Amiternum: the Sabine city where Sallust was born, just outside L'Aquila
A few kilometres from L'Aquila, near the village of San Vittorino, the resting remains of a Roman theatre and amphitheatre mark the site of Amiternum, an ancient Sabine and then Roman city with a serious literary claim to fame: it was the birthplace, in 86 BC, of Sallust, one of the greatest historians of Rome. Set in the high valley of the Aterno under the mountains, free to enter, and almost always empty, Amiternum is the kind of place where Roman history feels like a personal discovery.
Abruzzo keeps its Roman past lightly, scattered across mountain valleys, and Amiternum is one of its most evocative fragments. This was a city of real importance, the political and religious reference point for a web of villages across the Sabine uplands, and its ruins were admired and recorded by scholars as far back as the Renaissance. Today two quiet archaeological areas, a theatre and an amphitheatre, survive on either side of a modern road, and the pleasure of visiting is partly the monuments and partly the sense of standing in the home town of a writer whose unflinching histories of Rome's moral decline are still read and argued over two thousand years later.
Sabines, Rome, and the birth of a historian
The hills here were settled from deep prehistory, and in the Iron Age this was Sabine country, with fortified villages on the heights controlling the passes. Rome took the chief oppidum on the Colle di San Vittorino in the campaigns that subdued the Sabines in the late 3rd century BC, and through the late Republic and early Empire the settlement spread down from the hill toward the Aterno, growing into a proper Roman city along the Via Caecilia, with a forum, temples, baths and the entertainment buildings whose remains you visit. Its proudest claim is a man: Gaius Sallustius Crispus, Sallust, was born here in 86 BC. A politician turned historian, he wrote searing accounts of the Catilinarian conspiracy and the war against Jugurtha, and his bleak, moralising analysis of Roman corruption made him one of the most influential and most imitated of all Latin prose writers. To stand in Amiternum is to stand where that voice began.
The theatre, the amphitheatre, and the dead
Two monuments anchor the visit, on opposite sides of the modern road and the river. The theatre, of the Augustan age and excavated from 1878, stood near the centre of the Roman city and could hold around two thousand spectators; abandoned after the 4th century, it was even reused as a burial ground in late antiquity. The amphitheatre, of the 1st century AD, sits at the southern edge of the city by the river, its cavea once carrying tiered seating on two levels around an arena, with an estimated capacity of about six thousand, though the seating itself has largely vanished. Around the ancient city spread rich necropoleis, which yielded late-Republican Hellenistic bronze funerary beds, now in museums in Chieti and Rome, and famous carved reliefs that illuminate the funeral rituals and ideals of the age. Nearby, beneath the church of San Michele Arcangelo, lies the small early Christian catacomb of San Vittorino, linked to the local martyr who gives the modern village its name, with an early painted shrine.
| Element | Note |
|---|---|
| Theatre | Augustan age, around 2,000 spectators; later reused as a burial ground |
| Amphitheatre | 1st c. AD, estimated 6,000 capacity; seating largely gone |
| Necropoleis | Bronze funerary beds and famous reliefs, now in Chieti and Rome |
| Catacomb of San Vittorino | Early Christian, beneath the church of San Michele Arcangelo |
A short history in dates
- Iron Age Sabine fortified villages occupy the heights, including the Colle di San Vittorino.
- late 3rd c. BC Rome subdues the Sabines and takes the oppidum.
- 86 BC The historian Sallust is born at Amiternum.
- Augustan age The theatre is built as the city spreads toward the Aterno.
- 1st c. AD The amphitheatre is built at the southern edge of the city.
- after the 4th c. AD The theatre is abandoned and partly reused for burials; the city slowly declines.
What nobody tells you
A few honest pointers. The site is split into two separate areas, the theatre and the amphitheatre, divided by a modern road and the Aterno river, so do not expect a single continuous walk; treat them as two short stops. Entry is free, which is a gift, and the theatre has kept morning hours Tuesday to Sunday, but management has recently passed to the National Museum of Abruzzo in L'Aquila, so confirm current days and times before you go. Read a little Sallust beforehand, because the literary connection is half the reason to come. And combine the visit with L'Aquila itself, slowly rebuilding after its 2009 earthquake and well worth your support, where the National Museum of Abruzzo holds the region's finest archaeological treasures, including material that puts Amiternum in context.
