Radio Londra Rome 2026: The Campo de' Fiori Bar Named After the WWII BBC Broadcasts — and Why the Name Still Means Something
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
Radio Londra (Via di Monte della Farina 30, Rome — in the Regola quarter, adjacent to Campo de' Fiori) takes its name from the BBC World Service Italian-language broadcasts of WWII: "Radio Londra" was the specific name that Italians gave to the BBC Italian Service broadcasts (officially "Qui è Londra" — "This is London") that transmitted from London between 1938 and 1945 and provided the anti-Fascist Italian public with uncensored news about the war, resistance activities, and Allied operations. The broadcasts were illegal to receive in Fascist Italy and punishable by imprisonment; millions of Italians listened clandestinely, and "Radio Londra" became the specific symbol of the information that the regime could not control — the authentic voice against the official noise. A Roman bar named Radio Londra is making a specific political and cultural statement about its allegiance to a particular tradition of Roman public life.
The bar itself: a Campo de' Fiori area drinking and dining venue that operates as a multi-format space (breakfast bar in the morning, aperitivo bar from 6pm, informal restaurant for dinner) in the specific nocturnal economy of the Campo de' Fiori quarter, where the evening activity — from the market square aperitivo hour through the late-night bar scene — is among the most concentrated in Rome. The specific Radio Londra positioning: slightly removed from the Campo de' Fiori piazza proper (which concentrates the most tourist-facing bars and the highest prices), in a side street where the clientele is mixed between neighborhood regulars and informed visitors.
Radio Londra: Practical Information
Aperitivo and Evening
The Radio Londra aperitivo (from approximately 6pm) is the most useful time of day for the visitor: the spritz and negroni are competently made, the aperitivo snacks are included with the drink purchase (the specific Roman aperitivo format — small plates of mixed snacks that appear on the counter or table with the first drink order), and the street outside fills with the specific Campo de' Fiori aperitivo crowd that is more Roman than the Campo de' Fiori piazza itself at this hour. Drinks: €8-12 for an aperitivo cocktail.
The Campo de' Fiori Context
Campo de' Fiori (the "field of flowers" — the piazza that was a meadow outside the medieval city before becoming Rome's primary market and execution square in the 15th century) is the most sociable outdoor piazza in Rome at night: the flowers and vegetable market in the morning (7am-2pm), the aperitivo hour (6-9pm), and the late-night bar scene (10pm-2am) follow each other in sequence on the same cobblestoned space. The specific Campo de' Fiori historical note: the statue in the center of the piazza is of Giordano Bruno, the philosopher burned at the stake on this spot by the Inquisition on February 17, 1600 — his hooded figure faces toward the Vatican with the specific gaze that Romans read as defiance. The Bruno monument (1889) was controversial at its installation and remains the most politically loaded statue in Rome.
Q&A: Radio Londra Rome
What is the best time to visit the Campo de' Fiori area?
The morning market (7-11am) is the most genuinely local Campo de' Fiori experience — the flower and vegetable stalls that give the piazza its name, the fruit vendors, and the specific quality of a Roman market before the tourist hour. The aperitivo hour (6-8pm) is the most socially active, with the bars on and around the piazza at their peak energy. The late night (after 11pm) is for the specific Roman bar-hopping culture that the quarter supports. Avoid: Sunday (the market is closed, the piazza is quieter but the bar scene continues); the July-August tourist peak (the Campo de' Fiori is overwhelmed by international tourists during this period — the bars raise prices and lower quality).