Naples ( , , Neapolitan: Napule) in Italy
, is the
capital of the region of
Campania and of the province of Naples. The city is
known for its rich
history,
art,
culture,
architecture,
music and
gastronomy, playing an important role
throughout much of its existence; it is over 2,800 years old.
Naples is
located halfway between two volcanic areas, the volcano Mount Vesuvius
and the Phlegraean Fields
, sitting on the coast by the Gulf of Naples
.
Naples is one of the oldest cities of the
western world, whose current urban structure
retains elements of its long and eventful history. Founded by the
Ancient Greeks as "Νεάπολις",
Neápolis (New City), it held an
important role in
Magna
Graecia and then as part of the
Roman Republic in the central province of the
Empire.
The city has seen a multitude of
civilizations come and go, each leaving their mark and now the
historic city centre is listed by UNESCO
as a
World Heritage
Site.
Naples was preeminently the capital city of a kingdom which bore
its name from 1282 until 1816 in the form of the
Kingdom of Naples, then in union with
Sicily it was the capital of the
Two Sicilies until the
Italian unification. Naples has
profoundly influenced many areas of Europe and beyond .
The city proper has a population of around 1 million people: Naples
is the most densely populated major city in Italy.
The population of
urban area is estimated by
Eurostat to be 2.25 million, while the
Naples metropolitan area,
according to different sources, is the second after the
Milan
metropolitan area (with 4,434,136 inhabitants
according to SVIMEZ DATA or 4,996,084 according to CENSIS
INSTITUTE) or the third (3.1 million inhabitants according to
OECD) most populated metropolitan area in Italy.
Naples is
ranked fourth in Italy, for economic strength, after Rome
, Milan and
Turin
. Naples is a thriving and cosmopolitan
metropolis, and is the world's 91st richest city by purchasing
power, with a GDP of $43 billion, beating the
economies of Bucharest
and Zurich.
The
port of
Naples
is also one of the most important in Europe.
Even though the city has had a remarkable economic growth, and
unemployment levels in Campania and the
city have decreased since 1999, Naples is unfortunately still
characterized by political and economic
corruption and a thriving
black market empire. Italian mega-companies,
such as
MSC, are headquartered in the
city.
Since 1958, the city
hosts the Center Rai of Naples (media), while in the Bagnoli discrict there is a NATO
base.
Naples was the
most
bombed Italian city of
World War
II. In the twentieth century, first under fascism and
reconstruction following the Second World War built much of the
periphery. In recent decades, Naples has adopted a business
district (the
Centro Direzionale)
with skyscrapers and infrastructure such as the TGV in Rome or in a
subway expansion: it will include half of the region. The
metropolis will host the
IAC 2012 and the
Universal Forum of Cultures
2013.
The city is also synonymous with
pizza, which
originated in the city. A strong part of Neapolitan culture which
has had wide reaching effects is
music, including the invention of the
romantic guitar and the
mandolin as well as strong contributions to
opera and
folk
standards. There are popular characters and figures who have
come to symbolise Naples; these include the
patron saint of the city
Januarius,
Pulcinella,
and the
Sirens from the
epic Greek poem the
Odyssey.
History
Greek birth, Roman acquisition
The
history of the city can be traced back to the 8th century BC when inhabitants of the nearby
Greek colony Cumae
founded a
city called Parthenope; Cumae itself had
been founded by people from Euboea
, Greece
. The
exact reasons for doing so are not known for certain, but the
Cumaeans built
Neapolis (meaning New City)
next to the old Parthenope.
Around this time they had held off invasion
attempts from the Etruscans
. The new city grew thanks to the influence of
powerful Greek city-state Siracusa
and at some point the new and old cities on the
Gulf of
Naples
merged together to become one. The city became an
ally of the Roman Republic against
Carthage
; the strong walls surrounding Neapolis stopped
invader Hannibal from entering.
During the
Samnite Wars, the city, now
a bustling centre of trade, was
captured by the
Samnites; however, the Romans soon took it from them
and made Neapolis a
Roman
colony. The city was greatly respected by the Romans as a place
of
Hellenistic culture: the
people maintained their
Greek
language and customs; elegant
villas,
aqueducts,
public
baths, an
odeon, a
theatre and the
Temple
of Dioscures were built, and many powerful emperors chose to
holiday in the city including
Claudius and
Tiberius. It was during this period that
Christianity came to Naples;
apostles St.
Peter and
St. Paul are said to have
preached in the city. Also,
St. Januarius,
who would become Naples'
patron saint,
was martyred there.Last emperor of
Western Roman Empire,
Romulus Augustulus, was sent in
exile in Naples by king
Odoacer.
Duchy of Naples
Following
the decline of the Western Roman
Empire, Naples was captured by the Ostrogoths, a Germanic people, and incorporated into
the Ostrogothic
Kingdom
. However,
Belisarius of the
Byzantine Empire (also known as the Eastern
Roman Empire) took the city back in 536, after famously entering
the city via the
aqueduct.
The Gothic Wars waged on, and
Totila briefly took the city for the
Ostrogoths in 543, before, finally, the Battle of Mons Lactarius on the
slopes of Vesuvius
decided Byzantine rule. Naples was expected
to keep in contact with the
Exarchate of Ravenna, which was the
centre of Byzantine power on the
Italian peninsula.