Who should skip Amiternum
Honest version. If you want a single grand monument, Amiternum is two modest areas split by a road, with the amphitheatre's seating largely gone, so adjust your expectations. If you will not drive, it is awkward to reach. And if neither Roman entertainment buildings nor the birthplace of a Latin historian moves you, it may feel slight. But if you are drawn to the quieter corners of Roman Italy, if standing in the home town of Sallust and walking an Augustan theatre and an imperial amphitheatre under the Abruzzo mountains appeals, and if you value a free, uncrowded site you can pair with L'Aquila and the Gran Sasso, Amiternum is a genuine and atmospheric discovery.
Why Sallust still matters
It is worth knowing what makes Amiternum's most famous son so important, because it deepens the visit. Sallust effectively invented a whole manner of writing Roman history. Turning away from dry annals, he wrote sharp, compressed, morally charged monographs, the Catiline and the Jugurtha, that read less like chronicles than like arguments about what was rotting the Republic from within. His theme was moral decline: the idea that Rome, having conquered the Mediterranean, was being destroyed not by foreign enemies but by its own greed, ambition and faction. He wrote in a deliberately archaic, terse, epigrammatic Latin that later Romans found bracing and that students have wrestled with ever since, and his pessimistic vision shaped how Tacitus and generations after him understood power and corruption. There is a neat irony in his own career, too: he made a fortune as a provincial governor amid accusations of extortion, then retired to write austere denunciations of greed. None of his birthplace's modest ruins shout his name, but the connection is real, and reading even a few pages of the Catiline before you come turns a quiet field by the Aterno into the starting point of one of the great voices of Latin literature.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Amiternum?
- Amiternum is an ancient Sabine and then Roman city near San Vittorino, a few kilometres from L'Aquila in Abruzzo. It preserves a Roman theatre and amphitheatre, rich necropoleis and an early Christian catacomb, and it was the birthplace of the historian Sallust.
- Who was Sallust and was he born at Amiternum?
- Gaius Sallustius Crispus, known as Sallust, was a Roman politician turned historian, author of accounts of the Catilinarian conspiracy and the war against Jugurtha, and one of the most influential Latin prose writers. He was born at Amiternum in 86 BC.
- What can you see at Amiternum?
- The Roman theatre of the Augustan age, which held around 2,000 people, and the 1st-century amphitheatre at the southern edge of the city, estimated to hold about 6,000. Nearby are rich necropoleis that yielded famous reliefs and bronze funerary beds, and the early Christian catacomb of San Vittorino.
- Is Amiternum free to visit?
- Yes, entry has been free, and the theatre area has kept hours of Tuesday to Sunday 08:30 to 13:30. Management has recently passed to the National Museum of Abruzzo, so confirm current days and times before visiting.
- How do you get to Amiternum?
- By car from L'Aquila along the SS80 to the frazione of San Vittorino, about 11 to 12 km. By public transport you can take a train to L'Aquila and then a taxi. The theatre and amphitheatre have separate entrances, divided by the modern road and the Aterno river.
- Why are the theatre and amphitheatre in separate areas?
- The two monuments stood in different parts of the ancient city, and today they are separated by the modern road and the course of the Aterno river, so they form two distinct archaeological areas with their own entrances rather than a single continuous site.
- Where are the finds from Amiternum?
- The famous late-Republican bronze funerary beds are in museums in Chieti and Rome, and other material is in the National Museum of Abruzzo in L'Aquila, which provides context for the site. Carved funerary reliefs from Amiternum's necropoleis are among the notable finds of the region.
- Can you combine Amiternum with L'Aquila?
- Yes. Amiternum is only a few kilometres from L'Aquila, which is slowly rebuilding after its 2009 earthquake and is well worth visiting, and the National Museum of Abruzzo there holds the region's finest archaeological treasures, putting the site in context.
- Why is the historian Sallust important?
- Sallust pioneered a sharp, morally charged style of Roman history in his monographs on Catiline and Jugurtha, arguing that Rome was being destroyed from within by greed and faction. His terse, archaic Latin and pessimistic vision deeply influenced later writers such as Tacitus, making him one of the most important and imitated of Latin prose authors.
- What was the Via Caecilia at Amiternum?
- The Via Caecilia was the Roman road that generated the layout of Amiternum, running past the theatre and structuring the city as it spread down toward the Aterno. It connected the Sabine uplands toward the Adriatic, and the regular street plan with its public buildings, temples and domus developed along this axis.