Well no, they are not. This is the stairway leading to a beautiful church and it is really worth visiting.
Here on the Capitoline hill there used to be the temple of Juno and the geese sacred to the Goddess which gave the alarm to the city during the attack of the Gauls, 'monere' in Latin means to warn someone. The goddess was patronizing the issue of money, called 'moneta', thanks to the warning Juno.
According to the legend, the church was built on the place where the Emperor Octavian Augustus saw in a dream the Madonna with the baby Jesus and Mary told him, pointing the Capitoline hill: 'this is the altar of the son of God'; another version of the same story says that the Sybil of Tivoli explained to him the vision. The stairs were built as a thank giving to God after a plague and it is quite hard to climb them. Therefore I would recommend accessing the church from its back, climbing the nearby Michelangelo Cordonata stairway, reaching the back side of the church, around the corner of the Capitoline Museums, and climbing the stairs you see in the photo on the right. |
Inside the church, have a look at the Bufalini Chapel on the first chapel to the right aisle. The Chapel honours the Franciscan saint San Bernardino from Siena famous for his qualities of preacher. He gave a famous sermon also in Rome at the foot of the stairs in a market once held in this area. He said vibrant words against gambling and cheating with cards games.
In the painting below, the painter Pinturicchio represents Bernardino in the middle, on his right you find St Anthony and on the left St. Augustine. On the book that Bernardino holds in his hands you can find a Latin sentence 'Father, you showed your name to everybody' which refers to the abbreviation of the name of Christ 'IHS' that Bernardino invented and for which he was accused of heresy. This abbreviation became later the symbol of the Jesuit order.
Two years ago, I had the pleasure to guide in Rome an Italian group from San Giustino, Città di Castello, from where Riccomanno Bufalini came from. The group was one of the nicest I had that year and they requested to see their famous ancient citizen in this chapel.
After visiting the church we took a coffee at the café just outside the church on the VIctor Emmanuel II monument and we took the elevator on this monument to appreciate the view over Rome.
The group invited me then to San Giustino where the Bufalini castle can be visited. They brought me some brochures of the castle and, I promise, sometimes I will certainly go to see it and enjoy the warmth of San Giustino people.
Secondly, if you reach the counter façade of the church, there is the tomb of Giovanni Crivelli once on the floor and now repositioned vertically on the wall, created by Donatello, the famous Florentine sculpture and signed by the artist.
Moreover, there used to be a small statue of Jesus in a small chapel of the transept, beloved by the Romans, which was stolen few years ago and now replaced by a copy. For centuries, when a baby was born in Rome, people used to say that he was as beautiful as the Jesus of the Aracoeli.
Tips:
-Access the Victor Emanuel Monument II and the Church from the back, Piazza del Campidoglio.
-The elevator of the Victor Emmanuel Monument costs 7 euro, but the view is also amazing from the lower levels which are free. Go all around the outer parts of the building.
-Leaving the church, on the via di Aracoeli 14, there is a good bakery which makes lovely sandwiches, Mozzarellamania, no seats available inside though. Good ice-cream shop next door, Vacanze Romane on the same street. If you need to sit down and rest in a restaurant reach the nearby Jewish district short cutting from the Theatre of Marcellus. On via del Portico d'Ottavia you have plenty of good restaurants offering Jewish-Roman cuisine.
-If you are going to Umbria during your trip, visit the San Giustino castle: http://www.castellobufalini.beniculturali.it/index.php?lang=eng
If you need any further information, contact me through http://www.visitrome.guide