Palace

Palazzo Pinelli

Italy Giugliano in Campania
Palazzo Pinelli
Palazzo Pinelli · Wikipedia

About

Palazzo Pinelli, also known as Palazzo Palumbo or Palazzo Baronale, is a Renaissance palace located in Giugliano in Campania, in the Metropolitan City of Naples, Italy. Originally conceived as a fortified palace with defensive towers, the building underwent numerous transformations over the centuries, which altered the original design by Giovan Francesco De Palma, known as Mormando, as well as causing the near total disappearance of its gardens. The palace currently hosts conferences and performances. In 2019, it hosted the augmented reality museum dedicated to Giambattista Basile.

The palace was commissioned in 1545 by Cosimo Pinelli, banker, Duke of Acerenza and lord of the Giugliano fiefdom. The design is attributed to Giovan Francesco De Palma, known as Mormando, a Neapolitan architect and pupil of Giovanni Francesco Donadio, also known as Mormando, whose daughter Diana he married. Construction was completed around 1569.

In 1631, under the feudal lord Galeazzo Francesco Pinelli, grandson of Cosimo, the writer Giambattista Basile was appointed governor of Giugliano and resided in the palace. It is believed that Basile, a member of the Accademia degli Oziosi founded in 1611 by Giovanni Battista Manso, worked in the rooms of the piano nobile on his most famous work, Lo cunto de li cunti, a collection of tales that later inspired authors such as Charles Perrault and the Brothers Grimm for fairy tales including Cinderella, Puss in Boots, and Sleeping Beauty.

The palace also housed the renowned private library of Gian Vincenzo Pinelli.

In 1639, Galeazzo Francesco Pinelli sold his shares of the fiefdom and palace to Cesare d'Aquino. In 1691, ownership passed to Francesco Grillo, Duke of Giugliano. Following the death without heirs of Duke Domenico Grillo in 1756, the ducal palace and other family assets were confiscated by the royal treasury. The palace then became the residence of the royal administrator Antonio Tito. Around 1794, it was acquired by Marcantonio Colonna, Prince of Stigliano and new feudal lord of Giugliano. An important figure at the Bourbon court and Viceroy of Sicily from 1774, he commissioned a radical renovation of the building around 1794.

Palazzo Pinelli

In 1833, the palace was expropriated for the benefit of the Palumbo family, from whom the alternative name derives.

During the ownership of the Colonna princes of Stigliano, the palace underwent major modifications. Beginning in 1794, Marcantonio Colonna commissioned architect Domenico Chelli, then director of the Teatro di San Carlo, to carry out a radical renovation. The project included the refurbishment of the interiors in the Pompeian style and the construction of monumental gardens accessed through a still extant Baroque staircase.

The Colonna family enriched the complex with numerous embellishments, documented in the Dizionario geografico-istorico-fisico del Regno di Napoli (1796) by Francesco Sacco and the Memorie istoriche della terra di Giugliano (1800) by Agostino Basile. These included:

- A private chapel containing the entire body of Saint Felician Martyr, transferred to Giugliano at the request of the family, and still preserved there today.

- A "pleasant Trappa" featuring wax images of Trappists, depicted both seated in the refectory and in prayer

Palazzo Pinelli

- A large garden decorated with statues and perspectives, including a statue of the goddess Ceres and a sculptural group depicting Polyphemus, Acis and Galatea

- A maze with a "magnificent Chinese-style room" at its centre These features constituted an exceptional example of an eighteenth-century noble villa, combining architectural, artistic and landscape elements according to the taste of the period.

20th-century and contemporary transformations

In the 1960s, before the enactment of the 1967 Italian urban planning law, the gardens were almost completely covered with concrete through the construction of apartment blocks, and the fortress tower on the left side of the courtyard was later demolished to create flats. The busts that crowned the four columns at the entrance to the garden also disappeared.

In the 1990s, one wing of the palace was restored at the request of members of the Palumbo family, under the direction of engineer Pasquale Basile.

Palazzo Pinelli

The building survives in fair overall condition, although only fragments of the original gardens remain.

In 2025, following an accident, one of the four stone bollards placed at the entrance gate of the palace was broken.

During the ownership of the Colonna princes of Stigliano, the palace underwent major modifications. Beginning in 1794, Marcantonio Colonna commissioned architect Domenico Chelli, then director of the Teatro di San Carlo, to carry out a radical renovation. The project included the refurbishment of the interiors in the Pompeian style and the construction of monumental gardens accessed through a still extant Baroque staircase.

The Colonna family enriched the complex with numerous embellishments, documented in the Dizionario geografico-istorico-fisico del Regno di Napoli (1796) by Francesco Sacco and the Memorie istoriche della terra di Giugliano (1800) by Agostino Basile. These included:

- A private chapel containing the entire body of Saint Felician Martyr, transferred to Giugliano at the request of the family, and still preserved there today.