Caffè San Marco

Caffè San Marco is a historic café in Trieste, Italy founded in 1914[1] that became famous as a rendezvous for intellectuals and writers including Italo Svevo, James Joyce and Umberto Saba, a tradition that continues to date with Claudio Magris.

A meeting point for Trieste's irredentists, the café was destroyed by Austro-Hungarian troops during the first World War but was reopened when hostilities ended.

The interiors reflect the Vienna Secession style popular when the café was founded.

The café is owned by Italy's largest insurance company (also based in Trieste), Assicurazioni Generali.

Italians campaigned to save the historic café in 2013 and it has now been restored, incorporating a bookshop.

Entrance of Caffè San Marco
Coat of arms of the Free Territory of Trieste
Coat of arms of the Free Territory of Trieste