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Campomaggiore , a fascinating history

Campomaggiore , a fascinating history — Campomaggiore, Italia.

85010 Campomaggiore PZ, Italia ★★★★☆ 226 views
Liana Gomez
Campomaggiore
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About Campomaggiore , a fascinating history

Campomaggiore , a fascinating history - Campomaggiore | Secret World Trip Planner

The story of Campomaggiore has all the ingredients of a fairy tale, except for the happy ending. There is a rich and noble Count Teodoro Rendina who, after having traveled around Europe studying the utopian theories of Robert Owen and Charles Fourier, decides to create a country different from all the others: a country where poverty does not exist. He chose to implement his project in Basilicata, in a small village of farmers: Campomaggiore.

Campomaggiore , a fascinating history - Campomaggiore | Secret World Trip Planner

It is in 1743 when he builds the patronal palace of Campomaggiore, the church and the houses of the farmers. The houses are built following innovative urban criteria that allow the inhabitants to move easily and to have enough space to live in optimal hygienic conditions. Count Rendina also establishes the rules that regulate the life of the country: every peasant, for example, must have a house with a small appreciation of land that allows him to live; every peasant must have enough wood to heat himself with the obligation to plant three fruit trees for each tree felled. The idea is good and seems to work, Campomaggiore grows and arrives to count 1524 inhabitants in 1885.

However, the count did not reckon with the whims of nature, so in that same year the village was razed to the ground by a terrible landslide. Luckily the farmers managed to save themselves, but Campomaggiore was reduced to a pile of rubble.

Campomaggiore , a fascinating history - Campomaggiore | Secret World Trip Planner

The citizens of the destroyed village try to rebuild their houses but the land on which Count Rendina built his dream is subject to continuous landslides that make every attempt vain, leaving to posterity a ghost town, concrete evidence of a shattered utopia.

2. THE ABANDONED VILLAGE Probably the story of Count Rendina is not one of those with a happy ending, but it is also thanks to that landslide that today those who visit Campomaggiore can walk in a fascinating and suggestive ghost town. The most spectacular building is the Palazzo Patronale, which overlooks what was once the Piazza dei Voti (Square of Vows), so called to remember the day when the first settlers gathered to choose to follow the count in his idea. In front of the palace stand the remains of the church dedicated to the Madonna del Carmelo. Around are still visible the walls of the ancient peasant houses.

Campomaggiore , a fascinating history - Campomaggiore | Secret World Trip Planner

At about three kilometers from Campomaggiore Vecchio it is possible to visit the Casino della Contessa, summer residence of the Rendina family. It is in this magnificent scenery that in the weekends of August is staged "La città dell'Utopia" (The city of Utopia), a theatrical show that among lights, special effects and aerial dances tells the story of Count Teodoro Rendina and his shattered dream.

Campomaggiore , a fascinating history - Campomaggiore | Secret World Trip Planner
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Frequently Asked Questions

Count Teodoro Rendina founded Campomaggiore in 1743 after studying the utopian theories of Robert Owen and Charles Fourier across Europe. He wanted to create a society without poverty by building innovative homes with optimal living conditions, ensuring every peasant had a house, land, and wood for heating while maintaining environmental rules like planting three fruit trees for each one cut down.
In 1885, when the village had grown to 1,524 inhabitants, a devastating landslide completely destroyed Campomaggiore, reducing it to rubble. Although the farmers managed to survive, the land proved unstable with continuous landslides that prevented successful reconstruction, ultimately transforming the utopian dream into an abandoned ghost town.
Campomaggiore is now a fascinating ghost town that offers visitors a haunting glimpse into a failed utopian experiment, with the most spectacular attraction being the Palazzo Patronale overlooking the historic Piazza dei Voti. The abandoned village serves as a poignant reminder of Count Rendina's idealistic vision and the unpredictable forces of nature that destroyed it.
Count Rendina designed Campomaggiore using innovative urban criteria that allowed inhabitants to move easily through the village while maintaining optimal hygienic living conditions. The houses were built with adequate space and each peasant was provided with a small parcel of land, creating an early example of planned community development in 18th-century Italy.
Campomaggiore is located in Basilicata, a region in southern Italy, where Count Rendina chose to implement his utopian project in a small farming village. The ghost town remains accessible to visitors as a testament to the region's unique history and the dramatic landscape of Basilicata.
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