Oh, it would be glorious: folio pages, folded maps, copied inscriptions, coin drawings, reports from provincial officials—and Eriko’s tiny, devastating marginal notes correcting everyone else.
Her document would probably not be called a “dossier” in modern bureaucratic language. More likely it would be a memoria, relazione, or ragguaglio: a learned memorandum prepared for a minister or sovereign. It would combine antiquarian scholarship with practical advice for governing the Bourbon kingdom.
Let us place it around 1775, during the reign of Ferdinand IV, when Paestum was attracting increasing European attention, Bourbon-sponsored discoveries around Vesuvius had made ancient remains instruments of dynastic prestige, and Sir William Hamilton’s collections were stimulating intense interest in the painted vases found in southern Italy. (British Museum)
Eriko’s Memoria sopra la Magna Grecia
The physical object would be a substantial manuscript volume, perhaps forty to eighty folio leaves, bound in royal blue or red leather and stamped with the Bourbon lilies.
Its title page might read:
MEMORIA
Sopra le antiche città greche comprese nei presenti domini di Sua Maestà Siciliana
Containing an account of their origins, governments, commerce, monuments, customs, present condition, and possible usefulness to the Crown
Prepared by order of the Royal Secretariat
Caserta, in the Year 1775
This is a reconstructed document rather than a surviving historical text, but its categories, evidence, assumptions, and administrative purposes would fit an eighteenth-century Bourbon scholarly memorandum.
1. The first page: the question placed before her
Eriko would begin by defining the assignment.
Object of the Present Memorandum
The provinces now called Terra d’Otranto, Basilicata, Calabria Citra and Calabria Ultra contain the vestiges of cities which, being founded by Greeks in the most ancient centuries, acquired such abundance of population, refinement of laws, excellence of manufactures, and reputation in philosophy that this region received from the ancients the celebrated name of Magna Graecia.
His Majesty’s dominions therefore possess not merely monuments of foreign peoples, but the remains of one of the principal foundations upon which the civilization of Italy was constructed.
The present inquiry shall consider:
which ancient cities may be identified with present places;
what may be learned from authors, inscriptions, coins, buildings, tombs, and painted vessels;
what advantages those cities once derived from soil, rivers, roads, and maritime commerce;
what precautions should be taken for the preservation of their antiquities;
in what manner their ancient prosperity may instruct the present government of the provinces.
That last item is crucial. Eriko would not be commissioned merely to admire antiquity. The court would expect her to make the past useful.
2. Her map of Magna Graecia
A large folded map would follow, probably based partly upon ancient geographical texts and partly upon contemporary Bourbon surveys.
Eriko would plot:
Cumae, near the Bay of Naples;
Neapolis, beneath modern Naples;
Poseidonia, later Paestum;
Elea or Velia;
Pyxus or Buxentum;
Rhegium, modern Reggio Calabria;
Locri Epizephyrii;
Croton;
Sybaris and Thurii;
Metapontum;
Heraclea;
Tarentum, modern Taranto.
She would probably distinguish several layers:
Greek foundations
Indigenous settlements
Roman colonies
Modern towns
Roads, rivers, harbours and agricultural plains
This is already more sophisticated than simply colouring southern Italy “Greek.” Eriko would insist that Magna Graecia was a network of distinct cities, founded at different times by people from different parts of the Greek world.
She would also note that the Greek cities did not occupy an empty landscape. They interacted—and often fought—with Indigenous communities such as the Oenotrians, Lucanians, Bruttians, Messapians and others.
An ordinary court antiquarian might portray Greek civilization simply radiating outward over barbarism. Eriko would write in the margin:
“Contact is not the same thing as replacement.”
3. The sources she could use
Her source list would look wonderfully heterogeneous.
Ancient literary authorities
She might cite:
Strabo;
Polybius;
Livy;
Dionysius of Halicarnassus;
Diodorus Siculus;
Pliny the Elder;
Pausanias;
Athenaeus;
Justin’s epitome of Pompeius Trogus;
Diogenes Laërtius for philosophers;
perhaps Herodotus and Thucydides where relevant.
Strabo would be her backbone because he joins geography, political history, cities, roads, peoples and economic conditions—the very combination Eriko loves.
She would copy the relevant passages in Greek or Latin and provide an Italian translation. Where authors disagreed, she would not silently choose one. She would construct a little table:
| Question | Strabo | Livy | Local evidence | Eriko’s judgment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Site of ancient Sybaris | Near the Crathis | Roman historical references | Coins and scattered remains | Probable, but further survey required |
| Origin of Croton | Achaean colony | Consistent tradition | Inscriptions and coins | Highly credible |
| Identity of Paestum temples | Uncertain popular names | Limited literary help | Architecture itself | Greek buildings, despite later Roman occupation |
Her method would be transitional: no longer merely quoting classical authors, but not yet modern archaeology.
4. Material evidence
The dossier would include separate sections for:
architectural remains;
inscriptions;
coins;
sculpture;
bronzes;
painted pottery;
tombs;
roads and city walls.
