Treia is a town and ''
comune'' in the
province of Macerata in the central
Marche
Marche ( , ) is one of the twenty regions of Italy. In English, the region is sometimes referred to as The Marches ( ). The region is located in the central area of the country, bordered by Emilia-Romagna and the republic of San Marino to the ...
(
Italy). It is north of
Pollenza, west of
Macerata, and north-northeast of
Tolentino.
Geography
The site of the abandoned Roman
municipium of Trea is situated in the middle valley of the
River Potenza, some 30 km from the Adriatic shore. The town was located on a dominant plateau, 1 km north-west of present-day Treia, and just 3 km east of Monte Pitino, in an agrarian area around the church and convent of SS. Crocifisso.
Remains
The only remaining visible ruins are two small sections of the former city walls, partly incorporated in a now abandoned farm house. Since the 16th century many isolated finds as well as epigraphic monuments concerning Trea have been discovered in the general area. The first major excavations by Fortunato Benigni in the late 18th century determined the town’s approximate location and revealed parts of its walls, a basilica and a sanctuary with possible thermal building, located under the convent of SS. Crocifisso.
History
Treia is said to have been founded by the
Sabine people in 380 BCE. Although the precise origin of the site remains unknown, its location on an elevated plateau near the Picene hilltop site of Monte Pitino could indicate that it was already a pre-Roman center. It became a Roman municipium shortly after 49 BC and it is possible that its circuit wall was erected around that time.
The Roman town flourished between the reigns of
Augustus and
Antoninus Pius, as indicated by the large collection of funerary monuments, statuary and epigraphic evidence.
Large Egyptian religious statues of the Roman period have been found and are kept in the town's museum: they are unique in the Marche.
The later phases of Trea are less well documented and the last epigraphic evidence dates from the 4th century AD. However, according to some archaeological finds from early excavations and surveys, later habitation in Trea, at least until the 7th century AD, can be assumed.
It is imaginable that during the Early Middle Ages the remaining habitation was restructured in connection with a modest early Christian sanctuary for the plebs, here to be located at the site of SS. Crocifisso. Although this sanctuary is only found in documents from the mid-12th century onwards, many early medieval
spolia used in the later church of SS. Crocifisso indicate the presence of a much earlier phase. Around AD 1000 the population probably moved towards the more easily defensible hill-site of Montecchio (later called Treia) and the original town site remained practically deserted.
The town sided with the Pope in the temporal struggles of central Italy, and was besieged several times, and in particular in 1239 by
Enzio, son and vicar of
Frederick II and again in 1263 by
Conrad of Antioch, who was captured at the nearby battle of Vallesacco, and held for several months in town in a small prison (now in use as a caffé).
Montecchio eventually became part of the
Papal States, and in 1790
Pope Pius VI
Pope Pius VI ( it, Pio VI; born Count Giovanni Angelo Braschi, 25 December 171729 August 1799) was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 15 February 1775 to his death in August 1799.
Pius VI condemned the French Revoluti ...
rewarded it for its faithfulness by raising it to the official rank of "city", at the same time renaming it by its Roman name of Treia.
Treia's most famous native was the archaeologist and art critic
Luigi Lanzi.
Archaeology
From 2000 onwards th
Potenza Valley Survey Project a project of
Ghent University directed by Frank Vermeulen, attempts to map all buried structures of the ancient town. The survey methodology involves a series of aerial photography operations, large-scale geophysical prospections and intensive artefact surveys and studies. Due to all this new information it is now possible to map most parts of the town’s infrastructure in detail.
Roman ''Trea ''was situated along an important byroad of the
via Flaminia
The Via Flaminia or Flaminian Way was an ancient Roman road leading from Rome over the Apennine Mountains to ''Ariminum'' (Rimini) on the coast of the Adriatic Sea, and due to the ruggedness of the mountains was the major option the Romans had ...
