Home

Kampania

Kampania is the Polish name for the Italian region of Campania, located in southern Italy along the Tyrrhenian Sea. Its regional capital is Naples, and the region includes coastal areas such as the Amalfi Coast and interior provinces such as Caserta, Avellino, Benevento, and Salerno. Geography in Kampania features the Gulf of Naples, Mount Vesuvius, fertile plains, and parts of the Cilento area. The economy relies on tourism, agriculture (olive oil, citrus, wine), and manufacturing. Notable cultural heritage includes the historic center of Naples and the archaeological sites at Pompeii, Herculaneum, and Paestum, as well as the scenic Amalfi Coast. The region’s history stretches from Magna Graecia through the Roman era to the medieval and Bourbon periods, and it joined the unified Italian state in the 19th century; the 1980 Irpinia earthquake affected the area.

Kampania may also refer to the Polish term kampania, meaning campaign. In Polish, kampania covers campaigns

of
various
kinds,
including
military
campaigns,
political
campaigns,
and
advertising
campaigns,
with
examples
such
as
kampania
wyborcza
for
an
election
campaign.
The
word
is
not
used
as
a
formal
geographic
name
outside
Polish,
where
Campania
is
the
standard
Italian
form
of
the
region.