Pantalica

Byzantine Pantalica

The story of Pantalica is a mysterious narrative deeply linked to a highly characteristic landscape, one of history’s greatest natural defence systems.
Traces of the prehistoric settlement disappeared suddenly around the 8th century BC, perhaps due to a war caused by the foundation of Syracuse and a consequent expansion inland.
The site was reoccupied and reused in the period between the Byzantine era and Islamic expansion towards the West.
With their small rocky churches, the villages and the very name Pantalica date back to this period of systematic restoration, for residential purposes, of many of the funerary rooms dug into the rock in the protohistoric period. The first village was located near the Cavetta necropolis and had around seventy houses around the oratorio del Crocifisso (Crucifix oratory), which today has remains of frescoes depicting the crucifixion and St. Nicholas.
The second village was founded in the cliffs below the Anaktoron, in the southern necropolis, and its religious centre was the oratory of San Nicolicchio, decorated with frescoes and inscriptions of which only some fragments of the figures of St. Helen and St. Stephen are visible today.
The largest of these villages was located between the southern necropolis and the pass of Filiporto and consisted of more than 150 houses and a small church dedicated to San Micidiario , where you can still admire a fresco depicting Christ Pantocrator behind the central niche.

The Altar of Hieron II: Blood and fire place

The Roman Amphitheatre

Legends and magic echoes in the Latomie of Syracuse

King Hyblon’s kingdom: Pantalica, between history and legend

The Venationes

Piazza del Duomo, a sacred place of the ancient Greeks

The Culture of Pantalica

The Senatorial Palace

Pantalica: where nature and history merge

Crypt of San Marciano

Where seas and civilisations meet

The Church of San Giovanni alle Catacombe

Inside the Cathedral of Ortygia

Traces of Christianity in Syracuse

The Spanish fortification

Roman Syracuse, a military power thanks to the genius of Archimedes

The Church of St. Lucia to the Abbey

Giudecca, the hidden Jewish heart of Syracuse

The Athenaion of the tyrant Gelon

Ortygia. Venus rising from the waters of the port

The Cathedral of Syracuse

The Euryalus Fortress

Castello Maniace

Neapolis from past to present

The Museion and the Grotta del Ninfeo

Syracuse during the tyranny of Dionysius

Byzantine Pantalica

The functions of Castello Maniace

The cultural significance of tragedy

The Dionysian Walls: a masterpiece of Greek engineering

The architecture of the Piazza

The Gladiator performances

Temple of Apollo

The catacombs of San Giovanni

The Jews, a wandering people

The Greek Theatre of Syracuse

The Ear of Dionysius and the Grotta dei Cordari