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Elymian-Punic Walls of Erice

The Elymian–Punic Walls of Erice are early 5th-century BC fortifications enclosing the ancient city of Eryx (modern Erice, Sicily). First constructed during the Elymian period and later modified and expanded under Punic control, the walls run along the slope of Monte Erice facing Trapani and Bonagia, where they block the easiest route up the hill—a narrow gap between two rocky ridges.

The best-preserved line extends for about . From south to north it includes three principal gates—Porta Trapani, Porta Carmine, and Porta Spada—and excavations have identified the remains of a fourth gate oriented towards Castellammare del Golfo (commonly called Porta Castellammare).

Description

Along the western side, the circuit is punctuated by at least 18 towers. The northernmost 11 towers preserve ancient masonry and are larger; the towers further south are smaller and date to the medieval rebuilding.

On the eastern side, square towers stand at roughly intervals in front of a curtain wall about thick. This eastern stretch largely reflects a 14th-century reconstruction.

History and construction

Archaeological excavations identify two ancient building phases, later reworked in the Middle Ages.

  • First phase (early 5th century BC): walls with a megalithic base of very large, roughly hewn blocks set on foundations of small, irregular stones. Sealed layers by Tower 8 contained black-glaze pottery dated to about 490–480 BC, placing this earliest circuit at the beginning of the 5th century BC.
  • Second phase (late 4th–early 3rd century BC): rebuilding in opus quadratum using regular rectangular blocks. Finds from Tower 10 (e.g. a Morel 2621b cup, c. 285 ± 20 BC) date this work to the early 3rd century BC. Punic mason’s marks on blocks are usually linked to this phase.
  • Medieval works (especially 14th century AD): narrowing of tower modules, addition and reworking of posterns, and extensive repairs in smaller squared blocks across long stretches of the circuit.

Extent of the ancient town

Excavation and topographic study show that the ancient settlement was smaller than the medieval and modern town and concentrated on the northern summit. An archaic wall uncovered north of Porta Castellammare marks the northern limit. The southern stretches and smaller towers reflect medieval enlargement. This layout also supports the view that the celebrated sanctuary of Venus Erycina (now the Castle of Venus) stood on the very summit, outside the main settlement.

Research

The current phasing and measurements derive from targeted excavations and structural analysis along the western circuit (especially Towers 1–11) and from soundings near Porta Castellammare and the northern limit. Earlier campaigns (19th–20th centuries) disturbed some areas, but recent stratigraphic work clarified the sequence and dates.

Conservation

Restoration and consolidation of the walls began in the 1970s and have continued in recent decades. In 2024, the Erice municipality launched a new conservation phase, supported by €1.94 million in funding from Italy’s PNRR (Piano Nazionale di Ripresa e Resilienza). The project focuses on structural stabilisation, improved walkways, and new interpretive signage to support public access and understanding.

Gallery

References

External links