Acerra

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This article is about the city Acerra. For the Ancient Roman sacrificial incense box, see Acerra (incense box). For the moth genus, see Acerra (moth).
Comune di Acerra
Coat of arms of Comune di Acerra
Municipal coat of arms

Location of Acerra in Italy
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Region Campania
Province Naples (NA)
Mayor Espedito Marletta
Elevation 26 m (85 ft)
Area 54.08 km² (21 sq mi)
Population (as of 2007-08-31)
 - Total 53,134
 - Density 983/km² (2,546/sq mi)
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 40°57′N, 14°22′E
Gentilic Acerrani
Dialing code 081
Postal code 80011
Frazioni Gaudello, Pezzalunga
Patron St. Cuono and son
 - Day May 29
Website: www.comune.acerra.na.it

Acerra (Latin: Acerrae) is a municipality of Campania, Italy, in the Province of Naples, about 20 km (9 mi) northeast of the provincial capital in Naples. As of 2007, it had some 53,000 inhabitants.

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[edit] History

Acerra is one of the most ancient cities of the region, probably founded by the Osci with the name of Akeru). It was the first Roman city that was granted the status of civitas sine suffragio (332 BC).

Acerra was destroyed by Hannibal in 216 BC, but was restored in 210 BC.

Acerra served as a Roman base during the Social War in 90 BC.[1]

In 826 the Lombards built here a castle, later destroyed by Bono of Naples. In 881 it was sacked by the Saracens. Later it was a Norman possession, the seat of a county. As part of the Kingdom of Naples, it was a fief of the Aquino, the Origlia, the Orsini del Balzo and, from 1496 until 1812, the Cardenas. From 1927 it was part of the province of Terra di Lavoro.

In July 2005 a statue of the Virgin Mary in St Peter's Church was said to move and take on a pink colour. [1]

[edit] Acerra today

Acerra has been in the spotlight recently in regard to the growing problem of the disposal and treatment of industrial and urban waste in the area. Acerra, Nola, and Marigliano had been identified as the three points of the so-called "Triangle of Death" in which illegal waste management by criminal organizations ("ecomafia") have resulted in environmental conditions endangering the health of the region's people.

In October 2000, the Italian Parliament approved the findings of a commission which studied activities in Campania by the Camorra, which had been profiting from illegal waste management activities.

The scientific journal The Lancet Oncology published in 2004 a study by the Italian researcher Alfredo Mazza, a physiologist at the Italian CNR (Centro Nazionale per la Ricerca): this study revealed the terrible situation in the countryside of Campania and the negative impact on the people's health. He demonstrated that the deaths by cancer are much higher than average in that region with respect the European average.

[edit] Main sights

  • Cathedral, originally built over and ancient temple of Hercules and remade in the 19th century. It houses some Baroque canvasses from the 17th century. Annexed is the Bishop Palace.
  • Church of Corpus Domini (16th century).
  • Church of Annunziata (15th century), with a 12th century crucifix and a 15th century Annunciation attributed to Dello Delli.
  • Church of San Pietro (16th-17th centuries)
  • Baronal Castle.
  • Archaeological area of Suessula.

[edit] Sources

[edit] References

  1. ^ Canby, Courtlandt. The Encyclopedia of Historic Places. (New York: Facts of File Publicantions, 1984) p. 6

[edit] External links