The first
Lucanian settlements in the area date from the 6th century BC. The site was founded by the Romans in the 3rd century BC during the
Samnite Wars as a fortified vanguard, as part of the creation of a series of fortified outposts in strategic positions: the city arose almost simultaneously with
Venusia (291 BC) and
Paestum (273 BC). The position was chosen to control important routes (one of which became the
via Herculia in the late 200s AD) between Venusia and
Heraclea and another road led to the Via Popilia on the Tyrrhenian side. In 215 BC the Carthaginian general
Hanno was defeated under its walls, but in 207 BC
Hannibal made it his headquarters, where another
battle took place. In the
Social War it was a strong fortress, and seems to have been held by both sides at different times but was sacked by Italic tribes. It became a
colony, perhaps in the time of
Sulla, at the latest under
Augustus, and became important. Starting from the second half of the 1st century BC. the city was rebuilt with a series of public monuments in the Caesarian and Augustan eras. St. Laverius was martyred here in 312 AD. In 370 AD Grumentum became a bishopric but soon afterwards it began to be abandoned. Due to the Saracen inroads (9th–10th centuries), in 954 a new town (
Saponara or
Saponaria, the modern
Grumento Nova) was founded. ==The Site==