This was the era in which antiquarian inquiry was beginning to move toward systematic comparison and stylistic analysis. Winckelmann’s work encouraged scholars to distinguish historical styles rather than treating all ancient objects as one undifferentiated classical category; he also wrote about the temples at Paestum in his 1762 observations on ancient architecture. (Wikipedia)
Eriko would embrace the method but distrust the sweeping aesthetic judgments.
She might write:
Concerning the Use of Monuments as Historical Testimony
Written authorities deserve the greatest reverence, but they do not always describe the things most necessary to the present inquiry. A historian records wars and magistrates while omitting the dimensions of a harbour, the arrangement of a workshop, or the ordinary vessels used by families.
Buildings, coins, sepulchres, inscriptions, and painted pottery may therefore be regarded as a second species of archive.
Nevertheless, objects must not be made to confess more than they know. A vase found in a Lucanian tomb does not by that fact prove either that it was manufactured by Lucanians or that the deceased was Greek. Place of discovery, place of manufacture, subject represented, and use of the object must be considered separately.
That is very Eriko: objects must not be made to confess more than they know.
5. The city reports
Each major city would receive a standardized entry.
A. Poseidonia–Paestum
The Paestum section would probably be among the most detailed because its standing temples offered evidence unavailable at many other sites.
It might be arranged as:
Ancient names: Poseidonia; later Paestum
Probable founders: Greeks from Sybaris, according to received tradition
Subsequent rulers: Lucanians; Romans
Present jurisdiction: Principato Citra
Monuments: Three principal ancient temples; city walls; gates; other ruins
Natural setting: Plain between hills and sea; rivers and marshes
Present condition: Sparsely inhabited district, unhealthy air in some seasons
Potential utility: Royal preservation, measured drawings, controlled tourism, drainage and road improvement
Eighteenth-century visitors did not yet possess modern archaeological datings or secure identifications for all three temples. One of the temples was conventionally called the “Basilica,” reflecting uncertainty about its function. Winckelmann nevertheless recognized Paestum as vital evidence for early Greek architecture. (Wikipedia)
Eriko would order an architect to provide:
ground plans;
elevations;
column measurements;
distances between columns;
observations on stone and construction;
notes on later repairs and reuse.
She would resist the temptation to identify every building with a named deity merely because a traveller found the name pleasing.
“The appellation ‘Temple of Neptune,’” she might note, “is customary rather than demonstrated.”
B. Croton
Her Croton report would emphasize the city’s double reputation:
athletic and military strength;
philosophy, medicine and Pythagoreanism.
She would discuss Pythagoras, the political influence attributed to his followers, and the eventual violent reaction against Pythagorean associations.
But the administrative question would be: Could an intellectual order become too politically cohesive?
That would interest the Bourbon government enormously.
Eriko might summarize:
Croton demonstrates that learned societies strengthen a city when knowledge circulates, but threaten it when instruction becomes an exclusive instrument of faction.
She would then compare Pythagorean discipline with academies, religious orders and court advisory circles.
This section would make certain ministers glance nervously at one another.
C. Sybaris and Thurii
Sybaris would allow her to dissect the moral clichés surrounding luxury.
Ancient authors often turned Sybaris into a cautionary tale of wealth, softness and ruin. Eriko would catalogue these stories but ask whether “luxury” was functioning as historical explanation or moral theatre.
She might reconstruct the material basis of Sybarite prosperity:
rich agricultural land;
access to river systems;
commercial connections;
population and dependent territory;
exchange between coast and interior.
Then she would write:
“Abundance precedes luxury in the order of causes. To condemn the latter without examining the former is to substitute a sermon for political economy.”
That sentence would circulate privately through the palace.
The foundation of Thurii on or near Sybaris’s territory would lead her to discuss planned colonies, lawgivers and the difficulty of manufacturing civic unity from settlers of diverse origins.
D. Tarentum
Tarentum would be treated as the great strategic case.
Eriko would examine:
its excellent harbour;
Spartan colonial traditions;
fisheries and purple dye;
wool production;
naval strength;
relations with neighbouring Italian peoples;
the invitation to Pyrrhus;
eventual submission to Rome.
Her recommendation would be unmistakably contemporary:
A southern monarchy neglecting Taranto’s harbour would be ignoring a lesson repeated by the geography itself.
Here ancient history becomes naval policy.
E. Locri Epizephyrii
Locri would let her investigate law, gender, cult and aristocratic memory.
She might discuss the traditions surrounding the lawgiver Zaleucus, but carefully label stories of his severity as uncertain or exemplary rather than verified.
She would take particular interest in:
the cult of Persephone;
marriage customs;
female religious roles;
descent traditions connected by ancient writers with noble women among the settlers.
A conventional report might treat these as picturesque customs. Eriko would ask whether religious institutions gave women forms of public authority not represented in formal magistracies.
Naturally, this would become the section Sammi reads first.
F. Elea–Velia
Elea would be Eriko’s private sanctuary.
Here she would write about:
Xenophanes;
Parmenides;
Zeno;
the Eleatic school;
the relationship between philosophical abstraction and civic life.
But she would also include the harbour, walls, medical traditions and the city’s position on the Tyrrhenian coast.
