The 'Certosa di Padula', also known as ''Carthusian Monastery of Padula'' or ''Chartreuse of Padula'' or ''Certosa di S. Lorenzo'' or ''St. Lawrence Carthusian Monastery'', is a large famous
Carthusian monastery in the
Cilento National Park near
Salerno in
Southern Italy. It is a
World Heritage site.
The monastery is the second largest Chartreuse in Italy after the one in
Parma. It was founded by Tommaso San Severino on 27th April 1306 on the site of an existing
coenoby. It is dedicated to
St. Lawrence, and its architectural structure recalls the grate upon which the saint was burnt alive. The building history covers 450 years. Main parts of the building are in
Baroque style. It is rather large: 51,500 m² (12.7 acres) in all with 320 rooms and halls.
The monastery has the biggest
cloistre of the world at 12,000 m² (2.97 acres) and is surrounded by 84 columns. A famous spiral
staircase out of white
marble inside an annex leads to the large library.
According to the stern Carthusian rules between
contemplation and work in the Chartreuse, there are two distinct places for these practices: the peaceful
cloisters, the
library with its fine Vietri
ceramic tiled floor, the chapels decorated with fine inlaid marble works, the cloister
orchards ; and the large kitchen - where the legendary one thousand egg omelette was cooked for
Charles V -, the
cellars with their enormous wine vats, the laundries, and the huge external yards, where there were people working at the stables, ovens, stores, and at the olive oil mill. The yards were used for productive activities and for trade exchanges of the Chartreuse with the external world. The Monastery houses the archaeological museum of Western Lucania, which preserves a collection of all the finds unearthed in the excavations at the necroplis of
Sala Consilina and
Padula. This museum represent a period of time ranging from
protohistory to the
Hellenistic Age.
External links
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Chartreuse of Padula