The Cyclopean Cities of Ancient Latium
The countryside around Rome is
littered with relics of a past more or less remote. One feels almost a continuity
there between the ancient and the modern world, with the ancient Roman ruins
being almost a familiar presence as if part of the natural landscape. Yet, one
also finds there remains of a much older and mysterious past. Massive cyclopean
walls encircle towns and villages, their stones darkened by the passing of
centuries and millennia. One can never get used to them, so strange they are in
their interlocking geometries and so different from the familiar contours of
Roman and Medieval walls. They loom as a relic from an entirely different past
of which we know almost nothing.
The megalithic gate of the Acropolis of Alatri (Porta Maggiore). The walls reach an height of over 15 meters in this point and in proximity of the corner in the walls - Photo by Author |
Who built the
cyclopean walls and why?
The small towns of Alatri, Ferentino,
Segni, Sezze, Veroli and Arpino, all in the Province of Frosinone, Norba, Cori
and Circei in the Province of Latina, Amelia in nearby Umbria, as far as
Ansedonia, Orbetello and Roselle in
Tuscany and Alba Fucens in Abruzzo, are entirely surrounded by cyclopean walls
that survive to this day in varying states of preservation. They loom even to
this day over 15 meters high on the Acropolis of Alatri, and are almost intact
over their entire circuit around Ferentino, Segni and Norba.
The stones composing the walls are
truly gigantic, each weighting many tons, and as finely fitted together as to
leave a few millimeters at most between the joints. But it is their near
impossible acute angles and interlocking corners that cause the greatest
amazement, as if each stone was individually carved to be a piece of a gigantic
jigsaw puzzle.
Another view of the Walls of Alatri near the Porta San Pietro (Saint Peter's Gate) - Photo by Author |
Not much has changed since the time
when Ferdinand Gregorovius first described the cyclopean walls of the Acropolis
of Alatri as “the most astounding
monument of the past in Latium”. It was 1859 when he wrote these words: “The
sight of this marvelous masonry, which equals in size any existing Egyptian
building, would amply repay the visitor for the longest and most fatiguing
day's journey […] When I walked round this black, Titanic, construction, just
in as good preservation now as if years, instead of thousands of years, had
passed over them, I was filled with amazement greater than when I first beheld
the Colosseum at Rome”. [1]
In over 150 years, very little has
changed also in our knowledge of the builders and purpose of these cyclopean structures.
The debate on the original builders of Alatri and the cyclopean walls of Latium
raged for much of the 19th and the 20th Century. Lacking
any other plausible explanation, the construction of the walls was attributed
to the Romans of the early Republican period (III – I Century BC) and the whole
question was put to rest for almost half a century. Indeed, no other
civilization known to historians and archeologists would have had the technical
skills and social organization to afford the construction of the miles long
walls and to move tens of thousands of stones, some of which weighting in
excess of 27 tons.
Yet, whoever visits the little town
of Ferentino, still encircled by its beautiful cyclopean walls, would
immediately realize that this attribution is plain nonsense. Here one sees more than in any other place three distinct
and clearly recognizable stages of construction: the cyclopean, the Roman and
the medieval. The inscription of the Roman censors Aulus Lollius and Marcus
Irtius still stands to commemorate the restoration of the walls by the two
censors in 180 BC. Of course, the restoration was made with relatively small, square
blocks of stone upon the already ruined cyclopean masonry underneath, which
served as a 10 meters high foundation for the new roman wall. Even without the inscription, no reasonable
person would ever think that the cyclopean masonry and the brick-like stone
wall above could belong to the same period, not to mention having been built by
the same people! Yet one still reads in guidebooks and even scholarly studies
that the two censors built the whole of the walls of Ferentino, including the
cyclopean portion.
The acropolis of Ferentino, where one can clearly see the three layers of construction: the Cyclopean (bottom), Roman, and the Medieval on top - Photo by Author |
Another view of the cyclopean walls of Ferentino, near the Porta Sanguinaria. The arch above the gate is a Roman addition, as also much of the wall above - Photo by Author |
Nor did the Romans ever claim
authorship of such a feat as building the walls of Alatri, Norba, Segni or any
other of the cyclopean cities of Latium. Quite to the contrary, ancient
historians had a tendency to attribute these structures, so similar to the
great walls of Tiryns and Mycenae, to mythical ancestors like the Pelasgians.
If then the walls were not built by
the Romans, who built them? More
recent scholarship has shown greater openness towards the idea of a pre-Roman
date for the cyclopean walls. The pre-roman peoples of the Hernici and the
Volsci are therefore sometimes credited for the construction of the walls. Yet,
also this attribution, though much more plausible, appears to rest on very thin
evidence. The Hernici formed a league as
far back as 495 BC, until their capital, Anagni, was taken by the Romans in 306
BC. Yet one is surprised not to find even the slightest trace of cyclopean
walls in Anagni itself, where the walls – which are with good certainty
attributed to the Hernici – are rather built with much smaller square blocks.
