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NOLA , a city and episcopal see ofSee also: Campania, See also: Italy, in the province of See also: Caserta, pleasantly situated in the plain between See also: Mount Vesuvius and the Apennines, 164 m
.
E.N.E. of Naples, 121 ft. above See also: sea-level
.
Pop
.
(1901) 11,927 (See also: town); 14,511 (commune)
.
It is served by the See also: local railway from Naples to Baiano, and is 22 M. from Naples by the See also: main See also: line via Cancello
.
The more conspicuous buildings are the See also: ancient See also: Gothic See also: cathedral (restored in 1866, and again in 187o after the interior was destroyed by fire), with its lofty tower, the cavalry barracks, the ex-convent of the See also: Capuchins at a little distance from the city, and the seminary in which are preserved the famous Oscan inscription known as the Cippus Abellanus (from Abella, the See also: modern See also: Avella, q.v.) and some Latin inscriptions See also: relating to a treaty with Nola regarding a joint See also: temple of Hercules
.
Two fairs are held in Nola, on the 14th of See also: June and the 12th of See also: November; and the 26th of See also: July is devoted to a See also: great festival in honour of St Paulinus, one of the early bishops of the city, who invented the See also: church
See also: bell (campana, taking its name from Campania)
.
The church erected by him in honour of St Felix in the 4th century is extant in See also: part
.
There is a monument (restored in 1887) to See also: Giordano See also: Bruno, the See also: free-thinker, who was See also: born at Nola in 1548
.
Nola (NO^a) was one of the See also: oldest cities of Campania, variously said to have been founded by the Ausones, the Chalcidians and the Etruscans
.
The last-named were certainly in Nola about 500 B.C
.
At the See also: time when it sent assistance to Neapolis against the See also: Roman invasion (328 B.C.) it was probably occupied by Oscans in See also: alliance with the See also: Samnites
.
The See also: Romans made themselves masters of Nola in 313 B.C., and it was thenceforth faithful to See also: Rome
.
In the Second Punic War it thrice bade See also: defiance to Hannibal; but in the Social War it was betrayed into the hands of the Samnites, who kept possession till See also: Marius, with whom they had sided, was defeated by Sulla, who in 8o B.C. subjected it with the rest of Samnium
.
Seven years later it was stormed by See also: Spartacus
.
Whatever punishment Sulla may have inflicted, Nola, though it lost much of its importance, remained a
municipium with its own institutions and the use of the Oscan NOLLEKENS, See also: JOSEPH (1737—1823) See also: British sculptor, was born language
.
It became a Roman colony under See also: Augustus, who
died at Nola
.
Sacked by Genseric in 455, and by the See also: Saracens in 8o6 and 904, captured by See also: Manfred in the 13th century, and damaged by earthquakes in the 15th and 16th, Nola lost much of its importance
.
The revolution of 1820 under General See also: Pepe began at Nola
.
The sculptor Giovanni Marliano was a native of the city; and some of his See also: works are preserved in the cathedral
.
Nola See also: lay on the Via Popillia from See also: Capua to Nuceria and the See also: south, and a branch road ran from it to Abella and Abellinum
.
See also: Mommsen (Corp. inscr
.
See also: Lat. x
.
142) further states that roads must have run See also: direct from Nola to Neapolis and See also: Pompeii, but See also: Kiepert's map annexed to the See also: volume does not indicate them
.
In the days of its independence it issued an important series of coins, and in luxury it vied with Capua . Its territory was very fertile, and this was theSee also: principal source of its See also: wealth
.
A large number of vases of See also: Greek See also: style were manufactured here and have been found in the neighbourhood
.
Their material is of pale yellow See also: clay with shining black glaze, and they are decorated with skilfully See also: drawn red figures
.
Of the ancient city, which occupied the same site as the modern town, hardly any-thing is now visible, and the discoveries of the ancient street pavement have not been noted with sufficient care to enable us to recover the See also: plan
.
Numerous ruins, an amphitheatre, still recognizable, a theatre, a temple of Augustus, &c., existed in the 16th century, and have been since used for See also: building material
.
They are described by A
.
Leone, De Nola (Venice, 1514)
.
A few tombs of the Roman See also: period are preserved
.
The neighbourhood was divided into pagi, the names of some of which are preserved to us (Pagus Agrifanus, Capriculanus, Lanitanus)
.
(T
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