Altino (Altinum): the Roman city that became Venice, and the buried town revealed from the air
Altino, at Quarto d'Altino on the northern edge of the Venetian lagoon, was once Altinum, a major city of the ancient Veneti and then a thriving Roman town on the great roads north, a crossroads of land, river and sea. It matters for two extraordinary reasons. First, it is the progenitor of Venice: when the late-antique world fell apart, people from Altinum and its neighbours moved into the lagoon and helped create Venice and Torcello. Second, its entire buried street plan was famously revealed not by digging but from the air, in one of modern archaeology's most celebrated discoveries.
Millions of people visit Venice without ever suspecting that the city has an ancestor sitting quietly on the mainland a short drive away. Altino is that ancestor, and it is one of the most thought-provoking sites in the Veneto precisely because of what is not there: no standing Roman city, because the city is still underground, and a great deal of it was carried off long ago into the lagoon to help build Venice itself. What you visit instead is a superb modern museum, two modest but evocative archaeological areas, and the haunting knowledge that the streets, houses and canals of an entire Roman town lie mapped beneath the fields around you. It is archaeology as detective story rather than as spectacle, and for the right traveller that is far more interesting.
The city that emptied into the lagoon
Altinum was founded by the ancient Veneti between the 8th and 7th centuries BC and grew because of its position, at the meeting point of the inland plain, the lagoon and the Adriatic, which made it for centuries a hub of land, river and sea traffic and a crossroads of peoples and goods. Like the other Veneti cities, it was peacefully annexed to Rome in the 2nd century BC, and the great Roman roads, the Via Annia and the Via Claudia Augusta, ran through or near it. It reached its height as a Roman city between the 1st century BC and the 2nd century AD and stayed lively into the 5th to 7th centuries AD. Tradition holds that the birth of Venice followed the sack of Altinum, Aquileia and Concordia by Attila and the Huns in 452 AD, when refugees fled into the safety of the lagoon. Historians now temper that dramatic story: Altinum in fact persisted for some time, and it was above all the changing environment, along with later Lombard pressure, that gradually emptied the city as its people resettled in the lagoon at Torcello and the other island communities that became Venice. Either way, the line from Altinum to Venice is real, and standing here you are at the source.
The city revealed from the air
Here is what makes Altino unique. Because the Roman city was never built over by a later town and simply lies buried under farmland, it became the subject of a remarkable feat of non-invasive archaeology. During a drought, aerial photography captured crop marks across the fields, the subtle differences in how plants grow over buried walls, streets and canals, and from these images researchers were able to map the entire street plan of the hidden Roman city, its grid, its waterways, its public buildings, without lifting a spade. It is one of the most celebrated examples of aerial and remote-sensing archaeology anywhere, a whole city read from the sky. That story reframes your visit: the empty-looking fields are not empty at all, they are a complete Roman town held in suspension just below the surface.
The museum and the two archaeological areas
The National Archaeological Museum, opened in 2014 in a beautifully restored 19th-century rice mill, the ex-Risiera, tells the story across two floors, prehistory and pre-Roman Altinum below, the Roman city and its daily, social and economic life above. The finds humanise the place: a gold necklace of Salento workmanship, delicate murrine glass, marble funerary portraits, children's toys, even the leather soles of the inhabitants' shoes. A panoramic tower lets you look out over the buried-city landscape. About 500 metres away lie two archaeological areas, one preserving the monumental porta-approdo, a combined city gate and port quay that marked the northern entrance to the city from the 1st century BC, together with a stretch of the urban street that linked the gate to the centre. Modest in scale, but with the museum and the aerial story in your head, deeply resonant.
| Element | What it offers | |
|---|---|---|
| The ex-Risiera museum | Two floors, from the Veneti to the Roman city, with intimate everyday finds | |
| The two archaeological areas | The gate-and-quay and an urban street, about 500 m from the museum | |
| The panoramic tower | A view over the fields that conceal the buried city | |
| The idea | An entire Roman town mapped from the air, the ancestor of Venice |
A short history in dates
- 8th to 7th c. BC The ancient Veneti found Altinum on the edge of the future lagoon.
