Rome’s Top 10 : Squares and Fountains



  1. Piazza Navona

    The elongated oval of Rome’s loveliest square hints that it is built atop Domitian’s ancient stadium .
    This pedestrian paradise is filled with cafés, street performers and
    artists, milling tourists, kids playing football, and splashing
    fountains. Bernini designed the central Fountain of Four Rivers, and
    added the Moor figure to the most southerly of the piazza’s other two
    fountains, constantly altered from the 16th to 19th centuries .




  2. Trevi Fountain

    Tradition
    holds that if you throw coins into this 1732 Nicola Salvi fountain, you
    ensure a return to Rome. Ingeniously grafted on to the back of a
    palazzo (even the windowsills mutate into rough rocks), the Trevi marks
    the end of the Acqua Vergine aqueduct, built by Agrippa in 19 BC from a
    spring miraculously discovered by a virgin .




    Trevi Fountain

  3. Campo de’ Fiori

    This
    “field of flowers” bursts with colour during the morning market, and
    again after dark when its pubs and bars make it a centre of Roman
    nightlife. The dour hooded statue overlooking all is in honour of
    Giordano Bruno, a theologian who was burned at the stake here for his
    progressive heresies in 1600 during the Counter-Reformation .




  4. Piazza del Popolo

    Architect
    Giuseppe Valadier expanded this site of festivals and public executions
    into an elegant piazza in 1811–23, adding four Egyptian-style lion
    fountains to the base of one of Rome’s oldest obelisks. The 1200 BC
    Ramases II monolith was moved to the Circus Maximus by Augustus then
    placed here by Pope Sixtus V .




    Piazza del Popolo

  5. Piazza San Pietro

    Bernini’s
    gargantuan colonnade, 196 m (640 ft) across, embraces the hordes of
    worshippers and tourists arriving at St Peter’s. Its perfect ellipse is
    confirmed by the optical illusion of disappearing columns afforded by
    standing at one of the focus points – marble discs set between the
    central 1st-century BC obelisk, carved in Egypt for a Roman Prefect, and
    either fountain: Bernini’s on the left, Domenico Fontana’s on the right.




    Piazza San Pietro

  6. Fontana delle Tartarughe

    Giacomo della Porta designed this delightful fountain between 1581 and 1584. The turtles (tartarughe) struggling up over the lip, however, were added in 1658, perhaps by Bernini .




    Fontana delle Tartarughe

  7. Piazza Barberini

    This
    busy piazza is centred on Bernini’s Triton Fountain (1642–3), the
    merman spouting water from a conch shell. It was commissioned by Pope
    Urban VIII and features his family symbol (bees) on its base .




  8. Piazza Venezia

    The
    de facto centre of Rome and convergence of traffic patterns, during
    evening rush hour conducted with balletic brio by a white-gloved
    policeman. The piazza is flanked by the Palazzo Venezia, from whose
    balcony Mussolini once exhorted hordes to the joys of Fascism .




  9. Fountain of the Naiads

    The
    water spouting from Bernini’s Triton is puny compared to the gushes
    rising from Glaucus in this huge fountain and traffic circle. The
    fountain is surrounded by naiads and horses in this 1888 confection by
    Mario Rutelli (grandfather of Francesco, the city’s mayor from 1993 to
    2001).

    • Piazza della Republica

  10. Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere

    A
    perfect neighbourhood square: cafés, shops, a fine restaurant, and a
    17th-century palazzo abutting a medieval church, its mosaics
    romantically floodlit at night. A fountain fitted with shells by Carlo
    Fontana (1682) atop a pedestal of stairs serves as benches for
    backpackers to strum guitars and tourists to eat ice cream .