, which connected
Rome directly to the harbour city
Ancona, via most of the Potenza Valley. Around this road a street-side settlement developed gradually into a real town during the
Late Republic. The town wall delimiting the main urban area has an irregular oval shape, which agrees well with the general topographic configuration of the hilly plateau. The total enclosed area is only about 11
ha but possibly extramural habitation areas existed, particularly on the eastern and western sides. The street grid, individuating
insulae of different size, is organized parallel with and perpendicular to a central
decumanus maximus. Centrally the main road is interrupted by the monumental
forum
Forum or The Forum (plural forums or fora) may refer to:
Common uses
*Forum (legal), designated space for public expression in the United States
*Forum (Roman), open public space within a Roman city
**Roman Forum, most famous example
*Internet ...
complex. The open rectangular square, is bordered by
porticoes,
tabernae and a series of public buildings. Centrally on the eastern side stood a rectangular building identified as the main podium temple. On and near the short west side of the forum stood a
basilica, and possibly a
curia. The planned forum was probably constructed in late Republican and early Imperial times. The remnants of another temple, discovered under the bell tower of the sanctuary of SS. Crocifisso and partly excavated by the
University of Macerata in the 1980s, can be considered as an Egyptian sanctuary for
Isis and
Serapis. The discovery of a marble head of Serapis and a number of smaller Egyptian statuettes, as well as the second century AD inscription
[CIL IX 5652] that mentions the temple of the “Domina” (the goddess
Isis), can lead to the interpretation that this foreign cult was practiced here.
Main sights
Religious buildings
* ''
Treia Cathedral'' (SS. Annunziata): medieval brick ''
Duomo''
* ''Santuario del SS. Crocefisso'': a large early 20th‑century church complex
* ''
San Filippo Neri:'' Baroque church
* ''
Santa Chiara'': late-Baroque/early-Neoclassic church
* ''
San Michele''
* ''
San Francesco''
* ''
San Lorenzo
San Lorenzo is the Italian and Spanish name for Lawrence of Rome, Saint Lawrence, the 3rd-century Christian martyr, and may refer to:
Places Argentina
* San Lorenzo, Santa Fe
* San Lorenzo Department, Chaco
* Monte San Lorenzo, a mountain on t ...
''
* ''
Santa Maria del Suffragio''
* ''
Monastero della Visitazione''
Secular buildings
* ''Palazzo Municipale'': 17th‑century Town Hall (includes a collection of Renaissance and classical paintings that may be visited on request
*Villa Spada or Villa "La Quiete": work of the neoclassical architect
Giuseppe Valadier (now in ruins)
*Museum of the town's history, inaugurated in 2004.
*Georgic Academy
*Archaeological Museum
*Municipal Theatre
References
* Marengo, S. (2000), Regio V Picenum – Trea. Supplementa Italica, Nuova Serie 18, Roma, Casa Foscari, pp. 155–188.
* Paci, G. (1999), Indagini recenti e nuove conoscenze sulle città romane del territorio marchigiano. Annali della Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia, Università di macerate, pp. 201–244.
* Percossi Serenelli, E., Pignocchi, G. and Vermeulen, F. (eds.) (2006), I siti archeologici della Vallata del Potenza. Conoscenze e tutela, Ancona, Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali. Direzione Regionale per i Beni Culturali e Paesaggistici delle Marche.
* Vermeulen, F., Slapšak, B., Mlekuž, D. (2012), Surveying the Townscape of Roman Trea (Picenum). In: Johnson, P.S., Millett, M. (eds.), Archaeological Survey and the City, University of Cambridge Museum of Classical Archaeology Monographs, Cambridge, pp. 261–282.
External links
Official Site of TreiaIstituto PaladiniGeneral Department of the MarchesGhent University - Potenza Valley Survey Project
''(Text originally based on Bill Thayer's webpage, by permission.)''
{{Authority control
Hilltowns in the Marche