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하이라이트 • 종교적 장소
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9월 16, 2025, Acquedotto Carolino
Wonderful aqueduct built by Vanvitelli to bring water to the Royal Palace of Caserta
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1월 22, 2024, Castello di Matinale
TO visit, it is still possible to climb up one of the 4 towers for a view over the entire valley
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1월 22, 2024, Santuario di Sant'Angelo a Palombara
Sanctuary with wonderful fall over the entire Caudina valley
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1월 22, 2024, Santuario di Sant'Angelo a Palombara
Clearance with Sant'Angelo Sanctuary in Palombara, with adjoining panoramic view of the Caudina valley.
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8월 24, 2023, Piazza della Vaccheria e Chiesa di Santa Maria delle Grazie
Piazza del Vaccheria is the main square of the Bourbon village, here is the characteristic church of Santa Maria delle Grazie.
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6월 26, 2023, Santuario di Sant'Angelo a Palombara
A wonderful place from which you can admire a sensational view of the whole area below.
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4월 20, 2023, Acquedotto Carolino
Pedaling on the state road, you pass right under the imposing 18th century Carolino Aqueduct. It was used to bring water to the Royal Palace of Caserta from the Fizzo springs, today it is no longer in use and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997 together with the Royal Palace of Caserta and the San Leucio complex.
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3월 3, 2023, Acquedotto Carolino
Aqueduct built in the mid-1700s to bring water from Mount Taburno to the Royal Palace of Caserta. Considered one of the most important engineering works of the 18th century.
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2월 25, 2023, Castello di Matinale
This castle was wanted by Tommaso II d'Aquino. Over the years it was the home of nobles, such as the Sicilian kings, but later also of brigands.
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11월 1, 2022, Santuario di Sant'Angelo a Palombara
S. Angelo in Palombara seems, more than a sacred place, a solitary and massive fortress. News of the locality and the Abbey can be found in documents of less than one thousand. The Diploma of Landolfo, Archbishop of Benevento, which contains the act of reconstruction or foundation of the Diocese of Sant 'Agata dei Goti, dated 14 December 970, speaks of the summit of the mountain called Palombara, as the boundary of the new Diocese. Even if there is no express mention of the church, the recall of the territory suggests that there must have been something there that could give rise to conflicts of jurisdiction in the future. The first act in which S. Angelo a Palombara is explicitly named is the diploma of Henry II dated 6 March 1022; those of Corrado follow, 8 June 1038; William, 1070; Pope Gregory VII, December 3, 1084; Pope Anacleto, 1130 and 1139. They are deeds in which the possession and dependence of numerous abbeys with their respective appurtenances and endowments as well as other real rights over people and things is recognized to the Monastery of Santa Sofia in Benevento.
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10월 30, 2022, Casertavecchia Medieval Village
Casertavecchia (fraction of Caserta) is a medieval village that rises on the slopes of the Tifatini mountains at about 401 meters high and 10 km away in the north-east direction from Caserta. The origins of Casertavecchia are still uncertain, but according to some information extrapolated from a writing by the Benedictine monk Erchemperto, already in the year 861 AD. there was an urban nucleus called "Casahirta" (from the Latin casa meaning village and hirta meaning harsh). The village has undergone various dominations over the course of history.
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9월 25, 2022, Santuario di Sant'Angelo a Palombara
S. Angelo in Palombara seems, more than a sacred place, a solitary and massive fortress. News of the locality and the Abbey can be found in documents of less than one thousand. The Diploma of Landolfo, Archbishop of Benevento, which contains the act of reconstruction or foundation of the Diocese of Sant 'Agata dei Goti, dated 14 December 970, speaks of the summit of the mountain called Palombara, as the boundary of the new Diocese. Even if there is no express mention of the church, the recall of the territory suggests that there must have been something there that could give rise to conflicts of jurisdiction in the future. The first act in which S. Angelo a Palombara is explicitly named is the diploma of Henry II dated 6 March 1022; those of Corrado follow, 8 June 1038; William, 1070; Pope Gregory VII, December 3, 1084; Pope Anacleto, 1130 and 1139. These are acts in which the possession and dependence of numerous abbeys with their respective appurtenances and endowments as well as other real rights over people and things is recognized at the Monastery of Santa Sofia in Benevento.
