Antuni 2026: The Abandoned Mountain Village East of Rome and the Italian Ghost Town Tradition
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
Antuni is a medieval village in the Monti Simbruini (the limestone mountains east of Rome, in the province of Roma, accessible via the Via Valeria and the Aniene valley) that was abandoned in the post-war decades — the specific pattern of rural depopulation that emptied hundreds of Lazio, Abruzzo, and Calabrian hill villages as the agricultural economy that had sustained them for centuries collapsed and the cities offered industrial employment, public services, and a modernity that the isolated mountain village could not provide. The last permanent residents of Antuni left in the 1970s; the stone buildings have been slowly returning to the mountain since then, with the specific quality of ruins that are not ancient but recent — the fireplaces are still intact in the kitchen walls, the door hinges are still present in the door frames, the stone steps worn smooth by generations of feet lead to rooms that were furnished within living memory.
The borghi fantasma (ghost towns) of Italy are among the most emotionally specific places the country offers — the abandoned village is simultaneously the most concentrated expression of Italian rural civilization (the community architecture, the collective spaces, the specific relationship between the building and the mountain environment) and the documentation of its ending. Walking through an abandoned Italian hill village is not morbid tourism but an encounter with the specific 20th-century history that transformed Italy from a peasant agricultural society to the world's eighth-largest economy in less than three generations.
The Italian Ghost Town Tradition
Why So Many Italian Villages Were Abandoned
The abandonment of Italian hill villages accelerated between 1950 and 1980, driven by three converging forces: the postwar industrialization that created manufacturing employment in Turin (Fiat), Milan (Pirelli, Alfa Romeo), and the northern industrial triangle that pulled young workers from every southern and central Italian province; the mechanization of agriculture that eliminated the labour demand that had made the mountain village economically viable (a single tractor replaced twenty families working terraced fields); and the specific 1968 earthquake (the Belice valley earthquake in western Sicily, which destroyed Gibellina, Poggioreale, and Salaparuta) and 1980 earthquake (Irpinia, which destroyed dozens of Campanian villages) that produced forced abandonment of vulnerable historic settlements and accelerated the already-ongoing depopulation of the mountains. The result: approximately 2,000 partially or completely abandoned Italian villages (the Italian census identifies 5,705 comuni with under 1,000 inhabitants, many in ongoing demographic decline).
Other Notable Italian Ghost Towns
The most atmospheric Italian ghost towns for the visitor: Craco (Basilicata) — the most photographed Italian ghost town, the hillside village abandoned after a 1963 landslide, now used as a film set (The Passion of the Christ, Quantum of Solace); accessible on guided tours from Craco Peschiera below. Consonno (Lombardy) — the Como province village demolished in the 1960s and rebuilt as a resort/casino complex that failed spectacularly and was subsequently abandoned; the specific kitsch ruins of the casino-resort among the mountain vegetation are Italy's strangest ghost town. Roscigno Vecchia (Campania) — the Cilento mountain village abandoned in the early 20th century after landslide risk was identified; one elderly resident remained until the 2010s, making Roscigno Vecchia simultaneously the smallest and most poignant inhabited ghost town in Italy.
Q&A: Italian Ghost Towns
Is it legal to visit abandoned Italian villages?
The majority of Italian ghost towns are on public land (the comune owns the abandoned territory, or the area has been incorporated into a natural park) and accessible without permission. Some abandoned villages on private land require permission from the landowner or are fenced to prevent access for safety reasons. The specific legal and safety consideration: entering partially collapsed structures carries genuine physical risk — masonry in abandoned buildings of the 20th century (not ancient ruins, which have already completed their collapse process) can fail without warning. The recommendation: photograph from the street and paths, enter only structures with visible structural integrity, and avoid upper floors in any abandoned building.
Curiosità
L'Italia ha creato un programma ufficiale per ripopolare i borghi fantasma: il progetto "Resto al Sud" e i comuni che vendono case a 1 euro (avviato da Gangi in Sicilia nel 2008 e imitato da decine di altri comuni) hanno attirato compratori da tutto il mondo — tedeschi, olandesi, americani — che acquistano case abbandonate nei borghi spopolati per 1 euro più il costo delle ristrutturazioni. I risultati sono misti: alcuni borghi hanno effettivamente ripreso vita, altri hanno semplicemente aggiunto proprietari stranieri che usano le case come seconde case senza contribuire al ripopolamento permanente. Il fenomeno è comunque il documento più chiaro di quanto sia universale l'attrazione esercitata dal borgo medievale italiano sul resto del mondo.