After the exarchate fell a Duchy of
Naples was created; though Naples continued with its Greco-Roman culture, it eventually
switched allegiance under Duke Stephen II to Rome
rather than
Constantinople
, putting it under papal
suzerainty by 763.
The years between 818 and 832 were a particularly confusing period
in regard to Naples' relation with the
Byzantine Emperor, with feuding
between local pretenders to the ducal throne.
Theoctistus was appointed without
imperial approval; this was later revoked and
Theodore II took his place. However,
the general populance chased him from the city and instead elected
Stephen III, a man who minted
coins with his own initials not that of the Byzantine Emperor.
Naples gained complete independence by 840.
The duchy was under direct control of
Lombards for a brief period, after the capture by
Pandulf IV of the
Principality of Capua, long term rival
of Naples; however this only lasted three years before the
culturally Greco-Roman influenced dukes were reinstated. By the
11th century, like many territories in
the area, Naples hired
Norman merecenaries,
the Christian
descendants of the
Vikings, to battle their rivals; Duke
Sergius IV hired
Rainulf Drengot to battle Capua for him. By
1137, the Normans had grown hugely in influence, controlling
previous independent principalities and duchies such as
Capua,
Benevento,
Salerno,
Amalfi,
Sorrento and
Gaeta; it was in this year that Naples, the
last independent duchy in the southern part of the peninsula, came
under Norman control.
The last ruling duke of the duchy Sergius VII was forced to surrender to
Roger II, who had proclaimed
himself King of Sicily
seven years earlier; this saw Naples joining the Kingdom of Sicily, where Palermo
was the capital.
The Kingdom
Norman to Angevin
After a period as a Norman kingdom, the
Kingdom of Sicily was passed on to the
Hohenstaufens who were a
highly powerful Germanic
royal house of
Swabian origins. The
University of Naples Federico
II was founded by
Frederick II in the city,
the oldest state university in the world, making Naples the
intellectual centre of the kingdom.
Conflict between the Hohenstaufen house
and the Papacy, led in 1266 to Pope Innocent IV crowning Angevin Dynasty duke Charles I as the king of the kingdom:
Charles officially moved the capital from Palermo to Naples where
he resided at the Castel Nuovo
. During this period much
Gothic architecture sprang up around
Naples, including the
Naples
Cathedral, which is the main church of the city.
In 1282, after the
Sicilian
Vespers, the kingdom split in half. The Angevin
Kingdom of Naples included the southern
part of the Italian peninsula, while the island of
Sicily became the
Aragonese Kingdom of Sicily. The wars continued
until the
peace of
Caltabellotta in 1302, which saw
Frederick III recognised as king of
the Isle of Sicily, while
Charles
II was recognised as the king of Naples by
Pope Boniface VIII. Despite the split,
Naples grew in importance, attracting
Pisan and
Genoese merchants,
Tuscan bankers, and with them some of the most
championed
Renaissance artists
of the time, such as
Boccaccio,
Petrarch and
Giotto. In the midst of the 14. century,
The
Hungarian Angevin king ,
Louis the Great captured the city
several times.
Alfonso I
conquered Naples after his victory against the last
Angevin king,
René, Naples was unified for a brief
period with Sicily again.
Aragonese to Bourbon
Sicily and Naples were separated in 1458 but remained as
dependencies of
Aragon under
Ferrante.
The new dynasty
enhanced Naples' commerce by establishing relations with the
Iberian
peninsula
. Naples also became a centre of the
Renaissance, with artists such as
Laurana,
da Messina,
Sannazzaro and
Poliziano arriving in the city. During 1501 Naples
became under direct rule from
France at the time of
Louis XII, as Neapolitan king
Frederick was taken as a prisoner to
France; this lasted only four years.
Spain
won Naples
at the Battle of
Garigliano and, as a result, Naples became under direct rule as
part of the Spanish Empire throughout
the entire Habsburg Spain
period. The Spanish sent
viceroys
to Naples to directly
deal with local issues: the most important of which was
Pedro
Álvarez de Toledo, who was responsible for considerable social,
economic and urban progress in the city; he also supported the
Inquisition.
During
this period Naples became Europe's second largest city after only
Paris
. It was a cultural powerhouse during the
Baroque era as home to artists including
Caravaggio,
Rosa and
Bernini, philosophers such as
Telesio,
Bruno,
Campanella and
Vico, and writers such as
Battista Marino. A revolution led by
local
fisherman Masaniello saw the creation of a brief
independent
Neapolitan
Republic, though this last only a few months before Spanish
rule was regained. In 1656 the
plague
killed about half of Naples' 300,000 inhabitants.
Finally, by 1714, the
Spanish ceased to rule Naples as a result of the War of the Spanish Succession;
it was the Austrian
Charles
VI who ruled from Vienna
, similarly
with viceroys. However, the
War of the Polish Succession
saw the Spanish regain Sicily and Naples as part of a
personal union, which in the
Treaty of Vienna were recognised as
independent under a cadet branch of the Spanish
Bourbons in 1738 under
Charles VII.
