Get Thee to a Nunnery: Letters from Italy, Part I

By: Susan Van Allen (View Profile)

My fascination with nuns began early on. Growing up in the sixties, there was inspiration everywhere—from Julie Andrews romping through the Alps, Sally Field flying through the air, to my own beloved Catechism teachers.

Whenever I’m in Rome, I get a thrill out of seeing these “Brides of Jesus” on the streets eating gelato, jostling along with me on crowded buses, and once even at an underwear shop near the Campo de’ Fiori, buying panties.

In the Eternal City and all over Italy, convents open their doors to guests, at a bargain compared to hotels. Last winter and spring, I made it my mission to stay at a few in Rome to get a “Holy Digs” experience.

Intercontinental Hotel De La Ville
Starting off at this five-star when I’m telling a convent story might seem like breaking the Ninth “Thou Shalt Not Lie” Commandment. But to me, it’s only a venial sin, as this was actually a convent from 1600 to 1800. You can still see parts of the original building—gleaming white marble stairs and the chapel (now a beautiful dining room)—which conjures up images of sisters chanting Ave Marias.

I confess I needed pampering after my flight, and the big tub in the gorgeous ivory and rose travertine bathroom was perfect for that, along with the comfy king-sized bed and pretty turquoise-and-gold draperied room.

It’s quiet as a convent—hard to believe I’m right off the street from the Spanish Steps where vespas roar and throngs of tourists mill about. The only sound in my room is the faint hum of hotel heating systems and a courtyard fountain that my terrace overlooks. Yes, I have a terrace, surrounded by geraniums and a terra cotta angel.

After a lavish breakfast in the baroque dining room where I go elbow-to-elbow at the buffet with American families, Japanese businessmen, and chic Italians, I meet Giuseppe Vanvitelli, the handsome hotel manager, who fills me in on De La Ville history.

“After the nuns left,” he tells me, “Bishops moved in, and then a noble family took it over.” Leaning in closer he says, “Then it became a Casa di Toleranza, the whole neighborhood was not good.” I smile thinking, you gotta hand it to the Italians for calling a House of Tolerance what Americans refer to as a House of Ill Repute. In 1924, it became this hotel, designed by a Hungarian, Jozef Vago.

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