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・ Poggio Catino
・ Poggio Chiesanuova
・ Poggio Civitate
・ Poggio Colla
・ Poggio dei Pini
・ Poggio di San Remo
・ Poggio Filippo
・ Poggio Imperiale
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Poggio Reale (villa)
・ Poggio Renatico
・ Poggio Rusco
・ Poggio San Lorenzo
・ Poggio San Marcello
・ Poggio San Vicino
・ Poggio Sannita
・ Poggio Santa Maria
・ Poggio Sommorto
・ Poggio Umbricchio
・ Poggio-d'Oletta
・ Poggio-di-Nazza
・ Poggio-di-Venaco
・ Poggio-Marinaccio
・ Poggio-Mezzana


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Poggio Reale (villa) : ウィキペディア英語版
Poggio Reale (villa)

The Poggio Reale villa or Villa Poggio Reale was an Italian Renaissance villa commissioned in 1487 by Alfonso II of Naples as a royal summer residence. The Italian phrase "poggio reale" translates to "royal hill" in English. The villa was designed and built by Giuliano da Maiano and located in the city of Naples, in the district now known as Poggioreale, between the present Via del Campo, Via Santa Maria del Pianto and the new and old Via Poggioreale. At the time it was built, a period when the capitol city of the Kingdom of Naples was renowned for elegant homes with expansive vistas of the surrounding landscape and Mount Vesuvius, the villa was outside the city walls of Naples and was one of the most important architectural achievements of the Neapolitan Renaissance.〔Gardiner, Eileen, d'Engenio Caracciolo, Cesare, and Bacco, Enrico; Naples, An Early Guide, Italica Press 2008, Introduction p. xlv. ISBN 978-0934977203.〕 Imitated, admired, robbed of its treasures by another king, left in ruins and finally destroyed, the summer palace of the King of Naples lives on in name as a style.〔Abraham Leuthner von Grundt, in ''Architectural Theory: From the Renaissance to the Present : 89 Essays on 117 Treatises'', Bernd Evers, Christof Thoenes, eds., Taschen, 2003, p. 542. ISBN 9783822816998.〕〔"21-22", Kwartalnik architektury i urbanistyki. PWN. 1976. pp. 310, 321.〕
==History==
At the villa's building site there was a bubbling aqueduct (or Volla) that carried the waters of the Sarno with connected underground pipelines, and which was connected to the Piscina Mirabilis reservoir then called Dogliuolo, from the Latin ''Doliolum'' or ''Dolium'' (bath). The valley area of Dogliuolo was then a swampy expanse of wetlands, despite several attempts at reclamation by Neapolitan sovereigns of the Anjou and Aragon families. In 1485, King Ferdinand I of Naples decreed the reclamation of the area when he realized that drainage issues were the source and cause of malaria in the capital, and so issued his ''Fosso Fosso del Graviolo'' to eradicate the problem.〔F. Quinterio, Giuliano da Maiano, Grandissimo Domestico, Roma, 1996, pag. 438-469.〕
During the same period and in the same area, numerous villas were built for the Neapolitan Renaissance nobility. Around 1487, the Duke of Calabria, crown prince and future king Alfonso II, bought farmland in the Poggioreale valley Dogliolo,〔The name was later corrupted.〕 having decided to build a royal summer residence outside the city walls, perhaps in imitation of what his ally Lorenzo de' Medici was making at the time at Villa di Castello, as Alfonso hired away Lorenzo's architect. Lorenzo's favorite architect, Giuliano da Sangallo, also visited Naples during the villa's construction, and Alfonso eventually sent him back to Florence with gifts of money, plate, and antique sculpture for Lorenzo.


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