During the time of
Ferdinand IV, the
French Revolution made its way to Naples:
Horatio Nelson,
an ally of the Bourbons, even arrived in the city in 1798 to warn
against it.
However, Ferdinand was forced to retreat and
fled to Palermo
, where he was protected by a British fleet. Naples' lower classes the lazzaroni were strongly pious and Royalist,
favouring the Bourbons; in the mêlée that followed, they fought the
Neapolitan pro-Republican
aristocracy, causing a civil
war. The Republicans conquered Castel Sant'Elmo
and proclaimed a Parthenopaean Republic, secured by
the French Army. A counter-revolutionary religious army
of lazzaroni known as the sanfedisti under Fabrizio Ruffo was raised; they had great
success and the French surrendered the Neapolitan castles and were
allowed to sail back to Toulon
.
Ferdinand IV was restored as king; however, after only seven years
Napoleon conquered the kingdom
and instated
Bonapartist kings
including his brother
Joseph
Bonaparte.
With the help of the Austrian
Empire
and allies, the Bonapartists were defeated in the
Neapolitan War and Bourbon Ferdinand
IV once again regained the throne and the kingdom. The
Congress of Vienna in 1815 saw
the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily combined to form the
Two Sicilies, with Naples as the
capital city. Naples became the first city on the Italian peninsula
to have a railway in 1839 with the construction of the
Naples–Portici line,
there were many factories throughout the kingdom making it a highly
important trade centre.
Italian unification, present day
After the
Expedition of the
Thousand led by Giuseppe
Garibaldi, culminating in the controversial Siege of
Gaeta
, Naples became part of the Kingdom of Italy in
1861 as part of the Italian
unification, ending Bourbon rule. The kingdom of the
Two Sicilies had been
wealthy and 80 million
ducats were taken from
the banks as a contribution to the new Italian
treasury, while other former states in the Italian
unification were forced to pay far less. The economy of the area
formerly known as Two Sicilies collapsed, leading to an
unprecedented
wave of emigration,
with estimates claiming at least 4 million of those who left from
1876–1913 were from Naples or near Naples.
Naples was the
most
bombed Italian city of
World War
II. Though Neapolitans did not rebel under
Italian fascism, Naples was the first
Italian city to rise up against
German
military occupation; the people
rose up and freed their own city completely by October 1, 1943.
The
symbol of the rebirth of Naples was the rebuilding of Santa
Chiara
which had been destroyed in a United States Army Air corps
raid. Special funding from the Italian
government's Fund for the
South from 1950 to 1984 helped the economy to improve somewhat,
including the rejuvenation of the Piazza del Plebiscito
and other city landmarks. Naples still has
some issues, however: high
unemployment
and the
Naples waste
management issue, the latter of which the media has attributed
to the
Camorra organised crime network. Recently, the
Italian Government under
Silvio Berlusconi has held senior meetings
in Naples to demonstrate that they intend to tackle these problems
once and for all.
Architecture, features and city layouts

A panoramic view of the Bay of
Naples.
- See also, Buildings and
structures in Naples
Naples has one of the greatest density of cultural resources and
monuments that include 2800 years of history (castles, fountains,
churches, ancient architecture, etc.): the most prominent forms of
architecture in Naples are from the
Medieval,
Renaissance and
Baroque periods.
The historic centre
of Naples is typically the most fruitful for architecture and is in
fact listed by UNESCO
as a
World Heritage Site. A
striking feature of Naples is the fact that it has 448 historical
churches, making it one of the most
Catholic cities in the world.
Main piazza, palaces and castles
- See also, Palaces in
Naples
The
central and main open city square or
piazza of the city is the Piazza del
Plebiscito
. It was started by Bonapartist king
Joachim Murat and finished by Bourbon king
Ferdinand IV.
It is
bounded on the east by the Royal Palace
and on the west by the church of San
Francesco di Paola
with the colonnades extending to both sides.
Nearby is
the Teatro di
San Carlo
, which is the oldest and largest opera house on the Italian peninsula.
Directly
across from San Carlo is Galleria Umberto
, a shopping centre and
active centre of Neapolitan social life in general.
Naples is
well-known for its historic castles: the ancient Castel Nuovo
is one of the most notable architectural
representatives on the city, also known as Maschio Angioino; it was built during
the time of Charles I, the first
ever king of
Naples. Castel Nuovo has hosted some historical
religious events: for example, in 1294,
Pope Celestine V resigned as pope in a hall
of the castle, and following this
Pope Boniface VIII was elected pope here
by the cardinal
collegium,
and immediately moved to Rome.
The
castle which Nuovo replaced in importance was the Norman founded
Castel
dell'Ovo
.
Its name
means Egg Castle and it is built on the tiny islet Megarides, where the Cumaean
colonists founded the city. The third castle of
note is Sant'Elmo
which was completed in 1329 and is built in the
shape of a star. During the uprising of
Masaniello, the Spanish took refuge in
Sant'Elmo to escape the revolutionaries.
Museums
Naples hosts a wealth of historical museums and some of the most
important in the country.
