Approximately 2,500 years ago, however, the glory days of the city the Greeks called Selinus came to an abrupt end. In 409 B.C., an estimated force of 100,000 troops from Carthage traveled across the sea from modern-day Tunisia and laid siege to the city. After Selinunte held out for 10 days, the Carthaginian invaders breached the city’s walls and massacred approximately 16,000 residents and soldiers who tried to defend the city. Another 5,000 residents, mostly women and children, were taken as slaves. The once-thriving city became a ghost town after the attack. Carthage’s attempts to repopulate Selinunte never took hold, and it finally razed the city around 250 B.C. during the First Punic War.
What the Carthaginians started, nature finished. Earthquakes caused the enormous Greek temples to crumble to the ground, and wind-blown sand and dirt eventually entombed 85 percent of the ruins of Selinunte.
More than 2,000 years later, archaeologists unearthing Selinunte have found not just a well-preserved relic from ancient Greece, but a city frozen in time. Just as excavations at Pompeii have revealed snapshots of the precise moment in A.D. 79 when Mount Vesuvius buried the city in hot ash before many could escape, archaeologists have found evidences of lives suddenly interrupted when the Carthaginians stormed the city.
According to the Independent, archaeologists have discovered the half-eaten remains of food presumably left behind by terrified residents fleeing for their lives. Dozens of unfired pots and tiles waiting to be placed into kilns that were abandoned by workers also speak to the city’s precipitous demise.
“Selinunte is the only classical Greek city where the entire metropolis is still preserved, mainly buried under sand and earth. It therefore gives us a unique opportunity to discover how an ancient Greek city functioned,” Professor Martin Bentz of the University of Bonn, who is directing the current excavation at the 250-acre site, told the Independent.
After 15 years of work at Europe’s largest archaeological site, researchers have been able to identify all of the city’s 2,500 houses. As the Independent reports, archaeologists working at Selinunte have for the first time been able to develop a comprehensive plan of an entire ancient Greek city and accurately estimate its population.