Campania is a region of Southern Italy, bordering on Lazio to
the north-west, Molise to the north, Puglia to the north-east,
Basilicata to the east, and the Tyrrhenian Sea to the west. The
region covers 13,595 km² and has a population of 5.8 million.
Campania is divided into the provinces of Avellino, Benevento,
Caserta, Naples (Napoli), and Salerno. The regional capital is
Naples (Napoli).
The
name derives from Latin, as it was called by Romans Campania
felix ("fortunate countryside"), a name that is shared by the
French province of Champagne.
Tourist attractions include the Sibyl's cave at Cumae, the Greek
temples at Paestum, the Roman ruins at Pompeii and Herculaneum, the
volcanoes of Vesuvius, Campi Flegrei and Ischia, the Amalfi Coast (Costiera
Amalfitana) from Sorrento to Salerno and the islands of Capri,
Ischia and Procida, and the village of Calitri.
History
Campania was part of Magna Graecia, the Greek colonies of southern
Italy; the first Greek colony was founded at Cumae, north of present
day Naples, in the 8th century BCE. Etruscans and Samnites gave way
to the expanding Roman Republic.
In
217 BCE Hannibal entered Campania and by burning the crops of these
fertile lowlands hoped to provoke the Roman commander Fabius Maximus
Cunctator (the delayer). In this Hannibal failed; nor did he
sufficiently weaken Roman prestige for any of the Campanian towns to
rebel. Fabius, in turn, failed to trap Hannibal in Campania when
Hannibal used the ruse of tying burning brands to the horns of
cattle, so drawing off the force guarding a vital pass out of
Campania. In 216 BCE, however, after Hannibal's victory at the
battle of Cannae, Capua, the leading city of Campania, wavered. They
first requested complete equality with Rome, including the demand
that one of the Roman consuls should be elected from Capua. When
Rome rejected this, they opened negotiations with Hannibal who was
more than willing to endorse the full independence they sought. The
defection of Capua did not however inspire other Campanian towns so
Capua was isolated. The Romans, in Hannibal's absence, were
eventually able to build siege works round the city. As Hannibal
proved unable to break the siege, Capua was eventually starved into
submission in 211 BCE.
Campania was the breadbasket of Rome until the acquisition of Egypt
brought greater supplies of grain, resulting in the conversion of
smallholdings in Campania to the characteristic latifundia that
lasted from the Empire to modern times. Goths and the Byzantine
Empire struggled for control during the 5th and 6th centuries,
followed by the Lombards, who established the Duchy of Benevento.
The Normans (Robert Guiscard) conquered and re-unified Campania
during the 11th and 12th centuries, seizing southern Italy from the
Byzantines, forming the Kingdom of Sicily. After the Hohenstaufen
confrontation with the Papacy, the kingdom passed to Charles of
Anjou who retained his mainland territories after he lost Sicily
(1282) as the Kingdom of Naples, reunited with Sicily by Alfonso V
of Aragon (1442) who styled himself the 'King of Two Sicilies', a
title that was subsequently revived during the Spanish domination
(1504 – 1713) of both kingdoms. The Bourbons succeeded in 1713:
prior to the unification of Italy, Campania formed part of the
Bourbon Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.
Drinks and cuisine
Campania is undoubtely acknowledged as the birthplace of pizza.
It
is also home to Lacryma Christi wine.
Campania is regarded throughout Italy as the producer of the best
Mozzarella di Bufala (Mozzarella made from buffalo milk).
Calitrian cuisine is renowned in the region of Campania for being
very tasty and rather spicy. Typical hand-made pasta dishes include
cingul', the local dish par excellence. This is short, twirly pasta
boiled and then served with a thick, tasty tomato sauce. Other
varieties of pasta with the same sauce include lahan' and aurecchi'
r' preut'- (priest’s ears in the local dialect). Others are annazze',
served with delicious hot tomato sauce and pecorino cheese; and
sciliend' (a special vermicelli-like pasta) with a condiment of
garlic-fried oil and hot chili pepper.
Meat-based delicacies include m'gliatiegghij' a local favourite made
up of tasty roulades of kid or lamb casings garnished with cheese,
offal, garlic, parsley, salt, pepper and sliced sausage; sfritta, or
chopped pork meat sautéed with hot peppers; also sammuchij', a local
pudding made of pork blood seasoned with minced lard, little
segments of orange peel, rice, raisins, cinnamon, pork casings,
walnuts, salt and chili pepper powder.
A
traditional fish-based delicacy is stockfish a la ualanegna, the
favourite of plowmen in the past (ualan' means plowman), in which
stockfish is boiled and flavoured with garlic, herbs and chili
peppers.