- 2nd c. BC Altinum is peacefully annexed to Rome; the Via Annia and Via Claudia Augusta run through the area.
- 1st c. BC to 2nd c. AD Altinum flourishes as a Roman city and crossroads.
- 452 AD Attila sacks Altinum, Aquileia and Concordia; tradition links this to the flight into the lagoon.
- 5th to 7th c. AD The city gradually empties as people resettle in the lagoon, helping create Venice and Torcello.
- 2014 The new National Archaeological Museum opens in the restored rice mill, following the famous aerial mapping of the buried city.
What nobody tells you
Set your expectations correctly and Altino is wonderful; arrive expecting a Roman city to walk and you will be baffled by a museum and two small fenced areas. The trick is to do the museum first, absorb the aerial-discovery story, then walk out to the archaeological areas understanding that a complete town lies beneath the fields, at which point the flat landscape becomes thrilling rather than dull. It is an easy and rewarding antidote to the crush of Venice, twenty minutes away yet almost empty of tourists, and it pairs naturally with Torcello and the northern lagoon, the very places Altinum's people fled to, and thematically with Aquileia further east, another great Roman city of this corner of Italy. Monday closed, so plan around it, and the first Sunday of the month is free.
Who should skip Altino
Brutal version. If you want upstanding Roman ruins, skip Altino, because the city is literally still underground and what stands is a museum and two modest areas; you will feel cheated if that is your aim. If you will not engage with the museum and the idea behind the site, the fields will look like nothing. And if your time near Venice is tight and purely sightseeing, it is a niche detour. But if you are intrigued by the story of how Venice was born on the mainland, if the notion of a whole Roman city mapped from the air rather than excavated captivates you, and if you would trade crowds for a quiet, intelligent half day with a fine museum and a profound backstory, Altino is one of the most quietly fascinating places in the Veneto.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Altino (Altinum)?
- Altino, at Quarto d'Altino on the edge of the Venetian lagoon, was Altinum, a major city of the ancient Veneti and then a thriving Roman town on the Via Annia. It is considered the progenitor of Venice and is part of the UNESCO Venice and its Lagoon site, with a national museum and two archaeological areas.
- Is Altino really the ancestor of Venice?
- Yes, in a real sense. Tradition holds that refugees from Altinum and neighbouring cities fled into the lagoon after Attila's sack of 452 AD and helped found Venice and Torcello. Historians now stress that Altinum persisted for a time and that environmental change and later Lombard pressure gradually moved its population into the lagoon.
- How was the buried city of Altinum discovered?
- Because the Roman city was never built over and lies under farmland, aerial photography during a drought captured crop marks revealing the buried walls, streets and canals, allowing researchers to map the entire street plan of the hidden city without excavation. It is a celebrated example of aerial and remote-sensing archaeology.
- What can you see at Altino?
- The National Archaeological Museum in a restored 19th-century rice mill, with finds from the Veneti and Roman periods including a gold necklace, murrine glass, marble portraits, children's toys and leather shoe soles, a panoramic tower, and two archaeological areas about 500 metres away preserving a monumental gate-and-quay and an urban street.
- How much does it cost to visit Altino?
- Entry has been about 5 euro full, 2 euro reduced and free under 18, free on the first Sunday of the month, covering the museum, the Antenati Altinati display, the tower and the archaeological area. Combined tickets with the Concordiese museum and Caorle exist. Confirm current pricing.
- What are the opening hours?
- The museum has run Tuesday to Saturday 08:00 to 19:00 and Sunday and holidays 14:00 to 19:00, closed Monday. Always check the official Venice lagoon museums site for the current schedule before visiting.
- How do you get to Altino from Venice?
- About 20 minutes by car from Venice off the SS14. ATVO buses from Venice Piazzale Roma or Mestre toward San Donà di Piave stop near the site in roughly 45 minutes, and Quarto d'Altino station is on the Venice to Trieste rail line a short distance away.
- Is Altino worth visiting?
- For travellers drawn to ideas and backstory, very much so: it offers a fine museum, the profound story of the birth of Venice, and a whole Roman city mapped from the air, all in a quiet half day near Venice. Those who need upstanding ruins to walk may be disappointed, since the city itself remains underground.