We landed in Bari the way many travelers do—through the modern airport, bright signage, the small rituals of baggage claim and espresso—and then left almost immediately, trading the coast for the interior. The shuttle pulled away from the terminal and the landscape began to change in slow increments: olive groves repeating like a private alphabet, low hills, pale rock, the kind of winter light that makes southern Italy look older than it is.
For nearly fifty minutes, the road from Bari offered little in the way of drama. We talked as traveling companions—Dan, Tatiana, and I—about the usual things travelers talk about when they’re moving between places: what we had already seen, what we hoped this next stop would reveal, and the quiet calculations of time and light. The shuttle threaded along smaller roads, through a landscape that felt deliberately restrained. Olive groves appeared now and then—patient, silvery, repetitive—but nothing announced a city of myth. Nothing prepared you for a place so often described as biblical, petrified, impossible.
And then Matera emerged.
It wasn’t a gradual arrival, the way most towns introduce themselves with suburbs and gas stations and modern sprawl. Matera arrives the way a revelation does: one moment you’re in “not much,” and the next you’re staring at a stone body so dense with history that it feels like time has compacted into architecture. The first sightline catches you off guard. The city doesn’t sit politely on the land; it appears to be the land, folded into dwellings, terraces, stairways—an inhabited geology.
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Matera panorama. Image courtesy Dan McLerran
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We checked into Sant’Angelo Hotel, and the transition from road to stone to welcome happened quickly. Hospitality in places like this can feel performative, but here it felt like continuity—another layer in a city built on layers. The hotel’s general manager, Biagio Spagnuolo, greeted us with the kind of calm competence that makes you instantly stop worrying about logistics. He took care of everything, but more importantly, he did what great local hosts do: he translated a place, not into clichés, but into context. Over the course of a conversation that moved easily between practical advice and local memory, Matera began to shift from “spectacle” into “story.”
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Sant’Angelo, front entrance. Image courtesy Dan McLerran
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View of Matera from the Sant’Angelo facility.
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That distinction matters—especially for an archaeological audience—because Matera can seduce you into treating it as scenery. It looks like a set. It has the lighting. It has the angles. It has the aura of antiquity that makes every photograph feel already historical. But Matera’s real power isn’t aesthetic. It’s structural. It’s the rare kind of urban environment that forces you to ask not simply what you are looking at, but how it was made possible—and at what cost.
There are places you visit and places that feel as if they were waiting for you. Matera belongs to the second category. Long before you learn the names—Sassi, Gravina, Basilicata—you sense the governing rule of the city: here, architecture is not built so much as revealed. Houses are not placed on the land; they are carved from it. Streets are not simply drawn across terrain; they become part of a vertical puzzle of terraces, stairways, roofs that double as courtyards, doorways that open into darkness that once held families, animals, tools, and the unglamorous machinery of daily survival.
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Matera is often introduced with nicknames that try to do the work of description: the “second Jerusalem,” the “European Petra,” an ancient city that looks like a set built for Scripture. Film crews have agreed—Pasolini staged his severe, haunting Gospel here; Mel Gibson turned its ravines into a theater of suffering; even James Bond found a chase-ready backdrop among these stone folds. But the cinematic language can flatten what matters most. Matera is not merely photogenic. It is archaeologically profound because it is not a single monument or a neatly bounded ruin. It is a continuous human landscape—occupied, reshaped, and reinterpreted across millennia—whose core infrastructure was designed not for spectacle, but for persistence.
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Author scans the majesty of Matera’s intensely rock-imbued face.
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The astonishing fact is not simply that people lived in caves here in the distant past. In many parts of the world, caves sheltered Paleolithic and Neolithic communities. What makes Matera startling is continuity: those earliest decisions—someone, thousands of years ago, choosing a cave as a “good enough” home—did not remain an episode. Over time, settlement on the steep slopes of a river valley grew into an actual city. Its cave dwellings were inhabited, in one form or another, until the mid-twentieth century. Matera is ancient not only in origin but in habit. It is an urban organism whose oldest spaces refused to become obsolete, even when the rest of the world moved on to palaces, towers, and glass.
