Maritime
Museums in and around Naples
I’m
surprised that Amalfi has no naval
museum, nothing to
remind us that Amalfi was one of the four maritime republics of
medieval Italy.
That
fact is recalled by the presence of the Amalfi coat of arms on the
modern flag
of the Italian navy—along with the other three: Pisa, Venice, and Genoa
(all of
which have naval museums, I bet—but don’t know). That
is a quiz show question, by the way: Name
the four maritime republics of medieval Italy. Almost no one
remembers
Amalfi.
OK, I checked. Genoa has
TWO!; Venice, one; Palermo has turned the old Bourbon shipyards into a
naval
museum; Trieste has one; Nardò,
near
Taranto, has one; Bologne has one, as
does La Spezia, Imperia, and Caravaggio (not the painter, dummy, the
town. See
45° 30' N, 9° 38' E). Pisa? I’m not
sure, but at least they have that
tower thing. But Amalfi? The place where the first Maritime Code, the
so-called tavole amalfitane, was formulated, a code that
regulated
maritime trade
in the Mediterranean for 500 years? The place where Flavio Gioia invented the
modern compass? They have a Farming Museum
and a Paper
Museum. Go
figure.
In Naples,
they could have turned the old and historic arsenale—the
naval shipyards— into one, but they didn’t. That part of the port
definitively
disappeared during the great rebuilding of Naples—the risanamento—in 1900. So if you want
naval museums in and around Naples,
here’s what
you’ve got:
Museum of the Sea—Bagnoli
Founded in 1992 as part of the Nautical
Technical Institute
“Duca di Abruzzi”. The museum hosts a
collection of models, nautical instruments, and a library. (The above
photo is of a display in the Bagnoli museum.)
Museum of
the Sea—Ischia
Founded in 1996, the museum is housed in the
17th-century
Palazzo dell’Orologio in the historic center of the town of Ischia Porto on the island of Ischia.
The displays
occupy seven rooms on three floors. There
are exhibits of nautical instruments, naval
uniforms, model ships, a philatelic
exhibit of stamps dedicated to the sea, and
a photographic exhibit dedicated to both
the maritime navy and commercial fishing fleet. Given the Greek and
Roman
history of the area, the museum houses, as well, a display of maritime
archaeology.
Museum of the Sea—Procida
This facility is mostly a historical library
dedicated to the
commercial fishing fleet on the island, a traditional occupation of the
people
of the island. As well, there is a section dedicated to maritime
religious
rituals.
National Museum
of San Martino
In Naples, the “Sezione
navale” is an adjunct of the National Museum and is housed in
that facility on the San Martino hill, adjacent to the Sant’Elmo
fortress. The basis of the museum was a
donation of the
entire collection of the shipyards at Castellamare
at the end of the
1800s. An extensive display of models of
the many ships built and launched at Castellamre over the years, both
sailing
and steam vessels. The museum is currently undergoing restoration.
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