Chapter

Phoenician–Punic Maritime Trade & Urban Colonies

Phoenician merchants founded coastal trading posts from the 8th century BCE, establishing cities at Tharros, Nora, and Sulci (modern Sant'Antioco) that became full Punic colonies after Carthage took control around 550 BCE. These settlements layered over or alongside Nuragic communities — Nora's earliest Phoenician inscription is the oldest in the western Mediterranean. At Monte Sirai, a Punic hilltop fortress above Sulci commands the coastal plain, its walls and necropolis still traceable. The Punic period introduced urban planning, written language, and new religious practices (Tanit worship, tophet sanctuaries) that coexisted with and reshaped indigenous traditions. Stand at Tharros on the Sinis Peninsula and you look over Punic-era streets, a tophet, and Roman reoccupations — a palimpsest of Mediterranean colonization that the sea is slowly reclaiming.

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trade

Monte Sirai

A Phoenician hilltop fortress near Carbonia, Monte Sirai was built by settlers from Sulci (modern Sant'Antioco) to control the coastal plain and mining routes of the Sulcis. Its well-preserved walls, necropolis, and tophet make it one of the most complete Punic military settlements visible in Sardinia. Managed by the Soprintendenza. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer | Search hooks: Monte Sirai; Phoenician Punic fortress Carbonia; hilltop settlement Sulcis; tophet necropolis Sardinia; military colony archaeological site

Walk the fortress walls, visit the Punic necropolis and tophet area, and view the hilltop settlement layout with its commanding view over the coastal plain.

trade

Nora

Nora, on a promontory near Pula in southern Sardinia, preserves the oldest Phoenician inscription found in the western Mediterranean alongside Punic, Roman, and early Christian layers including in-situ mosaics and a Roman theatre. The site demonstrates the continuity of maritime urbanism from Phoenician trading post to Roman provincial city. Maintained by the Soprintendenza with ticketed access and published hours. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer; network_route | Search hooks: Nora; Phoenician Punic Roman city Pula; Nora archaeological site mosaics; oldest Phoenician inscription western Mediterranean; maritime trade promontory

View the Phoenician inscription, walk through Roman-era streets with intact mosaics, sit in the Roman theatre, and see the early Christian basilica remains on the promontory.

trade

Tharros

Founded by Phoenicians in the 8th century BCE on the Sinis Peninsula, Tharros became a major Punic and then Roman city — a layered maritime settlement whose ruins overlook the Gulf of Oristano. The visible remains include Punic-era streets, a tophet, Roman baths, and early Christian churches, making it one of Sardinia's most palimpsestic archaeological sites. Managed by the Soprintendenza with site signage. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer; network_route | Search hooks: Tharros; Phoenician Punic Roman city Sinis; tophet archaeological site Sardinia; maritime trade colony ruins; Cabras archaeological area

Walk the ancient street grid, view the Punic tophet area, enter the Roman bath ruins, and observe early Christian church foundations along the coastal promontory near San Giovanni di Sinis.

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More chapters in Sardinia

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Chapter

Nuragic Hillfort Networks & Water Sanctuaries

-1800 - -238

The Nuragic civilization dominated Sardinia for over fifteen centuries, building thousands of stone towers (nuraghi) that formed a hillfort network visible across the island today. At its height, Nuragic communities constructed sacred wells (pozzi sacri) aligned to astronomical events — the Pozzo Sacro di Santa Cristina near Paulilatino channels sunlight down its stairway at equinox, a feat of engineering that still draws observers twice a year. The colossal stone warriors of Mont'e Prama, shattered and buried around the 9th–8th century BCE and only rediscovered in 1974, show a warrior culture of extraordinary ambition. Walk through Su Nuraxi di Barumini (UNESCO since 1997) and you enter a multi-towered settlement that was still inhabited into the Punic and Roman periods. Note, however, that Nuragic-to-Christian ritual continuity at water sites is suggestive but not proven; spatial adjacency does not equal unbroken practice. Monte d'Accoddi, often mislabeled as a later sanctuary, was NOT reoccupied in the Christian period.

Chapter

Roman Integration & Provincial Urbanism

-238 - 456

Rome seized Sardinia from Carthage in 238 BCE and governed it as a province for nearly seven centuries, overlaying Roman urbanism on Punic and Nuragic foundations. The monumental thermal baths at Forum Traiani (Fordongianus) — Aquae Ypsitanae to the Romans — channel the same hot springs that still flow today, making them one of the best-preserved Roman bath complexes on the island. Roads, aqueducts (like the partially surviving one near Olbia), and forums restructured the island's connectivity. Roman Sardinia was also a grain supplier to the capital, and its interior remained restive — the mountainous Barbagia region takes its name from Roman descriptions of its 'barbarian' inhabitants. Walk the basalt-block streets at Fordongianus and you stand where Roman colonists bathed, traded, and administered an island that never fully surrendered its older identities.

Chapter

Neolithic–Chalcolithic Megalithic Ritual Landscapes

-4000 - -1800

The Neolithic megalithic tradition shaped Sardinia's earliest ritual geography: rock-cut chamber tombs (Domus de Janas, 'fairy houses') and a unique stepped altar at Monte d'Accoddi whose closest parallels are Mesopotamian ziggurats. In July 2025, UNESCO inscribed 17 Domus de Janas necropolises on the World Heritage List, confirming their global significance. Climb the ramp at Monte d'Accoddi and you stand where pre-Nuragic communities gathered for seasonal rites on a platform unlike anything else in the western Mediterranean. The Domus de Janas tombs, carved into sandstone and decorated with spiral and horn motifs, reveal a funerary cosmology that persisted across two millennia. These are not ancestors of the nuraghi but a distinct, earlier worldview — one that already treated stone, water, and the underworld as sacred channels.

Chapter

Vandal Dominion & Byzantine Christianization

456 - 1050

When the Vandals seized Sardinia in 456 CE, they ended nearly seven centuries of Roman rule and introduced a Germanic-African overlay that lasted until Byzantine reconquest in 534. The Byzantine period then brought Greek-rite Christianity, monasticism, and ecclesiastical architecture that shaped Sardinian religious practice for centuries. The 5th-century Basilica of San Saturnino in Cagliari is the island's oldest surviving Christian structure, its cruciform plan still legible despite later modifications. At Siligo, the church of Nostra Segnora de Mesumundu rises directly on the ruins of Roman baths — Byzantine-era burials with gold and silver grave goods attest to the transition from late Roman to early medieval Christian life. This long era of Vandal and Byzantine governance, followed by fragmentation as Byzantine power receded, set the institutional framework within which the Giudicati would emerge as autonomous Sardinian states.