Suasa: spectacular Roman mosaics and the largest amphitheatre in the Marche
The Suasa archaeological park, on a broad terrace in the Cesano valley near Corinaldo, preserves a Roman city most travellers have never heard of, and its centrepiece is one of the finest aristocratic houses in central Italy. The Domus dei Coiedii, the mansion of a powerful local family, keeps room after room of superb mosaics, Medusa, Leda and the swan, a satyr, and Pompeian-style frescoes besides. Add the largest amphitheatre in the Marche and a paved forum street, and Suasa is a small, brilliant site, open frustratingly rarely.
The Marche is full of these quiet revelations, and Suasa is among the best. It was never a famous city in antiquity, a commercial town serving a rich farming valley, and it is not famous now, which is exactly why a visit feels like a discovery. What raises it above the dozens of modest Roman sites scattered across Italy is the quality of what survives, above all the mosaics of the Domus dei Coiedii, which are not the worn grey fragments you often see but vivid, detailed, beautifully preserved floors that bring a wealthy Roman household vividly to life. The catch, and it is a real one, is that the park opens only on a handful of days, so seeing it takes planning. Plan it, and you are rewarded with one of the loveliest small archaeological experiences in the region.
A town of the Gauls' country, made Roman
Suasa grew up in the middle Cesano valley, on the road that linked the Adriatic coast to the Apennine passes, in territory that had belonged to the Senones, the Gaulish people Rome defeated in the 3rd century BC, hence the ancient name Suasa Senonum. Its earliest phases are still poorly known, but it developed into a municipium and a commercial centre serving a wide agricultural territory, strung long and narrow between the Cesano river and the low hills. The town acquired the standard Roman public buildings, a forum with curia and basilica, temples, baths, and, at the foot of the hills at the end of the 1st century AD, a vast amphitheatre.
The Domus dei Coiedii and the amphitheatre
The heart of the visit is the Domus dei Coiedii, the grand house of the gens Coiedia, a leading local family. Almost the whole mansion has been excavated, so you can read its plan room by room, the small private spaces, the grand reception and banqueting rooms, the guest quarters, the private baths. What you remember are the mosaics: numerous floors of the highest quality and excellent preservation, with mythological scenes and figures, Medusa, Leda and the swan, a satyr with his pipes, alongside natural motifs, symbols and animals. The painted wall plaster recovered here is a rare and refined example of Pompeian-style painting for central and northern Italy, now displayed in the museum in town. The visit runs along the paved Via del Foro, past the forum, and ends at the amphitheatre, a great oval of roughly 98 by 77 metres, the largest in the Marche, built to hold several thousand spectators and still used today for performances.
| Feature | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Domus dei Coiedii | A near-complete aristocratic house with superb, well-preserved mosaics |
| The mosaics | Medusa, Leda and the swan, a satyr; vivid and detailed |
| Pompeian-style frescoes | A rare example in central-northern Italy, shown in the town museum |
| Amphitheatre | The largest in the Marche, about 98 by 77 m, still hosts events |
A short history in dates
- 3rd c. BC Rome conquers the territory of the Senones Gauls; Suasa originates as a small centre.
- 2nd c. BC The town develops, with growing urban and monumental form.
- early 1st c. AD The forum complex is laid out on a raised level.
- late 1st c. AD The great amphitheatre is built, the largest in the Marche.
- 1st to 3rd c. AD The Domus dei Coiedii is decorated with its mosaics and frescoes.
- 1987 onward The University of Bologna and the Marche superintendency begin systematic excavations, still ongoing.
What nobody tells you
The single most important thing about Suasa is the opening hours, so internalise it: the park opens only on limited days, chiefly weekend and holiday afternoons in the warmer months, and visits are guided, so check the official Parco Suasa site and book before you build a day around it. Turning up unannounced on a Tuesday means a locked gate. Two stops complete the picture: the civic archaeological museum in Castelleone di Suasa holds the Coiedii frescoes and finds, and the territorial museum at San Lorenzo in Campo covers the wider valley, so allow time for at least the first. The site is partly accessible with wooden ramps over the domus. And combine it with Corinaldo, four kilometres away and one of the prettiest walled villages in Italy, to turn a short archaeological visit into a full and memorable day.
