Pinciano


Pinciano is the 3rd quartiere of Rome, identified by the initials Q. III. The name derives from the Pincian Hill. It belongs to the Municipio II.

History

Pinciano is among the first 15 quartieri of the city, originally delimited in 1911 and officially established in 1921. Previously, it was informally called Quartiere Sebastiani or Quartiere Pinciano or even Quartiere dei Fiumi, since several streets, near to the border with quartiere Salario, were named after Italian rivers.
Later, the quartiere was named Vittorio Emanuele III after the King of Italy, but in 1946 it regained its original name.

Coat of arms

Vert poplar on or background.

Geography

The quartiere is located in the northern area of the city, close to the Aurelian Walls.

Boundaries

Northward, the quartiere borders with Parioli, from which is separated by the whole Viale Maresciallo Pilsudski, by the whole Viale dei Parioli and by the whole Viale Liegi, up to Via Salaria.
Eastward, it borders with the quartiere Salario, whose boundary is marked by the stretch of Via Salaria, between Viale Regina Margherita and Piazza Fiume.
Southward, it borders with the rione Ludovisi, the boundary being outlined by the Aurelian walls alongside Corso d'Italia, from Piazza Fiume up to Piazzale Brasile. To the south, it also borders with the rione Campo Marzio, from which is separated by the stretch of the Aurelian walls alongside Viale del Muro Torto, from Piazzale Brasile up to Piazzale Flaminio.
Westward, it borders with Flaminio, whose border is marked by Via Flaminia, between Piazzale Flaminio and Viale Maresciallo Pilsudski.

Local geography

The main roads and squares of the quartiere are:
  • Corso d'Italia and Viale del Muro Torto, two important arteries of the city, running beside the Aurelian Walls;
  • Viale Bruno Buozzi, passing through the whole borough;
  • Piazza Euclide, which is regarded as the center of the quartiere and is often mistakenly thought to be located in Parioli;
  • Piazza Don Giovanni Minzoni, a wide rectangular square with a large garden in the middle, the Giardino Armida Barelli.
The streets and squares of the quartiere are mainly named after scientists, artists and musicians. Local toponyms can be categorized as follows:Astronomers, e.g. Giovanni Schiaparelli and Pietro Tacchini;Botanists, e.g. Ulisse Aldrovandi, Giuseppe Cuboni, Giuseppe De Notaris, Carlo Linneo, Giuseppe Mangili, Michele Mercati, Pietro Antonio Micheli, Francesco Eulalio Savastano;Geologists, e.g. Adolfo Cancani, Bartolomeo Gastaldi, Alessandro Serpieri;Mathematicians, e.g. Archimede, Giovanni Antonelli, Domenico Chelini, Guidubaldo Del Monte, Euclide, Giovanni Antonio Plana, Feliciano Scarpellini, Alberto Tonelli, Barnaba Tortolini;Physicians and physiologists, e.g. Carlo Allioni, Domenico Cirillo, Filippo Civinini, Luigi Luciani, Atto Tigri, Antonio Vallisneri;Musicians, e.g. Gregorio Allegri, Luigi Boccherini, Gaetano Donizetti, Gerolamo Frescobaldi, Benedetto Marcello, Saverio Mercadante, Giovanni Paisiello, Giovanni Pacini, Jacopo Peri, Ildebrando Pizzetti, Amilcare Ponchielli, Pietro Raimondi, Gioacchino Rossini, Nicola Spinelli, Giuseppe Verdi;Artists, e.g. Giuseppe Ceracchi, Sebastiano Conca, Cavalier d'Arpino, Carlo Dolci, Antonio Pollaiolo, Pomarancio, Pietro Paolo Rubens, Sassoferrato, Thorvaldsen, Ettore Ximenes;Politicians, e.g. Bruno Buozzi, Maresciallo Pilsudski.Rivers, e.g. Aniene, Cremera, Isonzo, Livenza, Po, Tevere.

Monuments and places of interest

Palaces and other buildings

Religious buildings

Archaeological sites

Gates in the Aurelian walls

Villas and parks

Culture

Universities and other cultural institutions

Museums

Cinema and theatre

The park of Villa Borghese houses the Cinema dei Piccoli and the Silvano Toti Globe Theatre.