To understand how such continuity is possible, you have to start with the material itself. Matera is shaped by stone that is at once resilient and workable. The local rock—soft enough to excavate with determination, stable enough to hold form—made it possible for generations to sculpt homes, cisterns, storerooms, and churches into the hillsides. That geological permission produced a city with an unusual spatial logic: it is layered, nested, and efficient. Roofs become streets; streets become terraces; terraces become thresholds into interiors that are partly natural void and partly human design. In summer, the stone offers coolness; in winter, it holds warmth. The landscape becomes a climate system, a structure, a shelter, and—crucially—a storage device for the one resource that can determine whether a settlement thrives or fails: water.
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Matera’s most impressive achievement may be the one that remains largely invisible from postcard viewpoints. The city does not sit beside a generous river like Rome or Florence; it occupies a terrain where water management requires ingenuity. Yet Matera historically avoided chronic water scarcity, not through luck, but through engineering. Beneath the main civic space—Piazza Vittorio Veneto—lies a vast subterranean reservoir known as Palombaro Lungo, a space that feels less like plumbing and more like a cathedral turned inside out. Descending into it is like entering the city’s secret memory: an immense hand-excavated chamber, carved into the rock, built to collect and store rainwater drawn down from the surrounding slopes.
The scale is difficult to grasp until you are inside. The reservoir plunges roughly eighteen meters deep and, according to local accounts, could hold millions of cubic meters of water. What matters archaeologically is not the number alone but the concept: a collective system of capture and conservation that required coordination, maintenance, and trust over time. Rainwater was guided into storage through channels and cisterns; the city became a machine for harvesting weather. This was not merely a technical solution but a cultural one—evidence that long-term habitation in a marginal environment can be sustained when engineering, habit, and social organization align.
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The Palombaro Lungo cistern. Holger Uwe Schmitt, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons
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And Palombaro Lungo was not an isolated marvel. In Matera, water was distributed through a network of smaller cisterns and channels—many integrated directly into domestic spaces. Homes often possessed their own collection points, fed by larger accumulators. In a region where resources were limited, efficiency became a form of architecture. The city’s multi-level form was not just an aesthetic accident; it enabled controlled flow and reuse, turning gravity into a civic tool. In that sense, it also demonstrates something modern cities often forget: infrastructure is not separate from identity. In Matera, infrastructure is identity – built into the landscape, maintained by communal necessity, and remembered even now with a kind of collective pride.
Above ground, the city’s social life also begins in civic space. Piazza Vittorio Veneto (see more about this below), the standard launching point for visitors, offers a snapshot of layered history: fountains that once served as essential water sources and, inevitably, social centers; palaces and churches whose façades display Romanesque and Gothic vocabulary; and a dense concentration of institutions that signal Matera’s role not only as a wonder of survival but as an administrative and cultural hub. Here, the “official” city touches the older, carved city—the moment when you step from a typical Italian square into the labyrinthine descent of the Sassi, and the centuries begin to stack more visibly.
From this point, the story can go in many directions—into markets and bread ovens, into castle ruins born of ambitious taxation, into underground churches and private “excavation museums” that reveal how stone rooms were used to store wine, grain, and water. But every route returns to the same core theme: Matera is not a city built on top of an ancient past. It is a city built into it.
Markets, Bread, and the Archaeology of Daily Life
The easiest way to understand a place is often through its ordinary needs: food, water, storage, shelter. Matera’s beauty can distract you from those fundamentals, so we started where locals start—among produce, fish, and the morning rhythm of a small city feeding itself. The market may not be grand in scale, but it is a living reminder that Matera is not an open-air museum. It is a functioning community, and its continuity has always depended on the practical intelligence of daily life.
