Himera...was conquered by force and the barbarians gave themselves to a long ruthless massacre of all those who remained there (...) Hannibal plundered the sacred places and, snatching away the people who took refuge there, set them on fire and razed the city to the ground, which had been inhabited for 240 years..."
Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica, 1st century BC.
![]() |
| Common grave of those fallen in the Battle of Himera in 409 BC and burial of a horse [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
Many of these burials are associated with an infamous page in the history of the ancient city, located on the strategic border between Hellenic Sicily and the area controlled by the Phoenicians: a vicious battle fought between the Greeks and Carthaginians in 480 BC.
The former prevailed, as evidenced by the discovery of the remains of the Temple of Victory, erected to mark the occasion, but in 409 BC the Carthaginians took revenge by besieging and razing the city.
![]() |
| View of one of the mass graves of soldiers killed in battle [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
There are as many as nine mass graves (seven associated with the battle of 480 BC and two with the battle of 409 BC) containing the bodies of those who fell in battle - arranged in an orderly fashion, one next to the other, in numbers varying from two to more than fifty.
![]() |
| View of the Himera necropolis [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
The discovery of two bronze greaves of the Iberian type confirm what Herodotus wrote, regarding the presence, in the Carthaginian army commanded by Hamilcar, of mercenaries from various parts of the Western Mediterranean.
![]() |
| Finds in the Himera necropolis [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
The issue was raised by a parliamentary question tabled last summer by Luigi Sunseri (Cinquestelle), a regional member of parliament, to whom the Regional Department of Cultural Heritage, chaired by the archaeologist Sebastiano Tusa, replied in detail.
![]() |
| View of the vast Himera necropolis [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
For three years, between 2008 and 2011, a highly talented team of specialists, including archaeologists, anthropologists, restorers and illustrators, led by the Archaeological Superintendence of Palermo, has been engaged in daily excavation activities.
The constant presence of anthropologists, led by Prof. Pier Francesco Fabbri of the University of Salento, has made it possible to collect important information related to the life and culture of the local population, as in the case of the burials of soldiers killed in the battles of Himera in 480 and 409 BC.
![]() |
| Part of the skeleton and skull of the girl with signs of cranial surgery [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
During the excavations, various types of graves were found: they range from simple graves dug into the sand, to wooden coffins, stone sarcophagi to cremation burials.
Skeletons of newborns have also been found, placed in terracotta amphorae in the shape of a uterus (enchytrismoi), bearing witness to the high infant mortality rate of the time, the risk of which was particularly high between birth and six months of age.
![]() |
| One of the burials of horses found in Himera [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
With the Universities of North Colorado, Georgia and Salento, research has been activated on aspects of bioarchaeology, with DNA analysis, useful to investigate human adaptation to the environment and paleonutrition in Himera and in the ancient Mediterranean.
Also interesting is the evidence of cranial surgery performed on a 19-21 year old girl, who lived between the sixth and fifth centuries BC, and who had a circular drill hole (13 mm in diametre) on the right side of the skull. An operation that evidently had no therapeutic effects but which nonetheless testifies to the existence in Himera of a school of advanced medicine.
![]() |
| Skull of a horse buried in Himera with bronze bit [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
They are in fact individuals aged between 15 and 57 years, with traces of deep wounds caused by cutting or throwing weapons, some of which - such as arrows, spear heads, swords, daggers - were still found embedded in the skeletons because they were not removed before burial. The study of these types of finds has made it possible to reconstruct the dynamics of duels between soldiers and the battle techniques of the time.
The burials of thirty horses are traced back by experts to the clash of 480 BC. A detailed study has been made of these remains and which will significantly illuminate both archaeological and zoological aspects.
![]() |
| Lekythoi found in the Himera necropolis [Credit: Archaeological Superintendence Palermo] |
At the site of the discovery, great care was taken to analyse the finds, to carry out photographic documentation, cleaning, consolidation, assembly of the fragments, integration of missing parts, final protection with microcrystalline wax, labelling and storage.
Two restoration laboratories have been set up - one for the restoration of large ceramic vessels, the other for the restoration of small items, such as funerary objects - which have enabled more than 6,000 restorations to be carried out.
In short, an enormous amount of work and a vast wealth of knowledge on a Greek city and its funeral practices, made even more poignant by the state of neglect in which everything had been left to stagnate, until the recent turning point.
Source: Fame Di Sud [November 21, 2018]















No comments: