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Nuraghe

The nuraghe or nurhag[1] is the main type of ancient megalithic edifice found in Sardinia, developed during the Nuragic Age between 1900 and 730 B.C.[2] Today it has come to be the symbol of Sardinia and its distinctive culture known as the Nuragic civilization. More than 7,000 nuraghes have been found, though archeologists believe that originally there were more than 10,000.[3]

Central tower of the Nuraghe Santu Antine of Torralba

Etymology

Natively, the structure is called a nurhage (Sardinian: [nuˈɾaɣɛ], Italian: [nuˈraːɡe]; plural: Logudorese Sardinian nuraghes, Campidanese Sardinian nuraxis [nuˈɾaʒizi], Italian nuraghi).

According to the Oxford English Dictionary the etymology is "uncertain and disputed": "The word is perhaps related to the Sardinian place names Nurra, Nurri, Nurru, and to Sardinian nurra 'heap of stones, cavity in earth' (although these senses are difficult to reconcile). A connection with the Semitic base of Arabic nūr 'light, fire, etc.' is now generally rejected."[4] The Latin word murus ('wall') may be related to it,[5] being a result of the derivation: murus*muraghe–nuraghe. However, such theory is debated.

An etymological theory suggests a Proto-Basque origin by the term *nur (stone) with the common -⁠ak plural ending;[6] the Paleo-Sardinian suffix -⁠ake is also found in some Indo-European languages such as Latin and Greek.[7] Another possible explanation is that the term nuraghe came from the name of the Iberian mythological hero Norax, and the root *nur would be an adaptation of the Indo-European root *nor.[8][9]

 
Density map of nuraghes on Sardinia per km2.

General layout

The typical nuraghe is situated in areas where previous prehistoric Sardinian cultures had been distributed, that is not far from alluvial plains (though few nuraghes appear in plains currently as they were destroyed by human activities such as agriculture, dams, road building etc.) and has the outer shape of a truncated conical tower, thus resembling a medieval tower, with a tholos-like vault inside.[10]

The structure's walls consist of three components: an outer layer (tilted inwards and made of many layers of stones whose size diminishes with increasing height: mostly, lower layers consist of rubble masonry, while upper layers tend to be of ashlar masonry); an inner layer, made of smaller stones (to form a corbelled dome of the bullet-shaped tholos type, and where ashlar masonry is used more frequently); and an intermediate layer of very small pieces and dirt, which makes the whole construction very sturdy: it stands only by virtue of the weight of its stones, which may each amount to several tons. Some nuraghes are about 20 meters (60 ft) in height, the tallest one known, Nuraghe Arrubiu, reached a height of 25–30 meters.[10]

The entrance leads into a corridor, on whose sides are often open niches, that lead to the round chamber. A spiral stone stair, leading to upper floors (if present) and/or to a terrace, was built within the thick walls and it was illuminated by embrasures. The Nuragic towers might have as much as three corbel chambers one on top of the other. In complex nuraghes corridors were often present, sometimes corbelled, such as at Santu Antine, in which the corbelled arch corridors were superimposed on two levels, and reached a length of 27 meters.

Today fewer than 7,000 nuraghes remain standing; their number was originally larger. Nuraghes are most prevalent in the northwest and south-central parts of the island.[11]

Function

 
Nuraghe La Prisciona, Nuraghe village near Arzachena, Sardinia

There is no consensus on the function of the nuraghes: they could have been rulers' residences, military strongholds, meeting halls, religious temples, ordinary dwellings or a combination of any of these things. Some of the nuraghes are, however, located in strategic places – such as hills – from which important passages could be easily controlled. They might have been something between a "status symbol" and a "passive defence" building, meant to be a deterrent for possible enemies.

Nuraghes could also have been the "national" symbol of the Nuragic peoples. Small-scale models of nuraghe have often been excavated at religious sites (e.g. in the "maze" temple at the Su Romanzesu site near Bitti in central Sardinia). Nuraghes may have just connoted wealth or power, or they may have been an indication that a site had its owners. Recent unconfirmed theories tend to suggest that Sardinian towns were independent entities (such as the city-states, although in a geographical sense they were not cities) that formed federations and that the building of these monuments might have depended on agreed-on distributions of territory among federated unities.

