Silent Guardians of Rome
Rome | Italy
Heritage
3
Visit if in the area
Walking Tour in Rome discovering Madonnelle and the untold stories carved into its street corners.
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Isabella Calidonna
What is this?
Scattered across Rome’s buildings, small street shrines known as Madonnelle depict the Madonna in modest frames of marble, terracotta, mosaic, oil or fresco. Once numbering in the thousands, around 500 remain today. Many include handcrafted frames or painted details—subtle traces of the artisans and caretakers who shaped the city’s spiritual landscape.
Their origins trace back to ancient Rome’s Lares Compitales—guardian spirits of crossroads—later transformed through Marian devotion into symbols of everyday faith. For centuries, locals kept them lit with candles or lanterns, maintaining them as acts of care and protection. Before modern streetlights, they lit the city’s darker corners, blending function and belief.
These shrines are more than historical detail. They are silent witnesses to Rome’s evolution—markers of intimate devotion, persistence, and community. Embedded in walls and corners, they reflect how faith and daily life remain quietly intertwined in the fabric of the city.
What makes this unique?
This walk invites you to engage with a centuries-old tradition still alive in the streets of Rome. The Madonnelle are more than religious symbols—they reflect devotion expressed through public care and enduring craftsmanship. These shrines reveal the layering of belief, design, and maintenance—how ordinary Romans shaped sacred space with skill, intention, and everyday acts of devotion.
Created in a range of styles and materials, each shrine holds clues to Rome’s visual language, spiritual habits, and social history. For generations, locals maintained them—cleaning, lighting, and protecting these small works as part of daily life.
Isabella, a licensed guide and art historian, reveals how these quiet images are woven into the city’s structure. Her attention to placement, form, and historical context brings out details most people overlook. You’ll walk away with a deeper sense of how beauty, belief, and care still shape the streets of Rome.
What is the profile of the host?
Isabella Calidonna is an art historian with a PhD in Art History, a licensed tour guide, and a certified running coach, currently studying to become an archaeologist. Her mission is to help people discover the city from a new perspective through gentle movement, discovery, and immersing oneself in Rome’s timeless beauty.
What to bring?
Comfortable shoes and clothes.
Where is this located?
Where will we meet?
You'll meet Isabella at the bottom of the Spanish Steps, in Piazza di Spagna.
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EUR 200
per person
Private
2 - 7 peopleⓘ
3 hours
The price includes all fees and tips.
This private experience is available for a minimum of 2 and maximum of 7 people. Solo travelers are welcome to book this tour but will be charged a supplemental fee to reach the minimum. What's included: Full guidance by a certified guide and an Italian coffee experience.
Offered in English
Private
2 - 7 peopleⓘ
3 hours
The price includes all fees and tips.
This private experience is available for a minimum of 2 and maximum of 7 people. Solo travelers are welcome to book this tour but will be charged a supplemental fee to reach the minimum. What's included: Full guidance by a certified guide and an Italian coffee experience.
Offered in English