via Flaminia(Roma),dal tram 2
december 2011
Piazza del Popolo and via Flaminia timelapse seen from Pincio terrace in Rome. Italy
Piazza del Popolo and via Flaminia timelapse seen from Pincio terrace in Rome. Italy. Top view before sunset
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Piazza del Popolo (Rome, Italy)
This video was made by me using photos of my wife and daughter and allowed by authors to use music.
Piazza del Popolo is a large urban square in Rome. The name in modern Italian literally means People's Square, but historically it derives from the poplars (populus in Latin, pioppo in Italian) after which the church of Santa Maria del Popolo, in the northeast corner of the piazza, takes its name.
The piazza lies inside the northern gate in the Aurelian Walls, once the Porta Flaminia of ancient Rome, and now called the Porta del Popolo. This was the starting point of the Via Flaminia, the road to Ariminum (modern-day Rimini) and the most important route to the north. At the same time, before the age of railroads, it was the traveller's first view of Rome upon arrival. For centuries, the Piazza del Popolo was a place for public executions, the last of which took place in 1826.
Via Flaminia and Piazza del Popolo
Virtual Museum of Ancient Via Flaminia, Rome, Roman National Museum
Multiuser VR installation dedicated to the ancient Roman road, via flaminia, hosted at the Roman National Museum, Diocletian Thermal Baths in Rome
Le frecce tricolori lasciano la scia sul cielo di Roma (Via Flaminia)
Via Flaminia , Roma Nord
Strada statale extraurbana dove regna il caos della segnaletica orizzontale e verticale .Tra il primo indicatore di velocità ( 70 ) prima del passaggio nel centro abitato e il prossimo ( 50 ) a 1 km dal uscita dal centro abitato nessuna restrizione di velocità .
( La sicurezza delle persone, nella circolazione stradale, rientra tra le finalità primarie di ordine sociale ed economico perseguite dallo Stato.)
[Cam on board] Corso Francia, Ponte Flaminio, Via Flaminia fino al G.R.A. (Roma)
[Cam on board] Corso di Francia, Ponte Flaminio, Via Flaminia fino al Grande Raccordo Anulare. (Roma)
Via Del Corso - The main shopping street in Rome
The Via del Corso (ancient Via Lata, the urban stretch of Via Flaminia), is a main street in the historical centre of Rome. It is remarkable for being absolutely straight in an area characterized by narrow meandering alleys and small piazzas. Considered a wide street in ancient times, today the Corso is approximately 10 metres wide, and it only has room for two lanes of traffic and two narrow sidewalks. The northern portion of the street is a pedestrian area. The length of the street is roughly 1.5 kilometres.
The Corso runs in a generally north-south direction. To the north, it links the northern entrance gate to the city, the Porta del Popolo and its piazza, the Piazza del Popolo, to the heart of the city at the Piazza Venezia, at the base of the Capitoline Hill. At the Piazza del Popolo, Via del Corso is framed by two Baroque churches, Santa Maria dei Miracoli and Santa Maria in Montesanto, and along the street are the church of San Carlo al Corso, the church of San Giacomo in Augusta, the church of Gesù e Maria, the Piazza Colonna with the ancient column of Marcus Aurelius, the Galleria Alberto Sordi, the church of Santa Maria in Via Lata, the Oratory of Santissimo Crocifisso, the church of San Marcello al Corso and the Palazzo Doria Pamphili.
From the fifteenth century, the road served as the racetrack during the Roman Carnival for an annual running of riderless horses called the corsa dei barberi, which is the source for the name Via del Corso. Today, the Corso is a popular place for the passeggiata, the evening stroll for the populace to be seen and to see others. It is also an important shopping street for tourists and locals alike.
ia Corso [kartalla] mielletään alueen pääshoppailukaduksi. Sillä shoppailu on hyvä yhdistää Espanjalaisten portaitten liepeillä tehtävään shoppailuun ja myös muinaisen Rooman nähtävyyksien katseluun. Kadulla on runsaasti nuorisomuotia ja myös kaikenlaista turistikrääsää myyviä liikkeitä, mutta sen varrelta on mahdollista löytää miltei mitä tahansa. Via del Corson lähellä on myös Rooman ensimmäinen tavaratalo, La Rinascente, Piazza Colonna -aukion laidalla.