The Naples
National Archaeological Museum
is one of the main museums, considered one of the
most important for artifacts
of the Roman Empire in the
world. It also hosts many of the antiques unearthed
at Pompeii
and Herculaneum
, as well as some artifacts from the Greek and Renaissance periods.
Previously a Bourbon palace, now a museum
and art gallery, the Museo di
Capodimonte
is probably the most important in Naples.
The art
gallery
features paintings from the 13th to the 18th century including
major works by
Simone Martini,
Raphael,
Titian,
Caravaggio,
El
Greco and many others, including Neapolitan School painters
Jusepe de Ribera and
Luca Giordano. The royal apartments are
furnished with antique 18th century furniture and a collection of
porcelain and
majolica from the various royal
residences: the famous
Capodimonte
Porcelain Factory was just adjacent to the palace.
The
Certosa di
San Martino
was formerly a monastery
complex but is now a museum and remains one of the most visible
landmarks of Naples. Displayed within the museum are Spanish
and Bourbon-era artifacts, as well as displays of the
nativity scene, considered to be among the
finest in the world.
Pietrarsa
railway museum is located in the city: Naples has a proud
railway history and the
museum features, amongst many other things, the Bayard, the first
locomotive in the Italian peninsula.
Other
museums include the Villa Pignatelli
and Palazzo
Como
, and one of Italy's national libraries (the
Biblioteca Nazionale Vittorio Emanuele
III
) is also located in the city.
Churches, religious buildings and structures
- See also, Churches
in Naples and Archdiocese of
Naples
Hosting the
Archdiocese of Naples,
the
Catholic faith is highly
important to the people of Naples and there are hundreds of
churches in the city. The
Cathedral of
Naples is the most important
place
of worship in the city, each year on
September 19 it hosts the
Miracle of
Saint Januarius, the city's
patron saint. In the miracle which thousands of
Neapolitans flock to witness, the dried blood of Januarius is said
to turn to liquid when brought close to
relics
said to be of his body: this is one of the most important
traditions for Neapolitans. Below is a selective list of some of
the best-known churches, chapels, monastery complexes and religious
structures in Naples;
Other features
There are various other interesting features of note around Naples.
Underneath Naples
there is a series of caves and structures created by centuries of
mining, which is in part of an underground
geothermal zone. The general public are
able to go on tours of the underground and there is even a museum.
Aside
from the main piazza there are two
more in the form of Piazza Dante
and Piazza
dei Martiri. The latter is somewhat controversial: it
originally just had a memorial to
martyrs but
in 1866, after the
Italian
unification, four lions were added, representing the four
rebellions against the Bourbons.
Founded in 1667 by the Spanish, the
San Gennaro dei Poveri is a
hospital for the poor which is still in existence
today.
It
was a forerunner of a much more ambitious project, the gigantic
Bourbon Hospice for the Poor
started by Charles
III. This was for the destitute and ill of the city; it
also provided a self-sufficient community where the poor would live
and work: today it is no longer a hospital.
Of the
public parks in Naples, the most prominent is
the Villa
Comunale
,
previously known as the Royal Garden as its building was ordered by
Bourbon king Ferdinand
IV in the 1780s. The second most important park is Parco Virgiliano which is very green and
has views towards the tiny volcanic islet of Nisida
; beyond
that in the distance are Procida
and Ischia
. It
was named after
Virgil the classical Roman
poet who is thought to be
entombed nearby.
Geography
In the
area surrounding Naples are the islands of Procida
, Capri
and
Ischia
, which are
reached by hydrofoils and ferries. Sorrento
and the Amalfi Coast
are situated south of Naples. The Roman ruins of
Pompeii
, Herculaneum
and Stabiae
, which were destroyed in the eruption of Vesuvius
in 79 AD, are also nearby. Naples is also near
the volcanic area known as the Campi Flegrei
and the port towns of Pozzuoli
and Baia
, which
were part of the vast Roman naval facility, Portus Julius
.
Quarters

Quarters of Naples
Shown above are the thirty quarters of Naples: these thirty
neighbourhoods or "
quartiere" as they are
known, are grouped together into ten governmental community
boards.
Climate
Naples enjoys a typical
Mediterranean climate with mild, wet
winters and warm to hot, dry summers.
The mild climate and
the geographical richness of the bay of Naples
made it famous during Roman times, when emperors
chose the city as a favourite holiday location.
Demographics
The population of the centre area (municipality - comune di Napoli)
is around one million people.
Its greater metropolitan area, sometimes known
as Greater Naples has an additional population of 4.4
million and include all the province and over; the towns which are
usually included within this area are Arzano
, Casandrino
, Casavatore
, Casoria
, Cercola
, Marano di
Napoli
, Melito di
Napoli
, Mugnano di Napoli
, Portici
, Pozzuoli
, Quarto
, San Giorgio
a Cremano
, San Sebastiano al Vesuvio
, Volla
.
The
demographic profile for the
Neapolitan province in general is quite young: 19% are under age
14, while 13% are over 65, compared to the national average of 14%
and 19%, respectively. There is a higher percentage of females
(52.4%) than males (47.6%). Naples currently has a higher
birth rate than other parts of Italy with 10.46
births per 1,000 inhabitants compared to the Italian average of
9.45 births.
