Scolacium: a Greek and Roman city, the birthplace of Cassiodorus, in a sea of ancient olives
Scolacium, at Roccelletta di Borgia just south of Catanzaro on the Ionian coast of Calabria, is an archaeological park where a Greek then Roman city sits inside a grove of centuries-old olive trees, watched over by the vast roofless ruin of a 12th-century Norman basilica. It was the birthplace of Cassiodorus, the late-Roman statesman and scholar who helped save classical learning, and the combination of Roman theatre, forum and medieval church in that silvery olive setting makes it one of the most atmospheric and least visited sites in the south.
There are sites you remember for a single monument and sites you remember for a feeling, and Scolacium is the second kind. You walk into a grove of old olive trees, their trunks twisted with age, and scattered through them are the bones of a Roman city: a theatre, a forum, a paved road, the brick mass of an amphitheatre. Rising above it all is a giant roofless church, its brick arches open to the Calabrian sky. The light comes through the olives, the sea glints below, and almost nobody else is there. Calabria hides its treasures, and this is one of the best hidden, a place where two thousand years of history sit quietly under the trees.
Skylletion, Scolacium, and the man who saved books
The layers run deep. Greek sources place a settlement here, Skylletion, from at least the 8th to 6th century BC, in the orbit of the powerful Achaean colony of Kroton, and myth even tied its founding to Menestheus, a king of Athens returning from the Trojan War. Virgil names it in the Aeneid as the coast "that wrecks ships." The Romans refounded it as a colony, Minervia Scolacium, in the late 2nd century BC under the reformer Gaius Sempronius Gracchus, and built the theatre, forum, amphitheatre, baths and aqueduct whose traces you walk today. But Scolacium's greatest claim is a person. This was the homeland of Cassiodorus, the 6th-century AD statesman, minister to the Ostrogothic kings, who after his political career founded a monastery nearby called the Vivarium, with a scriptorium where monks copied classical and Christian texts. In an age when the western Roman world was collapsing, that work of deliberate preservation helped carry ancient learning forward into the Middle Ages. If you have ever benefited from the survival of a classical text, you owe a small debt to a man from this olive grove.
The Norman basilica that gives the place its name
The most dramatic structure here is not ancient at all. Santa Maria della Roccella, built around the mid-12th century in the Norman period, is an enormous brick basilica now standing roofless and open, its great arches framing sky and olive branches. Its scale is startling for a rural church, and its half-ruined state is precisely what makes it beautiful, a cathedral-sized skeleton among the trees. The local name Roccelletta, and so the modern name of the whole site, comes from this "Roccella." Romans built the city, Normans built the church, and the olive farmers came later; all three layers share the same field.
What to see, and how long to give it
| Feature | Era | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Norman basilica (Santa Maria della Roccella) | 12th c. AD | The towering roofless landmark, the photographic heart of the site |
| Roman theatre | Roman | Carved into the slope, once seating a few thousand |
| Roman forum | Roman | The civic centre, with brick paving |
| Amphitheatre | Roman | For games and spectacle |
| Museum (in a 19th-c. building) | all periods | Finds including headless Roman statues and ceramics |
Give it a couple of hours, more if you linger in the grove, which you should. My honest routing for the area: pair Scolacium with the hilltop town of Squillace, whose people are partly descended from those who fled the abandoned coastal city, and which gives its name to the gulf. Together they tell the full story of why an ancient seaside city emptied out and moved uphill, away from malaria and raiders.
A short history in dates
- 8th to 6th c. BC A Greek settlement, Skylletion, exists here, linked to the colony of Kroton.
- late 2nd c. BC Rome refounds the city as the colony Minervia Scolacium under Gaius Sempronius Gracchus.
- Roman imperial period The theatre, forum, amphitheatre, baths and aqueduct are built.
- c. 485 to 585 AD Cassiodorus, born here, serves the Ostrogothic kings and later founds the Vivarium monastery and its scriptorium nearby.
- from the 8th c. AD The coastal city is gradually abandoned; people move uphill to Squillace and the Catanzaro area.
- mid-12th c. AD The Norman basilica of Santa Maria della Roccella is built.
