The best places to see medieval Rome are around the Campo de' Fiori, with its
open-air market and old Jewish quarter, and across the river in Trastevere.
Campo de' Fiori
Smack in the center of the square is a statue of Giordano Bruno,
philosopher. Bruno held that God was present in nature and that the universe was
infinite. The Catholic Church burned him at the stake in 1600, right where his
statue is today.
Today the square is best known for its open-air market.
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Walk around the streets near the Campo de' Fiori, paying particular attention
to Palazzo Spada in Piazza Capo di Ferro. This was built in 1540 for a cardinal
and improved by Cardinal Bernardino Spara and his brother Virginio in the 17th
century. They assembled a big art collection which is open to the public and
hired Borromini to construct a clever gallery that appears longer than it is due
to successively shortened columns.
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One of the nicest buildings is
the Palazzo Farnese but it isn't open to the public because it is the embassy of
France. This is a source of some bitterness to Romans who complain about the
haughty attitude of the French and naturally they would take one of the city's
best buildings.
Walk through the Largo di Torre Argentina, noting the remains of four temples
in the middle. These are from Republican times (4th century BC forward) and they
share the fenced-off ruins area with some blocks from the Curia of Pompey. This
building held a statue of Pompey, sessions of the Roman Senate, and the freshly
killed body of Julius Caesar, stabbed inside on March 15, 44 BC. If you walk
across the Largo to the southeast, you come to the ...
Jewish Quarter
Theoretically there is still a Jewish quarter of Rome where the ghetto used to
be. However, I've never been able to find anything except one Kosher shop and one
synagogue. Jews have a long history in Rome. They arrived as slaves with Pompey
back around 70 BC. Most Jews lived across the river in Trastevere, which was
reserved for foreigners during the Empire, and didn't really move to this side of
the Tiber until the 13th century. They had a few good years there until Pope Paul
IV (1555-59) walled them in; they were allowed out in 1848.
I couldn't really find anything left of the original ghetto walls and the
houses inside were demolished in 1888. That leaves a synagogue, finished in 1904.
This is reasonably huge but the strict Jewish prohibition against idolatry means
the decor is pretty plain compared to the surrounding churches. Other important
differences are that the synagogue is surrounded by machine gun-toting cops, you
can't bring a camera in due to police security policies, and you have to shell
out 8000 lire to get in. The ticket price includes a guided tour and a little
museum.
My guide, a spry old lady, told me that "there were so many beautiful churches
in Rome that we had to build a beautiful house for God also." She covered the war
years briefly. "There were 8000 Jews in Rome. The Germans demanded 50 kilograms
of gold as a ransom and promised in exchange not to take any of the Roman Jews to
the death camps. We gave them the gold, but a year later they broke their promise
and took away 2000 of us." The synagogue also contains the German records of
which Jews were taken away to be killed. One American tourist solved an old
family mystery with these records. He knew that his father had managed to escape
the Germans in Eastern Europe and get to Italy, but didn't know what had become
of the man subsequently. The records in the Roman synagogue revealed that he'd
been taken to Buchenwald in 1944.
Today there are about 15,000 Jews in Rome, out of a total of perhaps 40,000 in
all of Italy (there were 100,000 before World War II). All of the ones I've met
are very observant.
Right next to the synagogue there is a bridge over to a little island in the
middle of the Tiber, Isola Tiberina. Look at the Ponte Fabricio carefully. It was
built in 62 BC and is the oldest surviving bridge in Rome. There isn't much to
see on the island, just a hospital and a church. If you keep walking, you come to
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Trastevere
Most of the buildings look like wrecks, but this is the hottest place to live in
Rome right now and one of the very most expensive. During the Republic, this was
a place for foreigners but Augustus incorporated it into the city of Rome. The
big mock naval battles that people think were staged in the Colosseum were in
fact held in a special pool that Augustus built here called the naumachia.
Unfortunately nothing remains of this structure and one is left with several
important churches, a lot of narrow streets, and Pasquino, a theater showing
movies in English.
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