Caffè 900 — Twentieth-century Literary Café
Caffè 900 is a historic literary café in Cagliari, Sardinia, whose name and identity are rooted in the cultural life of the early twentieth century. The establishment preserves an interior atmosphere that recalls the intellectual salons and café society of the Belle Époque and inter-war periods, when Cagliari’s bourgeoisie gathered in such spaces to debate literature, politics, and the arts.
At a glance
- Type
- Historic literary café and cultural venue
- Period
- Twentieth-century tradition; current premises historic
- Style
- Liberty interior; early 20th-century bourgeois café culture
- Location
- Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy
- Coordinates
- 39.2173° N, 9.1238° E
Overview
Cagliari developed as the administrative and cultural capital of Sardinia under successive Pisan, Aragonese, Spanish, and Savoyard rule, accumulating a layered urban character unique among Mediterranean island cities. By the early 20th century, the city’s expanding bourgeois professional class created demand for the kind of literary café that flourished simultaneously in Rome, Milan, Florence, and across Europe. Caffè 900 embodies this tradition, serving as both a period interior and a living cultural space where the café as an institution of intellectual life is consciously honoured.
History
The café culture of Cagliari reached its peak expression in the decades between Italian unification (1861) and the Second World War, when establishments in the Via Roma and Piazza Yenne areas served as informal headquarters for journalists, lawyers, professors, and artists. The name Caffè 900 — literally “Café of the Nineteen Hundreds” — directly invokes this golden period of Italian café society, when Sardinian intellectuals engaged with the modernist and nationalist currents transforming the peninsula. The establishment’s reference to the Novecento also connects to the broader Italian cultural movement of that name, which sought to define a distinctly Italian modernity through literature, painting, and architecture in the inter-war decades.
What you see
The interior presents the characteristic visual vocabulary of the early 20th-century Italian café: dark wood panelling, marble-topped tables, mirrored walls, and pendant lighting that recalls the gas-lamp era. Bookshelves and framed literary photographs reinforce the literary identity of the space, while the bar itself retains the long counter format typical of Cagliari’s historic establishments. Period posters and prints from the Novecento era provide a decorative layer that makes the cultural reference explicit. The overall atmosphere is deliberately contemplative, inviting extended conversation rather than rapid consumption.
Cultural significance
Literary cafés occupy a privileged position in European cultural memory as the spaces where modern ideas were first publicly debated — from the Enlightenment coffeehouses of 18th-century Paris and London to the avant-garde gathering places of early 20th-century Italy. Caffè 900 keeps this tradition alive in a Sardinian context, connecting the island’s intellectual heritage to the broader history of Mediterranean urban culture. Its preservation of period interior character in an era of generic hospitality design gives it heritage value beyond its role as a working café.
Practical information
- Location
- Cagliari, Metropolitan City of Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy
- Hours
- Check official website or local listings for current opening hours
Getting there
Cagliari is the main city of Sardinia and is served by Cagliari Elmas Airport with flights from major Italian cities and several European destinations. From the airport, the Trenitalia regional train reaches Cagliari Centrale station in 5 minutes. The city centre, including the historic café district around Via Roma and Piazza Yenne, is walkable from the station. Ferries from Civitavecchia, Genoa, and Palermo also serve Cagliari port.