Unlike many northern Italian cities there are far fewer immigrants
in Naples. 98.5% of the people are
Italians.
In 2006, there were a total of 19,188
foreigners in the actual city of Naples; the majority of foreigners
are Eastern European, coming
particularly from Ukraine
and Poland
.
Non-Europeans in general are very low in number, however there are
some small
Sri Lankan and
East Asian immigrant communities.
Statistics show that the vast majority of immigrants are female;
this is because male workers tend to head North.
Education
There are many public and private institutions of
higher education in Naples, as well as
numerous institutes and research centres. Naples hosts what is
thought to be the oldest state university in the world in the form
of the
University of
Naples Federico II, which was founded by
Frederick II during 1224.
It is by far the most important
university in southern Italy, with around 100,000
students and over 3000 professors.
Part of the university is the important
Botanical
Garden of Naples
which was opened in 1807 by Giuseppe Bonaparte (using Bourbon king Ferdinand IV's
plans). Its 15
hectares feature
around 25,000 samples of vegetation, covering about 10,000 plant
species.
People from the city are also served by the
Seconda Università
degli Studi di Napoli, the second most important
university of the city, opened far more recently in 1989, which,
despite its name, has strong links to the nearby
province of Caserta.
A unique centre of
education in the city is the Istituto Universitario
Orientale which specialises in Eastern culture, founded by Jesuit missionary Matteo Ripa in 1732 after
he returned from work in the court of Kangxi Emperor of the Manchu
Qing
Dynasty
in China.There
are other prominent universities in Naples too, such as the
Parthenope University of
Naples, the private
Istituto
Universitario Suor Orsola Benincasa and the Jesuit-run
Theological
Seminary of Southern Italy. In keeping with its strong musical
legacy, Naples has a place to study music in the form of the
San Pietro a Maiella
music conservatory.
The earliest music conservatories of Naples
go back to the 1500s under the Spanish
rule.
Governance
Politics
Each of the 8,101
comune in Italy is
today represented locally by an elected
mayor
and a
city council, known as a
sindaco and informally called the first citizen. This
system or one very similar to it, has been in place since 1808 with
the invasion of the
Napoleonic
forces. When the
Kingdom of
the Two Sicilies was restored, the system was kept in place
with members of the nobility such as Dukes and Marquesses filling
the role. By the end of the 19th century as part of Italy,
party politics had begun to emerge; during
the
fascist era each commune was
represented by a
podestà. During the post-war period, the
political landscape of Naples has been neither strongly right nor
left — both
Christian democracts
and
democratic socialists have
filled the position at different times with roughly equal
frequency. Currently the mayor of Naples is
Rosa Russo Iervolino of
The Olive Tree, she has
held the position since 2001.
Administrative subdivisions
| Map |
Municipality |
Population |
President |
Quarters |
 |
| I |
84,067 |
Fabio Chiosi |
Chiaia, Posillipo & San
Ferdinando |
| II |
91,536 |
Alberto Patruno |
Montecalvario, San Giuseppe, Avvocata, Porto,
Pendino & Mercato |
| III |
103,633 |
Alfonso Principe |
Stella & San Carlo all'Arena |
| IV |
96,078 |
David Lebro |
San Lorenzo, Vicaria, Poggioreale & Zona Industriale |
| V |
119,978 |
Mario Coppeto |
Arenella &
Vomero |
| VI |
84,067 |
Anna Cozzino |
San Giovanni a Teduccio , Barra &
Ponticelli |
| VII |
91,460 |
Giuseppe Esposito |
Miano, Secondigliano & S.Pietro a
Patierno |
| VIII |
92,616 |
Carmine Malinconico |
Chiaiano, Piscinola-Marianella & Scampìa |
| IX |
106,299 |
Fabio Tirelli |
Pianura & Soccavo |
| X |
101,192 |
Giuseppe Balzamo |
Bagnoli & Fuorigrotta |
Economy
Naples is
Italy's fourth most important city for economic strength, coming
after Rome
, Milan
and Turin
. It
is the world's 91st richest city by purchasing power, with a GDP of
$43 billion.
Were Naples a country, it would have the
world's 68th biggest economy, near the size of that of Qatar
.
The
economy of Naples and its closest surrounding area is based largely
in tourism, commerce, industry and
agriculture; Naples also acts as a busy
cargo terminal, and the port of
Naples
is one of the Mediterranean's biggest and most
important. The city has had a remarkable economic growth
since the war, and unemployment in the region has gone down
dramatically since 1999. Naples used to be a busy industrial city,
though many of the factories are no longer there, and Naples is
still characterized by high levels of
corruption and
organized crime.
Electronics and aircraft industries
Naples
also hosted important electronics industries such as Olivetti research department in Pozzuoli
, now dismissed. Also Naples is important for
its
light aircraft industries
Partenavia and
Vulcanair (nowadays both firms belong to
Vulcanair) and hosted several departments of big aircraft
industries of
Aeritalia. Aeritalia then
joined with
Selenia (that were a group of
electronic and
radar defense military
industries) with the name of
Alenia. Alenia
is still present in Naples, but its production relevance is
important but nowadays shrinking.
