Paestum
has always been shrouded in mystery. It was probably founded around 650 BC
by a large group of Dorians who had been expelled from the city of Sybaris,
a luxurious resort across the mainland on the Ionian Sea. The Dorians named
their new colony Poseidonia, after the most important of their gods; it
flourished and quickly became the greatest city on the gulf of Salerno. Then
in 510 BC, Sybaris was destroyed. Poseidonia languished until 390 BC, when
it fell to a tribe of local barbarians called the Lucanians. Legend has it
that for decades the Greek inhabitants of the captive city secretly met once
a year to remember the illustrious days of their forefathers.
In 273 BC, the Romans arrived. They
changed the city's name, but we know as little about Roman Paestum as we do
about its Greek predecessor. Entire centuries passed in obscurity, briefly
interrupted by moments of glory: in the early 3rd century BC, Paestum was
heralded as a loyal ally of Rome against Hannibal; in 79 BC, the eruption of
Vesuvius partially destroyed it. Perhaps it was volcanic ash that helped to
silt up the mouth of the river on which the city stood; this led the
surrounding countryside to become swampy and mosquito-ridden. Christianity
arrived, eventually bringing a bishop and at least two churches. In the 9th
century AD, nearby Agropolis was taken over by Saracens. These Muslim Arabs
introduced such delicacies as pasta and buffalo (source of the exquisite
mozarella di bufala), but they were also such fierce fighters that they soon
became as dreaded as the malarial mosquitos.
By
877 AD, the inhabitants of Paestum had abandoned the city and retreated to
the safety of the nearby hills.
Incredibly, although Paestum's Temple
of Hera (also called "of Poseidon") was among the most famous cult-worship
sites in antiquity, and although it is the oldest, best preserved and most
beautiful Doric temple in existence today, and despite the city's proximity
to Salerno (24 miles) and Capaccio (4 miles), these majestic ruins were
unknown all through the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Indeed, although
scholars had been searching for them for centuries, they were not discovered
until 1740 and even then, not accurately described until 1779.