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entry Sept 2004
The ex-Military Hospital/
The
convent of the Sisters of the Most Holy Trinity was built between 1608
and 1617
at the wish of sister Victoria de Silva, a noblewoman who had taken the
vows.
As sister "Eufrosina," she first took up residence in the convent of
San Girolamo in Naples and then started her own order and convent on
via
Costantinopoli, both of which places are in the old historic center of
the
city. Pope Clement VIII, who reigned from 1592-1605,
gave her permission to find larger premises for a completely new
convent.
(Irrelevant/irreverent note: Clement's main claim to fame was letting
Giordano
Bruno be burned at the stake in 1600.) The
new convent was built
considerably away from the main part of the Naples of 1600, a site
halfway up
the Vomero hill, directly beneath the Monastery (now museum) of San
Martino and
the large vineyard and gardens of that institution. After the
completion of the
convent, work on an adjacent church was begun in 1618 under the
direction of
Cosimo Fanzago (1593—1678),
the truly tireless architect among whose other works in Naples are the
churches
of the Ascension at Chiaia, Santa Teresa at Chiaia, and Santa Maria
Egiziaca at
Pizzofalcone. For
two centuries, the convent lived a grand existence, a pilgrimage site
for
royalty from all over Europe, including one such episode in 1630 when
Maria of
Austria enjoyed wine drawn from wells (!) specially built to make her
day at
the convent less spartan. The church was rebuilt in 1737 after an
earthquake,
and things continued until the important year of 1806, at which point
the new
ruler of Naples, Murat, carrying out the wishes of his brother-in-law,
Napoleon, closed all monasteries and convents in the Kingdom of Naples. In
that year, the convent was converted into a military hospital and
remained such
even after the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in 1815. It
continued to
function as a hospital until relatively recently, and "l'ospedale
militare" is the only name that
the premises are known by to most Neapolitans. The church was damaged
in the
late 1800s and subsequently converted into a pharmacy for the hospital.
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