Vincenzo martemucci

Blending creativity, data, and AI engineering.

A dispatch on fragments, frustration, and the long work of piecing together a past that nobody seems eager to preserve.

There is a particular kind of exhaustion that comes from trying to report on something that exists mostly in absences. Not the clean, dramatic absence of a ruin, a toppled column or a roofless temple, but the bureaucratic, logistical, cultural absence that surrounds southern Italy’s archaeological record like fog around a hillside. I have been trying, for the better part of two years, to assemble a long form project about the archaeological landscape of the Italian Mezzogiorno, and I can tell you with some authority that the story does not want to be told. Not because it isn’t there, but because it has been scattered, buried, stolen, ignored, and, perhaps worst of all, filed away in archives that no one will let you see.

Let me be specific about what I mean. I am working on several interconnected pieces, all of which orbit the same gravitational center: the deep past of southern Italy and the astonishing indifference with which it has been treated. One thread follows Gravina in Puglia, the town where my family is from, a place that sits on the western lip of the Murge plateau, perched above a ravine so deep and ancient that the town takes its name from it. Another thread traces the broader archaeology of the Fossa Bradanica, that vast tectonic depression running between the Apennine chain and the Murge highlands, a landscape that has been continuously inhabited since the Paleolithic but remains, even in Italy’s own scholarly record, remarkably under documented. A third thread moves west into Campania, to the ancient Greek colonial sites along the coast, where the question is not what remains to be discovered but what has already been lost, dispersed across the collections of Europe and America before anyone thought to ask whether it should stay.

Each of these threads, individually, should be straightforward to report. Together, they amount to a kind of journalistic obstacle course that I suspect would be familiar to anyone who has tried to do serious cultural reporting in the south of Italy.

The Problem of Sources

Start with the most basic challenge: navigating the system. Southern Italian archaeology is a world of overlapping jurisdictions, underfunded regional heritage authorities, and local officials who oscillate between defensive pride and total disinterest depending on whether they think you are writing a tourism piece or an exposé. Italy’s heritage protection system, the network of regional superintendencies that oversee archaeological sites, is at once the country’s greatest asset and its most maddening bottleneck. Everything flows through it. Permission to visit a site, to photograph a dig, to access an archive, to reproduce an image of a pot shard: all of it requires paperwork that moves at a pace calibrated to geological time.

Then there is a paradox that anyone working on southern Italian archaeology will eventually confront. Much of what we know about these sites, we owe to foreign scholars. British and anglophone archaeologists conducted the foundational fieldwork at places like Botromagno, the ancient hill settlement outside Gravina. Without their surveys, their publications, their decades of patient excavation, much of this material would still be invisible to the wider world. The irony is bitter. Italy’s own scholarly infrastructure has often failed to document, synthesize, or make accessible the archaeology of its own south. The Italian language literature that does exist tends to be scattered across specialized journals with small print runs, limited digital presence, and no systematic indexing. Conference proceedings gather dust. Gray literature disappears into ministry filing cabinets. The comprehensive Italian language narrative of these places, the one you would expect the host country to have produced, largely does not exist.

For Gravina specifically, the problem compounds. The town sits on one of the most archaeologically layered sites in Puglia. Botromagno was a major settlement of the indigenous Italic people who inhabited the region before Roman contact, a place ancient geographers described as among the most important cities of its tribal territory. We know this in large part because anglophone researchers made it their business to find out. The archaeological park there covers hundreds of hectares. There are Neolithic remains, Iron Age traces, painted tombs from the fifth century BCE, the ruins of a Roman villa, a medieval castle, rock cut churches from the Byzantine period, an underground network of tunnels and cisterns that runs beneath the modern town like a second city. A necropolis. Interconnected chambers carved into the cliff face across multiple levels. And just a short distance away, one of the oldest and most intact early human skeletal finds in Europe, sealed in a cave and encased in mineral deposits for well over a hundred thousand years.

All of this exists. Very little of it has been pulled together by Italian scholarship into the kind of comprehensive, readable narrative that a place this extraordinary deserves. The local archaeological museum houses artifacts spanning millennia, but the published catalog is incomplete. Local historians have produced passionate but uneven accounts. The foreign fieldwork is rigorous but narrow in scope. Nobody on the Italian side has stitched it together. The reason is that the source material is fragmented across institutions, languages, and decades in a way that makes synthesis an act of sheer stubbornness, and the institutional will to do it has simply not been there.

The Fossa Bradanica: A Landscape Without a Story

Move outward from Gravina and the problem only deepens. The Fossa Bradanica is one of the most geologically and archaeologically significant landscapes in the Mediterranean. It is the deep trench that separates the Murge limestone plateau from the Apennine mountains, a depression filled with ancient sediments, carved by rivers that have been reshaping it for millions of years. The ravines that score its edges, the gravine from which towns like Gravina and its neighbors take their names, are among the most dramatic karst formations in Europe. The region preserves evidence of human habitation stretching back to the Lower Paleolithic.

