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Piazza dell'Indipendenza (Rome)

Coordinates: 41°54′16″N 12°30′09″E / 41.904377°N 12.502469°E / 41.904377; 12.502469
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41°54′16″N 12°30′09″E / 41.904377°N 12.502469°E / 41.904377; 12.502469

Piazza dell'Indipendenza
View of the square (1970)
LocationRome, Italy
Postal code00185
Major
junctions
Via Solferino &
Via San Martino della Battaglia
Construction
Construction start1872

Piazza dell'Indipendenza (Independence Square) in Rome is a square in Municipio V (the 5th municipality) of the Castro Pretorio district of the Italian capital city. It is situated between Via Solferino and Via San Martino della Battaglia.

History

After the annexation of Rome by the Kingdom of Italy, in 1871, work began on the construction of a new district at the Castro Pretorio. The first settlement was built for the nobility and the upper middle class that had migrated to Rome to serve in a political office or the Royal Court, while Esquilino, also under construction, was intended for the clerical and petty bourgeois classes. The new quarter was built around a square that would function as the center of the new area. In 1872, it was decided to name it Independence Square, honoring the Italian War of Independence.[1] The new square rose roughly where in Ancient Rome stood Campus Scelleratus, the place where the Vestali (the Vestal Virgins) who violated their virginity vows were buried alive.[2]

By 1872, the square was already called "the new quarter" in travel books.[3]

Notable sights

The Palazzo dei Marescialli (the Marshalls Palace), built in 1937 by Costantino Costantini, houses the Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura (the High Council of the Judiciary). In 1979, a bomb was placed in a car near the building by members of the far-right terrorist organization Movimento Rivoluzionario Popolare (Revolutionary Popular Movement) but it malfunctioned and failed to explode.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Piazza dell'Indipendenza" (in Italian). Rerum Romanarum. 2016. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  2. ^ Ball Platner, Samuel; Ashby, Thomas (1929) [1909]. A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ "Latest Corrections and Additions". A Handbook of Rome and its Environs (12th ed.). London, England: John Murray. 1875 [1867]. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
  4. ^ Casillo, Giuseppe (2012). A destra della destra: Terza Posizione [To the right of the right: Third Position] (Thesis) (in Italian). Universitá degli Studi del Molise.

Further reading