Paestum 2026: The Temple of Hera II Is Better Preserved Than the Parthenon, the Tomb of the Diver Is the Only Surviving Greek Symposium Painting, and Paestum Was Lost to Malaria and Rediscovered by Road Builders in 1746
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026. Verified by the editorial team of www.tourleaderpro.com.
Paestum (the ancient Poseidonia — the specific Magna Graecia city founded by the Greek colonists from Sybaris (the most extravagant single Greek colonial city in the western Mediterranean — the city whose specific luxury was so extreme that the Greek word "sybarite" became the generic term for the luxury-obsessed person)) in the specific Gulf of Salerno coastal plain (the GPS: 40.4219°N, 15.0050°E, the Capaccio Paestum municipality, Salerno province) is the most archaeologically important single Italian Greek colonial site and the one whose specific temple complex (the 3 Doric temples standing in the most complete single surviving state of any Greek colonial urban sanctuary in the western Mediterranean world) is routinely described by the archaeologists who work at Athens and Agrigento as "better preserved than the Parthenon" — not a marketing claim but a specific structural fact: the Paestum temples have never been used as a gunpowder magazine (the Parthenon was used as such and destroyed in the 1687 Venetian bombardment), never been converted to a mosque (the Agrigento temples were partially dismantled for the church building material), and have been protected by the specific malarial isolation (the specific Paestum abandonment (the 9th-10th century CE depopulation of the coastal plain as the Anopheles stephensi (the malaria-carrying mosquito) rendered the coastal territory uninhabitable) that simultaneously protected the temples from medieval spoliation and preserved the specific architectural completeness of the Paestum sanctuary).
Paestum Deep Guide: The Temples and the Museum
The Three Temples — What Each One Is
The Temple of Hera I (the "Basilica" — the specific misnomer applied by the 18th-century Bourbon architects who first surveyed the Paestum ruins and misidentified the specific 9-column-front Doric temple (the enneastyle — the 9-column front versus the standard 6-column front (the hexastyle) of the typical Doric temple) as a Roman basilica (the Roman civic building format with the similar elongated plan)): the oldest surviving Greek Doric temple in the western Mediterranean (the specific dating: approximately 550 BCE, the archaic period (the 7th-6th century BCE period of the most experimentally varied single Doric architecture — the archaic Doric whose specific swollen column profile (the entasis — the specific convex curve of the Doric column shaft that corrects the optical illusion of inward-curving straight columns) is most visible in the Paestum Hera I temple)); the Temple of Hera II (the "Tempio di Nettuno" — the second 18th-century misidentification: the temple (dedicated to Hera, not Neptune, as the specific votive deposit excavated beneath the altar (the specific female deity votive figurines (the ex-voto femminile — the terracotta female figurines deposited at the altar as the specific offering to Hera) whose specific identification confirms the Hera dedication) proves) is the most structurally intact Doric temple in the world (the specific 6 front columns, the 14 side columns, and the specific double-tiered interior columns (the specific superimposed column system (the two-storey internal colonnade)) of the Hera II temple are more complete than any surviving Parthenon or Agrigento Concordia temple element)); and the Temple of Athena (the "Temple of Ceres" — the third 18th-century misidentification: the intermediate temple (approximately 500 BCE) was used as a Christian church in the medieval period (the specific Christian votive deposit (the Byzantine-period lamp and incense burner found in the cella) documents the specific temple-to-church conversion that partially explains the temple's specific preservation (the Christian use prevented the temple from being completely demolished for building material)).
