Capo Colonna: The Lone Column of Hera Lacinia at the End of Calabria
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Capo Colonna (Cape of the Column) is a promontory on the Ionian coast of Calabria, 12km south of Crotone, named for the single remaining column of the Temple of Hera Lacinia — a Doric column of 8.17 metres, the last standing element of what was one of the most important sanctuaries of Magna Grecia. The temple at its peak (5th century BC) had 48 columns and was surrounded by a sacred precinct (temenos) of extraordinary wealth — ancient sources record that the sanctuary owned 1,000 cattle and enormous reserves of gold. Today, the single column stands on the headland against the Ionian horizon. No other Greek temple in mainland Italy has this quality of solitude and this quality of setting. Capo Colonna is one of the most evocative archaeological experiences available in Italy — not for its completeness (it is severely incomplete) but for the combination of ancient architecture, southern light, and sea that surrounds it.
The Temple of Hera Lacinia
The Temple of Hera Lacinia was built in the 5th century BC by the Greek city of Kroton (the ancestor of modern Crotone). Kroton was one of the most powerful cities of Magna Grecia — its athletes won more Olympic victories than any other Greek city (the wrestler Milo of Croton was six-time Olympic champion), its medical tradition was the most advanced in the Greek world (the physician Alcmaeon of Croton, who first identified the brain as the center of thought, was Krotoniate), and its sanctuary of Hera was used as a neutral meeting place for the cities of the Italian Greeks. The temple had 48 columns arranged in a 8 × 17 colonnade of the Doric order. A catastrophe of uncertain cause (possibly an earthquake) destroyed most of the columns in antiquity. By the 18th century, only one column remained — the one you see today.
The Museo Nazionale Archeologico di Crotone
The Museo Nazionale Archeologico di Crotone (in Crotone city, 12km from Capo Colonna) contains the finds from the sanctuary excavations — votive offerings of extraordinary quality including terracotta statues, bronze objects, and the metope fragments from the temple. The museum also documents the pre-Greek (Oenotrian) settlement of the area and the full history of the Greek colonial period. Ticket €5. Combine the museum (1.5 hours) with the site (1 hour) for a complete understanding of the sanctuary.
Questions About Capo Colonna and Crotone
How do I get to Capo Colonna?
By car from Crotone: 12km south on the SS106 then the local road to the promontory — 20 minutes. By train: Crotone station is on the Taranto-Reggio Calabria coastal line; from Crotone station to the site by taxi (10 minutes, €10-12). No direct public transport to the site. The archaeological area is open daily with variable hours — check museoarcheologicokr.it.
Is Capo Colonna worth the trip to Calabria?
Within a Calabrian itinerary: yes, absolutely. As a standalone from northern Italy: the journey to Crotone (by air to Lamezia Terme + 1h drive, or by train via Taranto — very long) requires deliberate planning. Capo Colonna combined with Gerace (90km south), the Sila plateau, and the Tyrrhenian coast (Tropea, 120km west) makes a complete Calabrian circuit of 4-5 days.
Curiosità su Capo Colonna e la Magna Grecia
La distruzione del Tempio di Hera Lacinia avvenne in buona parte per mano umana: nel 1480, il viceré di Napoli Diego Guevara ordinò lo smontaggio delle colonne del tempio per usare i blocchi nella costruzione del Castello di Capo Colonna. La colonna sopravvissuta si salvò perché era considerata protetta dalla Madonna di Capo Colonna — un'icona venerata nella cappella adiacente il sito. I cittadini di Crotone insorsero contro lo smontaggio e i lavori furono fermati. La colonna rimase in piedi per questa combinazione di superstizione religiosa e protesta civica. È uno dei casi in cui la devozione popolare ha preservato un monumento antico che la logica economica dell'epoca avrebbe distrutto. Capo Colonna oggi è Riserva Naturale Marina — le acque intorno al promontorio sono protette e la colonna si specchia nel mare che i Greci solcavano 2.500 anni fa. Vedi anche: Calabria · Gerace · Tropea.