Monday 30 March 2026 08:03
Taylor Swift's Italian Roots. A Village in Campania Has the Proof.
The Birth Certificate That Connects Taylor Swift to a Small Town in Southern ItalyA small museum in the town of Padula, in the Campania region of southern Italy, has confirmed what had long been suspected but never officially documented: Taylor Swift has Italian origins. The proof is a birth certificate, discovered in historical archives, belonging to one of her great-great-grandfathers.The document records the birth of Carmine Antonio Baldi on 28 March 1862 in Castelnuovo Cilento, a village in the province of Salerno. His parents were Vito Baldi and Rosa Galzerano. The discovery was made by the Museo del Cognome di Padula, directed by Michele Cartusciello, and represents the first official documentary evidence of Swift's Italian ancestry, moving the story from family lore and journalistic speculation into the realm of verified historical record.
The British press, including The Times, had already devoted significant coverage to the question of Swift's Italian roots in recent months. Now there is a paper trail.
Carmine Antonio Baldi's story is one that will be familiar to anyone who knows the history of Italian emigration. In the late 19th century, millions of southern Italians left their villages, driven by poverty, lack of land, and the pull of a continent that promised something better. Baldi was fourteen years old when he left Castelnuovo Cilento in 1876, travelling to the United States with his father and his brother. He arrived in Philadelphia.
What happened next was, by any measure, remarkable. Baldi started at the bottom, working a series of humble jobs including selling lemons on the streets of Philadelphia. He climbed. By 1903 he had established a bank. In 1906 he founded L'Opinione, an Italian-language daily newspaper that served the city's rapidly expanding Italian-American community. Within a few years, the Baldi family had built what could genuinely be described as a small economic empire, and Carmine Antonio had become one of the most prominent figures in Italian-American Philadelphia at the turn of the century.
That is the man in Taylor Swift's family tree. Four generations back, one of her great-great-grandfathers arrived as a teenager with nothing and ended up founding a bank and a newspaper in one of America's great cities.
Castelnuovo Cilento has not been slow to claim its connection to one of the most famous people on the planet. The village has already named a street after Charles Carmine Antonio Baldi. At the inauguration, a delegation of his descendants was present, along with Giuseppe Galzerano, identified as the first researcher to have actively investigated Taylor Swift's Italian origins and done much of the groundwork that eventually led to the archival discovery.
The mayor of Castelnuovo Cilento, along with other representatives of the local administration, have now formally invited Taylor Swift to visit the village where her family's American story began 150 years ago. The invitation has so far received no response.
This is not surprising. Swift's schedule and the volume of attention she receives make it unlikely that a letter from a small Campanian comune lands with particular urgency. But the invitation is genuine and the connection is real, and there is something genuinely affecting about the thought of it: a village of a few thousand people on the Cilento coast, looking out toward the Tyrrhenian Sea, with a street named after a boy who left at fourteen and never came back, writing to one of his great-great-granddaughters to tell her where she comes from.
The Cilento is one of the most beautiful and least touristed stretches of southern Italian coastline, a UNESCO-protected landscape of mountains, ancient Greek temples and fishing villages that has somehow managed to remain largely outside the mainstream tourist circuit. If Taylor Swift ever does make the visit, she would find a place that has changed less than almost anywhere else in Italy. She might recognize something in it. That, perhaps, is the real point of the invitation.
Ph:Β Jamie Lamor Thompson / Shutterstock.com
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A small museum in the town of Padula, in the Campania region of southern Italy, has confirmed what had long been suspected but never officially documented: Taylor Swift has Italian origins. The proof is a birth certificate, discovered in historical archives, belonging to one of her great-great-grandfathers.
The document records the birth of Carmine Antonio Baldi on 28 March 1862 in Castelnuovo Cilento, a village in the province of Salerno. His parents were Vito Baldi and Rosa Galzerano. The discovery was made by the Museo del Cognome di Padula, directed by Michele Cartusciello, and represents the first official documentary evidence of Swift's Italian ancestry, moving the story from family lore and journalistic speculation into the realm of verified historical record.
The British press, including The Times, had already devoted significant coverage to the question of Swift's Italian roots in recent months. Now there is a paper trail.
Carmine Antonio Baldi's story is one that will be familiar to anyone who knows the history of Italian emigration. In the late 19th century, millions of southern Italians left their villages, driven by poverty, lack of land, and the pull of a continent that promised something better. Baldi was fourteen years old when he left Castelnuovo Cilento in 1876, travelling to the United States with his father and his brother. He arrived in Philadelphia.
What happened next was, by any measure, remarkable. Baldi started at the bottom, working a series of humble jobs including selling lemons on the streets of Philadelphia. He climbed. By 1903 he had established a bank. In 1906 he founded L'Opinione, an Italian-language daily newspaper that served the city's rapidly expanding Italian-American community. Within a few years, the Baldi family had built what could genuinely be described as a small economic empire, and Carmine Antonio had become one of the most prominent figures in Italian-American Philadelphia at the turn of the century.
That is the man in Taylor Swift's family tree. Four generations back, one of her great-great-grandfathers arrived as a teenager with nothing and ended up founding a bank and a newspaper in one of America's great cities.
Castelnuovo Cilento has not been slow to claim its connection to one of the most famous people on the planet. The village has already named a street after Charles Carmine Antonio Baldi. At the inauguration, a delegation of his descendants was present, along with Giuseppe Galzerano, identified as the first researcher to have actively investigated Taylor Swift's Italian origins and done much of the groundwork that eventually led to the archival discovery.
The mayor of Castelnuovo Cilento, along with other representatives of the local administration, have now formally invited Taylor Swift to visit the village where her family's American story began 150 years ago. The invitation has so far received no response.
This is not surprising. Swift's schedule and the volume of attention she receives make it unlikely that a letter from a small Campanian comune lands with particular urgency. But the invitation is genuine and the connection is real, and there is something genuinely affecting about the thought of it: a village of a few thousand people on the Cilento coast, looking out toward the Tyrrhenian Sea, with a street named after a boy who left at fourteen and never came back, writing to one of his great-great-granddaughters to tell her where she comes from.
The Cilento is one of the most beautiful and least touristed stretches of southern Italian coastline, a UNESCO-protected landscape of mountains, ancient Greek temples and fishing villages that has somehow managed to remain largely outside the mainstream tourist circuit. If Taylor Swift ever does make the visit, she would find a place that has changed less than almost anywhere else in Italy. She might recognize something in it. That, perhaps, is the real point of the invitation.
Ph:Β Jamie Lamor Thompson / Shutterstock.com
