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The
The
massive building that
now houses the State Archives was originally the Benedictine monastery of
Saints Severino and Sossio and is in the heart of the old city
(photo, below), near the
intersection of Via dei Librai
("Spaccanapoli") and Via Duomo.
The monastery was one of the largest in the city and also one of
the
oldest, dating back to the 10th century. It was also known as the
"cloister of the plane tree" as legend has it that the original
building was erected in a grove of trees of that species (platanus),
a
specimen of which had been given to St. Benedict, himself. The
history of
the first few centuries of the monastery remains obscure; true
enlargement of
the premises started in the 1400s. Within the modern building are to be
found
works of art depicting the history of the Benedictine order.
In
the absence of much
original documentation, historians have had to rely on secondary
sources, which
is to say the later Spanish and Bourbon documentation about the history
of the
city and kingdom as they found it when their turn came to rule. One
thinks here
particularly of such things as the detailed inventory of personal
property and
real estate in the kingdom undertaken by Charles
III of Bourbon when he assumed
the throne of Naples in the 1730s. Before that, some records survive of
the
Royal Chamber of the "Sommaria," a medieval commission that kept
track of state expenses; as well, there are records of feudal
inheritances. Some
records of the
activities of the two centuries as a Spanish
vice-realm survive, as well as the
short-lived Austrian vice-realm in the
early 1700s. Various sources exist,
also, from the 1700s that document the rather complicated relationship
between
the Since
WW2, in order to
compensate in some way for the wanton destruction of so many documents,
attempts have been made to search out material in private hands locally
as well
as to bring back to Naples some of the documentation from abroad, such
as the
papers that the Bourbons took with them when they went into exile after the
unification of Italy in 1861. |