VIA TOLEDO, Piazza Dante

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After the Conservatory of the Holy Spirit, take a short scenic route to the left in the narrow part of a housing district to reach two important monuments. The first is the interesting Church of the Santissima Trinità dei Pellegrini, which is the chapel of a hospital today, with a beautiful interior full of interesting canvases from the 1600s. A little further on you'll see the vast Palazzo Tarsia, an immense noble building that was never finished and is in a precarious state today. It would have been one of the most spectacular private buildings in Naples, and we all hope it will be restored soon! Its exterior courtyard has been transformed into a small square where you can still recognize Baroque architectural elements.

Going back to Via Toledo, on the right hand side you can see, one next to the other, two important noble palaces: they are Palazzo Carafa di Maddaloni from the end of the 16th century and designed by Cosimo Fanzago, and the splendid Palazzo Doria d'Angri designed by Vanvitelli with a trapezoidal layout. First look for the balcony above the portal's Doric columns in the white marble façade divided into three orders: this is exactly where Garibaldi announced the annexation of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies to the Kingdom of Italy in 1860.

After this emblematic palace, your walk ends with the beautiful Piazza Dante, which was recently turned into a pedestrian square. Designed by the great Vanvitelli, it is also called the Carolino Forum and is a jewel of eighteenth-century urban planning. It has an elegant semicircular shape with the statue of King Charles III of Bourbon on horseback in the center. The twenty-six statues you see in the upper part allude to the virtues of the king. Through the great central niche you enter a historic school in the former Convent of San Sebastiano, which has two cloisters: one Medieval and the other Renaissance....

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