•
Castello Monforte, built in 1450 by the local ruler Nicola II Monforte, over Lombard or Norman ruins. The castle has
Guelph merlons and stands on a commanding point, where traces of ancient settlements (including
Samnite walls) have been found. The current construction is the result of later rebuilding after the earthquakes of
1456 and
1805. •
Chiesa della Madonna del Monte (Santa Maria Maggiore), erected in the 11th century and rebuilt in 1525. It houses a precious wooden statue of the
Incoronata from 1334. Below the castle, the church of St. George is probably the oldest in Campobasso, built around the year 1000 AD over the ruins of a Pagan temple. • Cathedral, or
Chiesa della Santissima Trinità (Church of the Holy Trinity), was built in 1504 outside the city walls. It was destroyed by
an earthquake in 1805 and a new
Neoclassical edifice was built in 1829. • Church of
San Bartolomeo is a
Romanesque building from the 11th century, in limestone. The interior has a nave and two aisles. • Church of
San Leonardo (14th century) has a façade mixing Gothic and Romanesque elements, and a side mullioned window with vegetable decorations influenced by the Apulian architecture of the period. •
Villa de Capoa, recently restored, is a noteworthy garden with statues and a wide variety of plant species, including
sequoias,
Norway Spruces,
cypresses and
Lebanon Cedars. ==Government==