Eryx (city)

Eryx
The ancient fortification walls of Eryx
Interactive map of Eryx
LocationErice, Sicily, Italy
RegionSicily
Coordinates38°02′26″N 12°35′17″E / 38.040655°N 12.588112°E / 38.040655; 12.588112
TypeAncient city
History
FoundedEarly 1st millennium BC (settlement); fortified early 5th century BC
PeriodsClassical antiquity
CulturesElymian, Greek-influenced, Punic, Roman
Site notes
ConditionPartly preserved
Public accessYes

Eryx was an ancient Elymian city in western Sicily, known in Greek and Roman sources as Eryx (Ἔρυξ). The settlement occupied the northern sector of the summit plateau of Monte Erice, distinct from the sanctuary of the Temple of Venus Erycina, and forms part of the site of the modern town of Erice.

As one of the principal centres of the Elymians, Eryx was never a Greek colony but came under strong Greek cultural influence from at least the 6th century BC, before passing to Carthaginian and later Roman control in the 3rd century BC. Its commanding position made it strategically important, particularly during the First Punic War.

By the medieval period, the site of the ancient city had become part of the town’s giudecca (Jewish quarter), as the main urban centre expanded southward. Following the expulsion of the Jewish population from Sicily in the late 15th century, the district declined and has remained sparsely inhabited into modern times.

Name

The name of the city is attested in Greek and Roman sources as Eryx (Ancient Greek: Ἔρυξ). In Punic inscriptions it appears as ʾrk (Punic: 𐤀‬𐤓𐤊), representing a Semitic form of the name.[1][2][3]

The origin of the name is uncertain, though in Greek tradition it was associated with the eponymous hero Eryx. In later periods, the settlement became known as Monte San Giuliano during the Middle Ages, before adopting the modern name Erice in the 20th century.[4]

Location and layout

The site of the sanctuary on a cylindrical-shaped promontory with the medieval expansion of the city in the background
Approximate extent of the ancient city of Eryx. The point marked “B” indicates the southernmost limit prior to medieval expansion

The city of Eryx was situated on the mountain now known as Monte Erice, an isolated peak rising from the surrounding low-lying terrain in western Sicily.[5]

Owing to its prominence, the mountain was regarded in antiquity as one of the highest in the island after Aetna,[6] though its actual elevation is about 750 m (2,460 ft). It is described by Virgil and other Latin poets as comparable in scale to Athos and Aetna.[7]

On the summit stood the sanctuary later known as the Temple of Venus Erycina, associated in later tradition with Aeneas.[8] While the location of the sanctuary itself was well established, early modern scholarship placed the ancient city of Eryx near the convent of Santa Anna, about halfway down the mountain.[9]

Modern archaeological and topographical studies, based on excavation campaigns carried out between 2009 and 2014 and on earlier investigations, indicate that the ancient city’s urban area was situated on the northern side of the summit, facing towards the coast and the port of Bonagia. It was enclosed by Elymian-Punic fortifications constructed from at least the early 5th century BC. It did not extend across the full extent of the modern town, which expanded in later periods.[10]

These conclusions are based on stratigraphic excavations of the fortification walls and towers, analysis of construction techniques, and the study of associated material finds, particularly pottery used for chronological dating. The investigations also combined architectural analysis with topographical study of the terrain and the layout of the modern town, allowing the identification of the probable limits of the ancient settlement.[10]

In the medieval period, this area formed part of the town’s giudecca (Jewish quarter), extending between the church of Sant’Antonio Abate, the Spanish Quarter, and the area known as the Fontanella. It descended southwards towards a line of fortifications, now lost, which once ran beneath the cliffs below the quarter. Following the expulsion of the Jewish population from Sicily in 1492 under Ferdinand II of Aragon, the district was largely abandoned and fell into decline.[4]

The sanctuary

The sanctuary of the Temple of Venus Erycina stood at a short distance from the urban settlement, occupying the top of a cylindrical-shaped spur surrounded by cliff.[4] Ancient sources distinguish clearly between the temple on the summit and the town situated below on the slopes, indicating that the sanctuary lay outside the main inhabited area.[11]

