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The Spanish Steps (Scalinata
di Spagna) in Rome ramp a
steep slope between the P iazza
di Spagna at the base and
the church Trinità dei Monti
above. The monumental
stairway, of 138 steps, was
built with French diplomat
Stefano Gueffier’s funds
(20,000 scudi) in 1723–1725,
linking the Bourbon Spanish
embassy to the Holy See,
today still located in the
piazza below, with the
Trinità dei Monti church
above.
The Spanish Steps were
designed by Francesco De
Sanctis after generations of
heated discussion over how
the steep slope to the
church on a shoulder of the
Pincio should be urbanized.
The solution is a gigantic
inflation of some
conventions of terraced
garden stairs.
During Christmas time an
impressive 19th century crib
is assembled in the first
terrace of the staircase.
During May, half of the
monument is covered by
flowerpots full of azalea
plants. In modern times the
Spanish Steps have included
a small cut-flower market, a
favorite place for eating
lunch (now officially
frowned upon and rewarded
with fines) or picking up a
gigolo. The apartment that
was the setting for The
Roman Spring of Mrs Stone
(1961) is halfway up on the
right.
The Spanish Steps have been
restored several times, most
recently in 1995.
In the Piazza at the base is
the Early Baroque fountain
called the Barcaccia ('the
ugly boat'), often credited
to Pietro Bernini, father of
a more famous son Gian
Lorenzo Bernini.
In the Piazza di Spagna, at
the corner on the right as
one begins to climb the
steps, is the house where
English poet John Keats
lived and died in 1821; it
is now a museum dedicated to
his memory, full of
memorabilia of the English
Romantic generation. On the
same right side stands the
15th century former cardinal
Cybo’s palace, now Ferrari
di Valbona, a building
altered in 1936 to designs
by Marcello Piacentini, the
main city planner during
Fascism, with modern
terraces perfectly in
harmony with the surrounding
baroque context.
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