The ancient site of the city was first settled by the
Messapians. In the late sixth century BCE it developed in importance and, even after it had been partially settled by
Greeks during the period of
Magna Graecia, it still retained some of its native traditions.
Strabo called Rudiae a "Greek city". According to
Aulus Gellius, the poet
Ennius referred to the linguistic and cultural heritage given him by the city in asserting that he had "three hearts",
Greek,
Oscan and
Latin (
Quintus Ennius tria corda habere sese dicebat, quod loqui Graece et Osce et Latine sciret). Rudiae is identified with the archaeological remains found in the immediate outskirts of
Lecce. These comprise traces of an amphitheatre, a necropolis and two city walls built of
tuff. In the past the walls were towered and defended by a ditch 4 km long. Judging by the extent of these, its entire area covered some 100 hectares, twice the size of nearby Lupiae (as Lecce was then called) in the Roman period. Later the city lost importance and by the first century CE, according to
Silius Italicus, was reduced to a modest village even as its neighbour was growing in size and importance. From the archaeological standpoint, however, Rudiae seems to have played the role of stylistic and distribution centre for funerary pottery over a considerable period. It is recognised as the most important site for both quantity and quality of such vases used in the Messapian region. Almost all local discoveries are housed in the Sigismondo Castromediano Museum in Lecce. ==References==