Sibari (Sybaris): the most famous luxury city of the ancient world, and the honest truth about visiting it
Sybaris, on the Ionian plain of northern Calabria, was so rich and pleasure-loving that its name gave us the word sybarite, and in antiquity its luxury was proverbial. Three cities rose on this one spot in turn: Greek Sybaris, then Thurii, then Roman Copia. That layering makes it one of the most important archaeological sites of the archaic and classical Mediterranean. It is also, and I am going to be straight with you, one of the most underwhelming to actually look at, because the ruins sit in a waterlogged coastal plain and most of what you see is the latest Roman layer. This page is about getting the most from it anyway.
Let me start with the legend, because the legend is the reason to care. The Sybarites were the most famous hedonists of the ancient Greek world. The stories, exaggerated by rivals and moralists, had them inventing the chamber pot for banquets, banning noisy trades from the city so the rich could sleep, and rewarding chefs for new recipes with patents. The city grew enormously wealthy as a trade hub between the Ionian and Tyrrhenian seas and the East. And then, in 510 BC, the neighbouring city of Kroton crushed it, and according to tradition diverted the Crati river over the ruins to erase it from the earth. That image, a city of pleasure drowned by its austere rival, is one of the great morality tales of antiquity. It is also, cruelly, a preview of the problem you will face as a visitor: water.
The honest problem: water, mud, and the Roman layer
I promised you straight talk, so here it is. Sybaris lies in a flat alluvial plain by the sea, and the water table is high. For decades the excavations have fought groundwater, and large parts of the Greek city sit well below today's surface and below the water table, which is why digging here has been a slow, soggy, century-long battle, and why old reports describe Sybaris "in the mud." What you can actually walk today is mostly the uppermost layer, the Roman city of Copia, with its streets, housing and public buildings. The fabled Greek Sybaris of the sybarites is largely still down there, underwater and unseen. So if you arrive picturing temples and a glamorous ruined metropolis, you will be let down. Manage that expectation and the visit becomes interesting rather than disappointing.
Why you go anyway: the museum, and the idea
The single best reason to come is the National Archaeological Museum of the Sibaritide, which is right by the digs and is genuinely excellent. It tells the whole arc of the territory, from the indigenous Oenotrian peoples of the Bronze and Iron Ages, through the three cities, with the finds that the waterlogged ground gave up: pottery, bronzes, gold, the everyday and luxury objects of a place that took luxury seriously. The standing bull, the emblem of ancient Sybaris from its coins, is the museum's symbol. See the museum first, then walk the excavations with that context in your head, and the modest Roman ruins suddenly read as the visible tip of an enormous, layered, half-drowned story. Visited as an idea, with the museum doing the heavy lifting, Sybaris is fascinating. Visited as a photo opportunity, it is a field with some low walls.
The three cities, in order
| City | Era | What it was |
|---|---|---|
| Sybaris | c. 720 to 510 BC | The Achaean Greek city of legendary wealth, destroyed by Kroton |
| Thurii | from 444 to 443 BC | A new Panhellenic foundation, with Athenian involvement; the historian Herodotus lived and died here |
| Copia | Roman | The Roman colony whose streets and buildings form most of what you see today |
That progression is the real treasure of the site and the thing the museum makes vivid: not one city but three, each built on the wreckage of the last, on the same fertile, treacherous, flood-prone plain. Few places in Italy compress so much history into one waterlogged field.
A short history in dates
- c. 720 BC Achaean Greek colonists found Sybaris, which grows fabulously rich.
- 510 BC Kroton destroys Sybaris; tradition says the Crati river was diverted over it.
- 444 to 443 BC Thurii is founded near the site as a new Panhellenic city; Herodotus is among its settlers.
- Roman period The Roman colony of Copia rises on the same ground.
- late antiquity onward The site declines and is buried under river silt and rising groundwater.
- from 1969 Long modern excavation campaigns begin, fighting the water table to recover the buried cities.
What nobody tells you
This is a site that punishes the unprepared and rewards the briefed. Go to the museum first, always, because without it the ruins mean little. Accept that you are looking mainly at Roman Copia and that legendary Sybaris is literally underwater beneath you. Wear proper shoes, because the open areas can be damp and muddy, exactly as they have frustrated archaeologists for a century. And treat Sybaris as one stop on a wider Ionian Calabria trip, paired with Scolacium, Locri and the Riace Bronzes at Reggio, rather than as a destination that will carry a day on its own visual appeal.
