Larino (Larinum): a tufa-cut amphitheatre and superb mosaics in the heart of Molise
In the hills of Molise, a couple of kilometres below the old town of Larino, lies the Roman city of Larinum, a city of the Frentani that prospered under the empire. Its showpiece is an amphitheatre of the Flavian age, partly carved straight out of the soft tufa, and around it spread baths paved with mosaics of rare beauty, marine creatures, fantastic animals, geometric designs. Free to enter and almost unknown, Larinum even has a literary claim to fame: it was the setting of one of Cicero's great courtroom speeches.
Molise is the Italian region nobody visits, the running national joke being that it does not even exist, and that is precisely why its Roman sites are such quiet pleasures. Larino is the perfect example. Most travellers who make it to Molise head for Saepinum, the so-called Pompeii of Molise, and Larinum waits a little further east, just as rewarding and even less visited. Its amphitheatre is the kind of monument that would draw crowds anywhere better known, and its mosaics are genuinely first-rate. You will likely have it almost to yourself, wandering free among ruins set in open, half-cultivated fields, in an atmosphere that is part archaeology, part pastoral landscape.
The Frentani, Rome, and Cicero's courtroom
Larinum's origins reach back to the archaic age, when this was a centre of the Frentani, one of the peoples of ancient Samnium. The city allied with Rome during the 3rd century BC and was made a municipium only after the Social War of 91 to 88 BC, after which it flourished, its countryside given over to increasingly specialised, export-oriented agriculture worked on a large scale. Its most famous moment in the historical record is a scandal: Larinum was the setting of the affair behind Cicero's Pro Cluentio, the long defence speech he delivered in 66 BC for Aulus Cluentius Habitus of Larinum, accused of poisoning, a case full of feuds, poisonings and small-town intrigue that gives us an unusually vivid window into life in a Roman provincial town. To walk Larinum is to walk the home town of one of Cicero's most famous clients.
The amphitheatre and the mosaics
The dominant monument is the amphitheatre, built in the Flavian age between 69 and 96 AD and cleverly cut in part from the natural tufa bank, which served as a quarry for its stone. It survives with the arena and its podium, the inclined slope of the ima cavea, some of the vomitoria through which spectators entered, and structures of the first-order ambulacrum. Like the Colosseum in Rome, it was stripped of its decorative and architectural facing over the centuries, and later abandonment turned it into a burial ground, leaving a romantic ruin in open fields. Near the arena stood bath buildings whose mosaics are the other glory of Larinum: floors of fine quality with geometric motifs and marine and fantastic animals. Excavation in the city has also uncovered a paved street lined with shops and houses, one of which kept the kantharos mosaic, and a Republican domus, later rebuilt, which yielded a wonderful mosaic of groupers and octopuses, now visible in the area. The richest mosaics of all, however, including the famous Lupercale mosaic, the she-wolf suckling the twins, are kept in the town's Museo Civico.
| Feature | Note |
|---|---|
| Amphitheatre | Flavian age, partly cut from the tufa; arena, podium, vomitoria survive |
| Bath mosaics | Marine and fantastic animals, geometric motifs, fine quality |
| Domus mosaic | Groupers and octopuses, on site; the kantharos mosaic from a street house |
| Museo Civico, Palazzo Ducale | The richest mosaics, including the she-wolf Lupercale mosaic |
A short history in dates
- 7th to 6th c. BC An archaic settlement of the Frentani.
- 3rd c. BC Larinum allies with Rome.
- 91 to 88 BC After the Social War, Larinum becomes a municipium.
- 66 BC Cicero delivers the Pro Cluentio, set in the affairs of Larinum.
- 69 to 96 AD The Flavian amphitheatre is built, partly cut from the tufa.
- late antiquity The city declines; the amphitheatre is spoliated and becomes a burial area.
- 1962 and 1978 onward The ruins are consolidated and systematic excavation begins.
What nobody tells you
The visit splits in two, so plan for both halves. The open-air area, with the amphitheatre, the baths and their mosaics and the groupers-and-octopuses floor, is free and self-guided with panels, which is generous but means you should read up a little first. The finest mosaics, above all the she-wolf Lupercale, are not on site but in the Museo Civico in the Palazzo Ducale up in the old town, so allow time to go up into Larino itself, which is a handsome place worth seeing for its cathedral and ducal palace anyway. Be aware the amphitheatre was stripped of its facing long ago, so admire the bones of the structure and the way it was carved from the tufa rather than expecting Colosseum-like grandeur. And pair Larinum with Saepinum to the west for a two-site Molise Roman day that almost no foreign traveller ever attempts.
