Palazzo Venezia, Naples

Palazzo Venezia

The courtyard
General information
Architectural style neoclassical
Location Naples
Country Italy

The Palazzo Venezia is an historical building located in via Benedetto Croce 19 in Naples (Italy), a section of the so-called Spaccanapoli street.

It is next to three other important buildings of Naples: Filomarino palace, Carafa della Spina palace and Petrucci palace. This palace is the proof of an intense political relationship during the centuries between Republic of Venice and the Kingdom of Naples. An underestimated building hidden in the city centre.

History

The palace was given in 1412 to the Venetian Republic by the King Ladislaus I for use as an embassy.

During the sixteenth century, the palace fell into complete ruin and Giuseppe Zono, by decree of the Venetian Senate, undertook to restore it in 1610. The same Zono made ​​to affix a plaque in Latin on the restoration carried out. That was just one of the several plaques affixed inside the palace. One of them reminds the restoration made by Pietro Dolce in 1646; another one commemorates the complete renovation of the palace by Antonio Maria Vincenti, after the disastrous earthquake of June 5th 1688.

After the Napoleonic wars, with the treaty of Campoformio, the palace became property of the Habsburg monarchy, but an year later the lawyer Gaspare Capone bought it and restore it. In the 19th century was built a small neoclassic garden building (casina pompeiana) in the courtyard.

The building

You enter the Venice Palace trough a lowered arch with on top the family crest of Capone. On the left of it there is the eighteenth-century open stairway with three arches. The canopy is in iron and glass and back in the early nineteenth century.

A particular relevance has the garden, where you can find the little chapel called Mary's cave (grotta della Madonnina).

References


Coordinates: 40°50′53″N 14°15′14″E / 40.8480°N 14.2539°E / 40.8480; 14.2539

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