By noon, all that's left are scraps washed into the gutters by the public drinking fountains and the traditionalist trattorie that ring it open for business.
All afternoon, the square is populated by tourists, snapping photographs of this postcard piazza ringed by a cobble of mismatched medeival buildings around a dour statue of a monk.
In the evening, the campo becomes an epicenter of central Rome's nightlife, with local youth and international students spilling out of the dozen pubs, bars, and birrerie that have sprung up over the past decade (the one marked simply "Vineria" is the only authentic, old-school wine bar in the mix) and turning the entire piazza into one giant nightly party.
In the Middle Ages, this campo dei fiori ("meadow of flowers") was where the most important executions took place.
That dour dude in a hood frowning down from the central pedestal was one of the victims, a monastic philosopher named Giordano Bruno.
His enlightened ideas didn't sit well with the Church, so they had him executed as a heretic on this spot in 1600—just all part of that year's papal Jubilee celebrations!
Piazza Campo dei Fiori (3 blocks south of Corso Vittorio Emanuele IPiazza Campo dei Fiori (3 blocks south of Corso Vittorio Emanuele II)
Always open
Free
Tours: from €40
Bus: 116, 116T, 46, 62, 64, 571, 916, 916F, N5, N15, N20
Planning your day: Well, it is a square. You might just pass thorugh. You might spend 10–15 minutes wandering the stalls, admiring the statue of Giordano Bruno, and snapping some photographs.
Take a guided tour of Campo de' Fiori with one of our partners:
Though central and colorful, keep in mind that the carousing makes it noisy late into the night, so think twice before booking a hotel just off the piazza.
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Piazza Campo dei Fiori (3 blocks south of Corso Vittorio Emanuele IPiazza Campo dei Fiori (3 blocks south of Corso Vittorio Emanuele II)
Always open
Free
Tours: from €40
Bus: 116, 116T, 46, 62, 64, 571, 916, 916F, N5, N15, N20