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Rome.
The piazza, church and famous Scalinata Spagna (Spanish Steps)
have long provided a gathering place for foreigners. Built with a legacy
from the French in 1725, but named after the Spanish Embassy to the Holy
See (which is still located in the piazza), the steps lead to the French
church,
Trinità dei Monti. In the 18th century the most
beautiful women and men of Italy gathered here, waiting to be chosen as
an artist's model.
In
May each year the steps are decorated with pink azaleas. lf you can't
manage the steps there's a lift to the top outside the Spanish
Steps metro station. It might look like the perfect spot for
a picnic, but don't get too enthusiastic. Theoretically you are not allowed
to eat whilst sitting on the steps. The municipai police who patrol the
area can be quite strict, and transgressors can be fined. lt's all aimed
at keeping the steps clean after a major restoration in 1995-96, but the
police would do better to catch the vandals who are defacing Rome's monuments
with graffiti.
To the right as you face the steps is the house where John Keats died
in 1821, now the Keats-Shelley Memorial House, a small museum crammed
with memorabilia of Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mary Shelley, Lord Byron
and other Romantics. It is open from 9 am to 1 pm and 2.30 to 5.30 pm,
Monday to Friday.
In
the piazza is the boat-shaped fountain called the Barcaccia,
believed to be by Pietro Bernini, father of the famous Gian Lorenzo. The
Viale della Trinità dei Monti at the top of the steps leads to
the Pincio. Half way along the road on the right is the Villa
Medici, perhaps Rome's best piece of real estate with undoubtedly
one of the city's best views. The palazzo was built for Cardinal Ricci
da Montepulciano in 1540. Ferdinando dei Medici bought it in 1576 and
it remained his family's property until Napoleon acquired it in 1801,
when the French Academy was transferred here. The academy was founded
in 1666 to provide talented French artists, writers and musicians - Prix
de Rome winners - an opportunity to study and absorb the enormous classical
heritage that Rome offered. A good way to get inside the building is by
seeing one of the regular art exhibitions that are held there. Guided
tours of the villa's spectacular gardens take place at 10.30 and 11.30
am on Saturday and Sunday from March to late May and from September to
late October.
| Pincio |
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| Rome. The Pincio was laid out by Giuseppe
Valadier in the early 19th century. An elegant park with avenues
of shady trees, it gets its name from the Pinci family who owned
it in the 4th century. It is a popular spot for a weekend passeggiata
and has a wonderful view of Rome over to San Pietro. The Pincio
joins Villa
Borghese park. |
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| Travel to Rome? |
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| Would you like to book an hotel in Rome
close to the Spanish Steps? Well, let the famous Piazza di Spagna
and Trinità dei Monti area be the location of your accommodation
in Rome: hotels
near the Spanish Steps |
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