Urbs Salvia (Urbisaglia): the Marche's biggest Roman site, and its quietest
Urbs Salvia, at Urbisaglia in the province of Macerata, is the largest archaeological park in the Marche: around 40 hectares with an amphitheatre, a theatre, and an underground frescoed cryptoporticus you can walk through. It's spectacular, it costs around €5–7 (the ticket usually includes the medieval Rocca), and on most days you'll share it with almost no one.
The Marche is the region most foreign visitors skip entirely, which is the whole point. Urbs Salvia is the kind of major Roman site that, in Lazio or Campania, would have a queue and a coach park. Here it has a wooden footbridge and silence. The park spreads across about 40 hectares below the medieval town of Urbisaglia, and a visit route of roughly a kilometre takes you down through the layers of a Roman provincial city.
The set-pieces, from top to bottom
Start high with the cisterns of the aqueduct that fed the city below. Then the theatre, and the curious edificio a nicchioni, a tier of niches that worked as a scenic bridge between the levels of the town. At the foot of the hill lies the sacred area: a temple with a cryptoporticus, an underground corridor whose southern gallery is entirely frescoed, with imagery tied to Augustan propaganda and charming panels of animals between lunar masks, in a style placed in the Third Pompeian Style. Walking a frescoed Roman corridor underground, alone, is the moment people remember.
The amphitheatre and the Masada connection
Outside the city walls, which still stand up to five metres in places, is the amphitheatre, built at the end of the 1st century AD by Lucius Flavius Silva Nonius Bassus. That name is worth pausing on: Silva is the Roman general who besieged and took Masada in Judaea. His home town built itself an amphitheatre, and it still hosts a long-running summer season of classical theatre, the kind of living use that beats any roped-off ruin. If your trip overlaps with the summer programme, see a play in it.
The new streets you can now walk
In 2025 the park opened a new visit route through the quartieri delle strade basolate, residential quarters where you walk directly on perfectly preserved Roman paving, the result of an ongoing dig run with the University of Macerata, active here since 1995. It's a reminder that this is a working excavation, not a finished monument: come back in a few years and there'll be more.
What nobody tells you
The cryptoporticus and parts of the site are often visited on a timed or booked basis, and the hours are seasonal and genuinely fiddly: phone or check the comune di Urbisaglia website before you drive out, especially off-season, or you risk arriving to a locked gate. The town museum has been shut for earthquake repairs, so the finds context is thinner than it should be for now. And buy the combined ticket: the medieval Rocca above the town and the nearby Abbadia di Fiastra, a beautiful Cistercian abbey in a nature reserve, turn this from a stop into a full, low-cost day.
Where Urbs Salvia fits in a Marche trip
The Marche is for travellers who've already done the obvious Italy and want hill towns, Adriatic beaches and Renaissance art without the crowds. Pair Urbs Salvia with Macerata (whose Sferisterio hosts a serious summer opera festival), the perfect Renaissance courtyard town of Urbino, and the Sibillini mountains. It is genuinely off the foreign-tourist map, which in 2026 is getting rare and valuable.
My honest recommendation
Don't make Urbs Salvia your only reason to come to the Marche, make it the centrepiece of a region you visit precisely because almost nobody you know has. The combination of a major Roman park, a frescoed underground gallery, a general who took Masada, and a summer theatre season, all without a queue, is the sort of thing that makes a trip feel like a discovery instead of a checklist.
Urbs Salvia in dates
The colony began in the Gracchan period, in the 2nd century BC, on an earlier settlement; Pliny the Elder refers to its people, and in time the town took the name Urbs Salvia, tied to the sanctuary of Salus Augusta. The amphitheatre was built at the end of the 1st century AD by Lucius Flavius Silva Nonius Bassus. The city was devastated during the late-antique invasions and never recovered its ancient scale; the medieval town of Urbisaglia grew on the heights above. Modern archaeology has been led on site by the University of Macerata since 1995, and in 2025 a new visitor route opened through the residential quarters with their preserved Roman paving. (I'm careful here: the exact circumstances of the city's late-antique destruction are debated by historians, so treat the "invasions" framing as the broad consensus rather than a single documented event.)
