Circeo and San Felice Circeo 2026: The Promontory Where a Neanderthal Skull Was Found in a Cave in 1939, Odysseus's Circe Supposedly Lived, and the Best Beach Below Rome Has Been Waiting for You
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
Circeo (the Monte Circeo promontory — the calcareous mass rising to 541m from the Lazio coastal plain 100km south of Rome, the southern boundary of the Parco Nazionale del Circeo (the national park established 1934), and the mythological site of the island of Circe from Homer's Odyssey (the specific ancient Greek geographic tradition that identified the Monte Circeo promontory as the island of Aeaea where Circe kept Odysseus for one year — the promontory was an island in antiquity when the coastal plain was still sea-covered, and the specific ancient identification with the Homeric site gives the promontory its specific mythological resonance)): the most historically stratified single coastal promontory in Italy — the Neanderthal presence documented in the Grotta Guattari (the cave discovered in 1939 where the Circeo Neanderthal skull (the first practically complete Neanderthal skull found in Italy) was discovered alongside the remains of 27 other Neanderthal individuals), the mythological Homeric association, the Roman coastal villa tradition (the specific coastal villas of the Roman aristocracy on the Circeo slopes), and the 20th-century national park establishment that has preserved the specific promontory ecology from the coastal development that the adjacent Ponza and Sabaudia plain received.
Circeo: Cave, Park, Beach, and Town
Grotta Guattari and Neanderthal Circeo
Grotta Guattari (the cave on the Monte Circeo seaward face — the site where the 1939 discovery of the Circeo Neanderthal skull (dating to approximately 55,000-65,000 years ago) produced the first and most complete Neanderthal skull from Italy and one of the most complete in the world): the Grotta Guattari visit (the cave museum adjacent to the discovery site — the Museo di Scienze Naturali del Circeo, at San Felice Circeo, documents the 2019-2020 excavations that expanded the known Neanderthal presence from 2 individuals (the 1939 discovery) to 29 individuals (the 2020 excavations — the largest single-site Neanderthal group in the archaeological record)): check the San Felice Circeo municipality for the current Grotta Guattari access schedule (the cave itself is open on guided visits only; the museum is open daily).
Parco Nazionale del Circeo
Parco Nazionale del Circeo (the national park covering the Monte Circeo promontory, the Sabaudia coastal lakes (the Lago di Sabaudia, Lago Fogliano, Lago di Monaci, and Lago Caprolace — the four lagoon lakes behind the Sabaudia dune barrier), and the Zannone island (the uninhabited island 6km offshore with the specific Mediterranean macchia): the park wetlands (the four coastal lagoons as the primary migratory bird stopover on the Tyrrhenian flyway — the flamingos, the herons, the marsh harriers, and the specific spring and autumn wader migration visible from the lagoon embankments): the Circeo park is the most biologically productive national park in the Lazio coastal zone and the one most rewarding for the wildlife observer.
The Circeo Beaches
Circeo beaches: the Sabaudia beach (the 26km dune beach between the Sabaudia town and the Monte Circeo base — the longest uninterrupted sandy beach in Lazio, EU "excellent" water quality, the specific rational planning character of the 1934 Sabaudia town (the Fascist-era planned city — one of the five Pontine cities founded in the 1930s), and the specific beach character of the long dune barrier); and the Capo Circeo beach (the small coves on the Monte Circeo seaward base, accessible by the path descending from the San Felice Circeo town — the specific secluded cove character that the dune beach lacks).
Q&A: Circeo
Is Monte Circeo worth climbing?
The Monte Circeo summit (541m — accessible by the marked trail from the San Felice Circeo town (2 hours ascent) or by car to the summit road (the road open on specific days)): the summit view (the specific Circeo panorama — the Pontine islands (Ponza, Palmarola, Zannone) visible to the west, the Pontine plain to the north, the Gaeta peninsula to the south, and the full Circeo national park wetland visible below): the climb is worthwhile for the panorama and for the specific montane Mediterranean macchia experience (the holm oak, the strawberry tree, and the wild orchid populations on the calcareous Circeo slopes). The climb difficulty: moderate (2 hours ascent, 541m altitude gain, marked trail) — suitable for the averagely fit walker with appropriate footwear.