The summit itself was naturally divided by a deep ravine separating the highest sacred area from the adjoining plateau. This topography contributed to the defensible and isolated character of the sanctuary, which was difficult to access but commanded extensive views over the surrounding coasts.[4]

Modern interpretations of the site have emphasised that this physical separation between summit and settlement helps explain ancient accounts of the city and temple being occupied independently during military operations.[12]

History

Elymian and early settlement

The origins of Eryx are uncertain, but archaeological evidence indicates the presence of a settlement by the late Archaic period, preceded by earlier occupation layers. Excavations beneath the city walls have revealed structures dating to the 6th century BCE, suggesting the existence of an indigenous settlement prior to the construction of the fortifications.[12]

There is little clear evidence for the existence of a polis at Eryx before the late 6th or early 5th century BCE. Earlier Greek sources refer only to the territory of Eryx rather than to an established city, suggesting that the development of an urban centre occurred relatively late.[13]

Silver coin of Eryx (c. 480–390 BC) bearing the Greek legend ERYKINON (“of the Erycinians”).

The emergence of a civic community at Eryx in the early 5th century BCE is also reflected in its coinage. The earliest issues, dated to this period, are associated with the emergence of the city as a polis. The use of Greek legends on these coins indicates participation in wider economic and cultural networks and reflects the adoption of Greek linguistic and monetary conventions.[14]

The development of the urban centre may have been closely connected to the importance of the sanctuary, which appears to have held wider regional significance and likely played a central role around which the settlement developed.[13]

Eryx formed part of the Elymian cultural sphere of western Sicily, whose communities maintained close political and economic relations with Phoenician settlements. Ancient sources describe the Elymians, including those of Eryx and Segesta, as non-Greek populations, although they were increasingly integrated into the wider Mediterranean world.[12]

During the 6th century BCE, the region became an area of conflict between indigenous groups and expanding Greek poleis, particularly Selinous. Greek attempts to establish colonies in the territory of Eryx, such as the expedition of the Spartan prince Dorieus, were ultimately unsuccessful.[12]

A major transformation occurred in the early 5th century BCE, following wider political changes in western Sicily after the Battle of Himera in 480 BC. Several indigenous settlements were abandoned or reorganised, but at Eryx a new urban layout emerged, marked by the construction of city walls and the development of a more structured urban centre.[10]

Punic colony

By the 4th century BC, Eryx had become closely integrated into the Carthaginian sphere of influence and functioned as a major fortified stronghold in western Sicily. Its elevated position and strong defences made it strategically important in the conflicts between Carthage and the Greek cities of the island.[12]

Silver litra of Eryx (late 4th century BC), bearing the legend Punic: 𐤀𐤓𐤊 (ʾrk), the name of the city in Punic script.

From this phase onward, Eryx also issued coinage bearing Punic legends, including the form Punic: 𐤀𐤓𐤊 (ʾrk).[14] An inscription, now lost, referring to the Sufetes of Eryx, indicates the presence of magistrates of Carthaginian type and suggests the adoption of Punic institutions within the city.[12]

During the wars between Carthage and Syracuse, Eryx changed hands on several occasions. In 397 BC, it briefly allied with Dionysius I of Syracuse during his campaign against Carthaginian territories, but was soon recovered by the Carthaginians.[15] Over the following century, it remained a key stronghold under their control.[12]

In 278 BC, during his campaign in Sicily, Pyrrhus of Epirus attacked Eryx, which was defended by a strong Carthaginian garrison. The city was taken after a difficult assault, during which Pyrrhus is said to have been among the first to mount the walls and to have displayed notable personal bravery.[16]

Eryx played an important role in the First Punic War (264–241 BC). In 260 BC, the Carthaginian general Hamilcar evacuated much of the population to the nearby coastal settlement of Drepanum (modern Trapani), turning the mountain into a military position.[17] The site thereafter became a key point of contention between Carthaginian and Roman forces.[18]

In the later stages of the war, Hamilcar Barca established himself at Eryx, the site of the Battle of Eryx, holding the city on the slopes while a Roman garrison occupied the summit sanctuary. This division of control persisted until the Roman naval victory at the Battle of the Aegates Islands in 241 BC, which brought the war to an end and secured Roman control of Sicily.[19]

This situation, in which the summit and the lower settlement were held separately, corresponds with the description given by Polybius and has been interpreted by modern scholarship as indicating that the sanctuary of Venus Erycina was located outside the urban area of the city.[10]

Roman period

After the conquest of Eryx during the First Punic War, the city passed under Roman control. While the sanctuary of the Temple of Venus Erycina continued to be of considerable importance, the urban settlement is less prominently attested in the sources.

