Country trails
The Sentiers de Pays take you to the heart of the Alta Rocca to discover unspoilt landscapes, forgotten hamlets and spectacular viewpoints. These signposted walking routes offer you an authentic immersion in the forests, mountains and rural heritage. Explore the soul of the region on foot, step by step.
Cucuruzzu and Capula














The tour is well laid out and takes you around the two archaeological sites of Cucuruzzu and Capula, one after the other (about an hour's walk and two hours for a full visit).
The Casteddu de Cucuruzzu is one of the most important Bronze Age (2nd to 1st millennium) monumental sites in the Alta Rocca region. Continuing on through the undergrowth, you come to the medieval site of Casteddu de Capula: this site allows visitors to identify the various island cultures that flourished on the same site. Occupied since the Bronze Age, it was later at the heart of feudalism. .
The tour is led by audio-guides, or by a guide reserved for groups. It is advisable to combine this visit with one to the Levie archaeological museum, where you can see many of the objects found on site.
Practical info
- parking in the dedicated car park
- visit from March to September, chargeable for adults
- contacts : 04 95 78 48 21
Beaconing
Wooden signs

IGN map

Aerial photos / IGN

Map of slopes (IGN map)

Map 1950 / IGN

Staff map (1820-1866)

Open Street Map
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Start of the tour
Follow the direction of the tour and start by going through the wooden gate.

Archaeological sites of Cucuruzzu and Capula
Passing through a Mediterranean forest in the heart of a preserved environment, you'll discover the Casteddu de Cucuruzzu, one of the island's twenty or so known casteddi, located mainly in southern Corsica.
It was in 1959 that the archaeologist Roger Grosjean, who made the Filitosa (Sollacaro) and Cauria (Sartène) sites famous, mentioned the Cucuruzzu site.
In 1964, the study was taken over by François de Lanfranchi, who continued and extended his research into the 1990s.
Built by Bronze Age man, it was established within a granite chaos dominating the northern slopes of the Livia plateau. Below the casteddu to the north-east, several terraces and shelters have been occupied; this is a village surrounded by a protective wall (not accessible).
The main monument is the Torra (tower: probably used for storing and processing foodstuffs), which still has part of its roof. The remains recovered during the excavations are on display at the Alta Rocca County Museum.
Continuing on through the undergrowth, you come to the medieval site of casteddu de Capula: this site allows visitors to identify the various island cultures that flourished in the same place. Occupied since the Bronze Age, it was later at the heart of feudalism. .

Casteddu de Cucuruzzu
The casteddu of Cucuruzzu acts as a fortress, protecting a village area that occupied the rest of the rocky spur. The only entrance is via a chicane-shaped corridor formed between two granite balls, making it easy to defend. Inside, there are loggias used for craft activities, diverticula for storing foodstuffs, and bowls and cupules used for grinding cereals, as shown by the remains found during the excavations and on display at the Levie museum.
The features of the western enclosure can be used as sentry boxes, with narrow openings comparable to loopholes. As in the other casteddi of this type, the ensemble is dominated by a large circular structure, the torra. Here, it is 4 to 5 m high and probably had an additional storey. Opening onto the peaks of Bavella, it features a corridor flanked by recesses, leading to a main room with an adjoining space. Roger Grosjean has interpreted the torra as a religious monument, but the similarity with the nuraghe in northern Sardinia suggests that it was intended as a place for storing and preserving the tribe's possessions and food resources. Its position at the highest point of the site also makes it a defensive or observation building offering a wide view of the surrounding area.

Capula website
The Capula fortification, located in the commune of Levie (Corse-du-Sud), stands at an altitude of 754 m atop a granodioritic hill rising out of the Pianu di Livia.
The upper part of the relief is occupied by a quadrangular tower, faced with small and medium-sized squared granite rubble, laid in horizontal beds and bound with a fairly fine lime mortar.
Below this building is a platform, surrounded by a cyclopean wall, where at least three adjoining buildings, probably corresponding to the lord's dwelling, have been erected. The architecture of these buildings was adapted to the various topographical constraints, as well as to the presence of granite balls that restricted living space.
The builders took advantage of the rock faces by cutting into them and creating the cavities needed, for example, to lay structural beams. Numerous emboitures in turn bear witness to the quarrying work that fed the building site.
These natural constraints obviously had an impact on the organisation and quality of the defensive system. The enclosure, which is mainly visible at one of the access ramps, is organised around a foundation footing made up of regular courses of parallelepipedic rubble, with no binder, set against the substrate. On the other slopes, there are only a few fragments of walls wedged between the rocky massifs.
Beyond this enclosure, small terraces can be seen between the granite balls, and the wall bases that can be seen through the vegetation suggest that a village settlement developed here. Finally, a few metres away from these terraces, a paved floor delimiting a rectangle is the site of the former medieval chapel.

Remains of the San Larenzu Chapel
The remains of the Romanesque chapel of San Larenzu can be seen right next to the "new" chapel, rebuilt much later using stones from the old building. The foundations of the chapel, traces of the apse and the presumed side entrance can still be seen.
The Alta Rocca is home to a number of Romanesque buildings, the best preserved of which is in the Commune of Carbini: the church of Saint Jean Baptiste and its majestic bell tower.

Prehistoric village
Meet the team of prehistoric craftsmen from the Chalcophore Association, in the heart of the prehistoric village at the Cucuruzzu and Capula sites.
You will be transported by the demonstration of ancient techniques, in the work of metallurgy (from wax to bronze), hard and soft rocks.