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Università degli Studi della Campania Luigi Vanvitelli

1991 establishments in ItalyEducational institutions established in 1991Università degli Studi della Campania Luigi Vanvitelli
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The University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli (Italian: Università degli Studi della Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli") is an Italian research university founded in late 1991. Its main seat is in Caserta, but its academic departments are also located in a series of historic and contemporary buildings in Naples, Aversa, Capua and Santa Maria Capua Vetere. It was previously named The Second University of Naples, as it was created to reduce University of Naples Federico II's overload.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Università degli Studi della Campania Luigi Vanvitelli (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Università degli Studi della Campania Luigi Vanvitelli
Viale della Libertà, Caserta Centro Storico

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N 41.0678 ° E 14.3308 °
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Università degli Studi della Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli"

Viale della Libertà
81022 Caserta, Centro Storico
Campania, Italy
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Calatia
Calatia

Cālātia was an ancient town of Campania, southern Italy, c. 10 km southeast of Capua, on the Via Appia, near the point where the Via Popillia branches off from it. It is represented by a locality known as Villa Galazia and by the church of San Giacomo alle Galazze (or San Giacomo delle Galazze or San Giacomo Le Galazze), within the modern town of Maddaloni, very near the boundary with the neighboring town of San Nicola la Strada, and right on the Via Appia. The Via Appia here, as at Capua, abandons its former SE direction for a length of 2,000 Oscan feet (500 m), for which it runs due east and then resumes its course SE. Ruins include remains of the walls (with sector from the Samnite age, in tuff, and others from the Sulla period) and the pre-Roman necropolis was partially excavated in 1882. The ten shafts lined with slabs of tuff which may have been the approaches to tombs or may have served as wells.The history of Calatia is similar to that of its more powerful neighbor Capua, but as it lay near the point where the Via Appia turns east and enters the mountains, it had some strategic importance. In 313 BC it was taken by the Samnites and recaptured by the dictator Fabius Maximus Rullianus; the Samnites captured it again in 311 BC, but it must have been retaken at an unknown date. In the 3rd century BC we find it issuing coins with an Oscan legend, but in 211 BC it shared the fate of Capua. In 174 BC it is mentioned that its walls were being repaired by the censors. In 59 BC a colony was established here by Caesar.