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The Piazza del Popolo, looking west from
the Pincio.

Steps lead from the Piazza del Popolo to
the Pincio to the east.
The entrance of the Tridente from Piazza
del Popolo, defined by the "twin" churches
of Santa Maria in Montesanto (left) and
Santa Maria dei Miracoli (right). The Via
del Corso starts between the two churches.The
Piazza del Popolo is one of the most famous
places, especially for foreigners, in Rome.
The name in Italian means "piazza of the
people", but historically it derives from
the poplars (pioppo)after which the church
of Santa Maria del Popolo, to the north
of the square, takes its name.
The Piazza lies inside the northern gate
of the Aurelian Walls, once the Porta Flaminia.
This was the the starting point of the Via
Flaminia, the road to Ariminum (modern Rimini)
and the most important route to the north
of Ancient Rome. The layout of the piazza
today was designed in neoclassical style
between 1811 and 1822 by the architect Giuseppe
Valadier, who demolished some buildings
to form two semicircles, reminiscent of
Bernini's plan for St. Peter's Square, replacing
the original cramped trapezoidal square
centered on the Via Flaminia.
An Egyptian obelisk of Rameses II from Heliopolis
stands in the centre of the Piazza.An Egyptian
obelisk of Rameses II from Heliopolis stands
in the centre of the Piazza. The obelisk,
known as the obelisk Flaminio, is the second
oldest and one of the tallest in Rome (some
24 m high, or 36 m including its plinth),
and was brought to Rome in 10 BC by order
of Augustus and originally set up in the
Circus Maximus. It was re-erected in the
Piazza by the architect-engineer Domenico
Fontana in 1589 as part of the urban plan
of Sixtus V. The Piazza also formerly contained
a central fountain, which was moved to the
Piazza Nicosia in 1818, when fountains in
the form of Egyptian-style lions were added
around the base of the obelisk.
Looking from the north, three streets branch
out from the Piazza, forming the so-called
"trident" (il Tridente): the Via del Corso
in the centre, the Via del Babuino on the
left (opened in 1525 as the Via Paolina)
and the Via di Ripetta (opened by Leo X
in 1518 as the Via Leonina) on the right.
Twin churches (the chiese gemelle) of Santa
Maria dei Miracoli (1681) and Santa Maria
in Montesanto (1679), begun by Carlo Rainaldi
and completed by Bernini and Carlo Fontana,
define the junctions of the roads. Close
scrutiny of the twin churches reveals that
they are not mere copies of one another,
as they would have been in a Neoclassical
project, but varying their details, offering
variety within their symmetrical balance
in Baroque fashion.
To the south, the central Via del Corso
follows the course of the Ancient Roman
Via Flaminia, coming from the Capitol and
the forum. The Via Flaminia became known
as the Via Lata in the Middle Ages, before
becoming today's Via del Corso and leads
to the Piazza Venezia. The Via di Ripetta
leads past the Mausoleum of Augustus to
the Tiber, where the Porto di Ripetta was
located until the late 19th century. Today,
the road crosses the Tibur by bridge, and
continues to the Vatican City. The Via del
Babuino ("Baboo"), linking to Piazza di
Spagna, takes its name from a Silenus sculpture
whose unpleasantness gained it the popular
name of an ape.
To the north of the Piazza lie the Porta
del Popolo and the Santa Maria del Popolo.
The Porta del Popolo was reconstructed to
the current appearance by Pope Alexander
VII in 1655, to welcome Queen Christina
of Sweden to Rome after her conversion to
Roman Catholicism and abdication. It was
designed by Bernini: whereas such festive
structures elsewhere were built of weather-resistant
plaster, in Rome the structure was more
permanently executed in stone. Opposite
Santa Maria del Popolo stands a Carabinieri
station, with a dome reflecting that of
the church.
A fountain stands on the each side of the
Piazza to the east and west. Steps from
the Piazza to the east lead up beside a
waterfall to the Pincio park, near the Villa
Borghese.
For centuries, the Piazza del Popolo was
a place for public executions, the last
of which took place in 1826.
Until quite recently, the Piazza del Popolo
was choked with traffic in a sea of car
parking; today, these have been swept away.
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Distance
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On
foot |
Metro |
Car |
Full distance: 0.5 km
Length of Route: 00h 05 |
Walk Distance: 0.5 km
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Full distance: 0.5 km
Length of Drive: 00h 03
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