A.G.Tur. Tourist Guides Association of Viterbo and Rome and Group LeadersTo book a show tour -Cell. 349 29.34.058 Fax 06 233.242.622 info@tusciaguide.it |
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Situated
near Rome ’s border, Sutri is a town of ancient origin. The town was built around
the 7th century BC, but the earliest mention goes back to the 4th
century BC. At that time the Romans began to conquer all the most powerful
Etruscan cities and placed Etruria
under the control of Rome . Most of the funerary objects found at Sutri’s necropolis show the
influence of the Etruscan-Faliscan art, and the richest funerary artefacts date
from the early Etruscan period.. Anyway, Sutri reached the height of its power
only after the Roman conquest. The rock-cut amphitheatre, Sutri’s most
remarkable sight, was built between the 2nd and the 1st
centuries BC. Completely hewn out of tuff rock, the amphitheatre can seat up to
3,000 people. Another important tourist attraction is the Mithraic church. Not
far from the amphitheatre, the mithraeum is a grotto where the god Mithras was
worshipped. The cave was reused as a Christian church in the early Middle Ages,
and its he walls were painted with religious subjects dating mainly from the 15th
century. Near the mithraeum there is also Villa Savorelli, a recently restored
villa of the 18th century with a park called ‘the Holy Wood’.
Nearby the villa are a church in the Borromini style and the ruins of a castle
known as ‘Charlemagne’s castle’. The medieval town was rebuilt on a
hilltop near the Cassia road, in the same area occupied by the Etruscan-Roman
town. In the Middle Ages, Sutri played a major role. Some important buildings,
like the Cathedral of Santa Maria with its wonderful Romanesque crypt (12th
century), are there to show it.
Testo: A.G.Tur. di Viterbo Fonte
dati e immagini Amm.ne Prov. di Viterbo |