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Marigliano


FieldValue
nameMarigliano
image_skylineGünümüzden Akhisar Genel Görünüm.jpg
image_captionSantuario della Madonna della Speranza
image_shieldMarigliano-Stemma.png
coordinates
region
metropolitan_cityNaples (NA)
frazioniLausdomini, Casaferro, Miuli, Faibano, Pontecitra, San Nicola
mayorVincenzo Galdi
area_total_km222.58
population_total29915
population_as_of30 September 2017
population_demonymMariglianesi
elevation_m30
saintSaint Sebastian
day20 January
postal_code80034
area_code081
website

Marigliano is a town and comune of the Metropolitan City of Naples, Campania, southern Italy.

The town lies 19 km from Naples. Nearby towns include: Acerra, Brusciano, Mariglianella, Nola, San Vitaliano, Scisciano, Somma Vesuviana.

Main sights

  • Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie, built around 1000. It was enlarged in the early 18th century by Domenico Antonio Vaccaro. The tuff bell tower, standing at c. 40.3 m, is from 1494. The upper small cupola, covered by yellow maiolica, was destroyed in the 1980 Irpinia earthquake, but has been rebuilt in the same shape but with different materials.
  • Ducal Castle, known from the 12th century. Of the medieval edifice, the square plan with the angular towers remain.
  • Church of the Annunziata with a late-Gothic apse. It houses a polychrome wooden polyptych in the high altar, in turn including a late 15th-century triptych
  • Monastery of St. Vitus

Organised crime

In October 2000, the Italian Parliament approved the findings of a commission which studied Camorra activities in Campania. According to this source, Marigliano is firmly under the control of the Camorra, in particular the group led by Antonio Capasso. This group took advantage of the efforts of law enforcement that eliminated its main enemy, a Camorra group led by the Mazzarella family that was located in Ponte Citra, a district of Marigliano.

Marigliano is a suburb of Naples. In the 1990s to the 2000s, a waste management crisis broke out in the city as a result of illegal dumping by the Camorra. Majority of the waste was dumped in the region between Marigliano, Acerra, and Nola, referred to as the "Triangle of Death". A 2004 study by Alfredo Mazza published in The Lancet Oncology revealed that deaths by cancer in the area are much higher than the European average.

Twin towns

  • USA Madison, New Jersey, USA, since 2006

References

References

  1. [http://www.camera.it/_dati/leg13/lavori/doc/xxiii/046/d010.htm Doc. XXIII n. 46] Report of the Parliamentary Commission on the Camorra in Campania (24 October 2000) {{in lang. it
  2. Kathryn Senior and Alfredo Mazza, [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S147020450401561X ''Italian “Triangle of death” linked to waste crisis''], ''The Lancet Oncology'', Volume 5, Issue 9, September 2004, pp. 525–527.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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