Manufacturing
The only
relevant industry of Naples remains actually the Alfa Romeo automobile factory at nearby Pomigliano
d'Arco
; the word "Romeo" in the company name is a
reference to Neapolitan engineer Nicola
Romeo.
Shipbuilding
Ship construction yards are present in
territory of Naples, Pozzuoli
and in Castellammare di Stabia
(motor yachts, fishing boats and fishing ships)
and also in Castellammare di Stabia
is present a big shipyard called Cantieri
Navali which is property of Fincantieri.
Food industry
One of the first large Italian companies producing canned
vegetables,
Cirio, was founded in Naples.
Naples and the surrounding area also has a large number of smaller
firms manufacturing canned vegetables, mostly
tomato sauce.
Family-sized pasta
companies in Torre
Annunziata
collapsed around 1949-1950 due to the rise of
industrial pasta makers in northern Italy. Only the slow food
typical artisan-made pasta in Gragnano
survived and it is one of the most apprecciated
typical products of Naples surroundings. Fior di latte cheese is made in the territory
of Agerola
, Lettere
and Gragnano
.
The wine
industry is also prevalent in the Naples area, mainly in Gragnano,
Lettere, Ercolano
and Pozzuoli
. Naples is also known worldwide for
Neapolitan coffee made with the historical
Neapolitan flip coffee pot, which
then led to the creation of the
espresso
coffee machine and Moka Express coffee pot. There are still some
little industries roasting
coffee beans and
producing ground coffee to be used with Neapolitan coffee
machines.
Economic relevance
The economy is measured on a provincial level; the
province of Naples is placed 94th out of
the total of 103 provinces in Italy in terms of
gross value added. Statistics do not
include wealth generated by the
black market or untaxed
wages. It is not uncommon for Neapolitan workers to
move North because unemployment is at around 28%. However, the
unemployment level in Campania has been decreasing, and today is
only 11.2%. The business centre of Naples is the
Centro Direzionale. This was built
only in recent times and features skyscraper technology designed by
Kenzo Tange; it is an attempt to
centralise and improve the business and economy of Naples, also
providing jobs with its hotels and shops.
In recent times, there has been a move away from traditional
agriculture-based economy in the province to one based on
service industries. In early
2002 there were over 249,590 enterprises operating in the province
of Naples registered in the Chamber of Commerce Public Register.
This sector employs the majority of the people, though more than
half of these are small enterprises with fewer than 20 workers; 70
companies are medium-sized with more than 200 workers; and 15 have
more than 500 workers. Employment in the province of Naples in
different sectors breaks down as follows:
Transport
Naples is well connected in regards to major motorways, known in
Italy as
autostrada.
From
Naples all the way north to Milan
is the
A1 known as autostrada del
Sole (motorway of the sun), the longest transalpine motorway on the peninsula.
There are
other autostrada from Naples too, such as the A3 which goes southwards down to
Salerno
where the motorway to Reggio
Calabria
begins, as well as the A16 which goes across
east to Canosa
. The latter is called the autostrada dei
Due Mari (motorway of the Two Seas) because it connects the
Tyrrhenian
Sea
to the Adriatic Sea
.
Within the actual city itself there are many
public transport services, including trams,
buses,
funiculars and trolleybuses. Three
public
elevators are active within the
bridge of Chiaia, in via Acton and nearby the Sanità Bridge. Naples
also has its own
Naples
Metro, the underground
rapid
transit railway system of the
city which has integrated into one single service system the
several railways lines of Naples and its
metro stations.
Suburban rail services are provided by
Trenitalia,
Circumvesuviana,
Ferrovia Cumana and
Metronapoli.

Spanish Quarters traffic.
The main
general train station of the city is
Napoli
Centrale
, which is located in Piazza Garibaldi; another
significant station is the Napoli Campi Flegrei. Naples has
lots of narrow streets, so the general public commonly use compact
hatchback cars and
scooters are especially common. Naples
is now connected to Rome by a
high-speed
railway with trains running at almost , reducing journey time
to under an hour; the system was introducted in 2007.
The port
of Naples has several ferry, hydrofoil and
SWATH catamarans services open to the general public,
most of which are to places within the Neapolitan province such as Capri
, Ischia
and
Sorrento
, or the Salernitan
province, such as Salerno
, Positano
and Amalfi
. There are however some which go to
destinations further afield, such as Sicily,
Sardinia, Ponza
and the
Aeolian
Islands
. There are many
enterprises at the port, which is important for
transferring
cargo and is a growing centre of
commerce in general.
Within the scope of
suburb San Pietro a Patierno
is the Naples International Airport
, the most important airport in southern Italy,
which serves millions of people each year with around 140 flights
arriving or departing daily.
Culture
Cuisine
The city
has a long history of producing a variety of famous dishes and wines; it
draws its influence from different civilisations which have ruled
the city at various times such as the Greeks,
Spanish
and French
. Neapolitan
cuisine emerged completely as its own distinct form in the 18th
century. The ingredients are typically rich in taste while
remaining affordable to the general populace.
