
Piazza Dante in Naples.
'Piazza Dante' is a large public square in
Naples,
Italy, named for the poet
Dante Alighieri. The square is dominated by a 19th-century statue of the poet, sculpted by
Tito Angelini. Originally, the square was called, simply, ''Largo del Mercatello'' (Market Square). In 1765, it was rechristened "Foro Carolina," after the wife of the King of Naples. At that time, the original square was modified by architect
Luigi Vanvitelli. Modifications included the construction of an ornate semicircular arrangement of columns and statues that now look down on the square. They now mark the western side of a boarding-school named for
Victor Emanuel II. Vanvitelli, with his changes, essentially converted what had been the rear of a large, prexisting and ancient monastery into the front of the "new" structure.