As part of a long-term survey of southern Etruria, the site of Monte
Gelato, about 30 km north of Rome, was excavated from 1986-90. An
exceptionally rich stratigraphy provided excavators with a detailed
occupation narrative. An Augustan villa where dormice were eaten and
eels kept as pets was abandoned in the early 3rd century AD. Sporadic
settlements on the `frontier zone' of Lombard incursions were succeeded
by the establishment of a fortified ecclesiastical centre and papal
estate in the 9th century AD. Two major issues shaped the project
design: firstly the chronology of the abandonment of Roman villas and
the move to fortified castelli and secondly, the cycles of isolation
from and linkage to Rome which continue to affect this beautiful area of
Italy.