Caserta
Caserta is the capital of the province of Caserta in the Campania region of Italy. An important agricultural, commercial, and industrial comune and city, Caserta is located 36 kilometres north of Naples on the edge of the Campanian plain at the foot of the Campanian Subapennine mountain range. The city is best known for the 18th-century Bourbon Royal Palace of Caserta.
History
Anciently inhabited by Osco-Samnite tribes, modern Caserta was established around the defensive tower built in Lombard times by Pando, Prince of Capua. Pando destroyed the original city around 863. The tower is now part of the Palazzo della Prefettura that was once the seat of the counts of Caserta, as well as a royal residence. The original population moved from Casertavecchia to the current site in the sixteenth century. Casertavecchia was built on the Roman town of Casa Irta, meaning "home village located above" and later contracted as "Caserta".The city and its vicinity were the property of the Acquaviva family, who, being pressed by huge debts, sold all the land to King Charles VII of Naples. The royal family then selected Caserta for the construction of their new palace which, being inland, was seen as more defensible than the previous palace fronting the Bay of Naples.
At the end of World War II, the royal palace served as the seat of the Supreme Allied Commander. The first Allied war trial took place there in 1945; German general Anton Dostler was sentenced to death and executed nearby, in Aversa.
Pope Francis visited Caserta on Monday, 28 June 2014, together with a friend named Giovanni Traettino, the pastor of an evangelical Protestant Charismatic Pentecostal church. The Pope apologized for the complicity of some Catholics in the persecution of Pentecostals during the fascist regime in Italy.
Geography
Caserta is located north of Naples. Its municipality borders with Capua, Casagiove, Casapulla, Castel Morrone, Curti, Limatola, Maddaloni, Marcianise, Recale, San Felice a Cancello, San Marco Evangelista, San Nicola la Strada, San Prisco, Sant'Agata de' Goti, Santa Maria Capua Vetere, and Valle di Maddaloni.''Frazioni''
- Casertavecchia - the ancient centre of the comune and former bishopric seat
- San Leucio resort - seat of famous Royal silk workshops, also is included in the World Heritage List
- Vaccheria - which housed the stable of the Royal cattle
- Falciano - a former bishop seat that includes a sixteenth-century palace
- Piedimonte di Casolla - has an ancient Benedictine abbey, built over a Roman temple dedicated to the goddess Diana
- Other "Frazioni": Aldifreda, Briano, Casola, Casolla, Centurano, Ercole, Garzano, Mezzano, Pozzovetere, Puccianiello, Sala di Caserta, San Benedetto, San Clemente, Santa Barbara, Staturano, Tredici, Tuoro
Climate
Demographics
Honours
The city of Caserta distinguished itself during the Second World War; in fact, it was decorated with the gold medal for civil valor and the bronze medal for military valour for the heroic actions and losses suffered during the war. The city was fiercely bombed and suffered a violent reprisal, but it managed to resist and, with the return of peace, all the people collaborated in the reconstruction of Caserta.Government
Carlo Marino, mayor of Caserta, was elected mayor of Caserta in June 2016 with 62.74%. However, he stepped down due to 'mafia infiltrations' and left Caserta without a mayor until the next election of which the date is unknown as of December 2025. Caserta's government is often subject to backlash due to the fact that the town has been declining since the 1980's.Main sights
- Caserta's main attraction is its Palace of Caserta. The royal palace was designed in the eighteenth century by the Italian architect Luigi Vanvitelli, recalling Versailles, as a residence for the Bourbon kings of Naples and Sicily.
- Palazzo Vecchio, a construction of the fourteenth century renovated by Luigi Vanvitelli as provisional residence for the royal court
- The cathedral
- The Aqueduct of Vanvitelli
Piazzas
- Piazza Matteotti is one of oldest squares in the city, it is called "Piazza Mercato" by Casertani, because there is the daily market in a building inaugurated in 2008.
- Piazza Vanvitelli is the main square in the city. The square once included Palazzo Castropignano, but this was subsequently replaced by a modern palace in the early 1960s. The seat of the municipality of Caserta, Palazzo Acquaviva lies within Piazza Vanvitelli as well as the offices of Questura and Prefettura of the Province of Caserta and various banks, shops, hotels, and bars. At the center of the square there is a statue of Luigi Vanvitelli, the architect who designed the Royal Palace of Caserta.
Sport
It is home to JuveCaserta Basket, Italy's 1991 basketball champion.
Transport
is a hub for regional and national traffic, and represents an important interchange linking Rome and Naples to Bari. The nearest airport is Naples-Capodichino, located approximately south.Caserta is the starting point of the A30 motorway to Salerno and is served by two exits of A1 motorway: Caserta Nord and Caserta Sud.
Twin towns – sister cities
Caserta is twinned with:- Pitești, Romania
- Aley, Lebanon
Notable people
- Stash Fiordispino, Italian singer
- Maria Valtorta, Italian writer
- Toni Servillo, Italian actor
- Giulio Douhet, air power theorist
- English cricketer Hedley Verity is buried there, having died in a Caserta hospital on 31 July 1943 of wounds sustained in World War II during the Allied invasion of Sicily.