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Saint Peter's Square (Latin: Forum Sancti Petri, Italian: Piazza San Pietro [ˈpjattsa sam ˈpjɛːtro]) is a large plaza located directly in front of St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City, the papal enclave in Rome, directly west of the neighborhood of Borgo.
The fabulous St Peter’s Square, Vatican City is something you must see when visiting Rome. It’s also a great free attraction, so being on a budget is no excuse not to visit! Read on to discover all about the history, obelisk, and architecture.
St. Peter's Square is one of the largest and most beautiful squares in the world. It is located in Vatican City, at the feet of St. Peter's Basilica. The dimensions of the square are spectacular: 320 meters long and 240 meters wide.
St Peter’s Square (Piazza San Pietro) in the Vatican City State is one of the most famous squares in the world, which houses over 300.000 people. It was designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini and had dimensions of 320 meters long and 240 meters wide.
Saint Peter’s Square was designed by the architect Gian Lorenzo Bernini, at the behest of Pope Alexander VII. It was completed in 1667, after eleven years of intense and onerous work. The square is made up of an “oval space with three centres” (196 x 149 metres), with semicircular colonnades connected to the basilica by “arms” or ...
St. Peter's Square is the queen of the squares, perhaps the most monumental in the world, the masterpiece of Bernini who created it from 1656 to 1667, with the aim of giving a worthy setting, a solemn access to the greatest temple of Christianity, and thus exalting the values of Catholicism.
Be welcomed into the piazza by Bernini ’s stunning colonnades. Marvel at the ancient Egyptian obelisk featured at the center of the square. Pay a visit to St. Peter’s Basilica, the most important church in Christendom.
The most famous part of Vatican City is undoubtedly St. Peter’s Square, which lies in front of St. Peter’s Basilica. The square became mainly known for the speeches from the Pope at the balcony of the basilica during Easter and Christmas celebrations.
St. Peter's Square has the shape of an immense ellipse (the visitor who stands in one of the two centers of this ellipse, marked by two white disks, one on each side of the obelisk, sees a single row of columns), 320 m. long and 240 m. wide, at its broadest point. From 'St. Peter's Basilica - A Virtual Tour' by Our Sunday Visitor.
Vatican Obelisk. The Vatican Obelisk is an Egyptian obelisk, one of the thirteen ancient obelisks of Rome. This obelisk is located in St. Peter's Square, in Vatican City. It is the only ancient obelisk in Rome that has never fallen. [1][2]