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From Platner & Ashby’s (1929) Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome:

The Quirinal Hill is the highest and northernmost of the seven hills of Rome. There are traces of settlements on the Quirinal Hill that date before the founding of Rome. The hill was previously occupied by the Sabine tribes and later conquered by the Romans. The name “Quirinal” is derived from the Sabine god of war Quirinus, a name which later was appropriated by the Romans and bestowed upon the figure of deified Romulus, founder of the city of Rome. The Servian Walls, constructed in the 4th century BC, traced the eastern edge of the Quirinal Hill. 

The Quirinale has always had a privileged position within the city of Rome, an all-time favorite of the Roman nobility. Being the highest hill and providing a fresh atmosphere far away from the overcrowded city center, many intellectuals and prominent citizens have built their residences up there, since ancient times. Emperor Vespasian and his brother built their domus on the Quirinale, and Emperor Constantine built his Bath complex there as well in the early years of the 4th century AD. The Baths of Constantine were the last Imperial Baths to be constructed in Rome. All the foundations of this complex were incorporated into new buildings constructed during the Renaissance, and only some sketches of the ancient ruins remain. 

Centuries later, during the 1500s, the papacy ordered a palace to be built on the Quirinale, which would also be the official summer seat of the popes, alternating with the Vatican. Attracted by the good reputation of the hill, many rich aristocratic families established themselves there as well, such as the Colonna and Barberini families. When the Papal State that ruled over Rome fell and Italy became a monarchy, the Quirinale Palace became the residence of the royal family of the Kingdom of Italy. Maintaining its importance, it is today the official residence of the Italian President. 

There are countless important buildings on the Quirinale. Right next to the Palace is the Piazza di Montecavallo, decorated by an obelisk which is believed to have been part of the Baths of Constantine. The obelisk is flanked by monumental statues of Castor and Pollux, the twin Gods patrons of horses. The Quirinale showcases incredible Baroque architecture examples, such as the Palace itself, but also the Barberini Palace (which is the house of the National Gallery of Antique Art), the iconic intersection of the Four Fountains of river gods designed by Domenico Fontana and Pietro da Cortona, the masterpiece church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane by architect Francesco Borromini, and many others. 

References

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The length of this tongue from the porta Collina in the Servian wall to the collis Latiaris (see below) is a little more than two kilometres. While there was a fairly deep depression between the Capitol and the Quirinal, as is shown by the pavement of the street found beneath the column of Trajan, yet the complete division between the two was made by the great excavations for the forum of Trajan. The highest point of the hill seems to have been within the area now covered by the Royal Gardens, for which considerable levelling off was done in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (Hulsen, Rom. Antikengarten 85 sqq.). In general, excavations indicate that marked changes of this sort were made both in antiquity (see FORUM TRAIANI) and in more recent times, which have modified both the height and contour of the hill. The height of the Royal Gardens is now 50 metres above sea-level, and that of the Treasury buildings 60 (A. Verri, II Colle Quirinale, Bull. Soc. Geol. Ital. 1908; S. Agata dei Goti (by Hulsen and others) Rome 1924, 3 sqq.).

On the north and west slope of the hill were at least four approaches through cuts or depressions, three of which were marked by gates in the Servian wall, PORTA SANQUALIS, P. SALUTARIS, and P. QUIRINALIS (qq.v.), corresponding to the modern Vie Nazionale, Dataria, and Quattro Fontane. The fourth led up to the top of the hill near the new tunnel under the Royal Gardens (BC 1926, 145-175).

 

Like the Viminal, the Quirinal was a collis, not a mons (for apparent exceptions-Flor. i. 7. 16; Eutrop. i. 7-see CP 1907, 463-464), and the description of the Argei (Varro, LL v. 51) preserves the names of the parts into which it was originally divided-collis Latiaris, the southern end; collis Mucialis, north of the Latiaris from the Via di Magnanapoli to the monte Cavallo; collis Salutaris, from Monte Cavallo to the church of S. Andrea; and collis Quirinalis, from this point east. The derivation of the first two names is unknown (HJ 399-400), and they, together with Salutaris (cf. SALUS), evidently passed out of use at an early date. Quirinalis then became the proper designation of the whole hill. This name was derived by Roman antiquarians from the inhabitants of the Sabine town Cures, who settled on this hill and were afterwards incorporated in Rome (Varro, LL v. 51; Fest. 10, 254; Jord. i. 2. 179-180), or from the god Quirinus, who was identified with Romulus (Ov. Fast. ii. 511; for the literature of the disputed etymology of Quirinalis, see WR 153; Walde, Lat. etym. W6rterb. s.v.). Whatever the true derivation, there is no doubt that, during the historical period, the hill was regarded as having been named from the god QUIRINUS, whose temple (q.v.) stood near the porta Quirinalis. Festus states (io, 234) that this hill was first called Agonus, but this is probably only an invention of the antiquarians.

 

The Quirinal is not enumerated among the hills of the Septimontium, and did not become a part of Rome until the organisation of the Four Regions, when, with the Viminal, it formed the third, Collina. There are traces of primitive settlements on this hill, and the tradition that they belonged to Sabines is probably founded on fact (for a discussion of these primitive settlements, see Pinza, Mon. L. xv. 776-781, pl. xxvi.; RE i. A. 1016-1008, and for the early cemeteries, see HJ 397, 398; Pinza, Mon. cit. 248-264). The Servian wall ran along the north-west edge of the Quirinal from the collis Latiaris to the porta Collina, where the agger began, and ran almost due south (see MURUS SERVII TULLII). In the Augustan division of the city the Quirinal fell into Region VI, which was afterwards called Alta Semita, from the main street that ran along the ridge of the hill, and corresponded nearly to the Vie del Quirinale and Venti Settembre. There were many temples on the Quirinal, and it became one of the principal residence districts for the wealthy (cf. DoMus), while a very large portion of its entire area was occupied still later by the baths of Diocletian (for the complete topography and monuments of the Quirinal, see RhM 1894, 379-423; HJ 394-443; P1. 484-506; RE i. A. 1016-1017).

Where in Rome is the Quirinal Hill?

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Cite this page as: Darius Arya, The American Institute for Roman Culture, “Quirinalis Mons (Quirinal Hill)” Ancient Rome Live. Last modified 08/07/2020. https://ancientromelive.org/quirinalis-collis-quirinal-hill/

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