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The Villas of Rome that rose beginning from the Renaissance and before 1870 in the perimeter of the walls, exist anchor, some of them entire, others have been mutilated by gardens, others devoured by the building fever that invested the city and its nobility when Rome became the capital of Italy. |
Villa Borghese is a great garden of naturalistic English style that is found in Rome and contains in its insides buildings, museums and attractions. |
The great park has quite a lot villas and 9 entries among the more frequented: Pinciana’s Door, that from the stairway of Trinità dei Monti, that from the ramps of the Pincio to Piazza del Popolo and the monumental entry of Piazzale Flaminio. |
Adjoining to Villa Borghese, at the feet of the hill, there is Villa Julia, built in 1551 - 1555 as summer residence for Pope Julius III, now it entertains the Etruscan Museum. |
The actual villa is just a small part of a precedent propriety, that contained three vineyards. Here the villa for Pope Julius III was built, he was an amiable humanist, a depth expert of the arts. |
The Villa Medici is an architectural complex situated on the hill of Pincio close to Trinità dei Monti in Rome. It has entertained since 1803 the academy of France in Rome. |
The Villa Doria Pamphili is a park in the city of Rome, it has origin from some Roman noble family as many other city parks. |
With its 180 has. of surface, it is the greatest park of Rome and one of the better preserved: the only tampering is owed to the opening of the Olympic Street (Street Leone XIII) that it has divided in two the ancient estate. |
The Villa Farnesina (or Villa of the Farnesina or simply the Farnesina) has been built since 1508 to 1511 from Baldassarre Peruzzi in Rome in the Trastevere Neighborhood for the banker from Siena Agostino Chigi. In 1534 it was purchased by the cardinal Alessandro Farnese and it had so the actual name. Villa Farnesina, was the first suburban noble villa in Rome. |
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