The Sardinian territory, as is well known, is home to several thousand monuments dating back to the so-called ‘Nuragic Age’, of varying size and articulation. Some are in a state of preservation that allows them to be appreciated in all their magnificence, others are usually referred to as ‘minor’, although it is improper and reductive to draw up a sort of classification between A and B series monuments.
Finally, there are an infinite number of them that, although in a more or less precarious state of preservation or even reduced to the bare minimum, nevertheless represent a powerful testimony to the building activity carried out by the people of the time.
To the latter category belong the three nuraghi that we present here: Antiogu or Su Fromigosu (photo by BWVM), Maxia (photo by Francesca Cossu) and Pirreu (photo by Marco Cocco), all in the territory of Sinnai, which is home to the better-known Sa Fraigada nuraghe, shown here in the photo by Maurizio Cossu.