In 2002, Juan Belmonte and Mauro Zedda measured the entrance orientations (declinations and azimuths) of 272 simple nuraghes and of the central towers of 180 complex ones. The data revealed clear peaks corresponding to orientations pointing to the sunrise at winter solstice and to the Moon at its southernmost rising position. These alignments remained constant throughout the history of nuraghe.[12] The most common declinations revealed were of around −43° for the earlier nuraghes, shifting to just −45½° for the later. Zedda has suggested that the target is likely a star, quite possibly Alpha Centauri.[12]

 
Protonuraghe Bruncu Madugui, Gesturi
 
Nuraghe di Santa Sabina, from Silanus, an example of a monotower nuraghe.
 
Nuraghe Santa Barbara, Villanova Truschedu, an example of a tancadu nuraghe.

Types

Protonuraghe

Protonuraghes are considered to be the most archaic type; they differ somewhat from the "classical" (tholos-vaulted) nuraghes in their stockier look. Protonuraghes generally follow an irregular plan and lack the large circular room present in presumed later forms; instead, they are laid out along one or more corridors or long rooms. Although lacking the central circular room, they are sometimes similar in size to later nuraghes.[13]

Mixed nuraghe

This type is distinguished by the restorations made in later times, supposedly because of a change to the protonuraghes design, or for other needs.

Single-tower nuraghe

This is considered to be the predominant type of nuraghe, and it represents the most diffused typology.[13] The single tower, of a truncated conical shape, contains one or more superimposed chambers, covered by a tholos-shaped chamber. The access, generally located at the ground level, leads into a passageway that leads, in the front, into the central chamber and in one side (usually the left) in the helical staircase, built inside the wall mass, that lead to the terrace or to the upper-floor chamber.

In addition to the usual circular rooms, in their inside can be found other smaller environments such as niches.

A "tancadu" nuraghe

A "tancadu" nuraghe (Sardinian term for courtyard) represents the evolution of the single-tower nuraghe; another circular building was later added to the main tower, with two enclosing curtain walls connecting the two. A courtyard was present within the structure, sometimes provided with a well.

 
Nuraghe Palmavera, Alghero
 
Nuraghe Seruci, Gonnesa

Polylobed nuraghe

Also called Nuragic royal palaces, the polylobed nuraghes are the least frequent typology. Very elaborate and often designed in a unified manner, they look like veritable fortresses with several towers linked by high ramparts, whose function was to offer more useful space and perhaps to reinforce the central tower. These "Megalithic castles" were surrounded by additional walls, sometimes also provided with towers (the so-called bulwark).

Notable nuraghes

Nuraghes are inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage Site list. Su Nuraxi di Barumini, in the south of the island, has been chosen to represent all the nuragic patrimony, but one of the highest and most complex nuraghes is the Nuraghe Santu Antine near the village of Torralba, in northern Sardinia. Other famous nuraghes are near Alghero (Nuraghe Palmavera), Macomer, Abbasanta (see Losa), Orroli (Nuraghe Arrubiu), Gonnesa (Nuraghe Seruci) and Villanovaforru (Nuraghe Genna Maria).

Date and cultural significance

The nuraghes were built between the middle of the Bronze Age (18th–15th centuries BCE) and the Late Bronze Age. The claim that the El-Ahwat structures from Israel might be related has been contested; those are dated to either the 12th or the 11th century BCE.[14] The only buildings widely accepted as being related to nuraghes are the torri (plural of torre) from southern Corsica and the talaiots from Menorca and Majorca.[8]

According to Massimo Pallottino, an Italian archaeologist specialized in Etruscology, the architecture produced by the Nuragic civilization was the most advanced of any in the western Mediterranean during this epoch, including those in the regions of Magna Graecia.[15] Of the 7,000 extant nuraghes, only a few have been scientifically excavated.

