Nuraghe in Sardinia
Art,  Europe,  History,  Italy,  Sardinia

Nuraghe, Mountain Towns & Murals: Crossing Sardinia.

The nuraghe of Sardinia have been the subject of considerable debate over the years, with some disagreement over their original functions and purposes. According to what appears to be the current school of thought, and definitely the thrust of websites and guide books, the reason for the confusion is that the nuraghe were multi purpose and therefore inconsistent in design from one to the next.

Nuraghe in Losa, Sardinia
Losa nuraghe

Nuraghe in Losa, Sardinia
Losa nuraghe

What is certain is that they are unique to Sardinia, that traces of over 10,000 have been identified, 7,000 of which are still standing in one form or another. Grain stores, fortresses, family homes, lookout posts, communal meeting places…all have been theories, each with strong evidence to justify the theory. In essence all of these theories are true, the nuraghe being effectively multi purpose mini castles. They are also impossible to miss if you make any kind of journey across or around the island.

Nuraghe in Sardinia
Su Pranu nuraghe

Our next journey takes us from west coast to east, so rather than do things in a hurry we opt firstly to detour to five different nuraghe locations, and secondly to break the journey with an overnight stay on the top of the island high up in the mountain range which is Sardinia’s spine. It’s a great drive full of both interest and spectacular scenery.

Sacred well at Santa Cristina, Sardinia
Sacred well Santa Cristina
Sacred well Santa Cristina

At Losa the nuraghe complex is extensive and visitor friendly, but Zuros, the so called Tomb of the Giants, and Su Pranu, the sites are remote, unmanned and largely inaccessible. Lastly, at the most extensive site of all, Su Nuraxi di Barumini, access is by guided tour only. At Losa, as we were at S’Archittu on our own steam the previous day, we are free to wander around the entire site and climb its unusual internal spiral ramp. At Su Nuraxi the experience is even more adventurous despite the formality of a guided tour, climbing through precarious passageways to examine the different sections of the construction.

Nuraghe in Santa Cristina, Sardinia
Santa Cristina nuraghe
Santa Cristina, Sardinia
Santa Cristina

Many nuraghe, as is the case at Losa, feature the spiral internal ramp as the means of ascent to the top. There would originally have been a header to the nuraghe, giving the whole construction a mushroom shape, though the roofs of all have long since disintegrated. These multiple and mysterious structures were built by people of whom little is known, so little in fact that they are simply known by historians as the “nuraghe people”, or the “nuragic civilisation”, the race named after the buildings rather than the other way round. The nuraghe people are believed to have inhabited Sardinia for millennia even before the Bronze Age, creating the nuraghe structures between 1600 and 1200BC in a 400-year building frenzy.

Su Nuraxi di Baramini, Sardinia
Su Nuraxi di Barumini

At Santa Cristina, a Christian village was constructed on and around the nuraghe site in the 12th century, remains of both the giant nuraghe and the two villages from different eras remain accessible. Among the pagan rituals of the nuraghi civilisation were those centred around the supply of water: here at Santa Cristina, the complex grew around a well. Historians have concluded that the positioning of the Christian church, directly between the well and the nuraghe, was so placed to break the pagan line.

Su Nuraxi di Baramini, Sardinia
Su Nuraxi di Barumini
Su Nuraxi di Baramini, Sardinia
Su Nuraxi di Barumini

Leaving our five very different nuraghe visits behind, we follow the road up into the mountains, through a 10-kilometre section where road surface disappears and rocky track takes over, up eventually to the small town of Fonni, 3000ft above sea level, for our one night stand. Described on web pages as “a taste of the real Sardinia”, Fonni is quiet, reserved and a million miles away from the touristic coastal towns. Here the cuisine is undeniably mountain rather than marine and we enjoy a hearty and fulfilling wild boar stew in what is Sardinia’s highest village.

Fonni village, Sardinia
Fonni village

And yet, Fonni isn’t without its quirks. For a start, it is home to a “Paleo” at which the rivalry of the competing teams is at least as passionate as the more famous equivalent in Siena, and, judging by the steep and narrow cobbled streets, at least as dangerous.

Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni
Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni
Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni

Moreover, Fonni has a completely absorbing way of telling its history, through a whole series of delightful and beautifully painted murals dotted around the town. The scenes depicted are lifelike, colourful and absolutely not without humour – study some of the photos above and below and see if you can work out which are the real windows, doors, balconies etc , and which are part of the mural. Wandering around Fonni on a kind of mural treasure hunt wiles away a couple of rewarding hours before we move on.

Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni
Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni
Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni
Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni

Move on we do, down from the heights of Fonni, down through forests of pine and cork oaks, across agricultural fields recently harvested with straw bales still evident, heading inexorably to the perfect blue waters of Sardinia’s eastern coast. Detouring for a quick cooling dip in the Med at Spiaggi Cartoe, our journey continues along the spectacular coast road to our next destination, the small town of Orosei.

Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni
Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni

Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni
Murals of Fonni in Sardinia
Murals in Fonni

“This was my great grandmother’s home”, explains Eleonora as she opens the door to our apartment, “we only made these apartments this summer. I hope you enjoy”.

We settle in behind the grand doors of the elegant townhouse and prepare to explore the beautiful stretch of coastline around Orosei. 

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