Walks in Rome (including Tivoli, Frascati, and Albano) . .\lir\-\-i-y-^-^-. Walks in Rome 39 (2.) On the left of the Piazza del Popolo, the Via Babuino (baboon)branches off, deriving its name from a mutilated figure on a foun-tain halfway down it, removed since the fall of the Papal Govern-ment, one of the many robberies of street interest to be the right is the English Church, the work of Street, chieflyerected by the generous exertions of Mrs. Henry Walpole and Christy. A few steps farther is the Greek Church of , attached to a college founded by Gregory XI


Walks in Rome (including Tivoli, Frascati, and Albano) . .\lir\-\-i-y-^-^-. Walks in Rome 39 (2.) On the left of the Piazza del Popolo, the Via Babuino (baboon)branches off, deriving its name from a mutilated figure on a foun-tain halfway down it, removed since the fall of the Papal Govern-ment, one of the many robberies of street interest to be the right is the English Church, the work of Street, chieflyerected by the generous exertions of Mrs. Henry Walpole and Christy. A few steps farther is the Greek Church of , attached to a college founded by Gregory XIII. in No. 144 John Gibson, the sculptor, died, January 27, 1866.^ Behind this street is the Via Margutta, almost entirely inhabitedby artists and sculptors, and which contained the Costume Academyof Gigi, weU known through many generations of artists, butrecently it has been destroyed. Models are now obtained at theCircolo degli Artisti. ThL Via Margutta is a street of studios and stables, crossed at the upperend by a little roofed gallery with a single window,


Size: 2328px × 1073px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidwalksinromei, bookyear1913