Who should skip Sibari
The genuinely brutal version, because you trust me more if I say it. If you want impressive standing ruins, skip Sybaris; it does not have them, and you will be annoyed. If you will not visit the museum, skip it entirely, because the open-air site without the museum is close to meaningless to a casual eye. If you have limited time in Calabria, the Riace Bronzes at Reggio and the temple column at Capo Colonna give far more visual reward per hour. But if you are a serious history lover, if the story of the drowned city of luxury and its three lives moves you, and if you will give the excellent Sibaritide museum the time it deserves, then Sybaris is a profound and strange place, and you will understand something about the fragility of wealth and the persistence of cities that no intact monument could teach you.
Thurii, Herodotus, and a constitution written by a philosopher
The middle of the three cities deserves more attention than it usually gets, because Thurii was an experiment. Founded in 444 to 443 BC, not long after Sybaris fell, it was conceived as a Panhellenic colony drawing settlers from across the Greek world, with strong Athenian backing under Pericles. The roll call of people connected to Thurii is extraordinary: the historian Herodotus, the father of history, is said to have lived and died here; the great orator Lysias spent time at it; and the layout and laws of the new city were shaped by advanced thinkers of the age, with the philosopher Protagoras reputedly drafting its constitution. So this muddy Calabrian field was, for a moment, a laboratory of Greek political idealism, a planned city built to embody the best ideas about how people should live together. That intellectual pedigree, layered invisibly over the buried hedonism of Sybaris, is exactly the kind of thing the museum helps you feel and the bare ground cannot show.
Frequently asked questions
- Why was Sybaris famous?
- Sybaris was the byword for luxury in the ancient Greek world, so much that its name gave us the word sybarite. Founded around 720 BC, it grew enormously rich as a trade hub, and stories, often exaggerated by rivals, made its pleasure-loving habits legendary before Kroton destroyed it in 510 BC.
- What are the three cities of Sibari?
- Three cities rose in turn on the same site: Greek Sybaris, destroyed in 510 BC; Thurii, founded in 444 to 443 BC as a new Panhellenic city where the historian Herodotus lived; and the Roman colony of Copia, whose streets and buildings form most of the visible remains today.
- Is Sibari worth visiting?
- It depends on your expectations. The visible ruins are modest and mostly Roman, because the legendary Greek city lies below the high water table, but the National Archaeological Museum of the Sibaritide is excellent and gives the site its meaning. Visit the museum first and treat the ruins as the tip of a buried story, and it is rewarding; expect dramatic standing monuments and you will be disappointed.
- Why are the ruins of Sybaris underwater or muddy?
- The site sits in a flat alluvial plain near the sea with a high water table, so much of the ancient city lies below the current ground level and below the water line. Excavation has fought groundwater for over a century, which is why so much of the famous Greek city remains buried and unseen.
- How much does it cost to visit?
- The museum and archaeological areas have been about 5 euro full, 2 euro reduced for ages 18 to 25, and free under 18, with a combined ticket covering both and an annual PACS pass around 20 euro. Confirm current prices on the official Parchi di Crotone e Sibari site.
- What are the opening hours?
- The site opens Tuesday to Sunday and is closed Monday. The museum runs roughly 09:00 to 19:30 and the open-air areas to mid or late afternoon, with longer summer hours. Always check the current official schedule.
- How do you get to Sibari?
- A car is the easiest option. There is a Sibari railway station on the Ionian line a few kilometres from the site, from which a short taxi reaches the Parco del Cavallo and the museum. The site itself is flat and the museum is close to the excavations.
- What can you combine with Sibari?
- Treat it as one stop on an Ionian Calabria trip alongside Scolacium near Catanzaro, Locri Epizefiri further south, the temple column at Capo Colonna near Crotone, and the Riace Bronzes in the Reggio Calabria museum, which together make a strong Magna Graecia itinerary.
- What was Thurii and who lived there?
- Thurii was a Panhellenic Greek colony founded near the site in 444 to 443 BC with Athenian backing, drawing settlers from across the Greek world. The historian Herodotus is said to have lived and died there, and the philosopher Protagoras reputedly helped draft its constitution, making it a notable experiment in planned city-making.