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Liguria travel:
Cinque Terre - Riviera - the Romans


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Cinque Terre - Riviera - the Romans

"This region according to the division made by Augustus, is the ninth. The ligurian coast between the river Varus and the Magra extdends two hundred and eleven miles." (PLINY, Naturalis historia, III, 5, 46 )

 With the principality of Augustus which we now call Liguria was a region that went beyond the present-day administrative limits, and comprising a vast and articulated territory where the river Varus and the Alps marked the western border, the river Po the northern one and the river Magra the eastern one. Immediately after the disappearance of the threat of Hannibal (202 BC), the situation of the immense Northern Italian countryside was still precarious and politically unstable.

The anti-Roman coalition between the Gauls and the Ligurians, which was still strong and perilous, was neutralized through a series of rapid and incisive military operations and with consequent territorial reorganization, new blood being brought to the existing colonial garrisons, as well as with new movements of colonies and the opening up of new penetration pathways.

The problem of Gaul having been solved, rapid anti-Ligurian raids at short intervals went on for about twenty-five years, in 200-173 BC, with chequered vicissitudes and often disastrous results for the Roman contingents. The Romans, having realized that no agreement could be reached through treaties and diplomatic ties, had to resort to more drastic and definitive instruments, which culminated in the well-known deportation of the Ligures Apuani to Sannio, near Beneventum, in 180-179 BC.

It was the consul Claudius Marcellus who in 155 BC celebrated the triumph that sanctioned the end of the conflict between Romans and Ligurians and paved the way for the Romanization of their territory". " The Romans, as they subjugated the regions of Italy with arms, became masters of part of the territory and founded their towns there." (Appian, Bella Civilia, 1.29 ).

These towns were the colonies that, together with the layout of roads and the centuriation of the territory, were the first step in Roman penetration, first of all strategic and military, and then economic and cultural. By the end of the second century AD, the process of Romanization of the eastern Ligurian area can be said to have been completed: all the necessary conditions had been fulfilled for its definitive reorganization.

On the ager which had been confiscated from the Ligures Apuani, and from which the latter had been deported, in 177 BC the Luna colony had been set up. Now, having lost its initial political and military function, it became the starting point for the revival of the economy: through its harbor facilities and its roads, and through the exploitation of the marble deposits in the Apuane Alps.

Archaeological documentation emphasizes a widespread territorial layout which one can put together not only from the evidence in the terrain, but also from a series of old markings, though these can no longer be controlled. Alongside the Luna pole, which Augustus' administrative subdivision assigned with its quarries to the 7th Region Etruria - an area active in the exportation of marble throughout the imperial age and beyond - there was a territory known both through architectural vestiges which has been lost but was documented (La Spezia gulf area: in the Muggiano, Fezzano, Limone Melara, Pegazzano and Marola localities), and through sites which are at present visible (Varignano, Bocca di Magra) or are known but still buried (Fiumaretta).

We cannot fail to notice that, unlike other regions in the Northern Italian environmental context, the Ligurian one provides little data on the territorial layout of its extreme eastern stretch, showing, for the Roman age too, a particular configuration, with sparse population, Ligurian traditions, and perhaps precarious forms of settlement involving modest and basic building techniques: one should think, for example, of the villages which surely must have come into being for the exploitation of woodland resources, probably analogous to those which arose near the quarries. What is certain is that along the coast there must have been residential and/or production structures, as the poets tell us and as we see from the Varignano and Bocca di Magra complexes. At any rate, the data afforded by necropolis complexes highlight a process of absorption and integration of the surviving autochthonous communities in the new social texture, which with the pax augustea can be seen as having been established once and for all.

Material evidence At the Civic Museum in La Spezia, named after Ubaldo Formentini, who was a passionate scholar and connoisseur of the La Spezia and Luna territory, there are also preserved some nuclei of Roman material, taken there from various sites in the province for various reasons and after a variety of vicissitudes, which from its very birth connoted the city's museum as a territorial reference pole. The finds made during the second half of the nineteenth century and at the start of the twentieth during the years of that intense planning, above all military, which was to change so radically the appearance of the Gulf of La Spezia - have mostly been lost.

However, notices and reports relating to those finds, together with what has been preserved and more recent acquisitions, make a satisfactory reading of the ancient territory possible. Of particular importance, in this connection, are the few indications coming from Marola and Muggiano, bearing witness to a series of scattered coastal settlements and maritime villas, like the ones which have come down to us at Varignano and Bocca di Magra, whose structures were destroyed at the time of the major military reorganization of the coast.

After World War II and in particular in the 1950s, there were other discoveries due to expansion of the city of La Spezia on the plain and hills, and contributions from the provincial territory The finding at Pegazzano and Madrignano of the equipment from two burials in stone boxes, unfortunately recovered without exploration of the archaeological context and hence isolated, is an important testimony to a Ligurian culture which by that time was politically dependent on the Romans but still kept its own individuality in the burial rite. By contrast, we see full-scale Romanization in the equipment in the Limone Melara necropolis, located in the densely built-up foothill part of the city's suburbs, and also in part of that brought to light in the diggings in the 50s and 60s connected with the Bocca di Magra Roman villa, whose remaining material (1970's diggings) is kept, instead, in the storerooms attached to the archaeological zone of the Luna Roman city, to which there is connected the big quantity of material recovered at the end of the nineteenth century by the marble industrialist Carlo Fabbricotti, who placed it in a private museum of his own, at the Colombarotto villa in Carrara.
Courtesy of APT Cinque Terre

36 Hours in the Cinque Terre, Italy, an article by the New York Times



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