Grotta dell'Arsenale

The Grotta dell'Arsenale is a cave on the island of Capri, southern Italy.

It may have been used in the time of Roman emperor Tiberius as a depot for naval stores. It measures 4 m long by 3.5  wide by 1.5 m high. Excavations made in 1777 in the shingle, which still covers the floor to a depth of from 1.2 to 1.5 m, showed evidence of traces in the walls of two or three rooms which were of Roman workmanship, along with a floor of coloured marbles and some iron fragments, which have been identified as part of the plant of the ancient naval station, or perhaps of a Roman galley. Although the floor of the cave is 2.4 m above the sea, in southerly gales, waves hit it so forcefully as to render its use as a storehouse out of the question. The walls unearthed here indicate, therefore, that at the time they were built, this cave stood higher above the sea than it does at present.

The cave itself seems to have been formed by marine erosion when the land-level was at least 2.4 m lower than it is at present, at a period which must have been much prior to Roman times.[1]

References

  1. ^ Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1903). The Geographical journal (Public domain ed.). Royal Geographical Society. pp. 131–. Retrieved 5 July 2012.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Capri
History
  • History of Capri
Geography
  • Anacapri
  • Arco Naturale
  • Blue Grotto
  • Capri (municipality)
  • Faraglioni
  • Grotta Bianca
  • Grotta del Castiglione
  • Grotta del Pisco
  • Grotta dell'Arco
  • Grotta dell'Arsenale
  • Grotta delle Felci
  • Grotta di Matromania
  • Grotta Verde
  • Gulf of Naples
  • Marina Grande
  • Marina Piccola
  • Monte Solaro
  • Tyrrhenian Sea
CultureArchaeological sitesNotable landmarksChurches
VillasRelated articles


Stub icon

This Italian location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e