The Certosa di San Martino dominates the Gulf of Naples.
Located at the top of Vomero Hill with only the immense Castel Sant’Elmo looking down on it, it is visible in various parts of the city and is one of its most symbolic sites.
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Opening days
from Thursday to Tuesday
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Opening times
from Thursday to Tuesday 8.30 -19.00
- 8.30 -19.00:
monumental courtyard
Church
Cloister of the Procurators
Refectory
Great cloister
Rooms annexed to the Church (Parlatorio, Chapter, Choir, Sacristy, Chapel of the Treasury)
Room of the Cona dei Lani
Entrance Hall of the Carriages
Lookout terrace and gardens
Strozzi table
De Vesevi Rebus Exhibition (Museo dell'Opera – Quartino del Vicario) - 9.40 -17.00:
Quarter of the Prior
Crib section
For more information on the opening hours of the sections click here
August 18, 2023
the Museum will close early at 17.00, with last entry at 16.00.August 19, 2023
the visit itinerary of the Certosa and Museum of San Martino will undergo changes: the Church and the annexed rooms will be temporarily closed to the public, while the opening of further rooms of the Images and Memories of the City section is planned. - 8.30 -19.00:
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Closing
Wednesday
25 December -
Extra Opening times
Saturday 9 September and Saturday 16 September
evening opening from 19.00 to 22.00 with last admission to the ticket office at 21.00. - Web Certosa e Museo di San Martino
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Feature List
- Info line
- Wheelchair accessible
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Accessibility
Partially accessible
HISTORY
The Certosa di San Martino was founded in 1325 on the orders of King Charles of Anjou and designed by Sienese architect and sculptor Tino da Camaino. It underwent major expansion and decoration work between the end of the 16th and the middle of the 18th centuries. Those involved in the work included Giovanni Dosio, Luca Giordano and above all Cosimo Fanzago, who is largely responsible for the complex’s Baroque-style decorations.
The monastery played a leading role in the cultural and economic life of the city until the ‘French Decade’. Because of anticlerical Napoleonic laws and, subsequently, the anti-ecclesiastical policies that followed the Unification of Italy, the Certosa became property of the Italian State in 1866 and was turned into a museum a year later.
VISITING THE CERTOSA AND MUSEO DI SAN MARTINO
The Certosa and Museo di San Martino consist of three main cloisters which face the various buildings and spaces of the monastic complex and a large terraced garden that slopes down towards the sea.
The museum was founded to house the pre-existing monastic heritage (paintings, sculptures, books and furnishings) but above all the memories of the city of Naples, collecting friezes, sculptures and objects that arrived here from the districts destroyed by the urban Risanamento cleaning project from the end of the 19th century which gave the historic city centre its present-day appearance.
Here you will admire the wonderful marble and wood decorations of the main church, frescoed by the most illustrious Italian Baroque artists, but also a highly diverse art collection divided into different themed sections. Don’t miss the Nativity section, the richest Italian public collection of traditional nativity scenes and shepherds dating from the 16th to the 19th centuries, and the Naval section, where the paintings by Hackert depict Charles of Bourbon’s white ‘Galea’, an elegant Turkish gulet given to Ferdinand IV of the Kingdom of Naples by Sultan Selim III, and the Lancia Reale of Umberto I of Savoy. The Museum also includes the sculpture section, the Quarto del Priore painting collection, glasses and collections of 19th century Neapolitan paintings.
Visiting San Martino is like taking a trip back in time through the history of the city of Naples. From the terraced gardens of the Certosa you can also admire one of the most beautiful views of the gulf and see the layout of the entire city from above. What are you waiting for? Book your visit now!
Services
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Visits
for groups by reservation [email protected]
available in Italian, English -
Didactics for schools
by reservation [email protected]
available in Italian, English -
Audioguide
€ 5.00
available in Italian, English, French - Bookshop
Additional Info
For groups and schools : maximum 24 people + 1 guide
Where
Largo San Martino 5, Napoli (NA)
Transportation
Funicolare di Montesanto: fermata MORGHEN
Funicolare di Chiaia: fermata CIMAROSA
Funicolare Centrale: fermata PIAZZA FUGA
Metro: linea 1 fermata VANVITELLI
Bus ANM: linea V1 fermata PIAZZALE SAN MARTINO