Ocriticum
Ocriticum was an Italic and Roman town, the ruins of which are located in the comune of Cansano, in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of Italy.
There are the remains of two Italic/Roman temples of Jupiter and Hercules, and a sacellum of Ceres and Venus, as well as remains of the ancient settlement.
The mansio Jovis Larene is also nearby, an important inn stop marked on the Tabula Peutingeriana.
The sacred area
The presence of a large sacred area was decisive for the development of the village of Ocriticum; pilgrims, wayfarers, traders, shepherds stopped there to venerate the divinities. The fervent religious activity led to the multiplication of the cults practiced in the plateau, the monumentalisation and expansion of the sacred buildings and the increase in the fame of the place.On the Peutingeriana Table Ocriticum is seven miles from Sulmo and twenty-five from Aufidena on the important route that connected the Peligna Valley with the Sannio Pentro, recognized as the medieval Via Nova still partially passable and recognisable.
The Italic temple
The first temple built in the area dates to the end of the 4th century BC; originally it consisted of a single cell with an almost square base, with an entrance facing South-East around which there was a sacred garden delimited by a perimeter wall erected dry. In a subsequent building phase, an expansion of the enclosure and of the temple building took place, which was provided with a pronaos built with a significantly different technique from the cell.In the sacred garden, dug into the ground to the west of the building, a votive deposit was found to conserve objects which, due to lack of space, could no longer be housed inside the naos; around 600 votive offerings have been found, datable between the 4th century BC and the 1st century BC, including a bronze statuette of Hercules which lay isolated on the bottom of the deposit: to Hercules, a very widespread divinity in the Peligna area in the late Italic age and Roman, therefore it seems that the temple was dedicated, albeit, probably, not exclusively.
The Roman temple
Around the beginning of the 1st century BC, there was a further expansion of the sacred area, in which, on a terrace higher than the Italic temple but perfectly aligned with it, another temple building, larger and architecturally sophisticated. The temple, with a rectangular base and divided into two rooms of equal size, was probably a tetrastyle prostyle, with a staircase set in front of the entrance, facing south-east as in the previous temple. Only the podium in opus reticulatum remains of the original structure: no trace remains of the entire decorative apparatus, as well as of the mosaic floor of the cell, with the exception of some mosaic tiles found near the building. The cult to which the temple was intended is probably that of Jupiter, as evidenced by the funerary inscription dedicated to Sesto Paccio and the toponym, Jovis Larene, by which the area was known in ancient times.Simultaneously with the construction of the temple of Jupiter, the extension of the sacred precinct was carried out, close to which, on the internal northern side, rooms were created for warehouses, shops and rooms for the use of the cultivators of the sanctuary. The enclosed space, thus chosen as a place of the sacred, is technically defined temenos and probably had an internal spatial organization aimed at the celebration of religious activities by the priests.