Perhaps the best-known aspect of Neapolitan cooking is its rich
savoury dishes. Naples is traditionally held as the home of
pizza. This originated as a meal of the poor,
but under
Ferdinand
IV it became better known: famously, the
Margherita was named after
Queen Margherita after a visit to the
city. Cooked traditionally in a wood-burning
oven, ingredients are strictly regulated by a
law dating from 2004, and must be composed of wheat
flour type "00" with the addition of flour type "0"
yeast, natural water, peeled
tomatoes or fresh
cherry
tomatoes, marine salt, and extra virgin
olive oil.
Spaghetti is
associated with the city and is commonly eaten with the sauce
ragù: a Neapolitan symbol is
folklore figure
Pulcinella eating a plate of spaghetti. Others
include
parmigiana di melanzane,
mozzarella,
spaghetti alle vongole and
casatiello.
Naples also has some famous
sweet dishes,
including colourful
gelato, similar though
more
fruit-based than
ice
cream. Some of the
pastry dishes include:
zeppole,
babà,
sfogliatelle and
pastiera, the latter of which is prepared
especially for
Easter. Another seasonal sweet
is
struffoli, a sweet tasting
honey dough decorated and eaten around
Christmas.Naples is also worldwide famous
for its neapolitan coffee, made with historical neapolitan
coffee pot called "cuccuma" or
cuccumella, which then lead the invention of
Espresso coffee machine and inspired
Moka Express coffee pot. Many little industries
for roasting and grounding coffee beans mixed from the best coffee
qualities produced worldwide are present in the territory of
Naples.There are some beverages from Naples also: it produces
wines from the Vesuvius area such as
Lacryma Christi ("tear of
Christ") and
Terzigno. Also from Naples is
limoncello the highly popular
lemon liqueur.
Film
Naples has been the setting in literature and in film. Comedies set
in Naples include
It Started in
Naples and
Dino Risi's
Scent of a Woman.
Language
The city of Naples has developed its own
language, the
Naples
dialect, which is mainly spoken in the city, and the region of
Campania, has also been diffused in other
areas of
Southern Italy. On October
14, 2008 a law by the Region of Campania stated that the Neapolitan
language had to be protected.
The name is often given to the varied
Italo-Western group of dialects of
Southern Italy; for example
Ethnologue groups the dialects as a separate
Romance language called
Napoletano-Calabrese.
This linguistic group is spoken throughout
most of southern continental Italy
, including
the Gaeta
and
Sora districts of southern Lazio, the southern part of Marche and Abruzzo, Molise, Basilicata,
northern Calabria, and northern and central
Puglia
. As of 1976, there were 7,047,399
theoretical
native speaker of this
group of dialects.
Music
Naples has played an important and vibrant role over the centuries
in the general history of western
European musical traditions. The
history of Naples as a strong musical
power can be traced back to the time of Spanish rule where
organised
music
conservatories of Naples were first introduced. It was during
the late
Baroque period that
Alessandro Scarlatti (father of
Domenico Scarlatti) established
the Neapolitan school of
opera; this was in
the form of
opera seria which was a new
development for its time. Another form of opera originating in
Naples is
opera buffa, a comic opera
strongly linked to
Battista
Pergolesi and
Piccinni;
later
Rossini and
Mozart would use the genre.
The
grandiose Teatro di
San Carlo
built in 1737, the oldest working theatre in
Europe, was the operatic centre of the city and remains so to this
day.
The earliest six-string
guitar was created by
a Neapolitan named Gaetano Vinaccia in 1779 (known as the
romantic guitar); the Vinaccia family had
also developed the
mandolin. Along with the
Spanish, Neapolitans became pioneers of
classical guitar music with
Ferdinando Carulli and
Mauro Giuliani being prominent exponents.
Giuliani
was actually from further south in the Kingdom of Naples – Apulia
- but had moved to Naples; Giuliani is considered
to be one of the greatest guitar players
and composers of the 19th century, along with his great Catalan
contemporary Fernando
Sor. Another Neapolitan
musical
artist who had an impact on the world stage is
opera singer
Enrico
Caruso, one of the most famous and respected
tenors of all time: he was considered a man of the
people in Naples and came from a
working
class background.
Perhaps the most well known part of Neapolitan music is the
Canzone Napoletana
style, essentially the
traditional
music of the city with a repertoire of hundreds of
folk songs, some of which can be traced back to the
1200s. The songs
O sole mio and
Funiculì
Funiculà are part of this style and are known far and wide
outside of Naples. The genre became a formal institution in 1835
thanks to the introduction of the annual
Festival of Piedigrotta songwriting competition. Some
of the best-known recording artists in this field includes Roberto
Murolo, Sergio Bruni and
Renato
Carosone. There are other forms of music played in Naples which
are not well known outside the area but hugely popular within it,
such as
cantautore (singer-songwriter) and
sceneggiata, which has been described as a
musical soap
opera; the most well known artist of this style is
Mario Merola.
Sports

SSC Napoli's badge on the pitch.
Football is by far the most
popular sport in Naples. Brought to the city by the
English during the early 1900s, it is deeply
embedded in local culture: it is played by everyone from the
scugnizzi (
street children
of Naples) to professional level.
The best-known club from the city is
SSC Napoli who play at the
Stadio
San Paolo
in Fuorigrotta. They play in the
Serie A league and won the
Scudetto twice during the time of
Diego Maradona.They have also won the
UEFA Cup before.