Roman authors of the late Republic and early Empire emphasise the sanctuary rather than the city itself. Cicero refers extensively to the temple in the 1st century BC, but makes little mention of the city, while Strabo describes Eryx in his time as almost uninhabited. Although Pliny includes the Erycini among the municipal communities of Sicily, a passage in Tacitus suggests that the sanctuary may have been administratively dependent on Segesta during the Roman period.[20]

Despite this limited attention to the city in the literary sources, the cult of Venus Erycina retained wide prestige in the Roman world. Temples to Venus Erycina were established at Rome itself, on the Capitoline Hill (dedicated 215 BC) and near the Porta Collina on the Quirinal (vowed 184 BC; dedicated 181 BC).[21][22] Its continuing importance is further reflected in the early Imperial period, when a delegation from Segesta appealed to the emperor Tiberius for the restoration of the sanctuary.[23]

Detail of the Ammaedara mosaic (3rd–4th century AD), depicting Eryx (Erycos) among Mediterranean sites associated with the cult of Venus.

The wider prestige of the cult is also reflected in late Roman art. A 3rd–4th century mosaic from Ammaedara (modern Haïdra, Tunisia), known as the Mosaic of the islands and cities of the Mediterranean, includes a depiction of Eryx, labelled Erycos, among other sites associated with Venus.[24]

Archaeological evidence likewise indicates continued activity at the site in the Roman period. Finds from the area of the later Castle of Venus, corresponding to the sanctuary, include material dating to the Late Republican and early Imperial periods.[13] In addition, an inscription commemorating the victory of Lucius Caecilius Metellus at Panormus in 250 BC, discovered near the site of the church of San Pietro and now preserved in the Cordici Museum, attests to the presence of military and commemorative activity at Eryx during this period.[4]

By the medieval period, the site of the ancient city had re-emerged as an important Christian religious centre under the name Monte San Giuliano, later known as Erice.

Archaeology

Archaeological investigation of Eryx has been relatively limited, and the urban organisation of the ancient city remains imperfectly understood. Much of the available evidence derives from the fortification walls and a small number of excavated areas, including the necropolis of Piano delle Forche and limited soundings within the later medieval town. Earlier investigations, carried out intermittently from the 19th century onwards, were often non-systematic and in some cases poorly documented, resulting in the loss of stratigraphic information.[10]

More recent excavation campaigns conducted between 2009 and 2014 have provided new data on the chronology of the Elymian-Punic Walls of Erice and the extent of the settlement, particularly through stratigraphic analysis and the study of pottery.[10]

Archaeometric analysis of pottery from these contexts indicates that painted wares with geometric decoration were likely produced locally, while black-glazed ceramics show compositional features consistent with imports from the Attic region of Greece. This evidence suggests that Eryx combined local ceramic production with the consumption of imported fine wares, reflecting its participation in wider Mediterranean trade networks during the 6th and early 5th centuries BC.[25]

Archaeological investigations have also identified an extra-urban Sanctuary of Demeter outside the northern sector of the city walls near the Spanish Quarter, interpreted as a thesmophorion and dated to the late 6th and early 5th centuries BC, providing further evidence for organised cult activity in the early phases of the settlement.[26]

Despite these investigations, large areas of the ancient city remain unexcavated, and many aspects of Eryx’s urban structure and history are still uncertain.[10]

See also

  • Elymian-Punic Walls of Erice
  • Temple of Venus Erycina
  • Sanctuary of Demeter
  • Necropolis of Piano delle Forche

