Italy for everyone

Borgo district in Rome

The Borgo district began its history in the distant past. Once it was located outside the city walls next to the cemetery on which the Apostle Peter was buried. Over time, the number of pilgrims coming from different countries to the grave of Peter has steadily increased. They began to form communities called Schools. At Schools, a hospital and a church were built.

One of the first such schools was built in the VIII century for pilgrims from Saxony. German pilgrims began to call the quarter "Burg", which subsequently transformed into the Italian word "Borgo".

For more than a century, the quarter experienced constant ruin from the Saracens, and under the papacy of Leo IV, it was decided to surround it with a city wall. They say that the pontiff himself, accompanied by barefoot pilgrims, walked along future walls.

So a fortified area appeared, stretching from the banks of the Tiber to the Basilica of St. Peter, which the people began to call the "Lion City".

Part of those historic walls survived north of Reconciliation Street. Along it stretches a fortified corridor - Passetto - along which any Pope in case of danger could freely evacuate from the Vatican to the more reliable castle of the Holy Angel.

Watch the video: Hidden Gems of Rome: Vatican Prati Neighborhood (November 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Italy for everyone, Next Article

La Scala: the most famous opera house in Milan
Cities of Italy

La Scala: the most famous opera house in Milan

It was Italy that owed its appearance as a genre of musical and dramatic art. And the word “opera” itself comes from Italian - “composition, work”. Starting from the 17th century, the championship in this art form belonged alternately to Venice and Naples until the construction of a new theater, La Scala, was completed in Milan in 1778.
Read More
10 most interesting churches and cathedrals of Venice
Cities of Italy

10 most interesting churches and cathedrals of Venice

Cathedrals and churches are one of the main assets of Venice: the city has about 250 consecrated churches, each of which boldly deserves the title of a work of art. The walls of many of them contain canvases of great painters and sculptors, so visiting the temples can be interesting not only to believers, but also to all art admirers.
Read More
How to get from Bologna to Rome: train, plane, bus, car
Cities of Italy

How to get from Bologna to Rome: train, plane, bus, car

As one of the great ones said: "All roads lead to Rome." It is not surprising that they lead from Bologna as well. Moreover, all roads are very high quality. Today BlogoItaliano will consider all possible ways to get from Bologna to the Italian capital - Rome. You can move between cities both by air and by land: by plane, train, bus or car.
Read More