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Monte Bubbonìa[1] is a 595-metre-high (1,952 ft) hill located in the comune of Mazzarino, about twenty kilometres from the city of Gela. It consists of three platforms, descending from west to east (i.e. the westernmost platform is also the highest).

Monte Bubbonia
Remains of the ancient settlement
Shown within Sicily
LocationCaltanissetta, Sicily, Italy
Coordinates37°15′6.93″N 14°20′25.25″E
Altitude595 m (1,952 ft)
Typesettlement
History
Periods6th century BC
CulturesSicans, Greeks
Site notes
ArchaeologistsPaolo Orsi, Piero Orlandini
Public accessyes

The site is reached by travelling along the SS 117 Gela-Catania, taking the turn-off for Piazza Armerina, driving for 9 kilometres, until a side road appears on the left, the old road to Mazzarino, marked by a sign which shows the street on an ancient Roman route map known as the Itinerarium Antonini.[2]

The shape of the hill, from a geological point of view, is relatively recent, with the Miocene limestone base covered by Pleistocene marl with silt and quartz grains, then finally by very red sand which is very crumbly and dusty. Below the curb of a dirt road which runs up the east side of the hill towards the acropolis, there is a 2.2-metre-long (7.2 ft) chamber dolmen, the shape of which has similarities to structures in Sardinia and Apulia.[3]

On the summit of the mountain, Paolo Orsi discovered an ancient city which the archaeologist Piero Orlandini later identified as the Sican settlement of Maktorion, known from Herodotus 7.53.[4] However, the ruins do not seem to predate the 6th century BC, and this makes Orlandini's identification unlikely.[5]




References


  1. Domenico Pancucci - Maria Cristina Naro, "Monte Bubbonia. Campagne di scavo 1905, 1906, 1955", Sikelika serie archeologica 4, Bretschnaider ed., Roma, 1992.
  2. Salvatore Piccolo, op.cit., p. 9 et seq.
  3. S. Piccolo, ibidem, p. 11.
  4. D. Pancucci, "Monte Bubbonia, Maktorion?", (Sicilia, Caltanissetta), in "F.A." XXVIII- XXIX, 1979, n. 5755.
  5. Eugenio Manni, Greci in Sicilia tra l'VIII e il VI secolo[permanent dead link].

Bibliography







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