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Leone Limentani Rome - Seven Generations of Porcelain, Power, and Reinvention
Episode 284

Leone Limentani Rome - Seven Generations of Porcelain, Power, and Reinvention

Flavor of Italy podcast · Wendy Holloway, Bruno Limentani

February 16, 202633m 40s

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Show Notes

In the heart of Rome's Jewish Ghetto, just opposite the Portico d'Ottavia and steps from the Teatro di Marcello, there is a staircase that leads down into history.

That staircase belongs to Leone Limentani Rome, one of the oldest family-run shops in the city — founded in 1820 and still operated by the same family, now in its seventh generation.

I first discovered Leone Limentani Rome decades ago when I lived on Via Giulia. I would walk along the Tiber and into the Ghetto, descend those stairs, and find myself in what felt like an Aladdin's cave of porcelain, crystal, and silver. Shelves stretched in every direction. Ginori plates. Limoges porcelain. Christofle cutlery. Baccarat crystal. Everything touchable. Everything real.

And that tactile immediacy is still part of what makes Leone Limentani Rome so special today.