ReidsGuides.com  
Web ReidsGuides
v spacer
v Trip Planning Tools Destinations Adventures Photographs Blog Shop v v
v v

Cappuccino and Circuses

Street performers, Bernini fountains, and a carnival of life crowd Rome's famous Piazza Navona

Rome's Piazza Navona
Rome's Piazza Navona.

Closed to traffic, studded with fountains, lined with cafes, and filled with tourists, street performers, artists, kids playing soccer, and amorous Roman couples,

Piazza Navona

is one of Rome’s archetypal open spaces. It’s also one of the best places to kick back and relax in the heart of the city.

The piazza owes its long, skinny, round-ended shape to the AD 86

Stadium of Domitian

(see sidebar), which once held chariot races to entertain up to 30,000 screaming fans in the bleachers and even threw mock sea battles with scaled-down ships (how they managed to fill the space with water, I've no idea).

These days, the oblong square still drams the crowds with a play of water in the form of a trio of statue-studded fountains. The

Fountain of the Moor

on the piazza's south end was designed by Giacomo della Porta (1576), the

Fountain of the Neptune

at the north end by Antonio della Bitta and Gregorio Zappalà (1878), and the soaring

Fountain of Four Rivers

in the center by Gianlorenzo Bernini (1651).

The figure of the Rio Plata on Bernini's Four Rivers Fountain on Piazza Navona in Rome, Italy.
The figure of the Rio Plata on Bernini's Four Rivers Fountain on Piazza Navona in Rome, Italy.

This Fontana delle Quatto Fiumi is a roiling masterpiece of rearing mer-horses, sea serpents, and muscle-bound figures topped by an obelisk, which, in a feet of engineering, is supported by corner buttressing so that the space directly beneath it could be hollowed out.

(Interesting aside: though the obelisk is, as are most in Rome, cut from Egyptian marble, it does not date from the age of the pharoahs. The Emperor Domitian himself had the oblesk crafted and shipped from Egypt—by then, part of the Roman Empire—and covered with "hieroglyphics" naming the emperors Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian.)

The giant figures at the fountain's four corners represent the world's four great rivers (or at least those known in the 1650s): the Danube (Europe), the bearded Ganges (Asia), the bald Plate (Americas), and the Nile (Africa, shrouding his head since the source of the Nile was unknown at the time).

Borromini's curvaceous facade of

Sant'Agnese in Agone

church rises next to the fountain, and tour guides love to tell the (false) legend that Bernini carved a slight to Borromini in the figure of Plate, rearing back and throwing his arm up as if to guard against the church facade falling on him. While it's true that the two men were arch-rivals in the field of Roman baroque architecture, the facade was started in 1653—two years after Bernini finished the fountain.

Echoes of Antquity
Today, the remains of the Stadium of Domitian lie mostly unexcavated underneath Piazza Navona's palaces, but you can see one travertine entrance arch from the stadium's north curve buried under a modern bank building on Piazza di Tor Sanguigna, just outside the north end of the piazza (peer over teh railing and down). The ancient staidum also survives in the piazza's very name. In ancient time, the stadium was home to the popular "Agoni Capitolini" atheltic games. By the Middle Ages, Romans were still calling this space "Campus Agonis," which became agone, which the Roman accent eventually rendered n'agona, and finally navona.

The stadium's tradition as a place for chariot races and games was kept alive throughout the ages with medieval jousts, Renaissance festivals, and the 17th- to 19th-century practice of flooding it on August weekends for the populace to wade and the nobles to parade around on the shallow pools in their carriages.

Piazza Navona also served as a marketplace from 1477 to 1869, and for ages it has hosted a

Christmastime fair

selling traditional presepio (nativity, or Christmas crèche) figurines and statues along with toys and dolls of the Christmas Witch La Befana, who traditionally brings Italian children presents on January 6 (though with Europe's general Americanization, Santa Claus has been making inroads in the Italian kiddie consciousness and most Roman tykes now get gifts on December 25 from Santa and again on January 6 from the Befana. Full Story).

Gelato Gobstoppers
The elegant Piazza Navona cafe called Tre Scalini is world-famous for its tartufo, the gobstopper of the ice cream world. This delectable frozen confection is a ball studded with chocolate chunks over a layer chocolate gelato over a layer of vanilla gelato over a fudge core with a candied cherry at the center. It's worth every Euro (and every calorie).

Pony up the couple of Euro it'll cost for an overpriced cappuccino—or, if you're at Tre Scalini, one of their famous tartufi (see sidebar)—but that's a paltry admission price for watching the parade of Roman life that swirls and tumbles past.

Gaggles of tourists snap pictures of street performers busking for change, or haggle with the artists hawking thier watercolors on rickety display stands and African immigrants selling decorative fezes and skullcaps from sheets they can gather up quickly at any sign of a policeman. Lovers smooch on the marble benches surrounding those splashing Bernini fountains, oblivious to the kids kicking soccer balls over their heads. Sanppy waiters thread amongst the tables ranked before overpriced cafes carrying trays of fresh cappuccini or, as the afetrnoon wears on, virulently red Campari-sodas. On rare occasions, worshippers file in and out of the church.

Of course, you could sit for free on a bench or on the steps to Sant'Agnese in Agonia church, but it's worth even the jacked-up prices to snag a good café table and while away an afternoon.







This article was last updated in January 2007. All information was accurate at the time.



about | contact | faq

Copyright © 1998–2008 by Reid Bramblett. All rights reserved.