Castel Nuovo ou Maschio Angioino e Estação Marítima, Nápoles, Itália
Nápoles - Itália
Fotografia - Cartão Postal
O Castel
Nuovo, também conhecido pelo nome de Maschio Angioino, é um castelo na cidade de Nápoles, na Itália.
Sua construção
foi iniciada em 1279, por ordem de Carlos I de Anjou, sendo completada três anos mais tarde, mas
permaneceu desabitado até 1285, quando foi ocupado por Carlos II de Nápoles. Sob
o reinado de Roberto I de Nápoles o
castelo foi ampliado e embelezado, tornando-se um centro de patronato
artístico, mas em 1347 foi saqueado pela armada húngara, sendo gravemente
danificado. Restaurado e fortificado por Joana I de Nápoles,
tornou-se uma resistente fortaleza contra vários assédios subsequentes. Sob a
dinastia aragonesa as estruturas foram renovadas. Afonso V de Aragão mandou
construir um grande arco triunfal no pórtico, obra de Francesco Laurana. Depois do saque de Nápoles em 1494 pelos
franceses, o castelo deixou de ser residência real e assumiu a função de
fortaleza militar, voltando a ser ocupado pela realeza no século XVIII.
Castel Nuovo (English:
"New Castle"), often called Maschio Angioino (Italian:
"Angevin Keep"),
is a medieval castle located in front of
Piazza Municipio and the city hall (Palazzo San Giacomo)
in central Naples, Campania, Italy.
Its scenic location and imposing size makes the castle, first erected in 1279,
one of the main architectural landmarks of the city. It was a royal seat for
kings of Naples, Aragon and Spain until 1815.
It is the
headquarters of Neapolitan Society of Homeland History and of the Naples
Committee of the Institute for the History of the Italian Risorgimento. In the
complex there is also the civic museum, which includes the Palatine Chapel and the
museum paths on the first and second floors.
The
construction of its former nucleus -today partly re-emerged following
restoration and archaeological exploration work- is due to the initiative
of Charles I of Anjou, who in
1266, defeated the Hohenstaufens, ascended to the throne
of Sicily and established the transfer of the capital
from Palermo to the city of Naples.
The presence
of an external monarchy had set the town planning of Naples around the center
of the royal power, constituting an alternative urban core, formed by the port
and by the two main castles adjacent to it, Castel Capuano and Castel dell'Ovo. This relationship between the royal court and
town planning had already manifested itself with Frederick II, Holy Roman
Emperor, who in the 13th century, in the Swabian statute had
concentrated greater attention on castles neglecting the city walls. To the two
existing castles the Anjevins added the main, Castel Nuovo (Chastiau neuf),
which was not just a fortification but above all his
magnificent palace.
The royal
residence of Naples had been until then the Castel Capuano, but the Norman ancient fortress was judged as inadequate to the
function and the king wanted to build a new castle near the sea.
The project
was designed by the French architect Pierre de
Chaulnes, the construction of the Castrum Novum started in
1279 to finish just three years later, a very short time considering the
techniques of construction of the period and the overall size of the work.
However, the king never lived there: following the War of the Sicilian Vespers,
which cost to the House of Anjou the
crown of Sicily, conquered by Peter III of Aragon and
other events, the new palace remained unused until 1285, the year of the death
of Charles I.
The new
king Charles II of Naples moved
with his family and the court to the new residence, which he enlarged and
embellished. During his reign the Holy See was particularly linked to the House of Anjou,
in a turbulent relationship, which also in the following years will be marked
by pressure, alliances and continuous ruptures. On December 13 of 1294 the Main
Hall of the Castel Nuovo was the scene of the famous abdication of Pope Celestine V (the hermit Pietro da Morrone), from the
papal throne, called by Dante Alighieri the great refusal and the following
December 24, in the same hall the board of cardinals elected Benedetto Caetani,
who assumed the name of Pope Boniface VIII and
immediately moved its headquarters to Rome to
avoid the interference of the Anjevin family.
With the
ascent to the throne of Robert, King of Naples, in
1309, the castle, which he renovated and expanded, became a remarkable center
of culture, because to his patronage and his passion for the arts and literature:
the Castel Nuovo hosted important personalities of the culture of the time,
such as the writers Petrarch and Giovanni Boccaccio in
their Neapolitan stays, while the most famous painters of the time that they
were called to paint its walls: Pietro Cavallini, Montano d'Arezzo, and above all Giotto, who in 1332 painted the Palatine Chapel.
From 1343 it
was the residence of Joanna I of Naples, who in
1347, fled to France, abandoned it to the assaults of the army of the
King Louis I of Hungary. He had
come to avenge the death of his brother Andrew, the Giovanna's
husband, killed by a palace plot that the queen herself was suspected of
instigating it. The castle was looted and on its return the queen was forced to
a radical restructuring. During the second expedition of Louis against Naples
the castle, where the queen had found refuge, resisted the assaults. In the
following years the fortress underwent other attacks: on the occasion of the
taking of Naples by Charles III of Naples and
then that of Louis II of Naples, who
subtracted it from the son of Charles III, Ladislaus of Naples. The
latter, regained the throne in 1399, lived there until his death in 1414.
