The town was crossed by a secondary branch of the Via Flaminia and by the Via Salaria Gallica, which connected it to Forum Sempronii (Fossombrone) and Ostra.
It was abandoned in the 6th century after the Gothic War, the population moving to nearby settlements.
It includes the remains of the ancient town of Suasa, abandoned in the 6th century AD.
The site comprises an open-air museum of a Roman house (the Coiedii domus), of great interest because of its size and architectonic complexity.
Mythological, floral, and geometric scenes can be admired, but above all, a magnificent marble floor created with over fifteen different kinds of stone.