References

Citations

  1. ^ Head & al. (1911), p. 877.
  2. ^ Filigheddu (2006), pp. 158–159.
  3. ^ Slouschz, Nahoum (1942). Thesaurus of Phoenician Inscriptions (in Hebrew). Dvir. p. 134.
  4. ^ a b c d e Tusa, Matteo (2017). Erice: Planning for Life. Erice: Self-published. ISBN 9788892667327.
  5. ^ "Mons Eryx", Pliny iii. 8. s. 14; "Mons Erycus", Cicero In Verrem ii. 4. 7; Tacitus Ann. iv. 43.
  6. ^ Pol. i. 55; Pomponius Mela ii. 7. § 17; Gaius Julius Solinus 5. § 9.
  7. ^ Virgil The Aeneid xii. 701; Val. Flacc. ii. 523.
  8. ^ Strabo, xiii. p. 608; Virg. Aeneid v. 759.
  9. ^ William Henry Smyth, Sicily, p. 243.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g De Vincenzo, Salvatore (2015). "The fortification wall of Eryx. A new definition of the settlement's construction phases and topographic development in light of recent excavations". Analysis Archaeologica. 1. Edizioni Quasar: 103–116. ISSN 2421-6380.
  11. ^ Pol. i. 55, 58.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g De Vincenzo, Salvatore (2020). "The city walls of Eryx and the sociopolitical conflicts in western Sicily before the Roman conquest". In Jonasch, Melanie (ed.). The Fight for Greek Sicily: Society, Politics, and Landscape. Oxford and Philadelphia: Oxbow Books. pp. 285–296. ISBN 978-1-78925-356-6.
  13. ^ a b c Lietz, Beatrice (2022). "Erice. Fonti storiche e archeologiche". In Ampolo, Carmine (ed.). La città e le città della Sicilia antica: atti delle ottave giornate internazionali di studi sull'area elima e la Sicilia occidentale nel contesto mediterraneo (Pisa, 18–21 December 2012) (in Italian). Quasar. ISBN 978-88-5491-263-2. hal-03908782.
  14. ^ a b Perin, Valeria; Campana, Alberto (January–February 2014). "ERYX: LITRA "POR" / AFRODITE "ERVKINA". Parte II". Monete Antiche (in Italian) (73).
  15. ^ Diod. xiv. 48, 55.
  16. ^ Diod. xx. 10.
  17. ^ Diod. xxiii. 9.
  18. ^ Pol. i. 55.
  19. ^ Pol. i. 58.
  20. ^ Strabo vi. 2; Cic. In Verrem ii. 4; Plin. iii. 8. s. 14; Tac. Ann. iv. 43.
  21. ^ Livy. "History of Rome — Book 22". York University. Retrieved 19 September 2025. …a temple to Venus Erycina…
  22. ^ "Venus Erycina, Aedes (Extra Porta Collinam)". Digital Augustan Rome. Retrieved 19 September 2025.
  23. ^ Tacitus. "Annals 4.43". LacusCurtius. Retrieved 19 September 2025.
  24. ^ "Mosaïque des îles et des villes de Méditerranée" (PDF). Musée départemental Arles antique. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
  25. ^ Montana, Giuseppe; Randazzo, Luciana; Blasetti Fantauzzi, Chiara (2019). "Archaeometric characterization of late Archaic ceramic from Erice (Sicily) aimed to provenance determination". International Journal of Conservation Science. 10 (4): 605–622.
  26. ^ Lentini, Ferdinando (2002). "Erice: il thesmophorion del quartiere spagnolo" [Erice: the thesmophorion of the Spanish Quarter]. Folder. Fasti On Line Documents & Research (in Italian): 167–175.

Bibliography

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSmith, William, ed. (1854–1857). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.
  • Filigheddu, Paolo (2007), "Die Ortsnamen des Mittelmeerraums in der Phönizischen und Punischen Überlieferung", Ugarit-Forschungen: Internationales Jahrbuch für die Altertumskunde Syrien-Palästinas, vol.  38 2006, Munster: Ugarit Verlag, pp. 149–266. (in German)
  • Head, Barclay; et al. (1911), "Zeugitana", Historia Numorum (2nd ed.), Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 877–882.


38°02′15″N 12°35′15″E / 38.0375°N 12.5875°E / 38.0375; 12.5875