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Below is a list of unofficial toponyms (some have been in the past, for example in the law on rehabilitation) relating to areas of Naples known to have not administrative value. Often they are relative districts or small villages once outside the city and subsequently incorporated into the urban fabric.
꽃 COTE Steakhouse, a Michelin-starred restaurant in Miami, Florida. As of the 2024 guide, there are 26 restaurants in Florida with a Michelin-star rating. Florida's culinary scene is highlighted by the 2-star L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon along with the 1-star Victoria & Albert's, the first Michelin-starred restaurant at a theme park. [1]
Vomero is noted for its central square, Piazza Vanvitelli; the ancient Petraio, its earliest path up and down to the original city of Naples; its ancient district of Rione Antignano; Floridiana Park and Villa Floridiana; the medieval fortress, Castel Sant'Elmo; three funiculars connecting to downtown historic districts; its active pedestrian ...
The villa since 1931 has housed the National Museum of Ceramics, Naples, also called the Museo Duca di Martina. [1] The Duke of Martina, second-born son of Riccardo and Maria Argentina Caracciolo, born in Naples in 1929, but moving to Paris where he began collecting decorative arts. His heirs donated the collection in 1911 to the city of Naples.
Tonight We Improvise (Italian: Questa sera si recita a soggetto [ˈkwesta ˈseːra si ˈrɛːtʃita a ssodˈdʒɛtto]) is a play by Luigi Pirandello. [1] Like his plays Six Characters in Search of an Author and Each In His Own Way, it forms part of his "trilogy of the theatre in the theatre."
The detail that has contributed the most to the mythification of this little village is the so-called Fenestella (in Italian finestrella).The legend tells that the Neapolitan poet and writer Salvatore Di Giacomo, seeing a small window on whose sill there was a carnation, had the inspiration for one of the most famous Neapolitan songs: Marechiare.
Located near the Teatro di San Carlo, the cafe used to host musicians and orchestra directors before their performances in the main theatre of Naples. On January 1 2002, the Italian president Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, who was linked to the city by a special empathy, [6] paid his first caffè in euro at the Gambrinus in Naples. [7]
The Chapel Royal of Naples (Italian: Cappella Palatina or Cappella Reale dell'Assunta) was the sacred musical establishment of the Spanish court in Naples which began with the Aragonese Court of Naples, [1] and continued under the Habsburgs [2] the Bourbons, and Joseph Bonaparte.