What nobody tells you
This is one of the rare southern sites with a genuine, if limited, public-transport option: a Trenitalia integrated ticket takes you by train to Catanzaro Lido and then by local bus to a stop right at the park, which is worth knowing if you are doing Calabria by rail. The grove means shade, which is a blessing on the Ionian coast in summer, so this is a kinder midday visit than most open archaeological sites. Bring water anyway. And do not skip the museum building for the headless Roman statues; the missing heads, many lost or scattered over the centuries, are oddly haunting and very Scolacium, a place defined by what time has taken away and what it has left standing among the olives.
Who should skip Scolacium
Honest version. If you need a single blockbuster monument, Scolacium is a scatter of ruins and one great church rather than a unified showpiece, and that diffuse quality will not suit everyone. If Calabria is not already on your route, this is deep in the south and not worth a special long haul on its own. And if the intellectual hook, Cassiodorus and the survival of ancient books, leaves you cold, you may find the actual remains modest. But if you are travelling the Ionian coast of Calabria, if you love atmosphere over spectacle, and if the idea of a Roman city and a Norman cathedral sharing an ancient olive grove by the sea appeals, Scolacium is a quietly unforgettable stop, and you will very likely have it almost entirely to yourself.
Scolacium on Calabria's Ionian archaeology trail
Scolacium is strongest not alone but as one bead on a string of Greek and Roman sites down the Ionian coast of Calabria, a coast that was once the heart of Magna Graecia and is now one of the quietest archaeological regions in Italy. To the south, near Locri, lies Locri Epizefiri, the city that gave the Greek world one of its earliest written law codes and left the haunting terracotta tablets called pinakes. Further toward Crotone stands the lone surviving column of the temple of Hera Lacinia at Capo Colonna, on a headland over the sea. And down at the toe, the Riace Bronzes in the Reggio Calabria museum are among the greatest Greek statues to survive from antiquity. String these together and you have a serious Magna Graecia itinerary, with Scolacium's Roman and Norman layers and its olive-grove calm as the gentlest stop on the route. You will share none of these with crowds, which is both the joy and the frustration of archaeological Calabria.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Scolacium?
- Scolacium, at Roccelletta di Borgia near Catanzaro in Calabria, is an archaeological park where a Greek then Roman city sits within an ancient olive grove, alongside the huge roofless Norman basilica of Santa Maria della Roccella. It was Greek Skylletion, then the Roman colony Minervia Scolacium.
- Who was Cassiodorus and what is his link to Scolacium?
- Cassiodorus was a 6th-century AD Roman statesman and scholar born here who, after serving the Ostrogothic kings, founded the Vivarium monastery nearby with a scriptorium where monks copied classical and Christian texts. That work helped preserve ancient learning as the western Roman world collapsed.
- What is the big church at Scolacium?
- It is Santa Maria della Roccella, a very large brick basilica built around the mid-12th century in the Norman period, now standing roofless with its great arches open to the sky. The local name Roccelletta, and so the modern name of the site, derives from this Roccella.
- How much does it cost and what are the hours?
- The combined park and museum ticket is about 5 euro full and 2 euro reduced. The park is open Tuesday to Sunday from 09:00 to one hour before sunset and is closed on Mondays. Confirm current details before visiting.
- How do you get to Scolacium?
- Easiest by car off the SS106 or SS280 near Borgia. By public transport there is a Trenitalia integrated ticket that takes you by train to Catanzaro Lido and then by local bus to a stop at the park, a rare convenient rail option for a southern site.
- What can you see at Scolacium?
- The roofless Norman basilica, the Roman theatre cut into the slope, the forum with its brick paving, the amphitheatre, and a museum in a 19th-century building holding finds including headless Roman statues and ceramics, all set among ancient olive trees.
- What can you combine with Scolacium?
- The hilltop town of Squillace, which gives its name to the gulf and whose people partly descend from those who left the abandoned coastal city, pairs naturally with Scolacium and explains why the ancient seaside city emptied and moved uphill.
- Is Scolacium crowded?
- No. It is one of the least visited significant sites in southern Italy, and on most days you can explore the ruins and the olive grove in near solitude, which is much of its appeal.
- What other ancient sites can you combine with Scolacium in Calabria?
- Scolacium fits a Magna Graecia trail down the Ionian coast: Locri Epizefiri to the south, with its early law code and terracotta pinakes; the lone column of Hera Lacinia at Capo Colonna near Crotone; and the Riace Bronzes in the Reggio Calabria museum at the toe of Italy. All are uncrowded.