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Grumentum
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Grumentum () was an ancient city in the centre of , in what is now the of , c. south of by the direct road through , and by the , at the point of divergence of a road eastward to Heraclea.

The main public buildings of the city have been excavated and are in excellent condition.


History
The first settlements in the area date from the 6th century BC. The site was founded by the Romans in the 3rd century BC during the as a fortified vanguard, as part of the creation of a series of fortified outposts in strategic positions: the city arose almost simultaneously with (291 BC) and (273 BC). The position was chosen to control important routes (one of which became the in the late 200s AD) between Venusia and and another road led to the Via Popilia on the Tyrrhenian side.

In 215 BC the Carthaginian general Hanno was defeated under its walls, but in 207 BC made it his headquarters, where another battle took place.

In the Social War it was a strong fortress, and seems to have been held by both sides at different times but was sacked by Italic tribes. It became a , perhaps in the time of , at the latest under , and became important. Starting from the second half of the 1st century BC. the city was rebuilt with a series of public monuments in the Caesarian and Augustan eras.

St. Laverius was martyred here in 312 AD. In 370 AD Grumentum became a bishopric but soon afterwards it began to be abandoned. Due to the Saracen inroads (9th–10th centuries), in 954 a new town ( Saponara or Saponaria, the modern ) was founded.


The Site
The site is a ridge on the right bank of the () about above sea-level, c. below the modern Grumento Nova, which lies much higher at 772 m.

Its ruins include those of a large amphitheatre (arena 62.5 m x 60 m, 1st century BC), the only one in . There are also remains of a theatre. Inscriptions record the repair of its town walls and the construction of thermae (of which remains were found) in 57–51 BC, the construction in 43 BC, of a , remains of which may be seen along an ancient road, at right angles to the main road, which traversed Grumentum from south to north. A domus with 4th century mosaics is also present, as well as two small temples of imperial times. Outside the walls monumental tombs, a Palaeo-Christian basilica and an aqueduct have been found.

The aqueduct had its source about 5 km further south and entered the town on the southern side of the plateau. It was transported on arches and emptied into a of which some ruins remain.

Many of the finds can be seen in the Archaeological Museum of Grumento Nova.


Notes

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