Piazza di Spagna
(Spanish Steps) is the only place where three
distinct elements of urban decor, a fountain, a
flight of steps and a church, have become a monument
in its own right, as well as a scenic wonder.
The actual form of the
entire area starts to define itself at the beginning
of the 16th century when it is decided to change,
on the project of Carlo Maderno, the construction
of the Franciscan church of the Trinity of
the Mounts, then consecrated by Sisto V in
1587 after Christ.
Since there were not the necessary funds to realise
the stairs, guaranteed by a testament legacy dating
from 1660 of the French diplomat Stefano
Gueffier, and since the diatribes on the ownership
of the land were not resolved, the connection between
the top of the hill and Piazza di Spagna
was made of two pathways going down through the
trees.
The stairs of the
Trinity of the Mounts is realised only between
1723 and 1726 after Christ, by Francesco De Sanctis,
as a series of stairs and terraces, never linked
to any form of spatial symmetry and in a non-ending
scenographic movement thanks to the use of straight
paths, curves and polygonal.
The church of Trinità
dei Monti has dominated the square since 1502.
It was built near the monastery founded by St. Francis
di Paola in 1493. In 1502, Louis XII had the
Trinità dei Monti church built next to this monastery,
for the French Catholics residing in Rome.
The church was consecrated
in 1585 by Pope Sistus V who considered it
the cornerstone for his ambitious plans of urban
development for the city. Its elevated position
and the strong upward thrust of its twin bell-towers
make it one of the most suggestive landmarks
in Rome.
The church contains
a great number of paintings as well as many private
chapels acquired by patrician families like the
Orsini, the Altoviti and others.
At the end of the XVI
century after the Spanish Embassy had established
itself in a magnificent palace on the square, a
wealthy prelate had another grand residence built
there, which he subsequently donated (in 1612) to
the influential Jesuit Congregation of the Propaganda
Fide. In that period, (between 1627 and 1629)
an unusually shaped fountain was built at the
foot of the steps.
It is known as the
Barcaccia (the boat) and was the first of
many fountains built in Rome by the architect
Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
It was commissioned
by Pope Urhan VIII (Barberini), and was shaped
like a boat with two prows to commemorate the great
flond of the Tiber in 1598 when it had been
possible to reach this point by boat.
In this period, while
the French and the Spaniards, as lords of Trinità
dei Monti vied with each other for supremacy in
the hope of gaining more territorial prestige, interest
in this square, that had the fame of being a
privileged enclave, began to attract numerous
foreigners to Rome. Many taverns, inns, and
cafes were opened, and between the seventeenth and
nineteenth centuries, business and commercial
activities began to concentrate there as well.
Towards the middle of
the sixteenth century the French began to
plan a flight of steps to connect the square to
their church on the hill above, but it was only
in 1723 that Pope Innocent XIII decided to name
Francesco de Sanctis, whom the French approved
of, as the executor of the famous steps.
This beautiful stairway
gave the square its graceful and elegant seventeenth
century touch that was the reason for its popularity
during the Romantic and the Art Nouveau periods.
These steps have a powerful scenic, almost theatrical
effect on the square, which makes them an ideal
stage for the annual fashion parade "Donna sotto
le Stelle" when the most important Italian
and international stylists present their
collections.