The Masada general's home town
It's worth dwelling on Lucius Flavius Silva. He's the Roman commander who, around AD 73–74, directed the siege of Masada in Judaea: the fortress whose defenders, by Josephus's account, chose mass suicide over capture. That same man, back home in the Marche, endowed his provincial town with an amphitheatre, which still stands and still hosts a summer season of classical theatre. Sitting in it for an evening performance is the rare case where a Roman monument is used for something close to its original purpose.
The combined day: park, Rocca and abbey
Buy the combined ticket. Above the town sits the medieval Rocca, usually included with park admission, with views over the whole valley. A short drive away is the Abbadia di Fiastra, a Cistercian abbey set in a protected nature reserve, a serene Romanesque-Gothic church and woods made for a post-ruins walk. Park, abbey and Rocca together turn a single archaeological stop into a genuinely full, low-cost day, which is exactly how the locals treat it.
Planning your visit: distances, seasons, time needed
By car Urbisaglia is about an hour from Ancona and its airport, and roughly 2 hours 30 minutes from Rome. Spring through autumn is the season; the seasonal, sometimes booking-only hours mean you should always confirm with the comune before driving out, especially the cryptoporticus. Allow two hours for the park, more if you add the abbey. The summer theatre season is the standout reason to time a visit, check the current programme.
Frequently asked questions
- How much does Urbs Salvia cost and what are the hours?
- The full ticket is around €5 (reduced about €2) at the amphitheatre ticket office, usually including the medieval Rocca; a combined ticket with the Abbadia di Fiastra costs more (around €9). Hours are seasonal, broadly Thursday–Sunday and holidays. Confirm the current calendar with the comune di Urbisaglia before visiting.
- Where is Urbs Salvia / Urbisaglia?
- On the SP78 at Urbisaglia, in the province of Macerata, in the Marche region. Park by the amphitheatre and cross the wooden bridge into the park.
- What can you see at Urbs Salvia?
- The largest archaeological park in the Marche (about 40 hectares): aqueduct cisterns, a theatre, the edificio a nicchioni, a temple with a frescoed underground cryptoporticus, the city walls, an amphitheatre, funerary monuments, and newly opened residential quarters with preserved Roman paving.
- Who built the amphitheatre of Urbs Salvia?
- Lucius Flavius Silva Nonius Bassus, at the end of the 1st century AD, the Roman general who besieged and took Masada in Judaea. The amphitheatre still hosts a long-running summer season of classical theatre.
- Do I need to book to visit the cryptoporticus?
- Parts of the site, including the frescoed cryptoporticus, are often visited on a timed or booked basis, and hours are seasonal. Phone or check the comune di Urbisaglia website before travelling, especially off-season.
- What should I combine with Urbs Salvia?
- Buy the combined ticket for the medieval Rocca above the town, and add the nearby Abbadia di Fiastra, a Cistercian abbey in a nature reserve. Together they make a full, low-cost day. In summer, the classical theatre season in the amphitheatre is the highlight.
- How far is Urbisaglia from the nearest airport?
- About an hour by car from Ancona and its airport, and roughly 2 hours 30 minutes from Rome.
From Augustan colony to a city Dante named among the ruined
Urbs Salvia, beside the modern town of Urbisaglia in the Marche, has a distinction that connects a quiet regional archaeological park to one of the greatest works of European literature. The Roman town flourished as a colony, reorganized and settled in the age of Augustus, and grew into a substantial and prosperous center, equipped with the full range of public monuments and supplied by an aqueduct. Its end was violent: in 409 AD, during the collapse of Roman power in Italy, the town was sacked by the Goths under Alaric, the same force that would shortly afterward shock the ancient world by sacking Rome itself, and Urbs Salvia never recovered. Its ruin was so complete and so proverbial that, eight centuries later, the poet Dante, in the Paradiso, the third part of his Divine Comedy, named Urbisaglia as an example of a once-great city fallen into ruin, citing it alongside another decayed town to make the point that even cities die, as a warning against human pride in worldly permanence. To stand in the archaeological park is therefore to stand in a place that entered the imagination of medieval Europe as a symbol of mortality and the fall of greatness, a ruin famous for being a ruin.
