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A view of a reconstructed hut at the Nuraghe Antine site at night.

5 Must See Megaliths of the Mysterious Nuragic People

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All over the Mediterranean island of Sardinia exist megalithic marvels that date from almost 4000 years ago. These mostly limestone structures are believed to have belonged to a civilization now known as the Nuragic people. Called ‘nuraghe’, they are a wonder to visit and immerse oneself in the ancient civilization that, for some reason - be it perhaps internal struggles, external invasion or some other reason entirely - had reason to construct thousands of these highly defensive edifices. Here we explore several of the best-preserved sites. 

Mysterious Civilization Enduring Through the Ages

Before Sardinia was occupied by the more modern civilizations of the Spaniards, Byzantines, Romans and Carthaginians, a mysterious civilization flourished on the island from the 18th century to the 3rd century BC.

Very little is known about this ancient civilization as they left very little written evidence and very few items providing evidence of how they lived. Even their name, Nuragic, is a term used based on the description of the fortress-like structures that they once built, called Nuraghe. These towering, sturdy architectural feats were constructed during the Bronze Age and are dispersed throughout Sardinia, with there being around 7000 known to exist, but far more thought to have been built.

Here we explore several of the best-preserved sites.

Su Nuraxi of Barumini

The Su Nuraxi site is found in the central region of the island, at Barumini, with the clue to its importance being in its very name. ‘Su Nuraxi’ means not a nuraghe, but the nuraghe. It is the most famous nuraghe in Sardinia and is the only designated UNESCO site on the island. The extensive site is one of the best preserved of the 30 Barumesi sites of the area and certainly the best complex as a whole. It was the first site to be explored by archaeologist Giovanni Lilliu and which led to his definition and ‘discovery’ of the Nuragic civilization.

17th century Nuraghe Su Nuraxi, in the south central Barumini region of Sardinia (Ciamabue / CC BY 2.0)

17th century Nuraghe Su Nuraxi, in the south central Barumini region of Sardinia (Ciamabue / CC BY 2.0)

It includes a complex nuraghe as well a substantial village of huts. It seems this was an important center of power and commerce in prehistoric times.

The structures are made from volcanic basalt stone sourced nearby and was active over 2000 years from 16th century BC to the 7th century AD. The complex includes the tower (or keep) with a bastion at each of its four corners. A village of 50 huts sprawls out surrounding this central structure.

This tower was once 18.5 meters (60 ft) tall and was erected in the Middle Bronze Age (16-14th century BC). It contained 3 rooms over 3 levels, and was topped with a tholos or false dome, a wooden roof which also was used for the other buildings in the village.

The Nuraghe Palmavera

The Nuraghe Palmavera is similar to all the nuraghe structures and is one of the largest and most important examples, after the Barumini complex. It is located on the Palmera headland, overlooking a bay the Romans romantically called the ‘Harbor of the Nymphs’ near the modern beachfront resort town of Alghero.

A view of Nuragic complex of Palmavera. (CC BY-SA 3.0)

A view of Nuragic complex of Palmavera. (CC BY-SA 3.0)

It is believed that Nuraghe Palmavera was built in phases starting in the 15th century BC with a main tower that stands almost 8 meters (26 feet) high and 10 meters (33 feet) in diameter, including the beehive shaped roofs. It is estimated that a village of up to 150-200 huts surrounded the tower, with only 50 existing today. A new phase of development was completed in the 9th century BC with the addition of an exterior wall and additional huts. Although built using limestone blocks and sand, the Nuraghe Palmavera was destroyed by fire in the 8th century AD, but parts of the structure remain intact.

Today, this Nuraghe complex is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Sardinia, along with the Nuragic complex of Barumini, which UNESCO declared a World Heritage Site in 1997.

Nuraghe of Santu Antine

This naraghe is a giant amongst giants, with the central tower now reported as being 16.5 meters (54.13 ft.) but once standing at a dizzying 23 to 24 meters (75-78 ft). It is currently the tallest naraghe of all, but it is thought that even higher towers existed in the past.

Santu Antine is located in the northwestern Sardinian province of Sassari, close to the town of Torralba, and is known by local people as  Sa Domu de su Re or The House of the King in English. The building is made of basalt and The central tower is composed of three smaller towers that were stacked one on top of the other. Only two of these towers have survived till today. The rooms of these two towers may be reached by climbing up a helicoidal staircase that was incorporated into the structure’s thick walls.

It is surrounded by a small collection of 14 huts that have been identified, which were part of what would have been a much larger settlement. These dwellings have been dated to the 13 th century BC, and articfacts dating to the Roman period have been found in them, showing they were used after long after the Nuralgic civilization had ended. Some huts contained features, such as seats, hearths, and niches that aid in our understanding of their function. One near the entrance had a seat and a hearth, and archaeologists have proposed it would have been used for gatherings or meetings.

Nuraghe Santu Antine, the largest nuraghe. (Antonio Figoni, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Nuraghe Santu Antine, the largest nuraghe. (Antonio Figoni, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Nuraghe La Prisgiona

The site Nuraghe La Prisgiona is extensive at around 5 hectares and includes 90 Bronze Age buildings that have been excavated so far and those around the main building are very well preserved.  It is a real chance to get a feeling of the past as you weave around the enclosures, with the size of the preserved settlement making it one of the most complex sites of its type. The main building is the classic three tower nuraghe but it also features an enclosed courtyard which includes a stone well that reaches a depth of 7 meters (23 feet). The well has yielded several well crafted jugs from the Nuralgic era.

One of the huts includes a long cresent shaped stone seat, long enough to accomodate over a dozen people, and an ornate jug was found here, perhaps for religious use.

The site is located in Arzachena, near Costa Smeralda (Emerald Coast) in the northeast of Sardinia. 