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9월 25, 2022, Castello di Matinale
The castle of Matinale, or castle of Rudovaco, is a castle of Cancello, a fraction of the municipality of San Felice a Cancello, in the province of Caserta. It stands on an elevation overlooking the entrance to the Suessola valley. The construction of the castle of Matinale is attributed to Tommaso II d'Aquino, count of Acerra, on the occasion of his wedding with Margherita di Svevia, illegitimate daughter of Emperor Frederick II, a wedding which took place before 1247. The bride's dowry included the fiefdom di Suessola, to which the Cancello hamlet also belonged. According to local tradition [2] an original Lombard fortification of the ninth century would have been the work of a certain Rudovaco and would have passed on his death to the count of Acerra, Cullezio. He wanted to join his castle of Acerra to that of Cancello with an underground path, causing the ruin of the western side and was unable to restore it following his death in battle. The castle was later restored or rebuilt by the Norman Ramperto and again by the Mattaloni counts in the 12th century. The castle hosted the kings of Sicily Guglielmo il Malo (1131-1166) and Manfredi di Svevia (1232-1266) and the Dukes of Rebursa and again, in the Angevin period, King Ladislao I and the Carafa in the Aragonese period. In the 15th century it was abandoned, having lost its military function. It was the seat of an inn and probably housed an archpriest church dedicated to St. Thomas the Apostle. In 1799 the French general Jean Étienne Championnet established his headquarters there and later became a den of brigands. It was donated at the beginning of the twentieth century by the D'Aquino family, princes of Caramanico, to the baron Giovanni Barracco. During the Second World War it hosted the allied command in 1943.
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9월 25, 2022, Castello di Matinale
The ruins of the castle are very impressive and are worth a visit. Too bad for the very poor enhancement of the site that deserves a better fate ...
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9월 18, 2022, Santuario di Sant'Angelo a Palombara
S. Angelo a Palombara, seen from the Caudina valley, and more particularly in the stretch between the locality (Botteghino) of San Felice Cancello and Arienzo, seems, more than a sacred place, a solitary and massive fortress, leaning forward on the side of the mountain , almost tending to watch over the industrious and fruitful plain. Nor does it lose this characteristic when you see it along the hills that the railway to Benevento touches to go up to Arpaia or when you run along the Appia, after Santa Maria a Vico. Continue reading on: https://www.comune.sanfeliceacancello.ce.it/pagina2323_santangelo-a-palombara.html
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9월 18, 2022, Castello di Matinale
The castle of Matinale, or Rudovaco, is a castle in Cancello, a hamlet of the municipality of S. Felice a Cancello, in the province of Caserta. It stands on an elevation that dominates the entrance to the Suessola valley. The construction of the Castle is attributed to Thomas II Aquinas, Count of Acerra. [....] According to local tradition, an original Lombard fortification from the 9th century was the work of a certain Rudovaco and passed upon his death to the Count of Acerra, Cullezio. He wanted to connect his castle of Acerra to that of Cancello with an underground route, causing the ruin of the western side and was unable to carry out the restoration following his death in battle. The castle was later restored or rebuilt by the Norman Ramperto and again by the Mattaloni counts in the 12th century. The castle hosted the kings of Sicily William the Evil (1131-1166) and Manfred of Swabia (1232-1266) and the dukes of Rebursa and again, in the Angevin era, King Ladislaus I and the Carafa in the Aragonese era. In the 15th century it was abandoned, having lost its military function. [....] It was donated at the beginning of the twentieth century by the D'Aquino family, princes of Caramanico, to Baron Giovanni Barracco. During the Second World War it hosted the Allied command in 1943. The castle has a square plan with square corner towers and a fifth tower on the north-west side to protect a postern. The tallest tower measures 20 m high. Splayed windows open in the towers and on the walls. The structures are in uncertain masonry, with corners in ashlar blocks, with wide smooth edges, over 7 m in height. The thickness of the masonry reaches approximately 2.5 m in the towers. The main access portal opens on the south-west side, near one of the towers, and has a double archivolt in white limestone blocks, with the sliding channel for the closing portcullis, and an external smooth ashlar display with an upper profile spearheaded (similar to the portals of the Norman-Swabian castles of Bari and Gioia del Colle). Inside it was divided into four two-storey wings around a courtyard, with rooms with various roofs (acute barrel vaults, cross vaults or wooden vaults on arches). Currently only the south-eastern wing is preserved. https://fondoambiente.it/luoghi/castello-del-matinale?ldc
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