The Cemetery of the 366
Trenches
By most
accounts, Charles
III
of Bourbon, who ruled the Kingdom of Naples
from 1734 to
1759, was an "enlightened monarch." He didn't just build opera houses
and royal palaces. He set out, for example, to construct the world's
largest
shelter for the indigent, the mammoth Albergo
dei Poveri, a facility—a walled town, virtually— that would
house and
educate 8,000 of the kingdom's destitute at one time. That project
never got
finished—not the least reason for which was that Charles abdicated to
return to Spain,
leaving Naples
in the care of his
half-wit son, Ferdinand. One project, however that did get finished
dealt with
the unpleasant task of what to do with the dead who couldn't afford a
burial.
The nobility and otherwise well-heeled, of course, had private chapels
and
burial grounds within the city, but what of the poor, the homeless, and
the
unknown stragglers in the big city who just dropped dead every time
there was a
minor outbreak of the plague or cholera or even from natural causes? It fit in with Charles' scheme of a
"cycle of assistance" for the indigent that a free, modern cemetery
for the poor should be built.
The design
fell to Fedinando
Fuga to fulfill this plan for a new cemetery, a very advanced one
for its day
in that it was to be well beyond the city walls. After Charles'
departure for Spain,
Fuga got
the approval of the new monarch, Ferdinand IV, in
1762 for the construction of a pauper's cemetery to be
built not too
distant from the Albergo dei Poveri. The
project was based on Fuga's experience in planning the Santo
Spirito cemetery in Rome.
The plan foresaw a square walled-in space on three sides with a
building
bounding the fourth side, which would house a chapel, custodian's
quarters, a
mortuary, and the entrance to the premises. Fuga
followed his layout of the courtyard of the Albergo in
designing the grounds of the cemetery, even
down to the
dimensions—80 meters on a side, paved with gray trachyte stone.
The
project called for the
creation of 366 trenches, each mounted by an arch and each trench
marked by a
day of the year (to include the extra day in a leap year). The first
trench
would receive those who died on January 1; the second day, January 2,
and so on
throughout the year, a scheme that gave the cemetery its unusual name.
The
cemetery marks the first use of the Poggioreale
section of Naples—at
the time,
well outside the city—as the area for municipal cemetery space. The
cemetery served
from 1762 to 1890; it is estimated that 2.5 million bodies were
interred during
that time. The register that recorded the burials, however, has been
lost. The
grounds may be visited, but they are now in poor repair; the premises
are in the
hands of the arch-fraternity of Santa
Maria del Popolo.
The entrance
is from a small
side street that angles off from Corso Malta named via
Fontanelle al Trivio, originally marked on old maps simply as, Strada che porta alle Sepolture dette il
Camposanto—the "road that leads to the cemetery." The lower
entrance
to the grounds is marked by an arch (top photo), and the entrance to
the cemetery, itself (photo, right), displays
marble plaques attesting to the work of Ferdinando Fuga at the behest
of
Ferdinand IV. Currently, the central
courtyard (photo, right) bears no trace, whatsoever, of the original
trenches; it has been planted or paved over.
One hears that some sort of "historical restoration" is planned, but
that
has not yet been undertaken.
(back
to index)
|