Who should skip Suasa
Brutal version. If you cannot align your visit with the narrow opening days, you simply will not get in, so this is a site for planners, not for the spontaneous. If you will not drive, access is awkward. And if mosaics and a single great house do not excite you, the rest of the standing remains are modest. But if you love Roman domestic art, if vivid, beautifully preserved mosaics of Medusa and Leda in a near-complete mansion sound worth organising your day around, and if you pair it with lovely Corinaldo, Suasa is one of the most rewarding small Roman sites in the Marche, and almost nobody else will be there.
The Senones and the ager Gallicus
Suasa sits in a landscape with a violent and important backstory worth knowing. This stretch of the Marche, between the Apennines and the Adriatic, was the ager Gallicus, the land of the Gauls, specifically the Senones, the Celtic people who had migrated into Italy and who, in 390 BC, famously sacked Rome itself. For more than a century the Senones were among Rome's most feared enemies, and the reckoning came in 295 BC at the battle of Sentinum, not far from here, and then in 283 BC when Rome crushed the Senones and annexed their territory outright. The conquered ager Gallicus was then opened to Roman and Italian settlers, and towns like Suasa grew up on the older Gaulish substrate as Roman farming and market centres. That is the deep meaning of the name Suasa Senonum, a Roman town in the country of the Senones, and it is why the whole area is so dense with Roman remains: it was prime confiscated land, parcelled out and developed by a victorious Rome. The rich mosaics of the Domus dei Coiedii are, in a sense, the long-term dividend of that conquest, the wealth of a Romanised valley that had once been Gaulish frontier.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Suasa?
- Suasa is a Roman archaeological park near Corinaldo in the Marche, on the site of the Roman municipium of Suasa in the Cesano valley. It preserves the grand Domus dei Coiedii with its mosaics, a forum and paved street, a Republican domus, and the largest amphitheatre in the region.
- What is the Domus dei Coiedii?
- The Domus dei Coiedii was the mansion of the gens Coiedia, a powerful local family. Almost fully excavated, it preserves numerous high-quality, well-preserved mosaics with mythological scenes such as Medusa and Leda and the swan, plus rare Pompeian-style frescoes now displayed in the town museum.
- Why is the amphitheatre at Suasa notable?
- The amphitheatre at Suasa, about 98 by 77 metres and built at the end of the 1st century AD, is the largest in the Marche, capable of holding several thousand spectators, and it is still used today for performances.
- What are the opening hours of Suasa?
- Opening is limited and seasonal, mainly weekend and holiday afternoons in the warmer months, for example spring weekends roughly 15:30 to 19:30 and summer Thursday to Sunday roughly 16:00 to 20:00, with guided visits. Always check the official Parco Suasa site and book ahead, as turning up on a closed day means a locked gate.
- How do you get to Suasa?
- By car it is about 20 km from the A14 exits at Senigallia or Marotta, then along the Cesano valley road, about 4 km from Corinaldo. It can also be reached by train to Senigallia or Pergola plus a connecting bus to Castelleone di Suasa.
- Where are the finds from Suasa?
- The Pompeian-style frescoes and many finds from the Domus dei Coiedii are in the civic archaeological museum in Castelleone di Suasa, while the territorial museum at San Lorenzo in Campo covers the wider Cesano valley. Visiting at least the town museum completes the picture.
- Who founded Suasa?
- Suasa originated after Rome conquered the territory of the Senones Gauls in the 3rd century BC, hence the ancient name Suasa Senonum. It grew into a municipium and a commercial centre serving a rich farming valley.
- Can you combine Suasa with Corinaldo?
- Yes, and it is recommended. Corinaldo, about 4 km away, is one of the prettiest walled villages in Italy, so pairing the two turns a short, limited-hours archaeological visit into a full and memorable day in the Marche.
- What was the ager Gallicus and the Senones?
- The ager Gallicus was the land of the Senones, a Celtic people who settled this part of the Marche and who sacked Rome in 390 BC. After Rome crushed them and annexed their territory in 283 BC, the confiscated land was opened to settlers, and Roman towns like Suasa Senonum grew up on the older Gaulish substrate, which is why the area is so rich in Roman remains.
- Is Suasa suitable for families with children?
- It can be, on its limited open days and as a guided visit, with wooden ramps over the domus and accessible toilets at the entrance. The vivid mosaics of Medusa, Leda and animals tend to appeal to children, and pairing the short visit with the walled village of Corinaldo nearby makes for an easy family day, but always book ahead given the narrow opening hours.