Roma - Il lungotevere Oberdan e gli storici palazzi della via Flaminia
ROMA. Anche in autunno nella Capitale il tempo è quasi primaverile con molti turisti ed il Tevere meraviglioso nonostante le polveri inquinanti. Affollata anche la pista ciclabile per passeggiate fantastiche da Castel Giubileo a Ponte Milvio e sul lungotevere fino a Castel Sant'Angelo ed il Vaticano. (Video Lelio - 2015)
Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Piazza del Popolo
Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Piazza del Popolo
Piazza del Popolo is a large urban square in Rome. The name in modern Italian literally means People's Square, but historically it derives from the poplars after which the church of Santa Maria del Popolo, in the northeast corner of the piazza, takes its name.
The piazza lies inside the northern gate in the Aurelian Walls, once the Porta Flaminia of ancient Rome, and now called the Porta del Popolo. This was the starting point of the Via Flaminia, the road to Ariminum (modern-day Rimini) and the most important route to the north. At the same time, before the age of railroads, it was the traveller's first view of Rome upon arrival. For centuries, the Piazza del Popolo was a place for public executions, the last of which took place in 1826.
The layout of the piazza today was designed in neoclassical style between 1811 and 1822 by the architect Giuseppe Valadier, He removed a modest fountain by Giacomo Della Porta, erected in 1572, and demolished some insignificant buildings and haphazard high screening walls to form two semicircles, reminiscent of Bernini's plan for St. Peter's Square, replacing the original cramped trapezoidal square centred on the Via Flaminia.
Valadier's Piazza del Popolo, however, incorporated the verdure of trees as an essential element; he conceived his space in a third dimension, expressed in the building of the viale that leads up to the balustraded overlook from the Pincio (above, right).
The central street, now known as the Via del Corso, was the ancient Via Lata, and to the north it links with the ancient Roman road, the Via Flaminia, beyond the city gate and southwards, to the Piazza Venezia (formerly the Piazza San Marco), the Capitol and the forum. The Via di Ripetta leads past the Mausoleum of Augustus to the River Tiber, where the Baroque riverside landing called the Porto di Ripetta was located until it was destroyed in the late 19th century. The Via del Babuino (Baboon), linking to Piazza di Spagna, takes its name from a grotesque sculpture of Silenus that gained the popular name of the Baboon.
To the north of the piazza stands the Porta del Popolo, beyond which lies the Piazzale Flaminio and the start of the Via Flaminia. The gateway was reworked to give its current appearance by Bernini for Pope Alexander VII in 1655, to welcome Queen Christina of Sweden to Rome following her conversion to Roman Catholicism and her abdication. Opposite Santa Maria del Popolo stands a Carabinieri station, with a dome reflecting that of the church.
( Rome - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Rome . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Rome - Italy
Join us for more :
La Via Flaminia
Alla scoperta dell' antica via consolare, Fotografando alcuni punti chiave meno conosciuti al pubblico ma spesso crocevia di storia.
Attraverso Fossombrone, Rimini e Pontericcioli scopriremo ciò che di percorribile rimane dell' antico tracciato. Strade e lastricati ancora calpestabili dopo oltre 2200 anni.
Le Flaminia sulla via Flaminia - Lancia Flaminia 60th Anniversary Tour 2017
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On 12, 13 and 14 May 2017 the Flaminia Register organized an international meeting to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Lancia Flaminia in all its versions, Pininfarina, Touring and Zagato. The participants took the Via Consolare Flaminia from the center of Fano, passing through Spoleto, arriving in Rome at Piazza del Quirinale and ending the tour through Tuscany.
I'm very pleased and proud to have documented the entire tour and for this I want to thanks the Flaminia Register ( for giving me the opportunity. Enjoy! ;-)
Il Registro Flaminia ha organizzato il 12, 13 e 14 maggio 2017 un Raduno per celebrare i 60 anni dall'inizio della commercializzazione della Lancia Flaminia al quale hanno preso parte anche le Flaminia nelle versioni carrozzate da Touring e Zagato. I partecipanti hanno ripercorso la via Consolare Flaminia partendo dal centro di Fano, passando per Spoleto, giungendo a Roma in Piazza del Quirinale e terminando il tour attraversando la Toscana, prima Radicofani ed ultima tappa Bonconvento (Siena).
