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**NEW: Regal Caserta Deserves a Detour - Where Star Wars and Angels & Demons Were Filmed (Free Italy Travel Advice)**



(NOTE: Screenweek.it has a photo of an style="font-style: italic;">Angels & Demons

scene being filmed href="http://www.screenweek.it/film/623-Angeli-e-demoni/galleria/23450"

target="_blank">on the famous staircase at Reggia di

Caserta. Here's href="http://www.screenweek.it/film/623-Angeli-e-demoni/galleria/5449"

target="_blank">another shot

of the movie being  filmed at the palace.)

This article originally appeared in a previous issue of Dream

of Italy

You can be forgiven if you have

never heard of Caserta -- or if

you feel like you have, but

aren't quite sure why. Its Campanian

cousins -- Pompeii, Sorrento, Amalfi --

have long overshadowed this small

city 20 miles north of Naples. While

Italian tourists provide a steady

stream of visitors, foreigners have yet

to take full notice of this historic gem.

Caserta's relative fame comes from a

palace known as "the Versailles of

Italy" -- the 1200-room Reggia di

Caserta. And the nickname isn't an

exaggeration. Some who have visited

both world-famous palaces argue that

the Royal Palace of Caserta's opulent

décor and expansive gardens surpass

those of the extravagant French

palace.

Indeed, Versailles was what the

Bourbon Charles IV of Naples had in

mind when he bought the village of

Caserta from the noble Caetani family

of Sermonta. He said he wanted to

build a palace rivaling that of his

grandfather's -- who happened to be

Louis XIV, the creator of Versailles.

Charles chose Caserta for its fertile

soil, fresh air and a location decidedly

away from the sea. Naples proved too

vulnerable a capital as the English

navy had bombed the city in 1743.

Charles IV worked closely with architect

Luigi Vanvitelli to create a design

for the palace and construction began

on the king's 36th birthday, January

20, 1752. Up to 2681 people worked

on the building simultaneously. Five

stories tall, the palace contains 243

windows, 43 staircases and four giant courtyards. No wonder it wasn't considered

even somewhat complete until

1774, during the reign of Ferdinand IV,

the son of Charles IV. Vanvitelli died in

1773, but his son Carlo took over the

supervision of construction. It wasn't

until 1847 that the palace's throne

room was finished.




Allot plenty of time to visit the royal

apartments, because they are worth

viewing in detail. Tours start at the

state staircase where the stairways are

so immense, that apparently (cringe)

American troops drove jeeps up and

down them during World War II.

The Reggia di Caserta served as a rest

area, headquarters for the American

5th Army and 15th Army and the

center for Allied Command at various

times during the war. In fact, on

April 29, 1945, German forces in Italy

surrendered to the Supreme Allied

Commander in the Mediterranean in

a 17-minute ceremony at the palace.

Across from the top of the stairs is the

palatine chapel, which the king wanted

to resemble the chapel at Versailles.

Unfortunately, this gilded place of worship

is often closed. If you get in, look

for the masterpiece, The Immaculate

Conception by Giuseppe Bonito, hanging

over the altar. Several other paintings by Bonito, Conca and Mengs, were

destroyed when the palace was

bombed on September 23, 1943.

Damage to several of the chapel's

columns has remained unfixed as a

reminder of the war.

The royal apartments feature the finest

paintings, frescoes, woodwork, tapestries,

fabrics and furniture imaginable.

Five antechambers lead to the golden

throne room, the largest room in the

palace, which remained undecorated

for its first five decades, during the

time the Kingdom of Naples passed from the Bourbons to the French and

back to the Bourbons. (Joachim Murat

of the Bonapartes ruled from 1808 to

1815.) Murat is conveniently left out

of the room's frieze containing

medallions of the kings of Naples.

The private apartments of the kingdom's

rulers provide unique views of

court life, with far too many attributes

than can be described here. For example,

Francis II's bedroom contains the

first known example of a roll-top desk.

Alexander's rooms are decorated with

colorful allegories of the Four Seasons

by Antonio de Dominici and Fedele

Fischetti. The library, containing 10,000

volumes, also houses a conical turning

bookshelf, designed so that Queen

Maria Carolina could read several books

without getting out of her seat.

Back to the ground floor, the palace

theater, a smaller replica of Teatro San

Carlo in Naples, is the only part of the

palace completed entirely under the

direction of Luigi Vanvitelli. The horseshoe-

shaped auditorium was inaugurated

in 1769 by Ferdinand IV and

has been painstakingly restored to its

original form.

On a sunny day especially, the beauty

of the palace's exterior may rival that of its interior. The 300 lush acres of

parkland (designed by Martin

Blancour) feature waterworks and fountains

among various gardens. The highlight

of Caserta's park is the great cascade,

a waterfall 225 feet high flowing

towards the palace from the

opposite

end of

the

park.

If your

stay permits,

visit Belvedere

San Leucio, a

former hunting

lodge turned

social experiment,

founded

by Ferdinand IV in 1789. Ferdinand

hired Vanvitelli student Francesco

Collecini to widen San Leucio and to

turn it predominantly into a royal silk

mill (although maintaining a royal

apartment, complete with an indoor

swimming pool) and establish an

industry for the locals.

By 1823, the neo-classic structure contained

silk mills, a cocoon warehouse,

housing for the mill manager and

parish priest, spinning rooms and a

school. Workers were housed across the street. Ferdinand established rules

for how his subjects should live and

work together. San Leucio became

famous around the world as one of the

first attempts at Enlightenment-inspired

rural socialism. Even today,

local workshops continue to produce

some of the world's finest silk, which

has been used to decorate the White

House and Buckingham Palace.

From the terrace of San Leucio,

visitors can look out over to the city of

Caserta and see the royal palace.

These two buildings have so many

stories to tell. History lovers won't be

disappointed.

Worth a Stop

Enoteca La Botte

Via Nazionale Appia,

168/180

Casagiove Caserta

(39) 0823 468130

www.enotecalabotte.it

With 2000 labels representing wines

from Campania to California, this specialty

wine and food shop located within walking

distance of the palace, is considered one

of southern Italy's best.The Ricciardi family

can lead you in tasting local products, such

as Fiano di Avellino wine, fresh mozzarella

di buffala and one of the region's more

recent delicacies, buffalo meat.

Getting There

Caserta's train station is a stone's

throw from the palace, making a

visit an attractive day trip from

Naples.The journey takes about

30 minutes. Caserta is also a stop

on the Rome to Naples intercity

train line (about a 2-hour ride).

For more information, visit

www.trenitalia.com.

Where to Stay

Jolly Hotel Caserta

Viale Vittorio Veneto, 9

(39) 0823 325222

www.jollyhotels.com

Many of the rooms in this 4-star property

have views over the palace and park.

Rates: 110 to 150 euros per room, per night.

Photo credits: Top - Mikuzz, Flickr.com View of Staircase - pietro.zampella, Flickr.com

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