Italy: What will happen to Rome’s cats at Largo Argentina?

Rome: Rome is about to undertake major works, funded by Bvlgari, to open Largo di Torre Argentina to visitors, prompting questions about how the development will affect the cat sanctuary among the ruins.

Rome’s archaeological site at Largo Argentina is about to undergo major works, funded by luxury jeweller Bvlgari, to open up the city’s fabled ‘Area Sacra’ to visitors for the first time.

Best known as the scene of Julius Caesar’s assassination, the Largo Argentina site includes four Roman Republican temples, dating from between the third and second centuries BC, and the remains of Pompey’s Theatre.

Rome to open Largo Argentina site to visitors thanks to Bulgari

However, when the €1 million project was announced this week, the first question on the lips of many people in Rome and abroad was: “What about the cats?”

The city has assured that the works – which include the installation of raised walkways, illuminated at night – will not affect the residents of the cat sanctuary located below street level, sheltered by a high wall, at the Via Arenula corner of the ancient site.

The modern-day history of cats at Largo Argentina goes back almost a century when the felines began to call the place their home during excavations at the archaeological site in 1929.

This led to the creation of a colony of stray and abandoned cats, cared for over the decades by a succession of gattare (‘cat ladies’), until the establishment of the Torre Argentina Cat Sanctuary in 1994.

“The feline shelter will not be touched, it will be protected” – said Rome mayor Virginia Raggi – “and the cats, famous in Rome and around the world, will stay where they are, silent custodians of these treasures.”

Monica Baraschi, the shelter’s vice president, stated: “the association doesn’t have a problem with the works and it was reassuring that the mayor has said that the cats will be respected and will remain in their place and from the viewpoint of the association there is no concern for our cats.”

The works, which will begin in the coming weeks and last about a year, will see the Area Sacra made accessible to visitors in “an integral, definitive way” for the first time, the mayor said.

Fiona Shaw, a long-term volunteer at the sanctuary, told Wanted in Rome she hopes the cats will continue to be able “to live the life they choose in the ruins” which, apart from being a sacred area, is their home.