Image gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Nurhag". Collins Dictionary. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  2. ^ Depalmas, A.; R. T. Melis (2010). "The Nuragic People: Their settlements, economic activities and use of the land, Sardinia, Italy.". In Martini, I. P.; Chesworth, W. (eds.). Landscapes and Societies: Selected Cases. New York, NY: Springer Science+Business Media.
  3. ^ Sergio Vacca, Angelo Aru, Paolo Baldaccini, Rapporti tra suoli e insediamenti nuragici nella regione del Marghine-Planargia (Sardegna centro-occidentale), in Il sistema uomo-ambiente tra passato e presente, a cura di Claude Albore Livadie e Franco Ortolani, Edipuglia, Bari, 1998, ISBN 88-7228-197-0
  4. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (online ed.), s.v. nuraghe.
  5. ^ M. Pittau, philologist
  6. ^ Recensione di Blasco Ferrer, Paleosardo
  7. ^ M. Wagner, La lingua sarda, Berna 1951
  8. ^ a b Ugas, Giovanni (2005). L'alba dei Nuraghi. Cagliari: Fabula. p. 25. ISBN 88-89661-00-3.
  9. ^ Arquer, Sigismondo (2008). Laneri, Maria Teresa (ed.). Sardiniae brevis historia et descriptio. CUEC. p. 16. Nowadays Sardinia is part of Spain and ancient tower-like ruins tapered towards the upper end dot the rural and mountainous areas, and they are built with solid rocks and have narrow openings; to the center are small steps leading to the top: they seem like fortresses. The native Sardinians call this type of ruins Nuraghes, perhaps because they are what is left of Norax's feats. [original text: Hodie insula paret regi Hispanorum habetque passim antiquissimas ruinas in locis agrestibus et montosis instar rotundarum turrium in angustiam ascendentium, quae robustissimis saxis sunt extructae, habentes ianuas angustissimas; intra vero muri mediam latitudinem sunt gradus per quos in altum conscenditur: prae se ferunt formam propugnaculorum. Incolae vocant huiusmodi ruinas nuragos, fortassis quod reliquiae quaedam sint operum Noraci.]
  10. ^ a b it:Museo archeologico nazionale di Nuoro, Il Sarcidano: Orroli, Nuraghe Arrubiu at www.museoarcheologiconuoro.beniculturali.it. 2015-06-30 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, "Italy."
  12. ^ a b Zedda, M.; Belmonte, J.A. (2004). "On the orientations of Sardinian nuraghes: Some clues to their interpretation". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 35 Part 1 (118): 92. Bibcode:2004JHA....35...85Z. doi:10.1177/002182860403500104. ISSN 0021-8286. S2CID 120386421.
  13. ^ a b Melis, Paolo. (2003). Civiltà nuragica. C. Delfino. ISBN 88-7138-287-0. OCLC 729900794.
  14. ^ Finkelstein, Israel (2008). "Radiocarbon Dating and Philistine Chronology with an Addendum on el-Ahwat". Ägypten und Levante. 17: 73–82. doi:10.1553/aeundl17s73. ISSN 1015-5104.
  15. ^ Pallottino, Massimo, 1909–1995 (1950). La Sardegna nuragica. Edizioni del Gremio. OCLC 1091906621.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Bibliography

  • Dyson Stephen L., Rowland Robert J. (2007). Shepherds, sailors, & conquerors – Archeology and History in Sardinia from the Stone Age to the Middle Ages. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, Museum of Archeology and Anthropology. ISBN 978-1-934536-02-5.
  • Giovanni Lilliu, , Nuoro, Edizioni Ilisso, 2005. ISBN 88-89188-53-7
  • Lilliu, Giovanni (2004). La civiltà dei Sardi. Dal Paleolitico all'età dei nuraghi (in Italian). Edizioni il Maestrale. ISBN 978-88-86109-73-4.
  • Paolo Melis, Civiltà Nuragica, Sassari, Delfino editore, 2003. ISBN 88-7138-287-0
  • Giovanni Ugas, L'alba dei Nuraghi, Cagliari, Fabula, 2005. ISBN 88-89661-00-3
  • Ugas, Giovanni (2016). Shardana e Sardegna : i popoli del mare, gli alleati del Nordafrica e la fine dei Grandi Regni (XV-XII secolo a.C.) (in Italian). Cagliari: Edizioni della Torre. ISBN 9788873434719.

