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The Argimusco is a high plateau situated just north of
Mount Etna Mount Etna, or simply Etna ( or ; , or ; ; or ), is an active stratovolcano on the east coast of Sicily, Italy, in the Metropolitan City of Catania, between the cities of Messina, Italy, Messina and Catania. It is located above the Conve ...
in
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,
Southern Italy Southern Italy (, , or , ; ; ), also known as () or (; ; ; ), is a macroregion of Italy consisting of its southern Regions of Italy, regions. The term "" today mostly refers to the regions that are associated with the people, lands or cultu ...
, between the Nebrodi and
Peloritani The Peloritani ( Sicilian: , ) are a mountain range of north-eastern Sicily, in southern Italy, extending for some from Capo Peloro to the Nebrodi Mountains. On the north and east they are bordered by the Tyrrhenian and Ionian Seas res ...
Mountains. It is located within the boundaries of the communes of Roccella Valdemone, Tripi, and Montalbano Elicona, the latter of which was constructed on the site of the prehistoric Abaca Enum. The location provides a comprehensive view of the
Aeolian Islands The Aeolian Islands ( ; ; ), sometimes referred to as the Lipari Islands or Lipari group ( , ) after their largest island, are a volcanic archipelago in the Tyrrhenian Sea north of Sicily, said to be named after Aeolus, the mythical ruler of ...
, the Rocca Salvatesta and Montagna di Vernà mountains, cape Tindari, cape Calavà, and cape Milazzo.


Argimusco, the sicilian Stonehenge

Between Montalbano Elicona, Novara di Sicilia and Tripi, in the province of Messina, on the northern borders of the Bosco di Malabotta, a group of large quartz sandstone rocks, with curious and evocative shapes, rises over a thousand metres above sea level. On one side the Tyrrhenian Sea, on the other the valley of the Alcantara river. Examples of names for the stones are, ''Virgin in prayer'', the ''monk'', the ''male face'' or ''the eagle''. Its atmosphere has been compared to the British Stonehenge. There are multiple hypotheses what the megaliths of Argimusco were: a site for sacred rites, a place for astronomical observations for the people of antiquity, or sandstone rocks eroded over the centuries by the wind of the plateau. Even today, eleven constellations are reflected in the megaliths of the site after sunset on cloudless summer evenings.


The Rocks

According to local legend, the dolmens and ancient menhirs are megaliths from a prehistoric population. The widespread belief is that wind erosion causes these. Two sizable, elongated stones stand among the megaliths in Portella Cerasa, and another megalith bears an etched Sun symbol. A large boulder in front of the dolmen's remnants at Portella Zilla, further to the west, may have been a menhir that had collapsed. Around the alleged monuments, no evidence of prehistoric human habitation, such as pottery, tools, or bones, have been discovered.


The Eagle

The Eagle is formed by the overlapping of blocks from the pentagonal faces. From certain angles, the silhouette of the megalith resembles a bird of prey, with wings half-spread and the head facing south. The eagle in hermetic symbolism is a privileged being which connects earth with heaven. It is the symbol of the soul of the deceased. The latter after the death of material life is born to new life (like the alchemical phoenix rising from the ashes, the soul rises from the alchemical ashes). In the background of the Aquila, stands Mount Nettuno (Rocca Salvatesta) that probably in the economy of the site acts as solstice or equinox indicator. left, Eagle


The Alchemical symbols

On Argimusco, the statues of the Pelican, the Owl, and finally a rock that resembles the alchemical alembic have been found. Pelican and Owl left, Pelican and Owl


The Profile of Asclepius

On the wall facing west, you notice the haughty profile of a young man who looks with his face upwards to the setting sun. The dual representation suggests the chthonic Italian deity of Janus, then adopted in Roman religion, to whom is dedicated the month of starting of the year. With it were measured various passages of the sun on the solstices on the north-south diagonal. In fact, the Great Cliff of Janus plays a central role in any relationship north (Aeolian Islands) and south (Etna). Ophiuchus


Virgo (Constellation)

If we with a look towards the west, we can admire the incredible precision, almost "portrait", of the megalith of the ‘Praying Woman’ or ‘Virgo". It is a mysterious androgynous figure twenty-six meters high with her hands clasped in prayer. You notice the elbow, the mantle, the knee, the Phrygian cap on the head, and even the pedestal base.


Ritual Ablution

The Virgin is the center of the "Mirror of the stars" staged at Argimusco, since all other figures play an ancillary role with respect to it. As a matter of fact, the sun rises in Virgo at summer solstice of 10,500 BC. It embodies the feminine divine figure, which is lunar liquid mercury, as opposed to the divine Apollonian, masculine, solar disk, put in alchemical terms. As a mercurial element, it is precisely located near the Serpens constellation and the bearer of snakes (Ophiuchus), or the symbol of the Caduceus of Hermes (Mercury) consisting of a rod around which wraps themselves, in fact, two snakes (now the symbol of medicine). Particularly significant, high on the megalith of the Virgo is a rectangular pool, that we suppose was used for ritual ablutions.


Gallery


References


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See also

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Pareidolia Pareidolia (; ) is the tendency for perception to impose a meaningful interpretation on a nebulous stimulus (physiology), stimulus, usually visual, so that one detects an object, pattern, or meaning where there is none. Pareidolia is a specific bu ...


External links

{{Messina Landmarks in Sicily Landforms of Sicily Plateaus of Italy