The city has produced numerous professional players, the most
famous of whom are
Ciro Ferrara and
Fabio Cannavaro. Cannavaro is the
current national team captain and led
Italy to the
2006 World Cup as captain and was
World Player of the
Year.
Some of the smaller clubs from the city
include Sporting
Neapolis and Internapoli who play at the
Stadio
Arturo Collana
. The city also has participants in
other sports though less popular:
Eldo
Napoli represent the city in
basketball's variation of
Serie A playing at
Bagnoli. Partenope Rugby are the best-known
rugby union side, winning the rugby version of
Serie A twice. Other sports
played to some extent include
water polo,
horse racing and
sailing. As well as
fencing,
boxing,
taekwondo
and other
martial arts. The "Accademia
Nazionale di Scherma" (National Academy and Fence School of Naples)
is the only place in Italy where the titles "Master of Sword" and
"Master of
Kendo" can be obtained.
Notable people
- Statius (45 – 96), poet
- Pope Boniface V (died 625),
pope
- Pope Urban VI (1318 – 1389),
pope
- Joan I of Naples (1328 – 1382),
queen
- Pope Boniface IX (1356 – 1404),
pope
- Alfonso II of Naples (1448
– 1495), king
- Jacopo Sannazaro (1458 – 1530),
poet
- Pirro Ligorio (1510 – 1583),
architect
- Luca Valerio (1552 – 1618),
mathematician
- Giambattista Marino (1569 –
1625), poet
- Salvator Rosa (1615 – 1673), poet,
satirist, painter
- Francesco Antonio
Picchiati (1619 – 1694), architect
- Masaniello (1622 – 1647),
revolutionary
- Gennaro Annese (1604 – 1648),
revolutionary
- Luca Giordano (1634 – 1705),
painter
- Ludovico Sabbatini (1650 –
1724), religious teacher, priest
- Giambattista Vico (1668 –
1744), philosopher
- Ferdinando Sanfelice (1675
– 1748), painter
- Domenico Antonio
Vaccaro (1678 – 1745) architect, painter
- Domenico Scarlatti (1685 –
1757), composer
- Nicola Porpora (1686 – 1768),
composer
- Alphonsus Liguori (1696 –
1787), saint, writer
- Ferdinand I of the
Two Sicilies (1751 – 1825), king
- Gaetano Filangieri (1752 –
1788), jurist
- Raffaele Sacco (1787 – 1872),
poet, inventor, lyricist
- Salvadore Cammarano (1801 –
1852), librettist, poet, playwright
- Domenico Morelli (1823 – 1901),
painter
- Lord Acton
(1834 – 1902), historian
- Peppino Turco (1846 – 1907),
songwriter, journalist
- Lamont Young (1851 –
1929), architect
- Vincenzo Gemito (1852 – 1929),
sculptor
- Ruggero Leoncavallo (1857 –
1919), composer
- Salvatore Di Giacomo (1860
– 1934), poet
- Ferdinando Russo (1866 – 1927),
poet, journalist, writer
- Victor Emmanuel III of
Italy (1869 – 1947), king
- Enrico Caruso (1873 – 1921), opera
singer
- Enrico De Nicola (1877 – 1959),
president, jurist, journalist
- Totò (1898 – 1967), actor
- Eduardo De Filippo (1900 –
1984), actor, writer
- Renato Caccioppoli (1904 –
1959), mathematician
- Renato Carosone (1920 – 2001),
singer-songwriter, musician
- Giorgio Napolitano (1925 – ),
politician, president
- Mario Merola (1934 – 2005),
singer
- Michele Campanella (1947 – ),
pianist and conductor
- Massimo Troisi (1953 – 1994),
actor
- Pino Daniele (1955 – ),
singer-songwriter, musician
- Fabio Cannavaro (1973 – ), World
Cup-winning footballer
- Antonio Di Natale (1977 – ),
national footballer
- Massimiliano Rosolino
(1978 – ), swimmer, olympian
- Roberto Saviano (1979 – ),
journalist, writer
Twinnings
Naples is involved in
town twinning
(known as
gemellaggio in Italian), a mutual partnership
with several cities. Below are partner cities listed on the
official website of the city of Naples;
Since
1995, the historic centre of Naples has been listed as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO
, a programme
which aims to catalogue, name, and conserve sites of outstanding
cultural or natural
importance to the common
heritage of mankind. The deciding committee who evaluate
potential candidates described Naples' centre as being "of
exceptional value", and went on to say that Naples' "setting
on
the
Bay of
Naples
gives it an outstanding universal value which has
had a profound influence".
See also
References
- http://www.unesco.it/patrimonio/elenco/napoli.htm
-
http://www.censis.it/files/Rapporto_annuale/2008/2_societa_italiana_2008.pdf
-
http://www.citymayors.com/statistics/richest-cities-2005.html
-
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/tgm/table.do?tab=table&init=1&plugin=1&language=en&pcode=tgs00010
-
http://www.diregiovani.it/gw/producer/dettaglio.aspx?id_doc=31468
- Article in Italian language of Il Denaro
- Ethnologue Napoletano-Calabrese
External links