Lugagnano Val d'Arda, Piacenza

Velleia Romana: the Pompeii of the North in the Piacenza Apennines

An almost unknown Roman archaeological site in the Piacenza hills: the forum, basilica, baths and the mystery of Trajan's Tabula Alimentaria.

Velleia Romana: the Pompeii of the North in the Piacenza Apennines

There are places in Italy where you can walk on Roman paving stones without meeting anyone. Velleia is one of them. Perched at 460 meters above sea level on the first slopes of the Piacenza Apennines, this Roman city was buried by a landslide in late antiquity and rediscovered in 1747 — yet it remains off every tourist circuit.

An intact Roman municipium

Velleia was a thriving municipium between the 1st century BC and the 3rd century AD, inhabited by the Ligures Veleiates before Romanization. What makes it extraordinary is the preservation: the forum with its colonnaded portico, the judicial basilica, the bath complex, cisterns and tabernae are all readable in the urban plan. Unlike Pompeii, there are no crowds here: you'll often be alone among these ruins.

Trajan's Tabula Alimentaria

The most important artifact found at Velleia is the Tabula Alimentaria Traianea, a large bronze tablet from 101-114 AD documenting Emperor Trajan's food assistance program for poor children in the area. It's the largest bronze document from the Roman world — now in the National Archaeological Museum of Parma, but a copy is displayed in the site's Antiquarium.

The forum and basilica

The heart of the city is the forum, a rectangular square paved with sandstone slabs and a three-sided portico. On the north side stands the basilica, where justice was administered. The temple podium dominates the square from above — thought to have been dedicated to Rome and Augustus. Twelve honorary statue bases lined up in the forum give the impression of a city proud of its status.

The baths and daily life

The bath complex lies east of the forum: calidarium, tepidarium, frigidarium with the hypocaust heating system still visible. Nearby, amphorae, oil lamps and coins were found that tell the story of daily life in a Romanized Apennine community. The Antiquarium houses the smaller finds: pottery, glass, fibulae, and a series of funerary inscriptions that reveal the names and occupations of the ancient inhabitants.

How to visit Velleia

The site is reached from Lugagnano Val d'Arda (PC) along a scenic road that climbs through wheat fields and oak woods. Parking is free, and entry to the archaeological park is free or just a few euros. On summer weekends the Antiquarium is open; on weekdays it's advisable to check opening hours. There are no bars or restaurants on site — bring water and a snack. The absolute tranquility is part of the experience.

A silent alternative

While Pompeii receives millions of visitors per year, Velleia counts just a few thousand. The ruins are less spectacular, sure, but the relationship between visitor and place is incomparable. Here you can sit on the edge of the forum, look at the hills and imagine the life of a mountain municipium without ropes, without audio guides and without queues. It's undertourism in its purest form.

Practical info

When is the best time to visit Velleia Romana?

The recommended time is April, May, June, September and October, when it is less crowded.

Is Velleia Romana crowded?

Velleia Romana is a almost deserted destination compared with the more touristy ones.

Where is Velleia Romana?

Velleia Romana is located in Lugagnano Val d'Arda, Piacenza.

Nearby

More destinations to discover

← All guides

⚖ Compare (0)