One detail that seems minor at first becomes an entry point into the city’s social archaeology: Matera’s bread. The traditional loaf is distinctive—large, rugged, shaped in a way that some locals claim echoes the region’s undulating terrain. More interesting than its silhouette, though, is what the bread tells you about scarcity and planning. Historically, families prepared dough at home but relied on communal ovens. To avoid confusion, each household used a personalized stamp—often wooden, sometimes decorated with symbolic figures, always marked with family initials. If a stamp was forgotten, the loaf could be claimed by the city.
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Pane di Matera, the signature Matera bread. Kars Alfrink, CC BY 2.0, Wikimedia Commons
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It’s an elegant system: communal infrastructure supported by individual accountability, with a built-in mechanism for redistribution. In archaeological terms, that stamp is a signature of social organization. It suggests a society where resources were limited, where storage mattered, where waste was morally and economically unacceptable. Bread in Matera is not simply cuisine. It’s a material archive of adaptation.
The Castle That Never Became What It Wanted to Be
Not all of Matera’s monuments speak the language of survival. Some speak the language of ambition—and its failure. Castello Tramontano, begun in the late fifteenth century, is often introduced as a ruined castle. But “ruin” implies a completed thing that decayed. This was different. The fortress stands as an unfinished project, a symbol of a political imagination that outran its own legitimacy.
Count Tramontano, inspired by architecture beyond Basilicata, attempted to build something that would signal power in the most direct way: through stone, scale, and dominance of the skyline. But power has a price. According to local history, the count was assassinated by citizens angered by excessive taxation. What one sees—two side towers and a central structure—feels less like a romantic ruin and more like a cautionary tale preserved in masonry: a reminder that Matera has never been a passive backdrop for authority. Even in stone, the city records resistance.
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Castello Tramontano. Anna Nicoletta Menzella, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons
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Piazza Vittorio Veneto: Where the Official City Meets the Rock-Cut City
Most journeys through Matera pass through Piazza Vittorio Veneto, and not just because it’s convenient. The square sits at a threshold between two kinds of urban reality: the “official” city of civic buildings, libraries, memorials, and façades—and the older, deeper city of rock-cut homes and subterranean systems.
Here, architecture becomes a kind of public language. The Church of San Domenico, with its Romanesque roots and Gothic elements, offers one of those moments when iconography collides with daily life: a rose window that evokes the Wheel of Fortune, figures suggesting fate’s rotation, and the archangel Michael defeating a dragon—an image that appears repeatedly in the city, as if Matera needs to keep reminding itself that the spiritual must, eventually, triumph over the brutal realities of material life. Nearby, the simpler façade of Mater Domini may not compete for attention, but the view beside it does: an overlook where you suddenly realize you’re standing at the edge of something far older than the square itself.
Piazza Vittorio Veneto also holds a clue to Matera’s most sophisticated achievement. Because beneath the feet of tourists, beneath the café tables and the casual conversations, lies an engineered void—Palombaro Lungo—that turns the city into an argument about water.
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A view of Piazza Vittorio Veneto
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It also demonstrates something modern cities often forget: infrastructure is not separate from identity. In Matera, infrastructure is identity – built into the landscape, maintained by communal necessity, and remembered even now with a kind of collective pride.
Stone Interiors: Storage, Survival, and the Archaeology of Domestic Space
Once you understand Matera’s relationship with water, the interiors begin to speak more clearly. What looks, at first glance, like a poetic arrangement of caves quickly reveals itself as a carefully calibrated system of domestic spaces—each carved volume assigned a function dictated by necessity rather than comfort. In Matera, archaeology does not begin with temples or palaces. It begins with storage.
Small, privately run excavation museums scattered through the Sassi offer a rare opportunity to see how deeply these interiors were integrated into daily life. In spaces that once lay buried or forgotten, visitors encounter the anatomy of survival: wine cellars cut directly into stone, grain storage areas protected from humidity, ventilation shafts engineered to circulate air naturally, and channels designed to guide rainwater into cisterns below. These were not ad hoc solutions. They were standardized responses refined over generations.
