Scavi di Caulonia — Ancient Kaulon
Kaulon, also written Caulonia or Caulon, was an ancient Greek city founded on the Ionian coast of Calabria around the seventh century BC. Its ruins — excavated as the Scavi di Caulonia — lie near modern Monasterace and preserve temple foundations, mosaic floors, and stratigraphic layers spanning Magna Graecia, Roman, and Byzantine periods. The site is among the most significant Greek colonial settlements in the toe of Italy.
At a glance
- Type
- Ancient Greek colonial city and archaeological excavation
- Period
- Founded c. 7th century BC; occupied through late antiquity
- Style
- Magna Graecia urban planning; Doric temple architecture
- Location
- Near Monasterace, Province of Reggio Calabria, Calabria, Italy
- Coordinates
- 38.4461° N, 16.5786° E
Overview
Kaulon was one of the Greek colonies planted along the Ionian shore of Calabria, part of the broader Magna Graecia network that shaped southern Italy’s cultural landscape for centuries. The site occupies a coastal promontory that offered natural defensive advantages and direct maritime access, conditions typical of successful Greek foundation choices. Excavations conducted since the nineteenth century have progressively revealed the city’s urban grid, public buildings, and rich material culture.
History
Ancient sources attribute the foundation of Kaulon to Achaean settlers, possibly linked to the same colonial wave that established Croton and Sybaris in the eighth and seventh centuries BC. The city flourished as a commercial and cultural hub during the classical period, minting its own coinage bearing a dolphin rider — a type well documented in numismatic collections. Kaulon suffered decline following Roman conquest and the upheavals of the Social War, and its population eventually shifted to the nearby site that became modern Monasterace Marina.
Systematic archaeological investigation began in earnest in the early twentieth century and has continued intermittently, with major campaigns exposing the remains of a Doric temple and associated peribolos wall dating to the fifth century BC.
What you see
The most visible monument at the site is the platform and column drums of a Doric temple, probably dedicated to a deity connected with civic life or seafaring. Visitors can also examine sections of the ancient street grid, domestic quarter foundations, and a remarkable polychrome mosaic floor uncovered in the 1990s — one of the finest surviving examples of Hellenistic floor decoration in Calabria. The Museo Nazionale di Monasterace, adjacent to the excavations, displays ceramics, terracottas, coins, and inscriptions recovered from the site.
Cultural significance
As one of the lesser-visited but archaeologically rich Greek colonies of Calabria, Kaulon complements the better-known sites of Locri and Croton in documenting the full spectrum of Magna Graecia urban life. Its mosaic floors and coin series have contributed directly to scholarship on Hellenistic art and economy in the western Mediterranean.
Practical information
- Address
- Contrada Faro, Monasterace, 89040 Reggio Calabria RC
- Hours
- Check official website or contact the Museo Nazionale di Monasterace
- Admission
- Check official website for current ticket prices
Getting there
Monasterace is served by the Reggio Calabria–Taranto railway line; the Monasterace Marina station is within walking distance of the coastal excavation area. By car, take the SS 106 Jonica and follow signs for Monasterace/Scavi. The nearest airport is Lamezia Terme (CIY), approximately 90 km north.
