Church and Museum of San Mamiliano
The Church of San Mamiliano is a small but historically significant early Christian place of worship in Sovana, a medieval hilltop hamlet in the province of Grosseto in southern Tuscany. The site takes its dedication from Saint Mamilianus, a fourth-century bishop venerated in the Tyrrhenian region, and is associated with one of the most remarkable hoards of late-Roman gold coins discovered in modern Italian archaeology. The church now doubles as the Museo San Mamiliano, housing the 498 gold solidi found beneath its floor during excavations in 2004.
At a glance
- Type
- Early Christian church; civic archaeological museum
- Period
- 5th–13th century (construction); 2004 (major archaeological discovery)
- Style
- Romanesque with early Christian origins
- Location
- Sovana, Sorano, Province of Grosseto, Tuscany
- Coordinates
- 42.6571° N, 11.6465° E
- Current use
- Active church and archaeological museum
Overview
Sovana is one of Italy’s most evocative small towns (it holds the designation I Borghi più belli d’Italia), perched on a tuff ridge above the valley of the Lente river. The Church of San Mamiliano occupies a corner of the medieval street grid alongside Sovana’s cathedral and the Aldobrandesca fortress. Though modest in scale, the building acquired national and international attention in 2004 when archaeologists excavating under the nave floor uncovered a ceramic jar containing 498 gold solidi minted between the reigns of Honorius and Justinian I — a hoard spanning roughly 450–527 AD and one of the largest late-antique gold coin finds in Italian history.
History
Sovana was a significant Etruscan and later Roman settlement, visible today in the rock-cut Etruscan necropolises on the surrounding hillsides. The town rose to regional importance in the medieval period as the seat of the powerful Aldobrandeschi counts and, briefly, as the birthplace of Pope Gregory VII (Hildebrand of Sovana, 1073–1085). The Church of San Mamiliano was established in the early Christian centuries in honour of Saint Mamilianus, bishop of Palermo, whose cult spread along Tyrrhenian sea routes. The church was rebuilt in Romanesque form during the high-medieval period and remained in use through subsequent centuries.
What you see
The exterior of the church is built in the local grey tuff stone typical of the Maremma, with a simple Romanesque façade and bell tower. The interior is a single-nave space with ancient stone columns and medieval masonry. A dedicated display case houses the extraordinary hoard of 498 gold solidi — ranging from coins of late-Roman emperors to early Byzantine rulers — presented with interpretive panels explaining their historical context and the circumstances of their discovery. The museum also holds finds from nearby Etruscan excavations, giving visitors a layered sense of the site’s pre-Christian past.
Cultural significance
The San Mamiliano gold coin hoard is one of the most important late-antique numismatic finds in Italian history, providing evidence of wealth circulation and coin use in the transitional period between the Western Roman Empire and early Byzantine rule in Tuscany. Sovana itself is a site of layered heritage — Etruscan necropolises, Roman remains, medieval architecture, and the birthplace of one of the most reforming popes in Church history — making the church museum a focal point for the region’s deep historical significance.
Practical information
- Address
- Via del Pretorio, Sovana, 58010 Sorano GR
- Opening hours
- Seasonal opening — check the Comuni Aperti or local tourist office for current schedule
- Admission
- Ticketed (combined tickets available with Etruscan necropolis sites)
- Nearby sites
- Sovana Cathedral (Santa Maria Assunta), Rocca Aldobrandesca, Etruscan necropolises (Tomba Ildebranda, Tomba dei Demoni Alati)
Getting there
Sovana is not served by rail. The most practical approach is by car from Grosseto (approximately 80 km south on the SS74 and local roads) or from Orvieto (approximately 60 km west). The nearest large towns with accommodation are Pitigliano (8 km) and Sorano (6 km), both connected to Sovana by local roads. RAMA bus services link Sorano with Grosseto on weekdays.
