First floor

First floor


On the first floor, the materials are displayed in the corridors and rooms (created in the original cells of the convent) located on three sides of the building which develops around the cloister below.

On the first floor, the materials are displayed in the corridors and rooms (created in the original cells of the convent) located on three sides of the building which develops around the cloister below. Along the corridors there are display cases that house the CD materials. Antiquarium, i.e. ceramic, clay, bronze and stone objects, mostly for funerary purposes, which in the original exhibition of the Museum (1968) had been grouped by type and decontextualized. On the north side of the building, rooms 1-4 complete the display of the funerary objects on the ground floor, hosting those from the necropolis of S. Antonio (4th-1st century BC) and the late Republican ones, relating to cremations, discovered in via Giannuzzi and via Urso. Room 5 is instead dedicated to the Messapian walls of Ugento, also hosting some large parallelepiped blocks of calcarenite. On the east side of the building, in rooms 6, 7, 11 and 12, materials from the ancient Ugentine port of Torre San Giovanni are exhibited, both from the excavations of 1975-1976 and from those which involved the necropolis investigated in 2014-2016; among the former, in particular, those from the High Hellenistic period should be mentioned, coming from the place of worship dedicated to Artemis Bendis, to whom room 7 is dedicated. Room 14 then houses materials from the prehistoric and protohistoric era, not only from Ugento but also from Leuca. On the west side of the building, in rooms 15-19, the numismatic section is displayed, with coins that cover a broad chronological span between the 5th century. B.C. and the 17th-18th centuries. A.D.; Of particular note are the bronze issues from the Messapian mint of Ugento (3rd-2nd century BC) and a hoard of silver denarii from the early 2nd-early 1st century. B.C. Finally, room 20 presents a selection of medieval ceramic materials produced in Ugentina, pertaining to a kiln drain found in via Madonna della Luce in 1974 and some vases recovered from a drain pit discovered in via Messapica in 2005.

G. Scardozzi

Routes

The Hellenistic necropolis of S. Antonio

The Hellenistic necropolis of S. Antonio

The necropolis in the S. Antonio area was excavated in 1986-1987 and consists of about 30 tombs mostly dating from the middle of the4th to the 3rd centuries BC, with the sole exception of the tomb from the archaic period; the necropolis extends just inside the city walls. The grave goods from some of these tombs are on display in the Museum.
The tombs of the 2nd-1st century. B.C.

The tombs of the 2nd-1st century. B.C.

Between the 2nd and 1st centuries BC, the topographical organisation of the town gradually changed and if the tombs of the 3rd and 2nd century BC still occupied areas between the different settlement cores, those of the 2nd-1st century BC were mainly located on periphery of the settlement, often in funerary areas already in use in the previous phase
L’Antiquarium

L’Antiquarium

Along the corridors of the first floor of the Museum, there are various displays related to the first exhibition containing ceramic, clay, metal, and stone materials, mostly decontextualised.
Materials from Torre San Giovanni

Materials from Torre San Giovanni

Three different exhibitions of materials are dedicated to Torre San Giovanni, which has been the port of Ugento since archaic times, from which it is located about 5 km to the south-west.
The materials of the medieval age

The materials of the medieval age

Among the materials exhibited in the Museum there are some medieval ceramics, mostly fragmentary, that came from the workshops that operated in Ugento, in the Borgo area along the via Salentina, on the eastern slopes of the old town.
The numismatic section

The numismatic section

The numismatic section offers a rich panorama of monetary discoveries in Ugento dating back to the 5th century BC and the Roman imperial period, with some examples even later (from the Byzantine period and the 17th-18th century).
The prehistoric and protohistoric section

The prehistoric and protohistoric section

The prehistoric and protohistoric section of the Museum includes a selection of clay and stone materials from Ugento dating back to the Neolithic and Eneolithic period, to which is also added a display case containing ceramic, flint, and bone objects from S. Maria di Leuca.