The site is today the largest archaeological park in the Marche, and its scale is part of its appeal. The most prominent monument is the Roman amphitheater, set a little apart, its elliptical shape and surviving structure clear in the landscape, where gladiatorial games and spectacles once drew the population of the colony. Closer to the town center are the theater and the great religious complex that is the park's most remarkable feature.
The frescoed cryptoporticus and the largest park in the Marche
The jewel of Urbs Salvia is its temple-cryptoporticus complex. A cryptoporticus is a covered, partly underground gallery, here built as a great rectangular portico enclosing the sacred area below a temple, and at Urbs Salvia it survives with something very rare: its painted decoration. The walls of the gallery still carry Roman frescoes, with motifs including birds, plants, and garlands, the kind of wall painting that usually perishes entirely on aboveground sites, preserved here in the sheltered underground passage. Walking the cryptoporticus, with ancient painted decoration still on its walls, is an experience few Roman sites in Italy can offer, and it is the single best reason to seek the park out. Around it the visitor can trace the theater, the line of the walls, the course of the aqueduct that supplied the town, and the spread of the urban area across the slope, a Roman colony laid open in the green hills of the Marche.
The setting adds to the visit. Urbisaglia lies in a gentle, rural part of the Marche, one of the quietest and least touristed regions of central Italy, and the archaeological park pairs naturally with the nearby Abbadia di Fiastra, a beautiful medieval Cistercian abbey set in a protected nature reserve, so a day here can combine Roman ruins, frescoed galleries, and a great monastic complex in a soft agricultural landscape. A car is the easiest way to reach and link these sites. Because the cryptoporticus and certain areas are sensitive and sometimes shown on guided or timed visits, confirm the current opening hours and visiting arrangements of the park before you go, and allow enough time to see the frescoed gallery properly, since it is the highlight that sets Urbs Salvia apart.
Alaric, the fall of the West, and a Marche itinerary
The sack of Urbs Salvia in 409 AD is a small window onto one of the largest events in history, the collapse of the Western Roman Empire. The Goths under Alaric who destroyed the town were the same force whose sack of Rome itself the following year, in 410, sent a shock through the entire ancient world, prompting contemporaries to ask how the eternal city could fall and inspiring some of the great reflections of late antiquity on the meaning of Rome's decline. Urbs Salvia was one of the many Italian towns caught in that wave of invasion and disorder as imperial authority crumbled, and unlike a great capital it simply never recovered, its population scattered and its monuments left to decay. That is why, centuries later, it could serve the poet Dante as a byword for a city reduced to ruin, a lesson in the impermanence of human works. For the visitor, this large historical frame gives the quiet park a certain gravity: the frescoed gallery, the amphitheater, and the line of the walls are the remains of a real town that died in the fall of the Roman West. The setting today could hardly be more peaceful. Urbs Salvia lies in the rolling, rural Marche, a region of hill towns, Renaissance courts, and soft agricultural landscape that remains one of the least touristed parts of central Italy, and the park pairs naturally with the nearby Cistercian abbey and nature reserve of Fiastra to make a day that joins Roman ruins, medieval monasticism, and quiet countryside. A car is the practical way to reach and combine these sites. Because the frescoed cryptoporticus is fragile and sometimes shown on guided or timed visits, confirm the current opening hours and visiting arrangements of the park before you go, and give yourself time to see the painted gallery, the highlight that sets Urbs Salvia apart from any other site in the region.