The Tomb of the Diver — The Only Surviving Greek Symposium Fresco
The Tomba del Tuffatore (the Tomb of the Diver — the specific 480-470 BCE Lucanian painted tomb discovered in 1968 by the archaeologist Mario Napoli 1.5km south of the Paestum city walls): the most important single ancient Greek painting surviving anywhere in the Mediterranean world — the specific 5-panel fresco programme (the 4 interior wall panels showing the specific Greek symposium (the symposion — the ritual communal drinking and intellectual discussion of the Greek civic culture, the specific painted programme showing the specific symposion participants (the symposiasts — the reclining young men with the specific symposion equipment (the kratēr (the wine-mixing bowl), the kylix (the flat drinking cup), and the auloi (the double flute music))): the most specifically documented single Greek sympotical painting programme in any surviving medium) and the specific tomb ceiling panel (the tuffatore — the specific diver figure (the naked young man diving from the specific masonry platform into the specific blue-green sea below)): the most debated single ancient painting subject (the specific "dive" interpretation: the most widely accepted scholarly interpretation identifies the dive as the specific metaphor for the soul's transition from life to death — the specific "leap into the unknown" (the specific Plato Phaedo passage (the specific Plato dialogue (Phaedo 114d) in which Socrates uses the specific "diving into the sea" metaphor for the philosophical approach to death) that the specific Tomb of the Diver fresco most specifically illustrates)). Current location: the Museo Nazionale di Paestum (the Via Magna Grecia 919, Paestum — the museum 200m from the archaeological site): the most important single Paestum museum object and the one whose specific viewing (the specific room (the Sala del Tuffatore — the room of the diver) at the Paestum museum where the specific 5 fresco panels are displayed in the specific reconstructed tomb configuration (the ceiling diver panel above, the 4 wall panels on 4 sides of the tomb room)) is the most specifically emotionally affecting single Italian museum experience.
Getting to Paestum From Naples and Salerno
The specific Paestum transport: from Naples (the Trenitalia Regionale from Napoli Centrale to Paestum station: the specific Napoli-Reggio Calabria regional line (the "Direttissima del Mediterraneo" stopping at the specific Capaccio-Paestum station (the GPS: 40.4153°N, 15.0080°E, 500m from the archaeological site entrance)): approximately 1h30m-1h45m, 8-12 euros. From Salerno (the closest major city — the Trenitalia Regionale from Salerno to Capaccio-Paestum: 30-40 minutes, 3.50-4.50 euros): the most practical single Paestum access from the Amalfi Coast hotel base (the Salerno ferry from Positano or Amalfi to Salerno: 40-60 minutes, 9-12 euros). The Paestum visit time: the site requires a minimum 2.5 hours for the 3 temples and the museum — allow 4 hours for the comprehensive visit. The site opens at 9:00 AM (the most practically important single Paestum timing: the specific early morning light on the Hera II temple (the 9:00-10:00 morning light from the east illuminating the specific eastern colonnade (the pronaos) with the most dramatically raked single temple light of the day) is the most specifically photographic single Paestum moment and the one that the afternoon visitor who arrives after lunch entirely misses). Admission: 18 euros for the site and museum combined (verify at paesum.it).
Q&A: Paestum Deep Guide
Why are the Paestum temples better preserved than the Parthenon?
The specific structural comparison: the Paestum Hera II temple (approximately 460 BCE) retains all 36 original Doric columns (the 6 front + 14 side x2 configuration), the complete entablature (the architrave, frieze, and cornice), and the partial internal colonnade (the 2 rows of 7 superimposed columns). The Parthenon (447-432 BCE) retains 30 of the original 46 outer columns but has lost the complete roof, the complete interior colonnade, and the specific sculptural programme (the Elgin Marbles at the British Museum and the specific Athens Acropolis Museum). The specific preservation factors for Paestum: no bombardment (the Venetian admiral Morosini's 1687 cannon hit the Parthenon's gunpowder magazine — Paestum was not occupied in 1687); no medieval Christian modification beyond the Athena temple (the Hera temples were never converted and never spoliated); and the specific malarial isolation (the coastal plain malaria drove away the medieval population and the medieval spoliator simultaneously — the specific accidental conservation by disease is the most specifically unusual single Italian archaeological site preservation mechanism).