Sono molto contento ed orgoglioso di aver documentato l'intero viaggio e per questo ringrazio il Registro Flaminia ( per avermene dato l'opportunità. Buona visione.
#lancia #flaminia #lanciaflaminia #flaminia60th #raduno #meeting #anniversary #zagato #touring #presidenziali #quirinale
Event / Manifestazione:Le Flaminia sulla via Flaminia
When / Quando: 12-13-14/05/2017
Where / Dove: Fano-Roma-Bonconvento
More info / Maggiori informazioni:
Registro Flaminia:
Lancia News:
Viva Lancia:
Watch these playlists, may interest you / Guarda queste playlist, potrebbero interessarti:
➪ Cars on track:
➪ Drifting, RC drift, Burnout, Drag Races & More:
➪ Rally, Autocross & Hillclimb races:
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➪ Lamborghini: Miura SV, Aventador, Diablo GT & more:
➪ Lancia: Delta HF, Delta S4, 037, Stratos & more:
➪ Alfa Romeo: 155 V6 Ti, 4C, 8C, Giulia GTA & more:
➪ Italian Tractor Pulling Championship:
➪ RC Action - Construction site, rc drift & more:
✔ Thanks to for the End-Card and front thumbnails graphics program.
Santa Croce in Via Flaminia
Santa Croce in Via Flaminia is a basilica church dedicated to the Holy Cross on the Via Flaminia in Rome, Italy.
It was first built in 1913 by the architect Aristide Leonori for Pope Pius X, in celebration of the 1600th anniversary of the Edict of Milan. In the style of a Roman basilica, it has a mosaic-decorated facade, a portico with six Doric columns and a mosaic by Biagio Biagetti, a five-storey bell tower and a three-aisled nave divided by six columns of Bavarian granite on each side.
It was opened for worship on 12 July 1914, and granted to the Congregation of the Sacred Stigmata, but was not consecrated until 1918.
In 1954, Pope Pius XII made it an alternative station church for Friday of the Fifth Week of Lent. Pope Paul VI elevated it to the status of Minor Basilica in 1964.
The Church of S. Croce was made a titular church for a Cardinal Priest by Pope Paul VI on 5 February 1965, an anticipation of a need for extra titles for new cardinals. On 22 February 1965 he created twenty-seven new Cardinals.
The position of titular priest of the church is now vacant.
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28/12/18 10:13 (Via Flaminia Nuova, 499, 00191 Roma RM,)
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Eric Clarks Travel Videos - Rome Italy - Piazza Del Popolo. One of Rome’s large squares. Amazing!
Eric Clarks Travel Videos - Rome Italy - Piazza Del Popolo. One of Rome’s large squares. Amazing!
Piazza del Popolo is a large urban square in Rome. The name in modern Italian literally means People's Square, but historically it derives from the poplars (populus in Latin, pioppo in Italian) after which the church of Santa Maria del Popolo, in the northeast corner of the piazza, takes its name.
The piazza lies inside the northern gate in the Aurelian Walls, once the Porta Flaminia of ancient Rome, and now called the Porta del Popolo. This was the starting point of the Via Flaminia, the road to Ariminum (modern-day Rimini) and the most important route to the north. At the same time, before the age of railroads, it was the traveller's first view of Rome upon arrival. For centuries, the Piazza del Popolo was a place for public executions, the last of which took place in 1826.
The layout of the piazza today was designed in neoclassical style between 1811 and 1822 by the architect Giuseppe Valadier,[1] He removed a modest fountain by Giacomo Della Porta, erected in 1572,[2] and demolished some insignificant buildings and haphazard high screening walls to form two semicircles, reminiscent of Bernini's plan for St. Peter's Square, replacing the original cramped trapezoidal square centred on the Via Flaminia.
