This is a comprehensive list of Camorra clans and their place of origin. A clan is a basic unit in the Camorra, a criminal organization originating in Campania. Currently it is estimated there are about 111 Camorra clans,[1] and about 7,000 full members.[2][3][4]

Province of Avellino edit

Quindici edit

  • Cava clan
  • Graziano clan

Province of Caserta edit

Casal di Principe edit

Maddaloni edit

  • Farina clan (defunct)

Marcianise edit

  • Belforte clan

Mondragone edit

Pignataro Maggiore edit

  • Lubrano-Ligato clan (defunct)

Metropolitan City of Naples edit

Afragola edit

Bacoli edit

  • Pariante clan

Castellammare di Stabia edit

Ercolano edit

  • Ascione clan
  • Birra clan (defunct)

Giugliano in Campania edit

Marano di Napoli edit

Naples edit

Nola edit

San Giuseppe Vesuviano edit

Poggiomarino edit

Pozzuoli edit

  • Beneduce-Longobardi clan

Portici edit

San Giorgio a Cremano edit

  • Abate clan (defunct)
  • Troia clan

Sant'Antimo edit

  • Puca clan
  • Verde clan
  • Ranucci clan (defunct)

Saviano edit

Torre Annunziata edit

  • Gionta clan
  • Gallo-Cavalieri clan
  • Tamarisco clan

Boscotrecase/Boscoreale edit

  • Vangone-Limelli clan

Torre del Greco edit

  • Falanga clan
  • Gargiulo clan (defunct)

Province of Salerno edit

Battipaglia edit

  • Pecoraro-Renna clan

Eboli edit

  • Maiale clan

Salerno edit

  • D'Agostino-Panella clan

Scafati edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mafia management". The Economist. 2016-08-27. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  2. ^ "FBI Italian/Mafia". FBI. Archived from the original on May 24, 2014. Retrieved December 26, 2014.
  3. ^ Gayrau, Jean-François (2005). Le Monde des mafias: Géopolitique du crime organisé [The World of Mafias: Geopolitics of Organized Crime] (in French). Paris: Odile Jacob. p. 86. ISBN 9782738187338.
  4. ^ Abadinsky, Howard (2012). Organized Crime. Belmont: Wadsworth, Cengage Learning. p. 122-123. ISBN 9781285401577. Archived from the original on January 4, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2020.