Getting Around
Stazione Centrale station
Alibus - Garibaldi station
Molo Beverello
Molo BeverelloTo the islands
Food Scene
Pizzeria Da Michele
1 Via Cesare SersaleStarita
27 Via MaterdeiMimì alla Ferrovia
19 Via Alfonso D'AragonaRistorante A Figlia d'O Luciano
38 Piazza Enrico de NicolaSightseeing
Via Dei Tribunali
Via dei TribunaliGesù Nuovo
2 Piazza del Gesù NuovoNaples Underground
68 Piazza San GaetanoSan Domenico Maggiore
8a P.za S. Domenico MaggioreVia Port'Alba
Via Port'AlbaArts & Culture
Cathedral of Naples, Chapel of St. Januarius
147 Via DuomoMonumental Complex of Santa Chiara
49/c Via Santa ChiaraCatacombs of San Gennaro
13 Via CapodimonteMuseo Cappella Sansevero
19/21 Via Francesco de SanctisVia dei presepi napoletani
46 Via San Biagio Dei LibraiThe second oldest of Naples Castles after Castel dell’Ovo, Castel Capuano was named after the nearby Capuana Gate – Porta Capuana. It was built in the mid 12th century by the Norman King William I, the first monarch of the Kingdom of Naples, and it was enlarged by the Angevins. Many kings and queens lived here, including Queen Joanna II. The Parthenopean revolutionaries were also incarcerated here for a time. In the 16th century it became the Palace of Justice and a prison under the reign of the Spanish viceroy Pedro de Toledo.
Today, the building serves as municipal offices and is generally closed to the public. If you walk down Via Tribunali, you’ll see its façade and, bending the rules,
22 locals recommend
Castel Capuano
74 Piazza Enrico de NicolaThe second oldest of Naples Castles after Castel dell’Ovo, Castel Capuano was named after the nearby Capuana Gate – Porta Capuana. It was built in the mid 12th century by the Norman King William I, the first monarch of the Kingdom of Naples, and it was enlarged by the Angevins. Many kings and queens lived here, including Queen Joanna II. The Parthenopean revolutionaries were also incarcerated here for a time. In the 16th century it became the Palace of Justice and a prison under the reign of the Spanish viceroy Pedro de Toledo.
Today, the building serves as municipal offices and is generally closed to the public. If you walk down Via Tribunali, you’ll see its façade and, bending the rules,
Naples National Archaeological Museum
19 Piazza Museo