Valadier's Piazza del Popolo, however, incorporated the verdure of trees as an essential element; he conceived his space in a third dimension, expressed in the building of the viale that leads up to the balustraded overlook from the Pincio (above, right).
An Egyptian obelisk of Sety I (later erected by Rameses II) from Heliopolis stands in the centre of the Piazza. Three sides of the obelisk were carved during the reign of Sety I and the fourth side, under Rameses II. The obelisk, known as the Flaminio Obelisk or the Popolo Obelisk, is the second oldest and one of the tallest obelisks in Rome (some 24 m high, or 36 m including its plinth). The obelisk was brought to Rome in 10 BC by order of Augustus and originally set up in the Circus Maximus. It was re-erected here in the piazza by the architect-engineer Domenico Fontana in 1589 as part of the urban plan of Sixtus V. The piazza also formerly contained a central fountain, which was moved to the Piazza Nicosia in 1818, when fountains, in the form of Egyptian-style lions, were added around the base of the obelisk.[3]
Looking from the north (illustration, right), three streets branch out from the piazza into the city, forming the so-called trident (il Tridente): the Via del Corso in the centre; the Via del Babuino to the left (opened in 1525 as the Via Paolina) and the Via di Ripetta (opened by Leo X in 1518 as the Via Leonina) to the right. The twin churches (the chiese gemelle) of Santa Maria dei Miracoli (1681) and Santa Maria in Montesanto (1679), begun by Carlo Rainaldi and completed by Bernini and Carlo Fontana, define the junctions of the roads. Close scrutiny of the twin churches reveals that they are not mere copies of one another, as they would have been in a Neoclassical project, but vary in their details, offering variety within their symmetrical balance in Baroque fashion.
The central street, now known as the Via del Corso, was the ancient Via Lata, and to the north it links with the ancient Roman road, the Via Flaminia, beyond the city gate and southwards, to the Piazza Venezia (formerly the Piazza San Marco), the Capitol and the forum. The Via di Ripetta leads past the Mausoleum of Augustus to the River Tiber, where the Baroque riverside landing called the Porto di Ripetta was located until it was destroyed in the late 19th century. The Via del Babuino (Baboon), linking to Piazza di Spagna, takes its name from a grotesque sculpture of Silenus that gained the popular name of the Baboon.
To the north of the piazza stands the Porta del Popolo, beyond which lies the Piazzale Flaminio and the start of the Via Flaminia. The gateway was reworked to give its current appearance by Bernini for Pope Alexander VII in 1655, to welcome Queen Christina of Sweden to Rome following her conversion to Roman Catholicism and her abdication.[4] Opposite Santa Maria del Popolo stands a Carabinieri station, with a dome reflecting that of the church.
Fontana del Nettuno.
In his urbanistic project, Valadier constructed the matching palazzi that provide a frame for the scenography of the twin churches and hold down two corners of his composition. He positioned a third palazzo to face these and matched a low structure screening the flank of Santa Maria del Popolo, with its fine Early Renaissance façade, together holding down the two northern corners. Valadier outlined this newly defined oval forecourt to the city of Rome with identical sweeps of wall, forming curving exedra-like spaces. Behind the western one, a screen of trees masks the unassorted fronts of buildings beyond.
4K ** Borghese Gallery COMPLETE 1st and 2nd Floor - Eric Clark's Travel Videos - Rome Italy
4K ** Borghese Gallery Complete 1st and 2nd Floor - Eric Clark's Travel Videos - Rome Italy
From Wikipedia
The Galleria Borghese (English: Borghese Gallery) is an art gallery in Rome, Italy, housed in the former Villa Borghese Pinciana. At the outset, the gallery building was integrated with its gardens, but nowadays the Villa Borghese gardens are considered a separate tourist attraction. The Galleria Borghese houses a substantial part of the Borghese collection of paintings, sculpture and antiquities, begun by Cardinal Scipione Borghese, the nephew of Pope Paul V (reign 1605–1621). The Villa was built by the architect Flaminio Ponzio, developing sketches by Scipione Borghese himself, who used it as a villa suburbana, a country villa at the edge of Rome.