Joanna II of Naples succeeded
her brother Ladislaus and ascended the throne as the last Anjevin dynasty. The
queen, depicted as a dissolute, lustful, bloody woman, would have hosted in her
alcove lovers of all kinds and social backgrounds, even rounded up by her
emissaries among young, handsome people. To protect her good name, Joanna II
would not hesitate to get rid of them as soon as she satisfied her cravings.
Precisely for this purpose it has been narrated for centuries that the queen
had a secret trapdoor inside the castle: her lovers, having exhausted their
task, were thrown into this well and devoured by sea monsters. According to a
legend, it would have been a crocodile from the Africa to the castle's dungeons after crossing the Mediterranean Sea, the perpetrator of the horrendous death of
the Joanna's lovers.
In 1443 Alfonso V of Aragon, who
had conquered the throne of Naples, established a court in the castle, such as
to compete with the Florentine court of Lorenzo de' Medici and
the fortress was completely rebuilt in its present form, maintaining its
function as the center of royal power.
King Alfonso V
entrusted the restructuring of the Angevin fortress-palace to the Majorcan
architect Guillem Sagrera, who
rebuilt it in Catalan-Majorcan-Gothic style.
The five round towers, four of which incorporated the previous Anjevin
construction with a square plan, suitable to support the blows of the guns of
the time, reiterated the defensive role of the castle. The importance of the
palace as a center of royal power was instead emphasized by rebuilding the Main
Gate in a Triumphal Arc shape, a masterpiece of the Neapolitan
Renaissance architecture and work of Dalmatian Francesco Laurana, together with many artists of various
origins. The works took place starting from 1453 and only after the king's
death was completed in 1479.
In the Hall of
the Barons there was the epilogue of the famous Conspiracy of the Barons,
war against the King Ferdinand I of Naples, son
of Alfonso V, by many nobles, led by Antonello
Sanseverino, Prince of Salerno, and Francesco Coppola, Count of Sarno.
In 1486 the king invited all the conspirators to this room under the pretext of
a wedding party, which marked the overcoming of hostilities and definitive
reconciliation. The barons ran, but the king, ordered his soldiers to bar the
doors, had them arrested, punishing many of them, including Coppola and his
sons, with the death sentence.
The Conspiracy of the Barons was
a movement of reaction against the policies of centralization of the State
adopted by the new sovereign dynasty of Naples, i.e. the Aragonese. The lawsuits against Ferdinand I of Naples were
that these began the recovery of populated areas, taking them away from the
Barons' property and supplying them with that of the Aragonese court. In fact,
the maneuver was a royal delivery of power.
The internal
struggle between barons and dynasty took place in a political and hidden manner
and the same culminated definitively in 1487 in the homonymous hall of the
Castel Nuovo. Ferdinand I of Naples,
during his throne, he found himself facing the barons, beating them in skill
and cunning after plots, assassins and double games.
The castle was
again looted by Charles VIII of France,
during his expedition in 1494. First with the fall of Ferdinand II of Naples (1496)
and later of Frederick of Naples (1503),
the kingdom of Naples was annexed to the Kingdom of Spain by Ferdinand II of Aragon,
who established the Viceroyalty of Naples. The Castel Nuovo lost its function as a
royal residence, becoming a military garrison, due to its strategically
important position. However, it hosted the Kings of Spain who came to visit
Naples, like Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor,
who lived there for a short time in 1535. The castle remained the
residence of the Spanish Viceroy until the early 17th century when the new
palace (now the Royal Palace of Naples)
replaced it.
The castle was
again arranged by Prince Charles of Bourbon, the future Charles III of Spain,
ascended to the throne of Naples in 1734, but lost its role of a royal
residence, in favor to the new royal palaces that went building in Naples
itself and its surroundings (the Royal Palace of Naples at the Piazza del
Plebiscito, Palace of Capodimonte, Palace of Portici and Royal Palace of Caserta)
and became essentially a symbol of the history and greatness of Naples.
The last
important event dates back to 1799, when it was proclaimed the birth of
the Parthenopean Republic (Neapolitan
Republic). Renovated for the last time in 1823 by Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies, it later hosted the
"artillery arsenal" and a "pyrotechnic office" which in 1837
estimated to be more prudent transfer of the guns factory of the Torre
Annunziata.
In the 1920s
was made the wide range of flower gardens that ran along the Maschio Angioino
until the end-20th century: in the early months of 1921 Count Pietro Municchi,
an engineer then councilor of urban decor, presented to the City Council the
proposal for the isolation of the Castel Nuovo.
Finally the
Italian State obtained the entire castle for civil purposes, the works began in
1923 and also affected the factories and warehouses built near the square in
place of the demolished bastions: already the following year all the various
buildings were eliminated and the esplanade was created where gardens were
built on the side of current Vittorio Emanuele III street.
Only the door
of the citadel was saved, the original Aragonese access to the complex, rebuilt
in 1496 by Frederick of Naples (as
evidenced by its emblem on the arch): isolated and distorted of its function,
is visible among the flower garden square along Via Vittorio Emanuele III. The
work related to the restoration of the castle, which eliminated the many
superficies added over time, lasted until 1939.

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