About the cemetery
It was built in 1829 in the farthest part in the eastern of the district of Villanova.
It was planned by the military Captain Luigi Damiano, and it put an end, following the text of the Napoleonic decree of Saint Cloud on 12th June,1804, to the habit of burying the dead inside the walls of the city and in churches, which was cause of several and dreadful pestilences, among the others that one of 1652, that ended by intercession of Saint Ephysius, whose feast on May 1th is connected to.
The cemetery was built in the open country, outside the walls, but soon it turned out to be inadequate to a city like Cagliari, which was constantly growing at that time. So, there was the need of making continuous enlargements and changes that reached their maximum extension with the so-called gradoni ( large steps), which were planned by G.Cima.
Then, the simultaneous growth of the city, which was becoming increasingly urbanized, absorbed it to Cagliari completely. It has not been possible anymore to do new burial since 1968, because there has not been enough room to do so.
The cemetery preserves a huge number of funeral monuments of great value which date back to the 19th-century, created by the chisel of A. Allegro, G.Sartorio, G.B.Troiani, P.G.B.Villa, A.Valli, and by local artists like P.Boero, F.Figari, F.Ciusa, F.D’Aspro, D.Fantini, A.Usai and many others. This huge number of monuments not only are the expression of the deepest sufferance of the dead’s close relatives, but they also represent the memory of many political, cultural, literary, scientific, military, religious and commercial personalities who have joined to the history of Cagliari.
Contacts
Cemetery of Bonaria
Viale del Cimitero
09125 Cagliari Italy
e-mail: voleare@voleare.it
Website: Cemetery of Bonaria
Tel. +39 070 281620
Tel/Fax: +39 070 272910
City Council of Cagliari: http://www.comune.cagliari.it
It was built in 1829 in the farthest part in the eastern of the district of Villanova.
It was planned by the military Captain Luigi Damiano, and it put an end, following the text of the Napoleonic decree of Saint Cloud on 12th June,1804, to the habit of burying the dead inside the walls of the city and in churches, which was cause of several and dreadful pestilences, among the others that one of 1652, that ended by intercession of Saint Ephysius, whose feast on May 1th is connected to.
The cemetery was built in the open country, outside the walls, but soon it turned out to be inadequate to a city like Cagliari, which was constantly growing at that time. So, there was the need of making continuous enlargements and changes that reached their maximum extension with the so-called gradoni ( large steps), which were planned by G.Cima.
Then, the simultaneous growth of the city, which was becoming increasingly urbanized, absorbed it to Cagliari completely. It has not been possible anymore to do new burial since 1968, because there has not been enough room to do so.
The cemetery preserves a huge number of funeral monuments of great value which date back to the 19th-century, created by the chisel of A. Allegro, G.Sartorio, G.B.Troiani, P.G.B.Villa, A.Valli, and by local artists like P.Boero, F.Figari, F.Ciusa, F.D’Aspro, D.Fantini, A.Usai and many others. This huge number of monuments not only are the expression of the deepest sufferance of the dead’s close relatives, but they also represent the memory of many political, cultural, literary, scientific, military, religious and commercial personalities who have joined to the history of Cagliari.
Contacts
Cemetery of Bonaria
Viale del Cimitero
09125 Cagliari Italy
e-mail: voleare@voleare.it
Website: Cemetery of Bonaria
Tel. +39 070 281620
Tel/Fax: +39 070 272910
City Council of Cagliari: http://www.comune.cagliari.it
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Monumental Cemetery of Bonaria, Cagliari, Italy, description, member of ASCE, part of European Cemeteries Route