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entry Nov. 2006
One such building
is the Archbishop's
Palace (courtyard, photo, left). It is a block away from the cathedral and forms—with the cathedral—a large
connected complex, for it is the official residence of the Roman
Catholic archbishop
and cardinal of Naples (as of May, 2006—Crescenzio Cardinal Sepe). The entrance is on via Donnaregina, the old
upper decumanus (east-west street) of
the original Greco-Roman city; it is just to the east of the
intersection of
via Duomo and directly across the
street from the church of Donna Regina Nuova,
a building I have often stood in front of (wondering why it is closed)
without,
as I say, ever turning around to look at what was on the other side of
the
street. [That church is now (2009) reopened. See the above link.] The original
Archbishop's Palace was built in 1389 at the behest of cardinal
Errico Capece Minutolo on the site of an old early Christian basilica.
The
building that one sees today, however, is largely the result of
reconstruction
and expansion of the premises under cardinal Ascanio Filomarino
(1583-1666),
completed in 1654. The work included clearing the area directly in
front of the
building to create a small open square between the Ascanio
Filomarino (image, below, right) was born in Naples of the noble family
of the
dukes Della Torre, and the surname appears prominently through other
members of his family in Naples. He was the eldest of the five sons of
Claudio Filomarino and
Porzia di Leonessa. He obtained a doctorate of law in Benevento, became
an ordained Cardinal priest in 1641 and was consecrated as Archbishop
of Naples in 1642. He is of particular interest in the history of
(see also: The First Neapolitan Republic and Naples in the 1600s )
Filomarino
certainly was aware of popular discontent in There are a
number of anecdotes about Filomarino. One is
that during the plague of 1656, he ordered the churches to care for the
stricken, yet apparently was among the first to seek refuge in the monastery of
San Martino. Another was that he had to be reminded by Rome that
the sacred
relics of San Gennaro, patron saint of the city, were not his own
personal
property and that he was not authorized to claim, as he had, that "…the relics are mine…", nor
authorized to remove them from the premises of the Cathedral of Naples
for the
purpose of soliciting miraculous cures in private homes. Also,
Filomarino is
said to have excommunicated a nobleman for not inviting him to his
wedding.
Cardinal Filomarino died on November 3, 1666, and is buried in the
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