On 3 July 1735 at the age of 18, Infante
Charles of Spain was crowned the
King of Naples and
Sicily. He had taken control of the two kingdoms by military force from
Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor. In 1738, Charles and his consort
Maria Amalia of Saxony were favourably impressed with the area of Portici when they visited the villa of
Emmanuel Maurice, the
Duke of Elbeuf. The couple commissioned this palace in Portici to serve not only as a private residence, but as a place to receive foreign officials travelling to the kingdom. Work began at the end of 1738 under the direction of
Antonio Canevari. Canevari had helped the royal couple in construction of the Neapolitan
Palace of Capodimonte. The interiors of the Palace of Portici were frescoed by
Giuseppe Bonito, while the gardens were decorated with
marble sculptures by Joseph Canart. Portions of ancient Roman villas and noble residences were discovered in preparing the foundations of the palace, and excavation of the area revealed numerous works of art, among them temple with 24 marble columns. This discovery was put in the Museum of Portici, built for the occasion, and annexed to the Accademia Ercolanese. The museum was founded by Charles in 1755 also to house the findings from the excavations of
Herculaneum. . Since the new royal palace was not large enough to house the whole court, it stimulated construction of other grand residences in the neighborhood, 122 of which are now known as the Vesuvian Villas. This also led to the expansion of the Palace of Capodimonte. Charles and his wife kept the Portici Palace as their summer residence and seven of their twelve children were born there. Upon King Charles' accession to the Spanish throne in 1759, he left his Neapolitan and Sicilian domains to his third son,
Ferdinand who would rule until his death in 1825. During the reign of Ferdinand, the palace was overshadowed by the far grander
Caserta Palace which became the official home of the court from 1759. Portici was the private home of
Infante Felipe, Duke of Calabria, the eldest son of Charles III of Spain. Prince Felipe was mentally disabled and lived in the palace until his death there on 19 September 1777. In the spring of 1769, the palace hosted
Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor. In 1770, a fourteen-year-old
Mozart stayed there. In 1799, King Ferdinand added an opera house to the palace. During the
Napoleonic occupation, King
Joachim Murat refurnished the palace with French furniture. In 1804, the Queen Consort,
Maria Isabella of Spain, gave birth here to her first child,
Princess Luisa Carlotta. Luisa Carlota would marry her uncle, the Spanish Infante
Francisco de Paula. On September 13, 1848, Queen Maria Isabella died at the palace aged 59. In 1834, ''Corografia dell'Italia'' describes the Palazzo Portici, as being built by King Charles: to increase the glory of the royal autumnal vacations, of which it formed the center. Towards 1750 it was used to store the collection of precious things that had been discovered in
Herculaneum and in
Pompeii. The building is on three floors, and is rectangular, 400 feet from east to west, and 360 feet wide. The principal prospect is of the sea; the large courtyard is octagonal, but has the singularity, or rather the disadvantage, of carrying the main thoroughfare that leads from Naples to Salerno, to Sannio, to Apulia and Calabria. Inside that big courtyard are the royal apartments, the sumptuous galleries that contained the fine museum, unique in the world, for the quantity of statues, bronzes, bas reliefs, pots, candelabras, and tools of every type found in the excavations of the above-mentioned two towns, and that today are part of the Bourbon Museum. What is seen however, and what is not found in other royal palaces, is that has floors composed of ancient Greek or Roman mosaics. The galleries however are not entirely devoted to precious objects; one also finds a fine collection of paintings of the Italian, French and Flemish schools. The gardens are at the east on the slopes of Vesuvius: they are immense, little adorned, but with many trees that are always green, especially service and arbutus trees, which feed the thrushes that abound there. Today the palace accommodates the seat of the Faculty of Agriculture of the
University of Naples Federico II. ==Architecture==