The geological history of the area adds another layer of meaning. Fossilized seashells embedded in the stone walls—silent witnesses to a time when this land lay beneath the sea—coexist with stalactites formed through slow mineral accretion. Matera’s domestic archaeology is therefore doubly stratified: human habitation carved into rock that itself carries the memory of ancient oceans. Few cities make geological time so visibly present in everyday architecture.
What emerges from these interiors is not a narrative of primitiveness, but of precision. Ventilation openings in ceilings regulated airflow; separate chambers managed different types of storage; proximity between living quarters and animals reflected both economic necessity and thermal logic. In many homes, livestock were housed deeper within the cave, their body heat contributing to warmth during winter months. Light entered primarily through doorways. Smoke escaped through carefully placed openings. Comfort was secondary. Function was everything.
From a modern perspective, these spaces can feel oppressive. From an archaeological perspective, they are extraordinary examples of environmental adaptation. They demonstrate how architecture can evolve not exclusively from abstract ideals but from the slow negotiation between human bodies, available materials, and climate.
A Vertical City and the Intelligence of Layers
Walking through Matera is an exercise in spatial disorientation. Streets descend and ascend without warning; stairways lead to rooftops that double as courtyards; a door at ground level may open into a space several stories above another home. This multi-level structure is not decorative. It is the physical consequence of cutting, slicing and shaping rather than building.
The Sassi—divided primarily into Sasso Barisano and Sasso Caveoso—are often described as neighborhoods, but that term feels insufficient. They function more like interlocking strata of habitation. Roofs become roads. Roads become thresholds. Each layer supports another. The result is a city where verticality replaces horizontal expansion, and density is achieved not through height but through depth.
Archaeologically, this matters because it challenges conventional urban models. Matera did not grow outward; it grew inward and upward simultaneously. Each new generation adapted existing spaces rather than abandoning them. This continuity explains why the city remained inhabited for so long: it was endlessly modifiable. New rooms could be carved. Old ones repurposed. Infrastructure expanded incrementally rather than through rupture.
Crucially, water systems mirrored this vertical intelligence. Domestic cisterns fed into larger reservoirs. Channels followed gravity rather than resisting it. The city’s architecture was not imposed on the environment—it cooperated with it. Few historic settlements demonstrate such a sustained dialogue between human intention and natural constraint.
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Sacred Stone: Churches Carved, Not Built
If domestic spaces reveal Matera’s pragmatism, its rock churches reveal something more complex. Throughout the Sassi, sacred spaces were carved directly into stone, evolving organically over centuries. Some were modest chambers; others expanded into multi-level sanctuaries with added chapels, altars, and eventually façades that attempted to reconcile the underground with the aboveground world.
Churches like San Pietro Barisano illustrate this layered evolution vividly. Initially excavated as a simple rock church sometime between the early medieval centuries, it expanded inward as needs changed, its interior deepening into the stone. Later additions—including bell towers and external architectural elements—attempted to give the church a recognizable silhouette from the outside. The result is neither purely subterranean nor fully conventional: a hybrid structure that records its own architectural hesitation.
Inside—or rather, below—San Pietro Barisano lies one of the city’s more unsettling archaeological realities. Due to chronic humidity and spatial constraints, the lowest levels of the church were used for mortuary practices now difficult to contemplate. Deceased monks and priests were placed in wall niches, seated and left to decompose naturally—a practice meant to symbolize prolonged presence among the living. The intention was spiritual continuity. The effect, by modern standards, is profoundly disturbing.
Such practices remind us that Matera’s beauty is inseparable from hardship. Stone preserves not only ingenuity but suffering. Moisture, darkness, disease—these were constant companions. Sacred spaces did not exist apart from these conditions; they absorbed them.
Nearby churches, such as Sant’Agostino or San Pietro Caveoso, offer different perspectives. Perched dramatically above ravines or integrated into cliff faces, they underscore how sacred architecture in Matera often relies on landscape to complete its meaning. Views across the Gravina valley transform stone into symbol. The city’s religious life was inseparable from its topography.
