2024

SITE ARCHÉOLOGIQUE DE SCUPI

Archaeological site

This site (Археолошки Локалитет Скупи/Arheološki Lokalitet Skupi) contains the remains of the Roman city of Colonia Flavia Scupinorum, founded in the 1st century AD, and better known as Scupi. Destroyed in 518 by an earthquake, it was rediscovered in 1926 by the Serbian archaeologist Radoslav Grujić (1878-1955) and is still being excavated jointly by Italian and Macedonian archaeologists. The visit is a bit disappointing. Already, apart from a large theater, the ruins are not very "talking". Moreover, there are no precise schedules (it is even sometimes closed without reason several days in a row) and the rare explanatory panels are frequently vandalized. Nevertheless, it is an important place. For Scupi was the only city in the territory of present-day North Macedonia to benefit from the title of "colony": the equivalent of a "Rome in miniature" with (free) inhabitants having Roman citizenship and institutions comparable to those of the capital. The site itself was continuously occupied from the 12th century B.C.

Hill of the Rabbit and Pudic Venus. Scupi is located very close to the confluence of the Vardar and the Lepenec River (800 m to the southwest), under the hill of Zajčev, which rises to 300 m above sea level. It was on this "rabbit hill" (Zajčev Rid) that Roman soldiers established in the 2nd century BC a castrum, a fortified camp that then dominated a city belonging to the Dardanians, allies of Rome in the conquest of the region. During the reign of Emperor Domitian (81-96), Scupi was given the title of colony. Veterans of various legions came to settle there and a typical Roman city plan was adopted. On the way to the theater on the hill, we pass along the remains of a small residential complex, a building with an arch, a horreum (warehouse) and a public bath. It is in these baths that a superb marble statue of Venus "modest" of the 2nd century was unearthed in 2008, today exposed in the museum of the City of Skopje. The path continues along a section of street, an early Christian basilica of the 4th century and a villa, before leading to the impressive 2nd century theater. This one could accommodate up to 9,000 spectators. But unlike the one in Stobi, in Povardaria, there is no indication that it was used for gladiatorial combat.

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