Nuraghe Losa

Nuraghe Losa is a distinctive and well-preserved nuraghe that is located near the village of Abbasanta, in the central-western region of Sardinia. It is named ‘nuraghe of the tombs’ which refers to the Roman cinerary urns carved into the rocks nearby, as during the Roman era it was used for funerary purposes.

The giant and imposing structure is reminiscent of a ship’s bow. ( franke 182 / Adobe Stock)

The giant and imposing structure is reminiscent of a ship’s bow. ( franke 182 / Adobe Stock)

It is most remarkable for the shape which is triangular and can be compared to the bow of a ship and it is obvious that the masonry techniques were reaching some refinement by this point, the 14th-15th century BC.

There is a main entrance raised above ground level through which a corridor leads to three of the internal towers. A fourth tower is accessed through a separate entrance. These towers are not obvious from the outside as the whole edifice appears as a solid mass of rock. Just why such a fortification was thought required remains a mystery, but this would surely have been virtually impenetrable.

As well as the three rooms, the main keep tower has a small spiral ramp leading to an upper chamber. There are also 3 wells for storage and a cistern in the western tower.

Arial view of Nuraghe Losa showing it’s triangular shape with 4 towers. (marco / Adobe Stock)

Arial view of Nuraghe Losa showing it’s triangular shape with 4 towers. (marco / Adobe Stock)

Only a small part of the surrounding settlement has been excavated but includes buildings from the late Punic, Roman Republican and Imperial, Late Roman and Byzantine periods.

There is also a Giant’s tomb, another interesting megalithic feature of the island.

A Nuragic Civilization Legacy

While the Nuragic civilization may be extinct and stories of their history now the stuff that legends, the magnificent stone structures that they left behind provide testament to a mighty society with a penchant for extreme defense. This is just a small taste of some of the best of the many sites it is possible to visit from this fascinating if enigmatic era.

Top image: A view of a reconstructed hut at the Nuraghe Antine site at night. Source: Francesco Ghiani, CC BY-SA 3.0

By Gary Manners

References

Shayne, T. 2020. Do These Legendary Tombs Reveal the Presence of Giants in Sardinia? Gaia

Available at: https://www.gaia.com/article/do-these-legendary-tombs-reveal-the-presence-of-giants-in-sardinia

Staff Writer. Barumini: The Nuraghi. Italia.it

Available at: http://www.italia.it/en/travel-ideas/unesco-world-heritage-sites/barumini-the-nuraghi.html#:~:text=The%20Nuragic%20complex%20of%20Barumini,can%20be%20found%20in%20Italy.

Staff Writer.2020. Why Do We Know So Little About the Nuragic Civilisation? Total Sardinia

Available at: https://totalsardinia.com/why-do-we-know-so-little-about-the-nuragic-civilisation/

Staff Writer.2020. The Complex of Palmavera. Sardegna Turismo

Available at: https://www.sardegnaturismo.it/en/explore/complex-palmavera

Staff Writer. 2020 Nuraghe Losa, Sardegna Turismo

Available at: https://www.sardegnaturismo.it/en/explore/nuraghe-losa

Staff Writer. 2020 Su Nuraxi, Sardegna Turismo

Available at: https://www.sardegnaturismo.it/en/explore/su-nuraxi

 

Comments

Gary Manners's picture

David, one question. Do you agree that these were defensive structures? Even if they couldn’t protect the whole population, perhaps to protect an elete class?

Gary

Gary Manners's picture

David, Thank you for this input. I have made some adjustments to the article to reflect some of your points here. Thank you very much!

Gary

It is quite the opposite. There are 7000 Nuraghe visible still today but these are only the still standing ones. Many more are complitely forgotten under later structures as christian churches or mud hill like the biggest of them: the nuraghe of Barumini. There is a  bronze model of it ,as it was at his apex, and it shows a 27 mt tall tower with 4 lower towers around the central one. This skycraper was completely covered with mud until the “father of sardinian archeology” uncovered it. The purpose of these thousands towers is unknown still today: it cannot be the defence of a population because they are, including the greatest, too small to protect the local population and their structure of stone without plaster made it impossible to preserve food to substain an enemy assault.
Again, it is false that there was not a language. There are  few fragment visible today but the nuragic population (the few who can write) used the foenician alphabet for their own words that are surviving in sardinian language  still nowaday. The nuragic people called themselves Shardana and were famous sea raiders and members of the (un)famous “sea people league” that terrified all mediterranean populations for a long time before the rise of the greek colture and  the rise of Rome .They were strong enough to forbid greeks sailors from exploring the sea that lies beyond Sardinia.Greek colonization in Spain started only when the nuragic age collapsed for unknown reason.  Even Pharaons enroled them as mercenaries and personal bodyguards at some point. There are many “egiptian stone beetles” that were carved with phoenician signs in sardinia by those mercenaries and sold by local tomb raiders as egiptian rarities.
Finally, yes, there are few nuraghe in Corsica (now a french island) and at the Baleari islands in Spain. One nuraghe was found in Israel and used by some archaeologist to affirm the sardinian true origin from the phoenician culture. But this is “younger” than the original sardinians.

Sardinia was apparently an island of Citadels; why?  Maybe because the island is not too far south of Gaul who’s people are famous for their raiding & looting; just ask the future Romans. This is the only reason I can think of for these ancient stone built villages that would of fit in well with the Midieval period of Europe. And I wonder if there’s similar type of building in the nearby island of Corsica.

Gary Manners's picture

Gary

Gary is an editor and content manager for Ancient Origins. He has a BA in Politics and Philosophy from the University of York and a Diploma in Marketing from CIM. He has worked in education, the educational sector, social work... Read More

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