Names, dates, and symbols are written all over an area densely covered in flat calcareous rocks high in the Apennines, at over 6,500 feet above sea level. They were written by bands of rebels, robbers, and outlaws following the conquest of the southern Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, leading to a unified Italian kingdom. The widespread brigantaggio movement opposed the way Southern Italy was being integrated into the young nation, and demanded social and economic changes with tactics like Robin Hood-style robbery and guerrilla violence.
The briganti thrived in areas with plenty of places to hide, and the movement was particularly strong in the Maiella region of Abruzzo. There, the young Italian government built the Blockhaus military barracks a short distance away from where the inscriptions were found. The etchings were written by a briganti group known as the Banda della Maiella, who hid in these mountains and resisted the Italian government until the end of the 19th century.
SOURCE: https://www.atlasobscura.com
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