Sito archeologico Ercole Curino
Type:
Luoghi della cultura; Oggetto fisico
Category:
Museums; Archaeological areas
The temple dedicated to Curian Hercules rises on a sacred area frequented uninterruptedly by pagans (the earliest evidences are rock-paintings discovered in a few caves at the foot of Monte Morrone) and by Christians, who occupied the area above, where there is the Celestinian hermitage of Sant'Onofrio. Situated on the main cattle-track that connects L'Aquila to Foggia, since its foundation in the II-I century B.C the temple had given hospitality to shepherds and sheep looking for Hercules's protection. The structure develops on two levels: a lower terrace and an upper one. The latter includes the remains of an arcade, a little temple, whose mosaic floors are decorated with sea-scenes, and a stone fountain carved in the rock. The lower terrace consisted of fourteenth barrel-vaulted rooms, most likely intended for commercial activity. The temple was deserted in the II century A.D., when a landslide made it inaccessible; an excavation carried out in the Fifties of the XX century brought to light the sanctuary, which, since the Middle Ages had been mistaken for Ovid's suburban villa.
Contacts:
responsible: Rosanna Tuteri - website: http://www.archeoabruzzo.beniculturali.it - email: sba-abr@beniculturali.it - tel: +39 087 132951 - fax: +39 087 13295464
Spatial coverage:
Località Badia - 67039, Sulmona (L'Aquila), Abruzzo - Italia


