Napoli
The
largest city of Campania, capital of the province and the
region, Naples is the third most populated city in Italy (after Rome and
Milan), with over a million inhabitants, and is the most important
industrial center and trading port for the South. It is situated halfway
down the Tyrrenia coast, at the innermost point of the Bay of Naples,
between Vesuvius and the Phlegrean Fields. It has a mild and constant
climate, with average temperatures of 16° C
and a serene
sky for at least half the year. Among the major industries are metalworking,
oil refineries, mechanics (naval and railroad), electricity and food
producing. The artistic crafting of coral and tortoise shell flourishes.
A
point of embarkation for emigrants in the past, Naples now has a large
traffic of merchandise (petroleum, carbon, cereals) and passengers. It is
the largest Italian port, with a noteworthy nexus of railway and highways
and a large international airport. In the vast urban area one can
distinguish many different neighborhoods: the old center, characterized by
buildings closely crowded together, is bordered
on the west by the new administrative district and on the east by the
business district, into which flows almost all the road and rail traffic.
Other neighborhoods, with narrow climbing streets, rise around the base of
the San Martino and Capodimonte hills. These neighborhoods have experienced
intense development, typically of the simpler kind, in contrast to that of
the residential neighborhoods that stretch out comfortably along the Vomero
and Posillipo hills.
Historical Background
The
original nucleus of the city can be found on the little island of Megaride.
Occupied today by Egg Castle (Castel dell’Ovo), it was first a settlement
of the Aegean Greeks, then the Rodi, followed by the Cumani, in the seventh
and sixth centuries
B.C. The Cumani also occupied the Pizzofalcone heights and named the city
Palaepolis (Old City). Around the fifth century B.C., Neapolis (New City)
arose in the surrounding areas, exercising strong
cultural influence based on its Greek roots. In the following century it was
occupied by the Romans, surrounded by walls and characterized by blocks of
streets formed in grids. Later it was occupied
by the Byzantines, then the Goths, and then became capital of an autonomous
dukedom. After a brief period of Longobard domi nion,
it fell under Norman control, until Ruggero II of Altavilla, King of Sicily,
was able to add
it to his kingdom in 1139. With the Angevin conquest in 1266, Naples became
the capital and experienced notable demographic and urban growth. New growth occurred with the arrival of Alfonso of Aragon and with
the reign of his successors (fifteenth century). After Charles VIII of
France, the Spanish took over in 1503. Naples rose to the dignity of being a
capital again in 1734 under the Bourbons, who reigned there until September
1860 (except during the brief French parenthesis, 1806-1815), at which time
it was annexed to Garibaldi’s Italy.
The bombardments of the Second World War, aggravated by the resistance of
the German troops, caused death and destruction to the
patrimony
of population and of art. However, the Parthenopaean population gained
victory on October 1, 1943, after four days of bitter fighting. (Note: The
mythical tomb of Parthenope, a siren, was
supposedly at the site where Naples grew up. As a result, the city has
become known as Parthenopaea.
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