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See also: ancient seaport See also: town of See also: Etruria, See also: Italy, at the See also: north end of the See also: peninsular of See also: Monte Massoncello, at the See also: south end of which is situated the town of See also: Piombino (q.v.)
.
The place, almost the only See also: Etruscan townbuilt directly on the See also: sea, was situated on a lofty hills now crowned by a conspicuous See also: medieval See also: castle and a poor See also: modern See also: village (Populonia)
.
Considerable remains of its town walls, of large irregular, roughly rectangular blocks (the See also: form is that of the natural splitting of the schistose See also: sandstone), still exist, enclosing a circuit of about i z m
.
The remains existing within them are entirely See also: Roman--a See also: row of vaulted substructions, a See also: water See also: reservoir and a mosaic with representations of fishes
.
See also: Strabo mentions the existence here of a look-out tower for 'the shoals of See also: tunny-See also: fish
.
There are some tombs outside the town, some of which, ranging from the See also: Villanova See also: period (9th century B.C.) to the See also: middle of the 3rd century B.C., were explored in 1908
.
In one, a large circular See also: tomb, were found three sepulchral couches in See also: stone, carved in imitation of
See also: wood, and a See also: fine statuette in See also: bronze of See also: Ajax committing suicide
.
Close by was found a See also: horse See also: collar with 14 bronze bells
.
The remains of a See also: temple, devastated in ancient times (possibly by See also: Dionysius of Syracuse in 384 B.C.), were also discovered, with fragments of See also: Attic vases of the 5th century B.C., which had served as ex volos in it
.
Coins of the town have also been found in See also: silver and copper
.
The iron mines of See also: Elba, and the tin and copper of the mainland, were owned and smelted by the See also: people of Populonia; hot springs too See also: lay some 6 m. to the E
.
(See also: Aquae Populaniae) on the high road-Via See also: Aurelia-along the See also: coast
.
At this point a road branched off to Saena ( See also: Siena)
.
According to Virgil the town sent a contingent to the help of See also: Aeneas, and it furnished Scipio with iron in 205 B.C
.
It offered considerable resistance to Sulla, who took it by siege; and from this See also: dates its decline, which Strabo, who describes it well (v
.
2, 6, p
.
223), already notes as beginning, while four centuries later Rutilius describes it as in ruins
.
The harbour, however, continued to be of some importance, and the place was still an episcopal see in the See also: time of See also: Gregory the See also: Great
.
See G
.
See also: Dennis, Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria (See also: London, 1883, ii
.
212 sqq.) ; I
.
Falchi in Notizie degli Scavi (1903-1904); L
.
A
.
Milani, ibid
.
(1908), 199 sqq . |
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