An acropolis site of the Monte Vico …

Years: 765BCE - 622BCE

An acropolis site of the Monte Vico area of Ischia, a volcanic island in the Tyrrhenian Sea, at the northern end of the Gulf of Naples, had been inhabited from the Bronze Age, as Mycenaean and Iron Age pottery finds attest.

Euboean Greeks from Eretria and Chalkis arrive in the eighth century BCE to establish an emporium for trade with the Etruscans of the mainland.

This settlement becomes home not only to Greeks, but a mixed population of Greek, Etruscan and Phoenician inhabitants.

Because of its fine harbor, the settlement of Pithecusae will become successful through trade in iron and with mainland Italy; at its peak, Pithecusae would house about ten thousand people. (The ceramic Euboean artifact inscribed with a reference to "Nestor's cup" will be discovered in a grave on the island in 1953. Engraved upon the cup are a few lines written in the Cumae alphabet. Dating from around 730 BCE, it is the oldest written reference to the Iliad and may be the earliest extant precursor to the Latin alphabet.)

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