Question:

What is this place in Rome called?

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Near the Forum, HUGE building with collumns and steps, flags, horses on top, looks beautifully lit at night.

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  1. Is it the Spanish Steps In Rome :)

    Thanks For Asking


  2. The place in question is called the Monument to Vittorio Emmanuele II. There is also a monument inside it dedicated to the unknown soldier which is nice.

    A little history about it;

    Monument of Vittorio Emanuele II (Monument of Victor Emmanuel II) or Altare della Patria (Altar of the Nation) or "Il Vittoriano" is a monument located in Rome, Italy. It occupies a site between the Piazza Venezia and the Capitoline Hill. The monument was designed and built by Giuseppe Sacconi between 1895 and 1911 to honour Victor Emmanuel, the first king of unified Italy.

    The monument is built of pure white marble and features majestic stairways, tall corinthian columns, fountains, a huge equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel and two statues of goddess Victoria riding on quadrigas. The monument holds the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier with an eternal flame, built under the statue of Italy after World War I. The base of the structure also houses the museum of Italian Reunification.

    The monument is controversial. Its construction destroyed a large area of Capitoline Hill housing a Medieval neighbourhood. The building itself is often regarded as pompous and too large. It is clearly visible to most of the city of Rome despite being boxy in general shape and lacking a dome or a tower. The monument is also glaringly white, making it highly conspicuous amidst the generally brownish buildings surrounding it, and its stacked, crowded nature has lended it several derogatory nicknames, among them "the wedding cake" and "the typewriter." Despite all this, the monument still attracts a hefty amount of visitors with its Roman-esque quality.

  3. The Spanish Steps. (Piazza di Spagna)

  4. This monument is called the "Vittoriano" or the Monument to Victor Emmanuel II, the first king of a united Italy. Referred to by many Romans as the "Wedding Cake" or "Type writer", this monument is very controversial.

    See pictures of it at http://images.google.com/images?q=vittor...

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