Archaeological sites in Sicily

Thanks to its geographical location, Sicily has always been a necessarily crossing point between East and West and a strategic trade center in Mediterranean sea.

Most ancient evidence of human presence on the isle dates back to Lower Paleolithic but the first settlement is documented only since Upper Paleolithic (35.000 years ago approx.) with “Grotta del Genovese” graffitoes at Levanzo. Besides Mesolithic is well documented by Grotta dell’Uzzo. An economy based on agriculture and sheep-farming started spreading through Sicily around 6000 BC. Many different cultures had been living together on the isle all along Neolithic. On Aeolian Islands they extracted and trade obsidian, a volcanic glass really popular at the time.

Yet in the Bronze age Sicily is in touch with Aegea culture as well as it goes through a hard time because of fightings and invasions by several enemy peoples.

Around VII Century BC, at the time of Greeks colonization, the island had been inhabited by Sicels, Sicani and Elymians. It was invaded also by Phoenicians who settled far to the west. It was a melting pot of peoples and cultures indeed, always on fight between each other and that’s the reason why Sicily never had a real stable situation.

In the west side, Greeks founded many colonies on which the hegemony of Syracuse grew day by day. Chartagenians  arrived on east side and here they gradually annexed Phoenicians’ towns. Later came Romans who powered over them and the whole isle. In the Late Roman Empire Sicily had to face first many barbarian raids. On a second time it was conquered in the following order by Goths, Vandals and finally Byzantines.

Browse the map below for the main archaeological sites of Sicily. One card for each site will give you detailed informations to the visit.

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Megara Hyblaea, or Megara Iblea, is an ancient Greek colony near Augusta, that used to be by the sea. Today is pherhaps one of the least well-known archaeological park in the whole municipality of Syracuse.…

Greek colony of Himera was founded by Greek settlers. Its excellent natural position, where the river Imera meets the plain of Buonfornello, allowed it easy and fast trade, becoming a crucial node and an important link between central Sicily.…

Motya is an ancient Phoenician colony founded in the VIII century BC on one of the four islands in the lagoon of Stagnone, San Pantaleo island.It was an important trading center as well as most of the other Phoenician colonies and an important place too for docking in the Mediterranean basin.…
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