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San Pietro Barisano. Sailko, CC BY 3.0, Wikimedia Commons
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San Pietro Caveoso. Image courtesy Dan McLerran
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Interior view of Rock Church of Sant’Agostino al Casalnuovo, 13th – 17th century. Image courtesy Dan McLerran
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Cinema, Scripture, and the Reinvention of Image
Matera’s visual power has not gone unnoticed by filmmakers. Long before mass tourism arrived, directors recognized that the city could stand in for something larger than itself. Pier Paolo Pasolini’s The Gospel According to Matthew used Matera’s stark landscapes to strip biblical narrative of sentimentality. Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ later transformed nearby ravines into sites of cinematic suffering, drawing global attention—and controversy.
These films did more than use Matera as a backdrop. They reframed the city’s image. What had long been associated with poverty and neglect began to be seen as authenticity, austerity, and historical gravity. Cinema did not create Matera’s importance, but it helped redirect the world’s gaze.
Yet long before Hollywood arrived, one book had already forced Italy to look at Matera differently.
“Christ Stopped at Eboli”: Exposure and Rupture
In 1945, Carlo Levi published Christ Stopped at Eboli, an account of his political exile to southern Italy under Mussolini’s regime. Levi’s observations were unflinching. He described Matera not as a picturesque relic but as a humanitarian crisis: overcrowded cave dwellings, rampant disease, lack of sanitation, endemic malaria, and extreme poverty.
The book triggered national outrage. Matera was labeled “the shame of the nation.” What followed was a decisive—if deeply ambivalent—intervention. In the 1950s, the Italian government initiated a mass relocation of residents from the Sassi into newly constructed modern housing. From a public health perspective, the move was necessary. From a cultural perspective, it was traumatic.
Many residents resisted leaving homes that, despite their hardships, were familiar and deeply rooted in identity. In some cases, authorities sealed cave entrances to enforce relocation. The Sassi were emptied—not abandoned through decline, but vacated by decree.
Archaeologically, this moment represented a rupture rather than an end. Matera’s long continuity was interrupted, but not erased.
From Abandonment to Reinterpretation
For years, the emptied Sassi hovered between ruin and erasure. At one point, there were proposals to demolish them entirely and pour concrete over the site—to remove the “problem” once and for all. That this did not happen is perhaps Matera’s greatest stroke of fortune.
Gradually, attitudes shifted. What had been seen as backwardness began to be reevaluated as resilience. Restoration efforts focused not on sanitizing the Sassi into a theme park, but on reactivating them—carefully, selectively, with an eye toward preservation rather than spectacle. Museums, residences, hotels, and cultural spaces began to return life to the carved city.
In 2019, Matera was named European Capital of Culture—a designation that symbolized not triumph, but rehabilitation. The city had not reinvented itself by rejecting its past, but by confronting it directly.
Matera as a Living Archaeological Landscape
Today, Matera resists simple definition.
It is neither a ruin nor a replica, neither a preserved relic nor a fully modern city. It is something rarer — a living archaeological landscape, shaped by time rather than frozen by it.
Here, people still inhabit spaces carved by hands that understood stone as shelter, storage, and strategy. Infrastructure follows ancient logic. Water still moves where gravity allows it. The city breathes according to rules written long before the modern world arrived.
Matera survived not because it was beautiful, but because it worked. And perhaps that is why its appearance still feels so arresting when it finally emerges from the road — sudden, uncompromising, inevitable.
A city that never stopped living in stone, and in doing so, learned how to begin again.
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Above and below, four views on foot in the ancient city by the author.
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Author Anastasia Adeler
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The author conversing with Biagio Spagnuolo, manager of the fabulous Sant’Angelo resort. Details of this conversation can be reached at the author’s slow journalism magazine, Living Rooms.
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Images by Anastasia Adeler, where not credited.