Salerno

Italy
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Also known as: Salernum
Latin:
Salernum

Salerno, city, Campania regione (region), southern Italy. It lies west of the mouth of the Irno River on the Gulf of Salerno, southeast of Naples. The Roman colony of Salernum was founded there in 197 bce on the site of an earlier town, possibly Etruscan, called Irnthi. Part of the Lombard duchy of Benevento from 646 ce, it became the capital of an independent Lombard principality in 839. It was conquered by the Norman Robert Guiscard in 1076 and became his splendid capital. Sacked by the Swabian Hohenstaufens in 1194, it revived under Giovanni da Procida, hero of the war of the Sicilian Vespers against the French (1282) and a native of Salerno, who enlarged the port and started a great annual fair. In 1419 Salerno passed to the Colonna family and later to the Orsini and the Sanseverino before reverting to the Kingdom of Naples.

Much of Salerno’s historic interest derives from its medical school—the earliest in Europe—which flourished there in the 11th and 12th centuries and to which flocked students from Europe, Asia, and northern Africa; it still exists.

In World War II the Salerno coast was the scene of a battle (September 8–18, 1943) between Allied landing forces and the Germans. Parts of the old episcopal city suffered great damage before the British Eighth Army arrived from Calabria and forced the Germans to withdraw.

Ruins of the castle of Arechi, prince of Benevento, and the remains of a palace survive from the Lombard period, but the city’s principal monument is the cathedral of St. Matthew (San Matteo), founded in 845 and rebuilt in 1076–85 by Robert Guiscard. In the crypt is the sepulchre of St. Matthew, whose body was, according to legend, brought to Salerno in the 10th century. The cathedral also contains the tomb of Pope Gregory VII.

An active Tyrrhenian seaport, Salerno is on the Naples–Reggio di Calabria railway. The city’s main industrial products and exports are foodstuffs, construction materials, textiles, machinery, ceramics, and wrought ironwork. Pop. (2011) 132,608; (2019 est.) 133,364.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Michael Ray.