Capodimonte Park, Naples ⋆ FullTravel.it

Capodimonte Park, Naples

Capodimonte Park covers an area of 134 hectares with about 400 plant entities classified into 108 families and 274 genera.

Parco di Capodimonte a Napoli
Redazione FullTravel
5 Min Read

All’interno del perimetro del Capodimonte Park there are sixteen architectures including residences, casinos, artisan factories, depots and churches, as well as fountains and statues, hunting devices, gardens and orchards, and a cemetery, that of the Capuchins of the Hermitage.

The history of the Park with the Capodimonte Royal Palace begins with the ascension to the throne of Charles of Bourbon, on May 10, 1734, and with his ambitious program of a system of possessions directly administered by the Crown called “royal sites”. Capodimonte, high and breezy, overlooking the entire gulf and visible from much of the city was considered a suitable place to host the royal residence.

The perimeter works of the hunting estate were already completed in 1736. Access was through the Middle Gate which led to the large semicircle from which the fan of avenues started.

The historiographical tradition has always assigned to Ferdinando San Felice and Domenico Antonio Vaccaro the design of this scenic layout, but more recent hypotheses attribute it to the Roman Antonio Canevari. Certainly, however, San Felice intervened in 1743 for the restoration of the Royal Porcelain Factory and two years later for the construction of the church of San Gennaro at the end of the first broad avenue of the fan.

Natural scenographies, statues, fountains along with walled gardens could not be missing in a royal forest where however the vegetation zoning was functional to the types of hunting practiced by the king, so that densely wooded areas with holm oaks, chestnuts, hornbeams and elms were followed by shrub areas with myrtle, olive and laurel, as well as clearings and hunting traps. Large areas were then cultivated to feed domestic animals and game, enclosed in special fences and enclosures.

Products of the forest and the land were partly used for the court’s needs and partly sold. In 1738 work began on the construction of the Royal Palace in the most panoramic area of the site, called “Spianato”.

Capodimonte Park, Naples

Royal Palace and Forest, originally completely separate, became a unitary and autonomous complex with respect to the city only in the French decade, when a perimeter wall was built around the Spianato along which the Main Gate on the Ponti Rossi road and the Small Gate on the road to Miano were opened.

An important innovation was represented by the new road designed by engineer Romualdo De Tommaso, the Napoleon Avenue, today Amedeo di Savoia: inaugurated in 1809, it connected in a ‘straight line’ the area of the Museum with Capodimonte, crossing with a bridge the Sanità valley and overcoming the Spaccata mountain with the scenic solution of the Roundabout, realized by Niccolini between the second and third decades of the century.

In the Park, Ferdinand I had the Capuchin Hermitage built from 1817 and began the first works of “English-style” redesign of the green areas to adapt them to the new taste which had already invaded all of Europe for some decades. The Savoia restored the hunting activity in the Forest and modified the layout of the areas adjacent to the Royal Palace and the Princes’ Casino.

Information about Capodimonte Park

Via Miano, 4 80145 Naples – Tel. 081.7410080/081.5808278

Opening hours Museum Capodimonte and park

The Capodimonte Museum is open every day except Wednesday from 8:30 AM to 7:30 PM. The last admission is allowed at 6:30 PM. The closing operations of the Museum and the outflow of visitors towards the exit begin at 7:00 PM. The museum is closed every Wednesday, January 1st and December 25th. The Capodimonte Forest is closed on December 25th, January 1st and on Easter Monday, April 17th.

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