Cava de' Tirreni (Italian:[ˈkaːva de tirˈrɛːni]; Cilentan: A Càva) is a city and comune in the region of Campania, Italy, in the province of Salerno, 10 kilometres (6 miles) northwest of the town of Salerno. It lies in a richly cultivated valley surrounded by wooded hills, and is a popular tourist resort.[3] The abbey of La Trinità della Cava is located there.
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Cava de' Tirreni lies among the hills close to the Tyrrhenian Sea, 5km (3mi) north of the Amalfi Coast and serving in practice as its northern gateway. The inhabited area is 198m above sea level, in a valley situated between two mountain groups: the Lattari Mountains (which separate Cava from the Amalfi Coast) to the west and the Picentini Mountains to the east. Many of Cava's citizens reside in the hills surrounding the town.
The Italian: frazioni of Cava are: Alessia, Annunziata, Arcara, Casaburi-Rotolo, Castagneto, Corpo di Cava, Croce, Dupino, Marini, Passiano, Pregiato, San Cesareo, San Pietro, Sant'Anna, Sant'Arcangelo, San Martino, Santa Lucia, Santa Maria del Rovo, Santi Quaranta.[4]
History
The church and the greater part of the abbey buildings were entirely modernized in 1796. The old Gothic cloisters are preserved. The church contains a fine organ and several ancient sarcophagi. The archives, now national property, include fine incunabula, documents and manuscripts of great value (including the Codex Legum Longobardorum of 1004[3] and the La Cava Bible).
Main sights
Cava de' Tirreni panorama from Mount Saint Liberatore.Railway station
This section does not cite any sources. (March 2021)
Abbey of La Trinità della Cava, founded in 1011. Features include the ambon with mosaics (12th century), the grotto of St. Alferius, the Romanesque cloister (13th century) and the large library, housing more than 50,000 volumes.
Cathedral (Duomo), begun in 1517 and opened in 1571.
Sanctuary of St. Francis and St. Anthony, an early 16th-century structure restored after the 1980 earthquake had damaged it. The façade is in tuff and travertine, with three large arches, the central one surmounted by a balcony. The main portal has a series of friezes sculpted in 1528 by local masters and containing scenes from the Gospels. The belltower, with three orders, was finished in 1584. The interior is on the Latin Cross plan, with some 16th-century frescoes by Belisario Corenzio in the sacristy.
Personalities
Lucia Apicella (Mamma Lucia, philanthropist)
Ferrante I d'Aragona (Ferdinand I of Naples, King of Naples from 1458 to 1494)
Mario Avagliano (historian and journalist)
Tommaso Avagliano (writer and publisher)
Ferdinando Baldi (film director, film producer and screenwriter)
Giovanni Vincenzo Della Monica (16th century engineer; collaborated with Giovan Battista Cavagna)
Raffaele Della Monica (cartoonist)
Antonietta Di Martino (high jumper, Italian indoor/outdoor champion)
Antonio Fiorentino della Cava (architect, designer of the cloisters of Santa Caterina a Formiello)
Giulio Genoino (Catholic priest; originator, with Masaniello, of the Neapolitan Revolt of 1647)
Costantino Grimaldi (philosopher, jurist, politician and noted anticurialist)
Simonetta Lamberti (10-year-old victim of a Camorra killing)
Sabato Martelli Castaldi (General of the Italian Air Force, partisan and martyr killed in the slaughter of the Fosse Ardeatine massacre on 24 March 1944; posthumous Gold Medal of Military Valor)
Attilio Mellone (member of the Franciscan order and man of letters)
One or more of the preceding sentencesincorporates text from a publication now in the public domain:Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Cava dei Tirreni". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol.5 (11thed.). Cambridge University Press. p.560.
"Statuto Comunale"(PDF). Città di Cava de' Tirreni (in Italian). 30 May 2019. p.2. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
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