Roman Forum (redirect from Campo Vaccino) the Campo Vaccino, or "cow field", from the livestock who grazed on the largely ignored section of the city. Claude Lorrain's 1636 Campo Vaccino shows... 49 KB (6,213 words) - 21:24, 11 March 2024 |
Modern Rome – Campo Vaccino is a landscape by British artist Joseph Mallord William Turner completed in 1839. It is Turner's final painting of Rome and... 10 KB (988 words) - 01:33, 21 December 2023 |
County Museum of Art Imaginary Landscape with the Palatine Hill from Campo Vaccino (1734), Metropolitan Museum of Art Monument to Mignard (c. 1735), Los... 30 KB (2,868 words) - 08:48, 8 April 2024 |
1821 Francisco de Goya, Bullfight, 1824 J. M. W. Turner, Modern Rome - Campo Vaccino, 1839 Édouard Manet, Portrait of Madame Brunet, 1867 Pierre-Auguste... 21 KB (1,852 words) - 15:29, 20 April 2024 |
cattle market (Campo Vaccino) in the centre of Rome. The mask has a long history. After the dismantling in 1816 of the Campo Vaccino fountain, it was... 4 KB (435 words) - 15:50, 10 April 2022 |
The centre of Rome showing the Colosseum and Roman Forum around 1870. Almost rural in character, it was known as the "Campo Vaccino" or "cattle field"... 82 KB (9,430 words) - 15:30, 27 April 2024 |
(Italian, "St. Joseph of the Carpenters"), also called San Giuseppe a Campo Vaccino ("St. Joseph at the Cowfield", an old name for the Roman Forum), is... 6 KB (339 words) - 20:02, 6 September 2022 |
Mount Usher Gardens Bahá'í Hanging Gardens of Haifa Poplars mall in Campo Vaccino in the area of the ancient Roman Forum, Rome (1656) (destroyed) Bomarzo... 78 KB (9,612 words) - 15:15, 26 March 2024 |
grass used as pastures for animals, thus the Roman Forum became the Campo Vaccino, the field of cows. The portions of the cities that remained intact... 85 KB (10,383 words) - 04:58, 22 April 2024 |