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Carlo Celano

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Carlo Celano
Engraved portrait of Celano in the Rijksmuseum
Born(1625-02-22)February 22, 1625
Died3 December 1693(1693-12-03) (aged 68)
Resting placeSanta Restituta
NationalityItalian
Occupation(s)Canon, art historian, archaeologist, man of letters
Parent(s)Salvatore Celano and Antonia Celano (née Picaccia)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Naples Federico II

Carlo Celano (22 February 1625 3 December 1693) was an Italian lawyer and man of letters, who led the restoration of the church of Santa Restituta in his birthplace of Naples[1] and left an accurate census of the city's monuments, updated up to the end of the 17th century.[2]

Life

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Born to Antonia Picaccia and her doctor husband Salvatore,[3] he inherited a taste for architecture, history and art from his father, expanding it by long journeys through Naples and excursions to its catacombs. He studied under his father and the Jesuits before graduating from university in law. He immediately began both to work as a lawyer and to write poetry and prose. He was forced to give up his legal job due to an incident in court and suspicions that he had taken part in the Masaniello revolt - the latter led him to be imprisoned in Naples' gaol, the Vicaria, until an influential friend secured his release.

Around 1660 he decided to take religious vows and to enter the congregation of the apostolic missions in Naples. He immediately took on positions of responsibility and soon archbishop Ascanio Filomarino made him a canon of Naples Cathedral. He continued writing and publishing under the pseudonym 'Ettore Calcolona', especially stage comedies[4] inspired by Lope de Vega, Calderòn de la Barca and other Spanish writers, which he published to some acclaim.[5] His satire Degli avanzi delle Poste, in which he imagined publishing letters that were never delivered and mounted up at post offices, was a sharp critique of fashions and social behaviour at the time. He also moved in cultural circles, visiting Luca Giordano's studio[6] and hosting lawyer Francesco Valletta's intellectual salons, at which he met the historian Jean Mabillon, for whom he acted as cicerone during Mabillon's grand tour and by whom he his mentioned as an expert on ancient Naples.[7] Celano became involved in fundraising to repair Santa Restituta after the 5 June 1688 earthquake and in mid 1689 he was chosen to join its repair committee and put in charge of the works - the reopening occurred on 24 May 1692. Celano died in Naples in 1693.

Works

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Notizie

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At the same time as the restoration work he published his most important work, Le Notizie del bello, dell'antico e del curioso della città di Napoli (Notices on what is beautiful, ancient and curious in the city of Naples),[8] dedicated to Pope Innocent XII. The work's main aim was to describe ten itineraries for foreign visitors to the city.[9] It was a true guidebook,[10] based on immense research and minutely describing culture, art and architecture in the city,[9] with especial attention to non-religious buildings.[11]

It went through three editions in the 17th century alone, with one more in the 18th century, edited by Giovanbattista Chiarini. That last edition was last reprinted in 2000 and moved the work's authorship more towards Chiarini himself, using Celano's work as a basic structure for his own. A critical edition of the most substantial 18th century reprint, that of 1792, has recently been edited by Gianpasquale Greco, also containing all the additions (i.e. the updates) of the other two 18th century reprints and also including the Notizie sulle reali ville (an 18th-century text supplementing the 1792 edition, dedicated to the royal foundations in the Bourbon era).[12]

Other works

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  • Non è padre essendo Re
  • Gli effetti della cortesia
  • Dell'amare l'ardire
  • La pietà trionfante
  • La forza della fedeltà
  • Degli avanzi delle Poste
  • Corso Politico nei Ginnasi Delphici del Gran Alfonso Primo Re di questo nome in Napoli
  • Lettere Spirituale e Morale in diversi soggetti

References

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  1. ^ (in Italian) F.Strazzullo, 'Le Conclusioni dell’archivio capitolare di Napoli', in Campania Sacra, Napoli, 1970, n. 1, pp. 79-142.
  2. ^ (in Italian) F.Strazzullo, 'Carlo Celano descrittore di Napoli sulla fine del ’600', in Atti dell’Accademia Pontaniana, Napoli, 1995, n.s. vol. XLIV; pp. 36–61.
  3. ^ (in Italian) R.Ruotolo, Qualche nota sulla famiglia e gli amici di Carlo Celano, in Ricerche sul ‘600 napoletano, Milano, 1985, pp. 133-137.
  4. ^ (in Italian) P.Pironti, Carlo Celano commediografo, Napoli, 1974.
  5. ^ (in Italian) A.Quondam, Dal barocco all'Arcadia, in Storia di Napoli, Napoli, 1970, vol. VI, t. 2°, pp. 946-952.
  6. ^ (in Italian) V.Pinto, Racconti di opere, racconti di uomini, Napoli, 1997, pp. 80-89.
  7. ^ (in Latin) J.Mabillon, Iter italicum litterarium, Paris, 1687, p. 114.
  8. ^ (in Italian) B.Croce, Un innamorato di Napoli: Carlo Celano, in Napoli nobilissima, Napoli, 1893, vol. II, Fasc. 5°, pp. 65-70.
  9. ^ a b Gianpasquale Greco, 'Notizie del bello, dell'antico e del curioso della città di Napoli' (1692): Carlo Celano all'alba della storia dell'arte napoletana, in "Horti Esperidum", 2018, I, pp. 397-422., in Horti Esperidum
  10. ^ (in Italian) L.Di Mauro, Cosa più dilettosa veder non si può in terra, cinque secoli di guide e descrizioni di Napoli, in G.A.Galante, Guida sacra della città di Napoli, (Napoli, 1872), ed. a cura di N. Spinosa, Napoli, 1985, pp. XXXIX-LIV.
  11. ^ (in Italian) L.Di Mauro, Il Patrimonio Storico-Artistico nelle Guide tra ‘800 e ‘900, in Libri per vedere, Napoli, 1992, pp. 319-324.
  12. ^ (in Italian) Carlo Celano, Notizie del bello, dell'antico e del curioso della città di Napoli. Edizione critica della ristampa del 1792 con le aggiunte del 1724 e del 1758-59, a cura di Gianpasquale Greco, Napoli, Rogiosi, 2018.
[edit]
  • Galvagno, Rosalba (1979). "CELANO, Carlo". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 23: Cavallucci–Cerretesi (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  • Chiarelli, Francesca (2002). "Celano, Carlo". The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 21 May 2024.