Largo Argentina

The sunken ruins of Largo Argentina in Rome, Italy, where Julius Caesar met his assassins and now cats nestle like easter eggs amongst the tall grasses

Largo Argentina
Largo Argentina (Photo by benoitnewton)
Today, Largo del Torre Argentina is largely known as the piazza where you frequently have to change buses, but set into its middle is an excavated zone sporting a trio of ancient temples, their columns poking up like broken teeth, their grassy foundations prowling with Rome's largest colony of stray cats, which legend holds are hosts for the ghosts of ancient Romans.

The site has been opened to visitors only sporadically and rarely over the years; call ahead to check just in case you get lucky, but consider it permanently closed.

United Nation for Cats

There is actually a volunteer run organization, Torre Argentina, devoted souly to the well being of the cats here. People from surrounding countries come to help with the efforts. The organization even alllows you to addopt a furry friend if you're interested! http://www.romancats.com

(You can, however, nip into the cat sanctuary shelter halfway down one staircase to chat with the harried cat lovers who try to keep up with spaying and inoculating the feral felines—at least until they are evicted, which the city is always threatening to do.)

Still, you can see it all from the road, really.

I find the Largo Argentina ruins all the more remarkable for the fact that they just sort of sit there, un-remarked upon—which is especially puzzling given that every 9th grader has read Julius Caesar, and here is the exact spot where he was killed!

Why so few guides or guidebooks bothers pointing this out mystifies me to this day. Therefore:

Et tu, Bruté?

Against the eastern edge of the excavations you can see the jumbled remains of some brick walls. This was the exit to Pompey's Theater and Baths complex, which the Roman Senate was using in the 1st century BC to hold their meetings while the main Senate house in the Forum was being rebuilt.

It was while exiting one of these meetings, on these very steps now covered in cats, that Brutus, Cassius, and the other conspirators fell upon Julius Caesar and stabbed him to death.

Tips & links

Details
ADDRESS

Largo del Torre Argentina / Via di San Nicola de Cesarini
tel. +39-06-060-608
www.largoargentina.com (unofficial site)

OPEN

Currently [perennially] closed—but you can see it all from the street level

ADMISSION

Free

Roma Pass: No

TRANSPORT

Bus: 30, 40, 46, 62, 64, 70, 81, 87, 119, 130F, 186, 190F, 492, 571, 628, 916, 916F, C3, 8BUS, 63, 271, 780, 810, H, N8

Hop-on/hop-off: Piazza Venezia

TOURS
How long does Largo Argentina take?

Planning your day: This piazza is a major bus stop, so chance are you will pass through at some point. In any other city, these ruins would be the town's top sightseeing highlight. Here, they merely make a nice centerpiece to a traffic circle. Just be sure, when changing buses, you take at least 5 minutes to cross to the excavations in the center and peer over the fence at these ruins.

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Area Sacra di Largo Argentina
ADDRESS

Largo del Torre Argentina / Via di San Nicola de Cesarini
tel. +39-06-060-608
http://www.largoargentina.com (unofficial site)

OPEN

Currently [perennially] closed—but you can see it all from the street level

ADMISSION

Free

Roma Pass: No

TRANSPORT

Bus: 30, 40, 46, 62, 64, 70, 81, 87, 119, 130F, 186, 190F, 492, 571, 628, 916, 916F, C3, 8BUS, 63, 271, 780, 810, H, N8

Hop-on/hop-off: Piazza Venezia

TOURS


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