Scipione Borghese was an early patron of Bernini and an avid collector of works by Caravaggio, who is well represented in the collection by his Boy with a Basket of Fruit, St Jerome Writing, Sick Bacchus and others. Other paintings of note include Titian's Sacred and Profane Love, Raphael's Entombment of Christ and works by Peter Paul Rubens and Federico Barocci.
The Casino Borghese was erected an area that in the seventeenth-century was outside of the walls of Rome, with the closest access being the Porta del Popolo. At the origins, the villa grounds covered an area with a circumference of nearly 3 miles.[1] The main building was designed by the Flemish architect Giovanni Vasanzio. The portico had spolia derived from the Arch of Claudius, once on the Via Flaminia.[2]
By 1644, John Evelyn described it as an Elysium of delight with Fountains of sundry inventions, Groves and small Rivulets of Water. Evelyn also described the Vivarium that housed ostriches, peacocks, swans and cranes and divers strange Beasts. Prince Marcantonio IV Borghese (1730-1800), who began the recasting of the park's formal garden architecture into an English landscape garden, also set out about 1775, under the guidance of the architect Antonio Asprucci, to replace the now-outdated tapestry and leather hangings and renovate the Casina, restaging the Borghese sculptures and antiquities in a thematic new ordering that celebrated the Borghese position in Rome. The rehabilitation of the much-visited villa as a genuinely public museum in the late eighteenth century was the subject of an exhibition at the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, in 2000,[3] spurred by the Getty's acquisition of fifty-four drawings related to the project.
In 1808, Prince Camillo Borghese, Napoleon's brother-in-law,[4] was forced to sell the Borghese Roman sculptures and antiquities to the Emperor. The result is that the Borghese Gladiator, renowned since the 1620s as the most admired single sculpture in Villa Borghese, must now be appreciated in the Musée du Louvre. The Borghese Hermaphroditus is also now in the Louvre.
The Borghese villa was modified and extended down the years, eventually being sold to the Italian government in 1902, along with the entire Borghese estate and surrounding gardens and parkland.
Bernini’s artworks to celebrate 20 years of Galleria Borghese
This exhibition is a unique once-in-a-lifetime journey into the world of one of the most universal artists of all time, Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
The artistic genius is known for having greatly contributed in making Rome the Eternal City. And while Galleria Borghese has always had nine of Bernini’s most famous masterpieces (five of which cannot be moved), this exhibition gives a “full-length” portrait of the great sculptor.
My name is Eric Clark and I am a world traveler. I have been around the world a few times and decided to help fund my travels by sharing my videos and pictures. I have been to almost every country and would be glad to give tips and pointers. Drop me a note. = )
ROMA: TRAGICO INCIDENTE, MUOIONO 2 GIOVANI IN VIA FLAMINIA
tvreporter.it
INCIDENTI: SCOOTER CONTRO AUTO A ROMA, MORTI DUE GIOVANI L'AUTOMOBILSTA E' STATO TRASPORTATO IN CODICE GIALLO AL SAN PIETRO Roma, 9 ott. - (Adnkronos) - Scontro tra un'auto e uno scooter questa mattina verso le 5.30 in via Flaminia Nuova, a Roma, nel tratto tra Tor di Quinto e Corso Francia. I due ventenni che viaggiavano a bordo dello scooter sono morti, mentre l'automobilista e' rimasto ferito ed e' stato trasportato in codice giallo all'ospedale San Pietro. Via Flaminia Nuova e' stata chiusa da via Due punti a via Flaminia Nuova, in direzione del Gra. Sul posto sono intervenute quattro pattuglie della polizia di Roma Capitale, una per i rilievi e tre per regolare il traffico in seguito alla chiusura della via.
Roma, deraglia tram in via Flaminia
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Incidente a Roma con protagonista un tram della linea 2. E’ accaduto poco prima dell’ora di pranzo in via Flaminia. Il tram è deragliato.
Grande paura tra i passeggeri che erano a bordo del convoglio. L’incidente è avvenuto nei pressi di piazza Carracci.
Sul posto la polizia locale del II Gruppo Parioli e gli ispettori dell'Atac. In corso le operazioni per immettere nuovamente il tram sui binari.
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