Historical Coffee Houses in Rome

Home In Italy Magazine


 
Apr 122021Historical Coffee Houses in Rome If we are asked to mention an historical coffee house in Italy, our mind goes to the Florian café in Venice. But, what about Rome? Read more to find a selection of the top Roman historical coffee houses.
Tagsfood, art, experience, local

If we are asked to mention an historical coffee house in Italy, our mind goes to the Florian café in Venice. But, what about Rome?
 Located in the elegant Via Condotti, in the very heart of Rome, is the Antico Caffè Greco; the second oldest coffee house in Italy, after the venetian Florian café. Meeting point for artists and intellectuals since the nineteenth century, it has been repeatedly portrayed in sketches and paintings, and had among its patrons even Schopenhauer, Franz Liszt, Stendhal, Wagner and Orson Welles. The Antico caffe’ Greco, with 300 artworks on display, is also one of the largest private art galleries open to public. 
  

A few minutes walking from Via Condotti you can find Coffee Museum Atelier Canova Tadolini, in Via del Babbuino, where at the end of XVIII century Antonio Canova, the greatest exponent of Italian Neoclassicism, had set up his laboratory. Here, you can sip good coffee surrounded by an exceptional collection of sculptures.
  
  
   


In Via della Pace, located a few steps from Piazza Navona, you can find the Antico Caffè della Pace. Art Nouveau style for this nineteenth century coffee house, characterized by the ancient wooden furniture and façade covered with Virginia creeper. It was once a very trendy place, and it is still frequented by intellectuals and international stars.
    


Near Piazza Navona and the Pantheon, right in front of the Senate of the Italian Republic, there is the Caffè Sant'Eustachio. This coffee shop dates back to 1930’s and it still has the same furniture and the same floor of that era. Its emblem is the deer, the symbol of Sant'Eustachio.
  


Finally, the first tea room in Rome: Babington's tea Room. Established in 1893 by Isabel Cargill and Anna Maria Babington. This tea and reading room was the result of the many Anglo-Saxons living in Rome who needed a place where they could drink their favourite beverage. Even today, this place overlooking the Spanish Steps is beloved by tea lovers who can find all the tea qualities and can breathe a quiet and reserved atmosphere. The XIX century style furniture, the wooden tables the teapots and exclusive porcelain make Babington tea room even more magical. 

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