Via Anagnina
Via Anagnina is a street in Rome which partially corresponds to the ancient via Latina.
Its name comes from the former connection between Rome and the city of Anagni that the street provided.
Route
Urban section
Via Anagnina runs from Via Tuscolana to the borders of the Municipality of Rome, beyond which it enters the Municipality of Grottaferrata.Suburban section
Outside the Municipality of Rome, the street changes its name to "Strada statale 511 Anagnina" and ends in Grottaferrata.In the Municipality of Grottaferrata, at the tenth mile of the former Via Latina, there is the small catacomb Ad Decimum, into use between the 3rd and the 4th century. Its small size and the modesty of the finds suggests that it was used by freedmen and workers employed in the nearby villae.
History
The street was established in 1933. Since 1972, as per Resolution nr. 3246 of 30 May 1972, it was included in the Municipio X.After the war, several small and medium-sized manufacturing companies were established along the street, as well as one of the giants of Roman industry, FATME, which moved here from the Appian Way in 1960 also thanks to the intervention of the Cassa per il Mezzogiorno. The company, which employed over 4,000 people, was one of the strongholds of the working class in the city, until – with the changing times, technologies and productions – in the 1990s it was definitively acquired by Ericsson, which established here its Italian headquarters.