The Roman Period The villa is likely to have been constructed over a Republican
villa rustica. It may have become the property of
Pompey the Great in the 60s BC and was taken over as imperial property after his sons' death. The villa was greatly expanded from the 120s AD and was used by
Antoninus Pius (r.138-161). The elaborate winery and its use described in the letters of Marcus Aurelius indicate that the villa was used to hold an important regional religious and secular festival celebrating the vintage, the
vendemmia for Latium. The power, wealth and extravagance of the emperor was emphasised in the winery which is an early form of ceremonial winery in imperial villas of the late 2nd to early 3rd century (such as the imperial
Villa of the Quintilii) which replaced the earlier integration of ceremony and ritual in Republican and
Augustan atria. In 207 under
Septimius Severus the road that led to the villa was paved, according to an inscription now in the cathedral of Anagni. Sometime afterwards (Phase II) the winery was modified including a new semi-circular room. Later (Phase III), the winery was levelled and useful materials removed followed by abandonment and roof collapse.
Letter of Marcus Aurelius At the age of 23, the future emperor
Marcus Aurelius visited the villa where his adoptive father
Antoninus Pius was staying. In letters to his tutor,
Fronto, he describes two days spent there at a festival inaugurating the vintage of Latium:
Middle Ages The earliest document attesting to the monastery dates from the 10th century and describes the foundation of the monastery by three nobles from Anagni. A series of very interesting charters and trials from the eleventh through 13th century speak to a small rural monastery with properties in the area of the original
fundus, which despite its meagre size and income managed to become embroiled in regional and papal politics of the central Middle Ages, culminating in the suppression of the monastery in 1297 by Pope
Boniface VIII. After the death of the monastery, the village remained at least for a little while, however, as it is referred to as a
castrum in 1301 and 1333, and a
castrum dirutum in 1478. The castrum walls and church are still standing today. ==The Site==