Piazza
del Campidoglio, on the top of Capitoline Hill, with the façade
of Palazzo Senatorio.The Capitoline Hill (Capitolinus Mons),
between the Forum and the Campus Martius, is one of the most
famous and highest of the seven hills of Rome, the site of a
temple for the Capitoline Triad: the gods Jupiter, his wife Juno
and their daughter Minerva. The temple was started by Rome's
fifth king, Tarquinius Priscus, and was considered one of the
largest and the most beautiful temples in the city. When the
Celtic Gauls raided Rome in 390 BC, the Capitoline Hill was the
one section of the city to evade capture by the barbarians.
The Capitoline echoes with famous events in Roman history; it
was here that Brutus and the assassins locked themselves inside
the Temple of Jupiter after murdering Caesar; here that the
Gracchi plotted and died; here the triumphant generals
overlooked the city for which they fought; here that the Sabines,
creeping to the Citadel, were let in by the infamous Vestal
Virgin Tarpeia, daughter of Spurius Tarpeius, who was later the
first to die on the rocks. Political criminals were murdered by
being thrown off the steep crest of the hill, to fall on the
dagger-sharp Tarpeian Rocks below. When Julius Caesar suffered
an accident during his Triumph, clearly indicating the wrath of
Jupiter for his actions in the Civil Wars, he approached the
hill and Jupiter's temple on his knees as a way of averting the
unlucky omen (he was murdered six months later)[1].
From 1536 until 1546, Michelangelo transformed the Campidoglio,
as Romans had come to know it, with his three palazzi that
enclose a harmonious and urbanely-coherent trapezoidal space,
approached by the ramped staircase called the "Cordonata".
Reversing the classical orientation of the Capitoline, which had
overlooked the Forum, the great architect, in a symbolic gesture,
turned orientation to face Papal Rome. The three palazzi are now
home to the important Capitoline Museums.
The church of Santa Maria in Aracoeli is adjacent to the square.
At its base are the remains of a Roman insula, with more than 4
stores visible from the street.
The English word capitol derives from Capitoline Hill.
Cordonata in RomeThe Cordonata is a monumental stair to reach
the high piazza of the hill Capitoline, the heart of pagan Rome.
It was created by the renaissance painter, sculptor and poet
Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475 - 1564).
It is especially notable for its extremely wide steps - so
designed so that nobles on horseback could ascend the hill
without dismounting.This text is
provided by Wikipedia.
| Distance |
On Foot
Full distance: 1.9 km
Length of Route: 00h 28 |
METRO
Length of Route: 00h 25
Number of Changes: 1
Walk distance: 1 km |
Car
Full distance: 3.8 km
Length of Route:00h 06 |
|