
Ancient ruins of Cumae
'Cumae' (''Cuma'', in Italian) is an ancient Greek settlement lying to the northwest of
Naples in the Italian region of
Campania. The settlement is believed to have been founded in the
8th century BC by
Greeks from the city of
Cuma and
Chalkis in
Euboea upon the earlier dwellings of indigenous,
Iron-Age peoples whom they supplanted.
Eusebius placed Cumae's Greek foundation at
1050 BC. Its name comes from the Greek word kymé, meaning ''wave'' - perhaps in reference to the big waves that the peninsula of Κyme in Euboea has.
There is also a small, modern Greek
Euboean city called
Kyme (Kύμη) as well as the excavated ancient Greek city of Cuma, the source point for the
Cumae alphabet.
Cumae was the first Greek colony on the mainland of Italy (
Magna Graecia), there having been earlier starts on the islands of
Ischia and
Sicily by colonists from the Euboean cities of
Chalcis (Χαλκίς) and possibly
Eretria (Ερέτρια) or
Cuma (Kύμη).
Cumae is perhaps most famous as the seat of the
Cumaean Sibyl. Her sanctuary is now open to the public. The colony was also the entry point onto the Italian
peninsula for the
Cumean alphabet, a variant of which was adapted by the
Romans.
The colony spread throughout the area over the
6th and
centuries BC, gaining sway over
Puteoli and
Misenum and, thereafter, the founding of
Neapolis in
470 BC.
The growing power of the Cumaean Greeks led many indigenous tribes of the region to organize against them, notably the
Dauni and
Aurunci with the leadership of the
Capuan Etruscans. This coalition was defeated by the Cumaeans in
524 BC under the direction of
Aristodemus. The combined fleets of Cumae and
Syracuse defeated the
Etruscans at the
Battle of Cumae in
474 BC.
Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, the last
legendary
King of Rome, lived his life in exile at Cumae after the establishment of the
Roman Republic.
Cumae was also a place where a widely influential early Christian work
The Shepherd of Hermas was said to have been inspired by way of visions.
The colony was built on a large rise, the seaward side of which was used as a
bunker and gun emplacement by the
Germans during
World War II.
In
Roman mythology, there is an entrance to the
underworld located at
Avernus, a crater near Cumae, and was the route
Aeneas used to descend to the Underworld.
External Links
★
YouTube video of Cuma from Napoli Underground.
★
"Cuma" in Around Naples Encyclopedia.