About Шаблон:Convert east of the town lies the small, volcanic Lake Martignano, also popular with tourists. The two lakes and the surrounding area have been declared a Regional Park and are under a strict naturalistic control.
Nearby at Mura di Santo Stefano about 3 km south of Lake Bracciano lie the remarkable remains of a great ancient Roman villa.
Roman villa of Mura di Santo Stefano
It was located along the Via Clodia and was built at the end of the 2nd century AD, probably on an earlier villa rustica of the 1st century.[1] The complex was a luxury retreat, possibly the residential part of a latifundium. There is evidence for continuing activity till the 3d or early 4th century.
The remains of the three-story building in cement with brick cladding are still preserved to about 18 m in height.[2] There are arched openings towards the outside framed by pillars of yellow and red bricks. Inside the building has a central courtyard with pillars and three floors with cross vaults which have now disappeared. It was lavishly decorated with 19 types of marble. The covered side corridors retain traces of marble cladding on the walls.[3]
↑Robert Van de Noort, David Whitehouse, "Le Mura di Santo Stefano, Anguillara, revisited", Papers of the Fourth Conference of Italian Archeology 4.2, Accordia Research Center 1992, pp.147-154
↑Thomas Ashby, The Roman countryside in the classical age, Milan 1982, p.174;
↑Lyttelton, Margaret, and Frank Sear. “A Roman Villa near Anguillara Sabazia.” Papers of the British School at Rome 45 (1977): 227–51. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40310864.