External links

  • Aerial photograph of Su Nuraxi
  • Nuraghi.org Su Nuraxi of Barumini
  • A map of all Nuraghes in Sardinia 2013-10-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • Another map providing the location of each Nuraghe – Nurnet
  • ArcheologiaSarda.com (in Italian)
  • NeroArgento.com (in Italian)
  • (in Italian)
  • Virtual Tour in HD [permanent dead link]

nuraghe, nuraghe, nurhag, main, type, ancient, megalithic, edifice, found, sardinia, developed, during, nuragic, between, 1900, today, come, symbol, sardinia, distinctive, culture, known, nuragic, civilization, more, than, nuraghes, have, been, found, though, . The nuraghe or nurhag 1 is the main type of ancient megalithic edifice found in Sardinia developed during the Nuragic Age between 1900 and 730 B C 2 Today it has come to be the symbol of Sardinia and its distinctive culture known as the Nuragic civilization More than 7 000 nuraghes have been found though archeologists believe that originally there were more than 10 000 3 Nuraghe Losa Central tower of the Nuraghe Santu Antine of Torralba Nuraghe Su Nuraxi Contents 1 Etymology 2 General layout 3 Function 4 Types 4 1 Protonuraghe 4 2 Mixed nuraghe 4 3 Single tower nuraghe 4 4 A tancadu nuraghe 4 5 Polylobed nuraghe 5 Notable nuraghes 6 Date and cultural significance 7 Image gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEtymology EditNatively the structure is called a nurhage Sardinian nuˈɾaɣɛ Italian nuˈraːɡe plural Logudorese Sardinian nuraghes Campidanese Sardinian nuraxis nuˈɾaʒizi Italian nuraghi According to the Oxford English Dictionary the etymology is uncertain and disputed The word is perhaps related to the Sardinian place names Nurra Nurri Nurru and to Sardinian nurra heap of stones cavity in earth although these senses are difficult to reconcile A connection with the Semitic base of Arabic nur light fire etc is now generally rejected 4 The Latin word murus wall may be related to it 5 being a result of the derivation murus muraghe nuraghe However such theory is debated An etymological theory suggests a Proto Basque origin by the term nur stone with the common ak plural ending 6 the Paleo Sardinian suffix ake is also found in some Indo European languages such as Latin and Greek 7 Another possible explanation is that the term nuraghe came from the name of the Iberian mythological hero Norax and the root nur would be an adaptation of the Indo European root nor 8 9 Density map of nuraghes on Sardinia per km2 General layout EditThe typical nuraghe is situated in areas where previous prehistoric Sardinian cultures had been distributed that is not far from alluvial plains though few nuraghes appear in plains currently as they were destroyed by human activities such as agriculture dams road building etc and has the outer shape of a truncated conical tower thus resembling a medieval tower with a tholos like vault inside 10 The structure s walls consist of three components an outer layer tilted inwards and made of many layers of stones whose size diminishes with increasing height mostly lower layers consist of rubble masonry while upper layers tend to be of ashlar masonry an inner layer made of smaller stones to form a corbelled dome of the bullet shaped tholos type and where ashlar masonry is used more frequently and an intermediate layer of very small pieces and dirt which makes the whole construction very sturdy it stands only by virtue of the weight of its stones which may each amount to several tons Some nuraghes are about 20 meters 60 ft in height the tallest one known Nuraghe Arrubiu reached a height of 25 30 meters 10 The entrance leads into a corridor on whose sides are often open niches that lead to the round chamber A spiral stone stair leading to upper floors if present and or to a terrace was built within the thick walls and it was illuminated by embrasures The Nuragic towers might have as much as three corbel chambers one on top of the other In complex nuraghes corridors were often present sometimes corbelled such as at Santu Antine in which the corbelled arch corridors were superimposed on two levels and reached a length of 27 meters Today fewer than 7 000 nuraghes remain standing their number was originally larger Nuraghes are most prevalent in the northwest and south central parts of the island 11 Access Niche of the central chamber Stairwell Tholos of Sant Antine nuraghe Window and embrasures Reconstruction of a nuraghe from 1600 B C Function Edit Nuraghe La Prisciona Nuraghe village near Arzachena Sardinia There is no consensus on the function of the nuraghes they could have been rulers residences military strongholds meeting halls religious temples ordinary dwellings or a combination of any of these