Located in downtown Santiago, the square is lined with a portrait of the Last Supper and a 50-pound 17th-century silver lamp. The Amas Square was originally flat and open in the early days. Amas Square followed the European trend in the nineteenth century, and the government planted grass and trees to make Amas Square its park. Now people come to rest, sit on the bench and enjoy the warm afternoon in Santiago. Some people opened the chessboard, caught the right to kill, frowned and the two fought together.