Here again, it has been foreign researchers who have done much of the heavy lifting. Major English language field surveys of the Bradanic trough and the Basentello Valley represent some of the most thorough work ever conducted in this area. Italian geologists have studied the tectonic structure extensively, but when it comes to the archaeology, the Neolithic settlements, the Eneolithic sites, the Bronze Age transitions, the dense network of indigenous villages that dotted the Murge during the Iron Age, the Italian language documentation is thin, scattered across conference proceedings and gray literature, and difficult to access even for those who know where to look.

The Murge plateau itself, now partly protected as a national park, is a landscape of extraordinary richness. It preserves sub steppe grasslands, karst formations, and the traces of an agro pastoral civilization that shaped the terrain for millennia: the dry stone enclosures, the sheep rearing structures, the network of ancient drove roads. But the interpretive infrastructure is minimal. Signage is sparse. Guided access is limited. There have been efforts to secure international geopark recognition, which could change things, but the process is slow, and in the meantime, the sites sit in a kind of administrative limbo, known to specialists but invisible to the broader public.

Campania: What Was Lost

If the Puglia material presents the challenge of assembling a story from fragments, the Campania material presents something worse: the challenge of accounting for what is gone.

The great Greek colonial sites along the Campanian coast are, on paper, success stories. They hold international heritage designations. The three great Doric temples at one site are among the best preserved Greek temples anywhere in the world. A famous painted tomb discovered there in the late 1960s is singular: the only known example of Greek figural painting from the Archaic or Classical period to survive intact. At the other major site, the ancient city founded by refugees fleeing the Persian conquest of Ionia, the walls and acropolis survive, along with a monumental arched gate that is unique in Greek architecture on Italian soil, and the memory of a philosophical school that shaped Western thought.

But the story of these sites is also, inescapably, a story of hemorrhage. The local museum holds the largest collection of material from the area, but a significant number of artifacts were removed before modern protections existed and are now distributed across collections worldwide. Major museums in Spain, France, Germany, and the United States hold important pieces: Roman statuary, fine painted pottery attributed to identified workshop hands, architectural fragments. A temple complex at a nearby river mouth is now nearly destroyed. Some of the archaic relief panels were recovered, but how many weren’t?

The problem is not unique to these sites. It is systemic. Investigators have estimated that tens of thousands of tombs have been looted across southern Italy, representing hundreds of millions of dollars in stolen heritage. For decades, criminal networks funneled artifacts from the hands of tomb robbers, who worked under cover of darkness with shovels and metal detectors, through intermediaries abroad, where the objects were cleaned up, given false provenance papers, and sold at auction to dealers and institutions around the world. Italy’s art crimes police have spent decades tracking these networks, and their work has been heroic. But what they recover is always a fraction of what was taken. Painted frescoes ripped from the walls of an ancient tomb and recovered twenty years later are a miracle of investigative persistence. They are also a reminder that we will never know which tomb they came from, what else it contained, or what story its full contents might have told.

At the site founded by the Ionian refugees, the losses are quieter but no less real. It has suffered less from organized looting than from slow neglect, the attrition of exposure, underfunding, and the sheer difficulty of maintaining a sprawling archaeological zone in a region where resources are perpetually scarce. Recent restoration work has been encouraging, but the site remains far less visited and less studied than its more famous neighbor, and its potential as a window into the colonial Greek world and the intellectual tradition it produced remains largely unrealized.

The Work Ahead

I write all of this not as complaint but as context. When you set out to tell the story of southern Italian archaeology, you are not simply reporting on ruins. You are navigating a landscape where the physical past and the institutional present are tangled together in ways that resist easy narration. The sources are scattered. The Italian archives are difficult. The foreign scholarship is essential but incomplete. The funding is inadequate. The looting, historical and ongoing, has created gaps in the record that can never be fully closed. And perhaps most frustrating of all, the country that should be most invested in telling these stories has too often left the work to outsiders.

And yet, the story is there. It is there in the ravine at Gravina, where rock cut churches from the early Middle Ages share cliff walls with caves that sheltered humans in the Neolithic. It is there in the Fossa Bradanica, where the first farmers built permanent settlements on soil deposited by ancient seas. It is there on the Campanian coast, where a young man painted on the underside of a tomb slab dives forever into an unknown sea, the only image of its kind to survive from the Greek world.

These are stories that belong to the places where they happened. Getting them right, getting the sources, the access, the context, the nuance, is slow, frustrating, sometimes infuriating work. But it is work worth doing, because the alternative is silence. And silence, in archaeology, is just another word for loss.

The author is currently developing a multi part project on the archaeology of southern Italy, with particular focus on Gravina in Puglia and the Murge/Fossa Bradanica region, and on the dispersal of archaeological heritage from the ancient Greek sites of Campania.

 

 

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