things Some of the nuraghes are however located in strategic places such as hills from which important passages could be easily controlled They might have been something between a status symbol and a passive defence building meant to be a deterrent for possible enemies Nuraghes could also have been the national symbol of the Nuragic peoples Small scale models of nuraghe have often been excavated at religious sites e g in the maze temple at the Su Romanzesu site near Bitti in central Sardinia Nuraghes may have just connoted wealth or power or they may have been an indication that a site had its owners Recent unconfirmed theories tend to suggest that Sardinian towns were independent entities such as the city states although in a geographical sense they were not cities that formed federations and that the building of these monuments might have depended on agreed on distributions of territory among federated unities In 2002 Juan Belmonte and Mauro Zedda measured the entrance orientations declinations and azimuths of 272 simple nuraghes and of the central towers of 180 complex ones The data revealed clear peaks corresponding to orientations pointing to the sunrise at winter solstice and to the Moon at its southernmost rising position These alignments remained constant throughout the history of nuraghe 12 The most common declinations revealed were of around 43 for the earlier nuraghes shifting to just 45 for the later Zedda has suggested that the target is likely a star quite possibly Alpha Centauri 12 Protonuraghe Bruncu Madugui Gesturi Nuraghe di Santa Sabina from Silanus an example of a monotower nuraghe Nuraghe Santa Barbara Villanova Truschedu an example of a tancadu nuraghe Types EditProtonuraghe Edit Protonuraghes are considered to be the most archaic type they differ somewhat from the classical tholos vaulted nuraghes in their stockier look Protonuraghes generally follow an irregular plan and lack the large circular room present in presumed later forms instead they are laid out along one or more corridors or long rooms Although lacking the central circular room they are sometimes similar in size to later nuraghes 13 Mixed nuraghe Edit This type is distinguished by the restorations made in later times supposedly because of a change to the protonuraghes design or for other needs Single tower nuraghe Edit This is considered to be the predominant type of nuraghe and it represents the most diffused typology 13 The single tower of a truncated conical shape contains one or more superimposed chambers covered by a tholos shaped chamber The access generally located at the ground level leads into a passageway that leads in the front into the central chamber and in one side usually the left in the helical staircase built inside the wall mass that lead to the terrace or to the upper floor chamber In addition to the usual circular rooms in their inside can be found other smaller environments such as niches A tancadu nuraghe Edit A tancadu nuraghe Sardinian term for courtyard represents the evolution of the single tower nuraghe another circular building was later added to the main tower with two enclosing curtain walls connecting the two A courtyard was present within the structure sometimes provided with a well Nuraghe Palmavera Alghero Nuraghe Seruci Gonnesa Polylobed nuraghe Edit Also called Nuragic royal palaces the polylobed nuraghes are the least frequent typology Very elaborate and often designed in a unified manner they look like veritable fortresses with several towers linked by high ramparts whose function was to offer more useful space and perhaps to reinforce the central tower These Megalithic castles were surrounded by additional walls sometimes also provided with towers the so called bulwark Notable nuraghes EditNuraghes are inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage Site list Su Nuraxi di Barumini in the south of the island has been chosen to represent all the nuragic patrimony but one of the highest and most complex nuraghes is the Nuraghe Santu Antine near the village of Torralba in northern Sardinia Other famous nuraghes are near Alghero Nuraghe Palmavera Macomer Abbasanta see Losa Orroli Nuraghe Arrubiu Gonnesa Nuraghe Seruci and Villanovaforru Nuraghe Genna Maria Date and cultural significance EditThe nuraghes were built between the middle of the Bronze Age 18th 15th centuries BCE and the Late Bronze Age The claim that the El Ahwat structures from Israel might be related has been contested those are dated to either the 12th or the 11th century BCE 14 The only buildings widely accepted as being related to nuraghes are the torri plural of torre from southern Corsica and the talaiots from Menorca and Majorca 8 According to Massimo Pallottino