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The Filangieri Museum
In 1881-82, because of the demolition and construction going on during the urban renewal of Naples (called, in Italian, the Risanamento—literally, ‘restoring to health’), it was necessary to dismantle the entire building stone by stone and move it back some 20 meters so that via Duomo could be widened. Since that date, the building has housed the museum donated by Gaetano Filangieri, prince of Satriano (not to be confused with his grandfather of the same name—click here.) Though parts of the collection were destroyed in air raids in WW II, the museum still displays an impressive assortment of arms, porcelain and period costumes. Additionally, there is the recent addition of a large table-top scale wooden model of the city of Naples as it existed during the Spanish viceroyship. At this writing, the museum is closed for repairs as
well as the construction going on for the via
Duomo station of the new Naples Metropolitana.
Many of the exhibits are temporarily on display in the
Maschio Angioino.
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