Even the ultimate function of the
cyclopean walls and acropolises is ultimately shrouded in mystery. Of course, the immediate thought that comes to
mind when seeing a wall is that it might serve some defensive function. Yet, in
spite of their grand scale, cyclopean walls would offer very little protection
and certainly no better protection than a much more simple structure built of
bricks or even wood. Not only are the walls pierced by several gates and
lacking towers or any other defensive feature one would expect from a
fortification of comparable size, but they even present features that seem to
exclude any meaningful defensive function. The author Giulio Magli lists
several of this features in his book “I
Segreti delle Antiche Città Megalitiche” [Secrets of the Ancient Megalithic
Cities]. For instance, the acropolis of Circei lacks any defense on the
Northern side, which was therefore entirely open and defenseless towards the
mountain. Even the main gate of Norba is too broad, at over 7 meters, to allow
any kind of covering unless we imagine a capstone of truly monstrous size as
could have never been supported by the side walls (there is ample evidence the
builders of the cyclopean walls didn’t know the principles of the arch, or
deliberately chose not to use it in their constructions) [2]. These cyclopean walls are much more similar to a sacred precinct,
like the themenos of a temple, than
to a fortress of any kind.
This is especially true in the case
of the Acropolis of Alatri, undoubtedly the finest of its kind in Italy and
among the greatest megalithic realizations in the Mediterranean. Other than the
usual absence of any defensive features inside or outside the perimeter of the Acropolis,
the only structure inside the precinct of its walls appears to be a large stepped
platform. Here is found some of the finest cyclopean masonry in Italy and
probably in the world, including a stone with over 15 angles, with joints so
tight that they don’t allow even the finest blade to pass between two stones. This
platform, called a Hyeron, was
clearly an altar of some sort, and is moreover very carefully astronomically
and geometrically aligned as to be the virtual center or omphalos of the whole city of Alatri.
Recent research has shown that the
entire city of Alatri was designed after a roughly circular plan, with three
concentric walls converging towards the Acropolis. The gates defined a number
of axes which show evidence of having been carefully astronomically aligned
towards the rising and setting of the Sun at the solstices and equinoxes. A
number of stellar alignments also seem to point to the constellation of Gemini,
Orion and the Southern Cross, at a time when it was still visible above the
horizon in the Northern hemisphere. Also, the golden section was embedded in
the design of the Acropolis and its gates.
The stars may shed new light on the
age-old question of the dating of the Acropolis of Alatri: A recent archaeo-astronomical
study shows that the Acropolis could not have been built later than 1,270 BC,
when the main axis of the city and of the Eastern wall of the Acropolis was
aligned to the star Polaris, with the North-West wall aligned to the rising of
the Sun on the morning of the Summer equinox and its setting on the Winter solstice.
The same study found evidence of an
astronomical clock based on the shadow projected by the sun along the tunnel
formed by the lesser gate of the Acropolis, also pointing at a date in the XIII
Century BC. [3]
Previous
studies had already shown that the shape of the Acropolis almost exactly
mirrors the profile of the constellation of Gemini. Even on a grander scale, the position of the
towns of Alatri, Atina, Arpino, Anagni and Ferentino (ancient Antinum) matches
the same profile of the constellation of Gemini (or, according to other
interpretations that also include several other centers of Lower Latium, the
constellation Ursa Maior). [4]
According to tradition, these five cities were
founded by a legendary king Saturn (sometimes identified with the God of the
same name) and are therefore called “Saturnian
Cities”. According to the same legend, the tomb of Saturn was located in
the town of Atina, which is also surrounded by imposing cyclopean walls of unknown
date.
Following the renewed interest in the
megalithic civilization of Central Italy, even UNESCO has taken an interest in
the astronomic alignments of the acropolis of Alatri. [5]
Even UNESCO now acknowledges that the cyclopean
walls of Lower Latium may be indeed several centuries older than their assumed
dating to the Roman period, and laments the lack of a reliable stratigraphy
that may shed more light on their true age. UNESCO defines Alatri as “the most spectacular example of the use of
geometry and astronomy in planning” and is considering its inscription as a
World Heritage site.
A view of the Hernici Mountains from the Acropolis of Veroli - Photo by Author |
References:
[1] Ferdinand Gregorovius, Latian Summers (tr. Dorothea Roberts, 1903), http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/Lazio/_Texts/ROBLAT/3*.html, accessed January, 2014
[2] Giulio Magli,
I Segreti delle Antiche Città Megalitiche,
Newton Compton, 2007
[3] Albino
Malanchini, Acropoli di Alatri, per una
Ipotesi di Datazione, published on September 24, 2012 http://www.ilpuntosulmistero.it/2012/09/24/acropoli-di-alatri-viaggio-archeoastronomico-alla-ricerca-di-misteri-per-un-ipotesi-di-datazione-finalmente-pubblicato-integralmente-lo-studio-di-albino-malanchini-che-ha-vinto-a-pari-merito-la/,
accessed January 2014
[4] Gianluigi
Proia and Luigi Cozzi, “Le Città Cosmiche del Lazio”, Mystero n. 33, february
2003, http://www.circei.it/pagina-27.html,
accessed January 2014
[5] UNESCO Portal to the Heritage of Astronomy, http://www2.astronomicalheritage.net/index.php/show-entity?identity=27&idsubentity=1, accessed January 2014
[5] UNESCO Portal to the Heritage of Astronomy, http://www2.astronomicalheritage.net/index.php/show-entity?identity=27&idsubentity=1, accessed January 2014