
Divinities that are mostly unknown to this day, since Carthaginian and Roman conquests in the late 1st millennium BC marked the end of the Nuragic golden age. Building great complex architectural constructions, whereof the iconic Nuraghi are best known, the Nuraghians could hold off enemy attackers, build up their cultural society and pay tributes the mysterious Nuragic divinities. From the island of Sardinia, the Nuragic Tribes spread their influence, primarily throughout the mediterranean, but also as far north as Scandinavia. Glory to you, most powerful Sardus, Hero-God of The Nuraghians. writes that Sardus was the son of Makeris (identificable with Melqart, the Libyan Hercules) and that the island of Sardinia changed is name from Ichnusa to Sardinia in honor of Sardus. Later Pausanias confirms the story of Sallust and in the second century B.C. According to Sallust, Sardus son of Hercules, left Libya along with a great multitude of men and occupied the island Sardinia, the island later called by his name. He appears in the writings of Sallust and Pausanias. Sardus, also known as Sid Addir or Sardus Pater, was an ancient mythological hero of the Nuragic mythology. Markets included civilizations living in regions with poor metal resources, such as the Mycenaean civilization, Cyprus and Crete, as well as the Iberian peninsula, a fact that can explain the cultural similarities between them and the Nuraghe civilization and the presence in Nuragic sites of late Bronze Age Mycenaean, west and central Cretan and Cypriote ceramics, as well as locally made replicas, concentrated in half a dozen findspots that seem to have functioned as gateway-communities. Soon Sardinia, a land rich in mines, notably copper and lead, saw the construction of numerous furnaces for the production of alloys which were traded across the Mediterranean basin and nuragic people became skilled metal workers they were among the main metal producers in Europe and with bronze they produced a wide variety of objects and new weapons as swords, daggers, axes, and after drills, pins, rings, bracelets, typical bronze statuettes, and the votive bronze boats show a close relationship with the sea. Since Sardinia is a large island, it was able to accommodate and sustain for at least 5000 years, sometimes in close contact with the surrounding world and at others in conditions of relative isolation, the development of prehistoric neolithic people dedicated to agriculture and farming and those of the Copper Age and early Bronze Age (about 7000-1600 BC).

It is based on the experiences of immediately preceding pre-Nuragic cultures. The Nuragic civilisation is autochthonous, namely an indigenous civilisation formed in Sardinia by populations rooted on the island for thousands of years.

The Nuraghians were a civilisation of Sardinia, lasting from the Bronze Age (18th century BC) to the 2nd century AD and is undoubtedly the most important autonomous cultural expression about ancient Sardinia. 5.1.4 Foreign interests in our Nuraghe structures.5.1.1 Construct the Giants of Mont'e Prama.