Her philosophical memorandum might conclude:
“A city need not be large to alter the intellectual government of mankind.”
That sentence, underlined twice, would remain one of the few moments in the volume where Eriko permits herself open admiration.
6. The question of Greek vases
This section would be politically awkward because foreign diplomats, aristocrats and collectors were purchasing southern Italian antiquities in large numbers.
Sir William Hamilton, British envoy at Naples from 1764, assembled major collections of painted vases. His first collection was sold to the British Museum in 1772, and lavish publications helped spread their forms and imagery across European art and design. Many works were then discussed as “Etruscan,” although objects in these collections often came from Greek and Italic contexts within the Kingdom of Naples. (British Museum)
Eriko would therefore include a chapter titled something like:
Whether the Painted Vessels Commonly Called Etruscan Should Be Considered Greek, Italian, or Provincial
Her conclusion would be cautious:
script and mythological imagery may be Greek;
manufacture may have occurred locally;
artisans and customers may have belonged to different communities;
excavation context must be recorded;
stylistic resemblance alone cannot establish provenance;
the term “Etruscan” is being used too indiscriminately.
She would be ahead of many contemporaries, but not magically modern. She would lack scientific dating, stratigraphic excavation and the fully developed classifications of later archaeology.
Still, she would recognize the central problem:
Greek language and Greek style do not automatically equal manufacture in mainland Greece.
7. Magna Graecia as a political laboratory
This would be the intellectual heart of her dossier.
Eriko would treat the Greek cities not as a lost golden civilization but as a series of political experiments:
| City | Political lesson |
|---|---|
| Sybaris | Wealth can produce power but also hostile moral mythology |
| Croton | Education can strengthen civic life or harden into faction |
| Tarentum | Maritime geography creates strategic obligations |
| Thurii | Planned constitutions cannot erase conflicts among populations |
| Locri | Law acquires authority through tradition, religion and social memory |
| Elea | Small cities may exercise enormous intellectual influence |
| Poseidonia | Conquest changes civic identity without wholly erasing the past |
| Neapolis | A Greek civic culture can survive through accommodation with larger powers |
She would tell the Bourbon court that Magna Graecia disproved two comforting ideas:
that one ideal constitution suits every city;
that cultural brilliance guarantees political survival.
Its cities were prosperous, inventive and intellectually formidable—but they were also divided, competitive and vulnerable to stronger confederations and territorial states.
8. The administrative recommendations
This is where the antiquarian memorandum becomes a blueprint for government.
Eriko would probably recommend the Crown:
Establish provincial correspondents
Bishops, magistrates, engineers and educated landowners should report discoveries using a standard form:
precise location;
depth;
relation to walls or tombs;
associated objects;
inscriptions;
name of landowner;
drawings before removal.
Prohibit undocumented removal
No antiquity should be taken from a tomb or building without a record.
Regulate export
Important inscriptions, coins and painted vessels should not quietly leave the kingdom through dealers and foreign collectors.
Create a royal repository
Objects from Magna Graecia should be arranged geographically and historically, rather than merely by beauty or monetary value.
Survey the ancient routes
The location of Greek cities could help identify useful modern roads between harbours, plains and inland markets.
Improve Paestum carefully
Drainage and road access should be improved without quarrying the ancient structures for building stone.
Publish a royal atlas
Measured plans, inscriptions, coins and selected objects should be engraved and published under Bourbon patronage.
The motive would be both scholarly and competitive. Naples should not allow foreigners to become the principal interpreters—or owners—of the kingdom’s antiquities.
9. The ideology beneath the dossier
Officially, Eriko’s conclusion would flatter the monarchy:
The Bourbon kingdom is heir to Greek ingenuity, Roman government and Christian civilization.
But her real argument would be subtler.
Magna Graecia shows that the kingdom’s southern provinces are not remote, backward appendages to Naples. They were once centres of:
philosophy;
medicine;
law;
agriculture;
manufacture;
maritime commerce;
urban experiment.
Their present poverty or isolation therefore cannot be explained as natural destiny.
That is the politically dangerous implication.
If those regions had once sustained some of the Mediterranean’s richest cities, then their current condition must arise partly from:
damaged communications;
disease and marshland;
concentrated landholding;
neglected harbours;
administrative weakness;
insecurity;
extraction without reinvestment.
Eriko would be using antiquity to make a quiet accusation against the present.
Her final paragraph
I think she would close with something like this:
Magna Graecia ought not to be regarded as a magnificent corpse from which statues, vessels and inscriptions may be removed for the adornment of royal rooms. It is a record of the powers latent in these provinces. The same seas remain, the same harbours may be restored, and the same plains may again sustain populous cities. The monuments therefore instruct the Crown twice: first by showing what human industry accomplished, and secondly by showing that no prosperity, however brilliant, survives indefinitely without prudent institutions, concord among citizens and vigilant care of the territory.
And beneath it, in handwriting that was plainly not part of the official clean copy, Sammi would add:
“Eriko has discovered that archaeology is political economy wearing a very attractive Greek chiton.”
Eriko would cross out attractive.
But not the rest.
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