The Palatine Library

Temple of the Muses and pride of the queens

The library is the third distinctive place of a royal house along with the theatre and the chapel, a symbol of  civilization promoted by the sovereigns.

Founded by Maria Carolina, the Palatine Library is spread over three consultation rooms, preceded by two reading rooms. With its over 14,000 volumes of literature, history, philosophy, theater, law and military art, the library collection of the Palatine Library contains the most significant examples of European and Neapolitan culture, mirroring the literary taste of its owners: Maria Carolina of Habsburg , Caroline Murat and Ferdinand II. The two queens were mainly responsible for the growth of the collection over time.

The neoclassical decoration of the rooms corresponds to the humanistic conception which considered the library the “temple of the Muses”.

Today Palatine Library’s book heritage is accessible only by reservation for proven reasons of study and research.

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Shelves and Furniture

The first and third room of the Library still retain the original eighteenth-century mahogany shelves, true masterpieces capable of combining functionality and aesthetics.

The third room contains two wooden painted globes, one celestial and one terrestrial, made in Paris by the geographer Robert de Vaugondy.

La terza sala conserva due globi di legno dipinto, uno celeste e uno terrestre, realizzati a Parigi dal geografo Robert de Vaugondy.

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Füger’s Masonic Paintings

In 1782 Queen Maria Carolina called the German painter Heinrich Friedrich Füger to fresco the third room of the Palatine Library. The four monumental paintings were to celebrate the triumph of the arts and sciences during the enlightened reign of Maria Carolina and Ferdinand IV. This unifying theme hid an esoteric message, clearly evident to the queen and the painter, both sympathizers of Freemasonry. The fresco known as The School of Athens is the one that most explicitly refers to Masonic ideology: under the guise of a classic scenario, the representation of an initiatory ceremony is supposedly hidden.

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Esplora la mappa cliccando sui pin
Beyond the Royal Palace
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