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Man Intent on Fixing Toilet Uncovers Centuries-Old Subterranean World Beneath His Basement

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An Italian man’s dream to open a modest restaurant became an archaeological obsession when he broke ground in order to repair a faulty toilet. The underground world filled with centuries of history he found beneath his building would dominate his life for more than a decade.

In 2000, Luciano Faggiano faced plumbing and sewage issues on the property he had purchased in order to start a trattoria, a casual eating establishment, in Lecce, Italy. Figuring it would be a quick fix, he opted to find and repair the trouble himself, with the help of his two older sons. Digging beneath the building, the family soon discovered a subterranean world, “tracing back before the birth of Jesus: a Messapian tomb, a Roman granary, a Franciscan chapel and even etchings from the Knights Templar. His trattoria instead became a museum, where relics still turn up today,” writes an article in The New York Times.

The ruins and chambers discovered due to the excavations of Luciano Faggiano.

Lecce, and Italy in general, is rich with history. Described as a layered cake of ancient civilizations and empires stacked one atop the other, the history of the area can be found just under its cobblestone and modern paved surfaces. Relics and artifacts are revealed frequently, whether from a farmer’s fields or under a city parking lot. Such discoveries are exciting additions to the shared collection of Italy’s past, but the historical finds also slow or cancel modern construction plans like subway systems or building improvements, causing headaches for city planners and builders.

A Roman amphitheater in Lecce, Italy.  These ruins are typical of the subterranean finds uncovered by Luciano Faggiano. 

Lecce itself is an historic city, located in the heel of Italy’s boot. The location was strategic for ancient trade. Mario de Marco, local historian and author told The New York Times, “The very first layers of Lecce date to the time of Homer, or at least according to legend.” The Greek, Roman, Ottoman and Norman invaders all coveted the area, and left traces of their presence behind.

Roman ruins are pervasive throughout, with notable sites including two amphitheaters, churches, and fortified strongholds built to defend the city.

Roman amphitheater of Augustan (early 1st c. CE) date with probable Hadrianic (117-138 CE) renovations, partially dug out of the bedrock and partially built up. 

Faggiano’s initial toilet pipe dig became a giant archaeological project. Experts were called in to monitor the situation, but all excavations were paid for and completed by Faggiano himself. After years of labor and cash drained into the work, his ambitions flagged.

“At one point, I couldn’t take it anymore,” he told the New York Times. “I bought cinder blocks and was going to cover it up and pretend it had never happened. I don’t wish it on anyone.” However, relying on the continued help of his grown sons and the rent money from boarders, the tunneling progressed.

The History Blog writes that more than 4,000 artifacts have been recovered in the lengthy excavations. The finds include: many tombs and ossuaries, including the tomb of a Roman infant; a deep pit where bodies were left to decompose before the bones were collected and interred; post holes cut for dwellings, ancient streets, grain silos, a 10-meter-deep well still fed by water; secret tunnels used by religious orders; frescoes, ancient vessels and pottery, jewelry, an altar, and thousands of other artifacts.

So expansive and significant are the chambers, tunnels and artifacts that an independent museum has been established on site to showcase the finds. The Museo Archeologico Faggiano can be seen through its website, and Google Maps hosts an immersive virtual tour.

Luciano Faggiano eventually did find and mend the sewage pipe which had caused the entire adventure, and still has plans to open his much-delayed trattoria—but at a new location. He has no interest in tending to the plumbing himself, however.

source



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    Total 8 comments
    • Syco247

      Cool! I want to find neat old stuff under my bathroom!

      • FAT AXL!!!

        So? Stick your arm into your toilet and start digging around until you find something.

    • eXChroma

      I would 100% have kept that place myself and never reveal it. Have a permanent hideout just for yourself. Do whatever you want there. The lands may have rules but the places they don’t know are the places you are free.

      • DJSmith911

        by your logic we should all buy burial plots, buy a coffin, put the coffin in the ground and climb into it whenever we want to feel “free”.

    • Huskerfan44

      Good one, supports placing (__)o(__)bama’s presidential library in the basement of an outhouse.

    • Cousin_Jack

      Same thing happens in the UK, difference is they’re centuries old mineshafts.

    • Air Quotes Shill Air Quotes

      What an idiot, spent over a year, unprofessionally stomping all over ancient history, destroying artifacts, and hauling parts away to the dump, while he smashed around in an important archaeological site, before someone finally called the cops on him for destroying history.

      He should have been sent to jail.

    • Jacko

      It’s a cave not a world.

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