Fairy houses, in the heart of Sardinia

Domus de janas Ludurru - Budd

Fairy houses, in the heart of Sardinia

Hidden, mysterious and magical, the domus de Janas are an underground world that reveals itself little by little
In folk legends they are the homes of small fairy creatures

An underground universe, camouflaged in the landscape of the Sardinian countryside. Over 3500 domus de Janas are scattered throughout the island, an expression of the funerary rites of people who lived five thousand years ago, and then reused in later periods. Using only stone pickaxes, these people dug and shaped the hard rock to create underground tombs where they laid the dead and 'returned' them to the Mother Goddess, a divinity attested to by the discovery of hundreds of votive statues.

The name of these 'artificial' caves derives from the ancient belief, spread by popular legends, that they were the homes of tiny fairies, the Janas, who wove golden threads in the moonlight and watched over children's sleep. Sacredness and rituals drove the pre-Nuragic men to dig into the rock and decorate the 'rooms' that housed their loved ones, who 'slept' in the womb of mother Earth while waiting for the regenerative journey to the afterlife.

The domus are carved into isolated boulders or grouped in necropolises on rocky ridges. There are many types: pit, oven, chamber and with dromos. Many were built in the likeness of the houses of the living, equipped with double-pitched ceilings, hearths, columns, plinths, basins and false doors, symbols of the passage to the afterlife. Of the thousands discovered, more than 200 retain carved, engraved and painted decorative motifs, largely symbolic, such as cattle heads, bull horns and spirals. All the domus de Janas, from the simplest to the most sophisticated, exude a magical charm.

Montessu, in the heart of Sulcis

Looking at the walls of the necropolis, which stretches out like an amphitheatre, you will see small and large entrances to no less than 35 domus de Janas, skilfully excavated from the 3rd millennium BC: some are decorated with spirals and concentric shapes. What prompted the men of that time to take such painstaking care of the rooms in which the dead were housed?
necropoli a domus de Janas di Montessu
Necropolis of Montessu
The most imposing and extensive Domus de Janas burial site in the south of Sardinia is located in a fertile plain in the lower Sulcis subregion,...

S'Incantu, a few kilometres from Alghero

It is also known as the 'tomb of painted architecture', an emblematic name for the construction and ornamental features of the most famous of the four underground tombs on Mount Siseri, a hill on the border between the Nurra and Logudoro Turritano. It is divided into several chambers, some made like Neolithic huts, and decorated with all the characteristic motifs of the pre-Nuragic age.
s'incantu - Putifi
S'Incantu - necropolis of Mount Siseri
Of the four domus de Janas that make up the famous pre-Nuragic burial ground in the north-west of Sardinia, this is the richest and most intact:...

Sant'Andrea Priu, in the center-north of Logudoro

Three domus in the necropolis will amaze you with their size and state of preservation. The 'Tomb of the Chief' has an area of 250 square metres and comprises 18 chambers arranged in a labyrinth around two main rooms. The necropolis was reused for a long time. In Roman and later Byzantine times, the 'Tomb of the Chief' was transformed into a rock church, one of the first in the time of the persecutions. Repeatedly plastered and frescoed with scenes from the New Testament, which you will notice inside, it was dedicated to St Andrew.
Sant'Andrea Priu, la tomba del Capo
Necropolis of Sant'Andrea Priu
In the historical region of Logudoro, which occupies the central-northern part of Sardinia, there is a vast and spectacular archaeological burial...

Sas Concas, in the Barbagia di Nuoro

Of the underground complex, excavated in the final Neolithic period in the Oniferi area, you will be impressed by the Emiciclo tomb: its complex structure consists of an antechamber, a large central chamber and five secondary cells. Among the symbolic representations are eleven upside-down anthropomorphic petroglyphs, perhaps representing the dead returning to Mother Earth.
Petroglifi - Oniferi
necropoli Sas Concas
In central Sardinia, in the Nuoro area, there is a well-preserved Pre-Nuragic site: it consists of twenty tombs with mysterious anthropomorphic...

Anghelu Ruju, between Alghero and Fertilia

A valley in the hinterland of Alghero is 'pierced' by 38 tombs excavated in sandstone between the 4th and 3rd millennium BC and spread out in two groups, one group of seven in the flatter part, the other of 31 on a small hill. Inside them, even the stone spikes used to excavate them were found. The domus are decorated with the 'classic' symbols related to the veneration of the dead of the time, carved in relief.
Necropoli di Anghelu Ruju - Alghero
Necropolis of the Anghelu Ruju
Alghero contains the largest complex of prehistoric sepulchral ‘little grottos’ in northern Sardinia, preserving the relics of a civilisation that...