This tour invites you to discover Sardinia's most celebrated prehistoric site, Su Nuraxi di Barumini, in the company of fellow travellers who share your passion for history, mystery and the profound silences that ancient places hold. Your expert English-speaking guide will accompany you from Cagliari through the rolling landscape of the Marmilla region — a landscape of amber fields, hills and ancient stones that seems to exist outside of ordinary time — sharing insights into the geology, history and human storey of this extraordinary corner of the island.
Su Nuraxi di Barumini has stood here since the second millennium BC. Its central tower, originally rising to over eighteen metres, was constructed from massive blocks of basalt fitted together without mortar, without metal tools, without any of the technologies we might assume necessary for such ambition. Around it, four secondary towers connected by a formidable curtain wall, and beyond them, the remains of a village that once housed an entire community — families, craftspeople, traders, elders — living their lives in the shadow of these extraordinary towers.
Your guide will recount the mysteries surrounding Su Nuraxi — the competing theories about its function, the social world of the Nuragic civilisation, their sophisticated metalwork and far-reaching Mediterranean trade networks, and the legends of the Giants of Sardinia, the mythical beings that later generations, unable to imagine mere humans constructing such monuments, believed must have raised these towers from the earth. There will be time for every question, and the intimate scale of the group ensures a conversation that can go as deep as your curiosity wishes to take it.
From Su Nuraxi, the tour continues to the nearby Casa Zapata — a 16th-century aristocratic manor house that conceals an even more extraordinary surprise. Beneath its floors, visible through a specially constructed glass walkway, lies an entire nuraghe — discovered during restoration works and preserved exactly as it was found, a prehistoric monument hidden beneath a Renaissance mansion for centuries without anyone knowing. The house also contains a beautifully curated archaeological museum with finds from the surrounding area, offering a final, intimate encounter with the people who built this landscape.