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Rome Navona Square
in Rome city centre
Rome,
Rome information, piazza navona, Navona Square,
Navona Square information, Rome Piazza navona,
tourist, famous roman sites, attraction, Bernini's
Fountain, Rome, Roma, four rivers, obelisk,
Italy, Rome city Centre
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Rome
- Navona Square - Rome Information - Rome
city centre - Rome - Italy
Rome main attractions
of the Eternal City - Piazza Navona Information
Rome,
Rome information, Navona Square. Information
about Navona square (piazza Navona) and
itsl History, secrets and beauties in Rome
city centre.
OFFICIAL TOUR COMPANY OF ROME AND Vatican city
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Piazza Navona (Navona
square) is one of the
most ancient and full of history places
in Rome.
The Piazza has its
lengthened shape because it resamples the route of a
Roman stadium here built by emperor Domitian.
Unlike amphitheatres
as Colosseum,in the stadiums were not held
gladiators fights but sports competitions on the
model of Greek Olimpyc games.
Anyone hoping to pay a quiet
v isit
to Piazza Navona should arrive with the sun.
From 9 A.M. to midnight, the 900-footlong piazza-which
follows the outline of the Circus Agonalis built
by Domitian and was flooded for mock battles
into the 19th c.-is thronged with vendors, portrait
artists, and picture snapping tourists who tend to crowd
the view of the main attraction, Bernini's Fountain
of the Four Rivers .
The four rivers anthropologically
depicted-the Nile, the Ganges, the
Danube, and the Rio de la PIata-represent
the four corners of the earth targeted for conversion
by the Counterreformation Church.
Commissioned by Pope
Innocent X in 1645, in a bid to outdo his Barberini
predecessor, the fantastic confection was paid for with
a despised tax on bread. The obelisk rising from
its center, topped with the Pamphilj symbol,
a dove, once stood beside Domitian's Temple of
Isis. Innocent then hired Borromini, Bernini's great
rival, to redo the facade of the adjacent S. Agnese
in Agone .
Although the 3rd-c. Agnes
suffered agonies aplenty-stripped naked before a howling
crowd in a brothel that stood on this spot before she
was burned, beheaded, or stabbed to death (accounts
vary)-the name refers not to her martyrdom, but to the
athletes (agone) of the ancient Circus. Next
door is the Palazzo Pamphilj , now the Brazilian
Embassy, and at the foot of the piazza sits the
sprawling 18th-c. Palazzo Braschi , the last
palace built in Rome for the family of a pope.
The compact quarter of twisting
streets and alleys just west of Piazza Navona
is an easy place to get lost, literally and most rewardingly.
Use this card as a guide,
but yield often to the temptation to stray down streets
not mentioned.
From the southwest end of
Piazza Navona, walk west on V. di Pasquino to
Piazza di Pasquino, where the weathered stone
remnant of Rome's favorite" talking statue" bestrides
a pedestal papered with political witticisms and vulgar
satirical veerse.
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