main index ©
Jeff Matthews
2002-2012 entry
June 2010
Cleaning Up the Regi Lagni
An
ambitious project is underway, backed by an initial
allocation of 50 million euros, to restore and clean
up what used to be one of the "happiest" bits of Campania Felix
(Happy Campania)—now fallen on very unhappy times.
In question is the area known as the Regi Lagni—that
is, much of the Campanian plain, the area to the
north and northeast of Naples. The area forms a
large drainage basin of about 1000 km2
(425 miles2);
the Regi Lagni
is the vast network of artificial canals that
collect pluvial and spring waters in the provinces
of Caserta, Naples and Benevento, an area that
contains about 100 towns and a current population of
almost three million.
The main canal is 55 km (34 miles) long (the red
line in the above image) and arcs from the area near
Nola in the east (on the right in the image) through
the broad plain to enter the sea at a point between
Lago Patria and the mouth of the Volturno river.
There are an additional 210 km (130 miles) of
secondary canals along the path of the main canal,
producing an image of a naked fish vertebra with
spines running off of it. In spite of the degraded
state of the system (the most generous description I
have found calls it "an open sewer") and lack of
maintenance, the system still plays an important
role in the maintenance of the hydrological regime
of the basin. The entire area is intensely farmed
and, as well, supports much small industry.
The canal system goes back to the 1610, when the
Spanish rulers of Naples decided to solve the
flooding of the Clanio river and drainage basin once
and for all. (They had actually undertaken earlier
water management projects in area as early as 1539.
Stabilizing the zone was high on viceroy Toledo's list of
things that had to be done in order to turn Naples
into the best fortified city in the Spanish empire.)
For 1600—and even today it would be ambitious—it was
a massive land reclamation and water management
project and essentially amounted to straightening
large sections of the river and converting it to a
canal with added rectilinear secondary waterways. It
took six years and involved the talents of the
finest engineers of the day. (These included Tommaso Alappio,
D.A. Cafaro,
and Michelangelo
Cartaro, all involved in their careers with
such enterprises as the construction of the Royal
Palace and the first university building in Naples,
now the National Museum.) The finished product
worked well and was maintained for many years—at least three centuries, as a matter of
fact. The Bourbon rulers of
Naples expanded it in the 1700s; the area, after
all, was on the way out to the new Royal Palace at
Caserta and, thus, suitable for being "regally
urbanized." (Some remnants of plush Bourbon villas
can still be seen in the area.) The system seems to
have survived usefully and relatively whole until
the boom years after WWII. Overbuilding, unlicensed
building, absolute disregard for the environment,
etc. etc.—all that—so when it started to degrade, it went to
hell in a very fast handbasket.
A word about the Clanio
river. It used to start in the hills above
Nola, but today it no longer really exists. Whatever
is left of the river apparently still flows
underground near Lago Patria, feeding it and
providing what little water movement and exchange
exists in that body of water. Some sources claim
that local farmers still dig down and tap that
source for fresh water. In ancient times, the
river actually flowed into the lake, but the
canalization project moved the final stretch of the
main river somewhat to the north. (The name lagni is
probably a variation of Clanio. In Latin, the river was
the Clanius,
also Glanius;
later, it was called the Lanius. Regi means "royal.") In any event,
neither the old Clanio nor any other river actually
feeds the Regi
Lagni these days. Any new water that goes
into the system is from rain run-off, which,
however, can be considerable.
Reclaiming the area means, first and foremost, going
through the Sisyphean task of clearing out of the
canals an unbelievable amount of rubbish, including
junked cars, TVs and refrigerators—all that plus the
chemical clean-up. But they are at work. Optimistic
drawing-board visions see kilometers of tree-lined
canals running through recreational areas and
archaeological parks.
sources:
Fiengo, Giuseppe. (1988) I Regi Lagni e la bonifica della
Campania Fexlix durante il viceregno spagnolo.
Firenze 1988. Olschki (Biblioteca dell'Archivio storico
italiano.) Florence.
on-line
source: Regi
lagni: Giardini d'Europe
to encyclopedia index
to
portal index for urban planning