Who should skip Larino
Honest version. If you want a monument with its facing and decoration intact, the amphitheatre was stripped like the Colosseum and stands as bare bones. If you expect the best mosaics on site, the finest are up in the town museum, so a complete visit means two stops. And if you will not drive, Molise is hard to reach. But if a tufa-cut Flavian amphitheatre and beautiful marine mosaics in an empty, pastoral setting appeal, if a free, self-guided ramble through a little-known Roman city suits you, and if the connection to Cicero's Pro Cluentio adds a thrill, Larinum is one of the most rewarding and peaceful Roman sites in southern Italy, and pairs perfectly with Saepinum.
The Frentani, Samnium, and the price of Roman citizenship
The deeper story of Larinum is the story of how Italy became Roman, which was anything but gentle. The Frentani belonged to the wider world of the Samnite peoples of the central Apennines, tough mountain and hill communities who fought Rome in a series of brutal wars across the 4th and 3rd centuries BC before being absorbed as allies, socii, bound to supply troops for Rome's armies without enjoying the rights of Roman citizens. That bargain festered for generations, and in 91 BC it exploded into the Social War, the bloody revolt of Rome's Italian allies demanding the citizenship they had earned in blood. Rome won the war militarily but conceded the central point, extending citizenship across peninsular Italy, and it was in the aftermath, between 91 and 88 BC, that Larinum and towns like it were reorganised as municipia, their leading families now Roman citizens, their local government remodelled on the Roman pattern. The prosperity visible in Larinum's amphitheatre and mosaics is the prosperity of that settlement: a once-independent Frentane town turned into a self-governing Roman municipality, its elite investing in the public buildings and private luxury that proclaimed their new status. Cicero's Pro Cluentio, set here just a generation later, shows that same municipal society in vivid, quarrelsome close-up, which is why Larinum is not just a pretty ruin but a window onto the making of Roman Italy.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Larinum?
- Larinum is the Roman city beneath and beside modern Larino in Molise, a centre of the Frentani made a municipium after the Social War. Its archaeological area preserves a Flavian amphitheatre partly cut from the tufa, baths with fine mosaics, a paved street and a domus mosaic, with entry free.
- Why is the amphitheatre at Larino special?
- The Larinum amphitheatre, built in the Flavian age between 69 and 96 AD, was partly carved straight out of the natural tufa bank, which also supplied its stone. It survives with the arena, podium, parts of the ima cavea and some vomitoria, though, like the Colosseum, it was stripped of its facing over the centuries.
- What is the connection between Larino and Cicero?
- Larinum was the setting of the affair behind Cicero's Pro Cluentio, the defence speech he delivered in 66 BC for Aulus Cluentius Habitus of Larinum, accused of poisoning. The case, full of feuds and intrigue, gives a vivid picture of life in a Roman provincial town.
- Where are the best mosaics from Larino?
- The richest mosaics, including the famous Lupercale mosaic of the she-wolf suckling the twins, are kept in the Museo Civico in the Palazzo Ducale up in the town of Larino. On the archaeological site you can still see fine bath mosaics and the mosaic of groupers and octopuses from a domus.
- Is Larino free to visit?
- Yes, the open-air archaeological area is free and self-guided, with information panels. To see the finest mosaics you also visit the Museo Civico in the town. Confirm current arrangements before going.
- How do you get to Larino?
- By car, the archaeological area is about 2 km from the historic centre of Larino, in the Piano San Leonardo, with parking and a short walk to the entrance at the corner of Via Dante and Via Mazzini. Molise is most easily explored by car.
- Who were the Frentani?
- The Frentani were one of the peoples of ancient Samnium, inhabiting this part of what is now Molise and the neighbouring Adriatic coast. Larinum was their best-known centre, and it allied with Rome in the 3rd century BC before becoming a municipium after the Social War.
- Can you combine Larino with Saepinum?
- Yes. Saepinum, the well-preserved Roman town often called the Pompeii of Molise, lies to the west, and pairing it with Larinum makes a rewarding two-site Roman day in a region that very few foreign travellers explore.
- What was the Social War and how did it change Larinum?
- The Social War of 91 to 88 BC was the revolt of Rome's Italian allies demanding citizenship. Rome won militarily but granted citizenship across Italy, and in the aftermath towns like Larinum were reorganised as municipia with Roman citizenship and Roman-style local government. The prosperity of Larinum's amphitheatre and mosaics reflects that new status.