Classroom lesson · St Peter's Square · 🇻🇦 Vatican City

St Peter's Square

A giant oval plaza hugged by 284 stone columns

An aerial view of St Peter's Square in Vatican City showing the oval colonnade and central obelisk

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

St Peter's Square is the enormous open plaza at the entrance to Vatican City. It is surrounded by a curved row of 284 tall stone columns arranged in a wide oval shape, like two giant arms reaching out to welcome visitors. The whole square can hold more than 300,000 people at once.

Tell me more

The colonnade - that is the word for the curved rows of columns - was designed by a brilliant Italian sculptor and architect named Gian Lorenzo Bernini, who started building it in 1656. Bernini said he wanted the columns to look like the arms of a mother hugging her children. It took eleven years to finish.

Each column is about 13 metres tall - roughly the height of four double-decker buses stacked on top of each other. There are 284 columns arranged in four rows, and 140 statues of saints stand along the very top, looking out over the square. If you tried to count every single stone piece in the colonnade, you would be counting for a very long time.

Right in the middle of the square stands a tall, pointed stone called an obelisk. It was brought to Rome from Egypt nearly 2,000 years ago, and it is even older than that - carved about 4,000 years ago. Two fountains gurgle on either side of it, and pigeons love to splash in them on sunny afternoons.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Bernini said his curved columns look like arms giving a hug. Why do you think he wanted a building to feel welcoming? Can you think of other buildings that feel welcoming from outside?
  2. 02The square holds 300,000 people. How does that compare to your school, your town, or a sports stadium you know?
  3. 03If you were going to design a famous square for your own town, what shape would it be and what would you put in the middle?
Try this

Classroom activity

Using a large sheet of paper and a pencil tied to a piece of string, draw a perfect oval. Mark a dot in the centre and design your own 'square' - add columns, statues, a fountain, and a centrepiece. Label each part and explain your choices to a partner.