Online Encyclopedia

CASERTA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 445 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CASERTA  , a

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town and episcopal see of
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Campania, Italy, the capital of the province of Caserta, situated 21 M . N. by E. of Naples by
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rail via Accerra, and 23 M. via
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Aversa . Pop . (1901) town, 19,18o; commune, 33,373 . The
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modern town (229 ft.) was a mere
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village belonging to the Caetani
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family of Sermoneta, who were
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counts of Caserta, until its
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purchase from them by Charles IV. of Naples, and the erection of the royal palace, begun by
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Luigi Vanvitelli (
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van Wittel) in 1752, but not completed until 1774 for Charles's son Ferdinand IV . It forms a rectangle, the south front being 83o ft. long and 134 ft. high, with 37 windows in each storey . The interior is richly decorated with
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marbles, almost all of which, except the white Carrara marble, are Neapolitan or Sicilian . The
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staircase, the
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chapel and the theatre are especially sumptuous . The extensive gardens which occupy the hillside behind the palace are adorned with fountains and cascades; the botanical garden contains many trees from
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northern climates . Two miles north is S . Leucio, a village founded by Ferdinand IV. in 1789, with a royal casino, and large
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silk factories which are still active . The old town (Caserta Vecchia) lies high (1310 ft.) about 3 M. to the north-east .

It was founded in the 9th

century by the Lombards of Capua . The
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cathedral has not suffered from restoration . It was completed in 1153 . It is a copy of that of Sessa Aurunca, and preserves the type of the Latin
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basilica . The campanile, Sicilian in style, was completed in 1234, while the dome, which betrays similar motives, is even later . Its pulpit is decorated with the richest polychrome mosaic that can be found anywhere in Sicily or south Italy, and is quite Moslem in its brilliance . It is indeed remarkable to find these motives in a church so far inland (Bertaux, L'
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Art clans l'Italie meridionale, Paris, 1904, i . 353, &e.) . There are also the ruins of the old walls . CASE-SHOT, a projectile used in ordnance for fighting at close quarters . It consists of a thin metal case containing a large number of bullets - or other small projectiles (see
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AMMUNITION) . Case-shot was formerly called " canister," though the
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term now used occurs as early as 1625 .

End of Article: CASERTA
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