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Piazza
Navona Rome's
most characteristic square; The whole district, with its narrow streets,
dark lanes and its closed palaces, witnesses of a glorious past and of
traditions full of charm to us |

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The
history of the square goes back to Ancient Rome. In this area rose
the large Circus of the Emperor Domitian. As a matter of fact the vast
elliptical shape of the square matches exactly the outlines of the
circus. Here were carried out mock sea battles, grandiose public shows,
games etc. In the following centuries, although the complex fell into
ruins, the site was still a favourite spot by the Romans.
In the Middle
Ages several festivals took place in this square, it was used for jousting,
horse-racing, and water festivals. During the latter, which often took
place in the stifling dog-days of August, the piazza was flooded and
Rome's aristocracy had their gilded carriages pulled around the artificial
lake, while throwing money on every hand in order to increase popular
gayety.
These days, December still sees the great Christmas' market,
a means by which the square's old festive is kept alive. The square,
with its fountains, the church of S.Agnese, Palazzo
Pamphilj and the buildings that surround it, was already constructed
between the 1600's and 1700's. Since then nearly nothing has been changed
and this is the secret that characterizes the square. Pope Innocent
X began to arrange the public square, till that moment dirty and neglected,
with the reconstruction of Palazzo Pamphilj commissioned
to Girolamo Rainaldi. The grandiose palace with its simple mass gave
immediately a distinguished look to the square, to which were added
later other constructions. The interiors are noteworthy for the decorations
of the hall with frescoes by Pietro da Cortona, famous
artist from Florence. The Pope commissioned also the church of S. Agnese,
on the place where the saint endured the martyrdom. In the Middle Ages
a church had been already built on the walls of the Circus. The ruins
of which are still visible under the new church. The church was designed
by Borromini (1645-50).
The artist was particularly criticized and mocked for the baroque concave
and convex lines of the façade, for the lightness of the campaniles
and the cupola, and for the completely new conception of the whole
building. The most pitiless of his critics was his eternal rival Bernini.
The artist, sensible and weak, suffered so much from the never ending
critics who committed suicide. The interior of the church is by Carlo
Rainaldi,
richly decorated in conformity with the baroque spirit. Pope Innocent
X was buried here. Once completed the square, the Pope continued
to embellish it with the construction of two fountains. One of these,
masterpiece by Bernini, is the central Fountain
of the Rivers (Fontana
dei Fiumi). On the group of rocks sit the giants symbolizing
the rivers of the four Continents: the Nile, the Ganges, the Danube
and the River of the Plata. On top of it raises the obelisk dating
from Domitian's reign. The other fountain in front of Palazzo Pamphilj,
is the Fountain of the Moor. The third Fountain, to the other side
of the square is a recent work of the XIXcent.
Today the square is surrounded by characteristic
coffees and wine-bars, in the center of the square the painters expose
their works, and the Romans, adults and kids, come to take a walk creating
an indissoluble harmony between art, history and true life.
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