an Italian archaeologist specialized in Etruscology the architecture produced by the Nuragic civilization was the most advanced of any in the western Mediterranean during this epoch including those in the regions of Magna Graecia 15 Of the 7 000 extant nuraghes only a few have been scientifically excavated Image gallery Edit Nuraghe Arrubiu Orroli Nuraghe Santa Barbara Macomer Nuraghe Adoni Nuraghe Is Paras Stairwell inside Nuraghe Nolza Nuraghe Iloi Sedilo Nuraghe Oes Giave Nuraghe Ruiu Chiaramonti Nuraghe Orolio Silanus Nuraghe Santu Antine Torralba Nuraghe Loelle Budduso Nuraghe Orolo Bortigali Nuraghe Nieddu Codrongianos Nuraghe S Urachi Nuraghe Su Mulinu VillanovafrancaSee also EditAhwat Beehive tomb Broch Chullpa Giants grave Girna Motillas TalaiotNotes Edit Nurhag Collins Dictionary Retrieved 29 March 2023 Depalmas A R T Melis 2010 The Nuragic People Their settlements economic activities and use of the land Sardinia Italy In Martini I P Chesworth W eds Landscapes and Societies Selected Cases New York NY Springer Science Business Media Sergio Vacca Angelo Aru Paolo Baldaccini Rapporti tra suoli e insediamenti nuragici nella regione del Marghine Planargia Sardegna centro occidentale in Il sistema uomo ambiente tra passato e presente a cura di Claude Albore Livadie e Franco Ortolani Edipuglia Bari 1998 ISBN 88 7228 197 0 Oxford English Dictionary online ed s v nuraghe M Pittau philologist Recensione di Blasco Ferrer Paleosardo M Wagner La lingua sarda Berna 1951 a b Ugas Giovanni 2005 L alba dei Nuraghi Cagliari Fabula p 25 ISBN 88 89661 00 3 Arquer Sigismondo 2008 Laneri Maria Teresa ed Sardiniae brevis historia et descriptio CUEC p 16 Nowadays Sardinia is part of Spain and ancient tower like ruins tapered towards the upper end dot the rural and mountainous areas and they are built with solid rocks and have narrow openings to the center are small steps leading to the top they seem like fortresses The native Sardinians call this type of ruins Nuraghes perhaps because they are what is left of Norax s feats original text Hodie insula paret regi Hispanorum habetque passim antiquissimas ruinas in locis agrestibus et montosis instar rotundarum turrium in angustiam ascendentium quae robustissimis saxis sunt extructae habentes ianuas angustissimas intra vero muri mediam latitudinem sunt gradus per quos in altum conscenditur prae se ferunt formam propugnaculorum Incolae vocant huiusmodi ruinas nuragos fortassis quod reliquiae quaedam sint operum Noraci a b it Museo archeologico nazionale di Nuoro Il Sarcidano Orroli Nuraghe Arrubiu at www museoarcheologiconuoro beniculturali it Archived 2015 06 30 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica Italy a b Zedda M Belmonte J A 2004 On the orientations of Sardinian nuraghes Some clues to their interpretation Journal for the History of Astronomy 35 Part 1 118 92 Bibcode 2004JHA 35 85Z doi 10 1177 002182860403500104 ISSN 0021 8286 S2CID 120386421 a b Melis Paolo 2003 Civilta nuragica C Delfino ISBN 88 7138 287 0 OCLC 729900794 Finkelstein Israel 2008 Radiocarbon Dating and Philistine Chronology with an Addendum on el Ahwat Agypten und Levante 17 73 82 doi 10 1553 aeundl17s73 ISSN 1015 5104 Pallottino Massimo 1909 1995 1950 La Sardegna nuragica Edizioni del Gremio OCLC 1091906621 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bibliography EditDyson Stephen L Rowland Robert J 2007 Shepherds sailors amp conquerors Archeology and History in Sardinia from the Stone Age to the Middle Ages Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archeology and Anthropology ISBN 978 1 934536 02 5 Giovanni Lilliu I nuraghi Torri preistoriche della Sardegna Nuoro Edizioni Ilisso 2005 ISBN 88 89188 53 7 Lilliu Giovanni 2004 La civilta dei Sardi Dal Paleolitico all eta dei nuraghi in Italian Edizioni il Maestrale ISBN 978 88 86109 73 4 Paolo Melis Civilta Nuragica Sassari Delfino editore 2003 ISBN 88 7138 287 0 Giovanni Ugas L alba dei Nuraghi Cagliari Fabula 2005 ISBN 88 89661 00 3 Ugas Giovanni 2016 Shardana e Sardegna i popoli del mare gli alleati del Nordafrica e la fine dei Grandi Regni XV XII secolo a C in Italian Cagliari Edizioni della Torre ISBN 9788873434719 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nuraghe Aerial photograph of Su Nuraxi Nuraghi org Su Nuraxi of Barumini A map of all Nuraghes in Sardinia Archived 2013 10 19 at the Wayback Machine Another map providing the location of each Nuraghe Nurnet ArcheologiaSarda com in Italian NeroArgento com in Italian Virtual Reconstructions in Italian Virtual Tour in HD permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nuraghe amp oldid 1160822221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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