A series of sites, including hilltop settlements, of Rivoli, near Verona in northeast Italy, which have provided the name for a version of the northern Italian Neolithic Square-Mouthed Pottery culture. As well as the characteristic pottery, the sites have produced pintaderas, and a fragment of copper - early evidence of metal working in the area. There is also a medieval castle begun by Victor Amadeus II, king of Sicily and Sardinia, in 1712 on the site of an older structure.