Rione Monti - The most ancient quarter of Rome
The first quarter of Rome is “Monti” (mounts), so called as its confines once comprised the Esquilino, Viminal, part of the Quirinal and the Celio hills. It is the most ancient quarter of Rome. This is why the quarter together with its monuments and vestiges from antiquity offers a fairly complete overview of the city’s different periods, from the Republican to the Imperial period, and the Middle Ages to the Renaissance and Baroque, a succession of styles that covers 2500 years of history
Today the main area of the Monti quarter is characterized by narrow lanes, seldom flat, that mark the pattern of a city made of tall palaces from different ages, buildings whose plasters were scratched by the time and darkened by pollution, where craftsman workshops, night clubs, art galleries find their place: it is the ancient Roman Svbvra, today Suburra (the word means " inhabited area under the city", and this is actually the impression you have going downstairs to Piazza della Suburra from Via Cavour, in proximity of the B line metro station, or going upstairs the “Salita de’ Borgia” to reach the Church of San Pietro in Vincoli, or even walking down Via Nazionale along Via dei Serpenti or Via del Boschetto... ).
This up-and-down going invites
to visit the quarter on foot, privileged means to live and experience
the atmosphere of one of the most appealing areas of the Capital
and appreciate its archaeological monuments, starting from the Colosseum to the Ludus Magnus- the arena of gladiators - to the Domus
Aurea,
the Baths of Trajan, the Fora
of Emperors Augustus, Nerva and Trajan with the adjacent Markets, sections of the Servian and Aurelian walls
(with the Asinara gate), the Baths of Titus, the rests of the aqueduct
of Claudius, the Church of San Pietro in Vincoli
which houses Michelangelo’s
Moses, the Church of Santa Francesca Romana, the Papal Palace, the
Egyptian Obelisk, the Santa Sanctorum, the Holy Stair, the Basilica
of St. John in Lateran, the Church
of St. Clemente, St. Martino ai
Monti, the medieval Basilica of St. Mary Major, medieval vestiges
as the Leonian triclinium, the Lateran Baptistry, the
Church of St. Stefano Rotondo, the Conti tower, the house of the Knights of Rodi,
the Church of St. Prassede, the Capocci towers and some masterpieces
of the Roman baroque such as the churches of St. Andrew on the Quirinal
and St. Carlino alle Quattro Fontane...
A journey through time
The Svbvra becomes part of
the city area of Ancient Rome when the king of Etruscan origin Servio
Tullio elects it for his own residence. It is the most authentic
and popular area of the City, the place of the social and human contradictions
of the capital of the Empire, overcrowded, dirty, noisy and above
all dangerous, expecially because of numerous fires and downfalls
of the insulae, high buildings that reached five stores where an
unlimited number of poor families lived amassed in rented apartments,
in the uproar of noises and colors. Substantial changes happen only
under Sisto V (1585/1590), that realizes the aqueduct Felix, sets
via Panisperna and outlines via dei Serpenti.
In the Subura there were- and some left illegally are found still
today - ill-famed brothels, unsafe taverns and inns. The same Julius
Caesar was born in the Svbvra, and according to tradition Nero came
often disguised as a plebeian in order to test humors of the poorest
classes, and also Messalina came here incognito in search of transgression.
The Suburra
Even
if characterized by turbulent and popular inhabitants, the Subura
became part of the IV Region the Templum Pacis - whose northern border
coincided with the ancient Clivus Suburanus (today Via dei Selci)
- when Caesar Augustus, (elected Emperor by the Senate in 29 B.C),
gave an urban planning to the city, that was so ordered in fourteen
regions. The Clivus Suburanus was a branch of the so-called Argiletum:
a long street that after covering the Suburana Valley, near the summit
of the Cispius hill (that together with the Fagutal and the Oppius
hill formed the Esquilin hill), forked into the Vicus Patricius (today
Via Urbana) and the Clivus Suburanus. The ancient path of the Argiletum
is covered today by the main street of the area, Via Madonna dei
Monti, faced by medieval buildings, houses dating back to the 1600’s
and palaces of the 1700's, today homes of a population proud to live
in the first quarter of Rome and to preserve in the language, in
the habits, in the customs and in the art trades the values of old
Rome. (La grande guida dei rioni di Roma, Rione I Monti, Alberto
Manodori, p.37).



