Herbessos
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Herbessos was an ancient city located at Montagna di Marzo, Sicily, a few kilometres north-west of Piazza Armerina.[1]
It occupied an area of approximately 15 hectares and has been partially excavated.
The first limited excavations were by Paolo Orsi in 1930 who described the riches that were illegally stolen over the years, feeding large collections. Subsequently in the 1950s Dinu Adamesteanu recognised, through aerial photography, part of the ancient access routes to the city. In the 60s archaeology was carried out by Gino Vinicio Gentili and subsequently by Vito Romano who also identified a sacred area.

The most ancient traces are attributable to the ancient and middle bronze age, connected to the Castelluccio culture.
Herbessos is mentioned for the first time as a Siculan city allied to the Carthaginians during the Siege of Syracuse (415–413 BC). For this reason in 404 BC the city was attacked in vain by the tyrant Dionysius I of Syracuse, after which he made a treaty with it. Agathocles of Syracuse established a garrison there, which, in 309 BC, was driven out by the Acragantines while the tyrant was in Africa and the city became an ally of Akragas. It was later an ally of Syracuse.
In 262 BC, in the First Punic War, Herbessos was chosen by the Romans as the supply base[2] but soon after it was captured by the Carthaginians. In 260 BC the Romans recaptured it.
In 214 BC Hippocrates of Syracuse, fleeing from Lentini, found refuge there.[3] The Syracusan force sent against them was persuaded to desert. The city allied itself with Carthage shortly after which it was conquered by the Romans of Marcellus.
After the Second Punic War, the Romans razed the entire town to the ground, when nearby Morgantina was destroyed and Enna punished with the massacre of its citizens. They eventually rebuilt a Roman city, with the theatre, forum, other public buildings, and Roman houses.[4]
Under the Romans it was one of the civitates latinae condicioni.[5]
The settlement continued until the Middle Ages.