- Suessula
Suessula (Greek: polytonic|Σουέσσουλα) was an ancient city of
Campania , southernItaly , situated in the interior of the peninsula, near the frontier withSamnium , betweenCapua andNola , and about 7 km northeast ofAcerrae , Suessula is now a vanished city and the archeological site belongs to the city ofAcerra , and not to SanFelice a Cancello as reported in some sources.History
Ancient
Suessula is repeatedly mentioned dining the wars between Romans and
Samnites , as well as in theSecond Punic War againstHannibal . Thus in theFirst Samnite War (343 BC ) it was the scene of a decisive victory byValerius Corvus over the Samnites, who had gathered together the remains of their army which had been previously defeated atMount Gaurus (Livy vii. 37). In the followingCampanian War the Suessulani followed the fortunes of the citizens of Capua, and shared the same fate, so that at the close of the contest, in338 BC , they must have obtained the status of "civitas", but without the right of suffrage ("Id." viii. 14). In the Second Punic War the city played a considerable part, though apparently more from its position than its own importance. Suessula laid on the line of theVia Popillia , which was here intersected by a road which ran fromNeapolis through Acerrae, and on to theVia Appia , which it reached just west of the Caudine pass. The line of hills which rises from the level plain of Campania immediately above Suessula, and forms a kind of prolongation of the ridge of Mount Tifata, was a station almost as convenient as that mountain itself, and in216 BCE , it was occupied byM. Claudius Marcellus with the view of protectingNola , and watching the operations of Hannibal against that city (Liv. xxiii. 14, 17). From this time the Romans seem to have kept up a permanent camp there for some years, which was known as theCastra Claudiana , from the name of Marcellus who had first established it, and which is continually alluded to during the operations of the subsequent campaigns (Liv. xxiil. 31, xxiv. 46, 47, xxv. 7, 22, xxvi. 9). But from this period Suessula fades into obscurity. It continued to be a municipal town of Campania, though apparently one of a secondary class; and inscriptions attest its municipal rank under theRoman Empire . It had received a body of veterans as colonists underSulla , but did not attain the colonial rank (Strabo v. p. 249; Plin. iii. 5. s. 9; Orell. "Inscr." 129, 130, 2333; "Lib. Col." p. 237). TheTabula Peutingeriana places it on a line of road from Capua to Nola, at the distance of 9 miles from each of those cities (Tab. Peut).Middle Ages and modern
Suessula was an
episcopal see in the first ages ofChristianity , until at least the10th century . It was for a time the chief town of a smallLombard League principality . It was several times plundered by theSaracens , and at last abandoned by the inhabitants in consequence of themalaria . Theruins of the town lie within the Bosco d'Acerra, a picturesqueforest , about 7 km south ofMaddaloni , and an adjacent castle is still called "Torre di Sessola". They were more conspicuous in the8th century than they now are, but traces of thetheater may still be seen, and debris of other buildings. Oscantomb s wereexcavate d there between 1878 and 1886, and important finds ofvase s andbronze s have been made. The dead were generally buried within slabs oftuff arranged to form a kind ofsarcophagus . Inscriptions, as well as capitals of columns and other architectural fragments, have been found there (Pratilli Via Appia, iii. 3. p. 347; Romanelli, vol. iii. p. 590).References
*SmithDGRG
*1911
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