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Pompeii
Pompeii is a ruined Roman city near modern Naples in the Italian region of Campania.
It was destroyed during a catastrophic eruption of the volcano Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. The volcano buried the
city under many feet of ash and it was lost for 1,600 years before its accidental rediscovery. Since then, its
excavation has provided an extraordinarily detailed insight into the life of a city at the height of the Roman
Empire. Today, it is one of Italy's leading tourist attractions and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The city of Pompeii, along with Herculaneum and many smaller places around the
Bay of Naples, were Roman municipalities destroyed during an eruption of the volcano Mount Vesuvius in 79. The
eruption was described by Pliny the Younger (see below), whose uncle Pliny the Elder died after travelling across
the bay with a flotilla of naval vessels to save some of those trapped in the seaside towns.
Early History
The town was founded in the 7th century BC by the Osci, a people of central Italy, on a hill near the mouth of
the Sarno River, already in use as a safe port by Greek and Phoenician sailors. When Etruscans threatened an attack,
Pompeii allied with the Greeks, who then dominated the Gulf of Naples. In the 5th century BC, the Samnites conquered
it (and all the other towns of Campania); the new rulers imposed their architecture and enlarged the town. It has
been supposed that during the Samnites' domination, Rome conquered Pompeii for a while, but these theories have
not been verified.
Pompeii took part in the war that the towns of Campania initiated against Rome, but in 89 BC it was besieged by
Sulla. Although the troops of the Social League, headed by Lucius Cluentius, helped in resisting the Romans, in
80 BC Pompeii was forced to surrender after the conquest of Nola. It became a Roman colony with the name of Colonia
Cornelia Veneria Pompeianorum. The town became an important passage for goods that arrived by sea and had to be
sent toward Rome or Southern Italy along the nearby Appian Way.
In 62, a violent earthquake severely damaged Pompeii and many other towns of Campania. In the time between 62 and
79 (the eruption), it was rebuilt, perhaps richer than before in houses and artworks.
Vesuvius buries the city
The eruption of the Vesuvius in Discovery Channel's Pompeii.The inhabitants of Pompeii, as those of the area today,
had long been used to minor tremors and wisps of gas from Mt. Vesuvius, and in 65 AD there had been a series of
earthquakes serious enough to cause structural damage to houses in town; and in early August of 79 AD, all the
town's wells dried up; but the warnings were not sharp enough, and the Roman world was stunned when on August 23
a catastrophic volcanic eruption of the volcano buried the city and obscured the sun on a mild afternoon. Coincidentally,
the date was that of the Vulcanalia, the festival of the Roman god of fire.
The only reliable eyewitness account of the event was recorded by Pliny the Younger in a letter to the historian
Tacitus. Pliny saw a strange phenomenon occurring over Mt. Vesuvius: a large dark cloud shaped rather like a pine
tree emanating from the mouth of the mountain. After some time the cloud rushed down the flanks of the mountain
and covered everything around it, including the surrounding sea.
The "cloud" that Pliny the Younger wrote about is known today as a pyroclastic flow, which is a cloud
of superheated gas, ash, and rock that erupts from a volcano. Pliny stated that several earth tremors were felt
at the time of the eruption and were followed by a very violent shaking of the ground. He also noted that ash was
falling in very thick sheets and the village he was in had to be evacuated. Also, the sea was sucked away and forced
back by an "earthquake", a phenomenon which modern geologists call a tsunami.
His description then turned to the fact that the sun was blocked out by the eruption and the daylight hours were
left in darkness. His uncle Pliny the Elder had already taken several ships to investigate the phenomenon. On the
other shore, Pliny the Elder apparently died from carbon dioxide asphyxiation after lying on the ground.
Lost for 16 centuries
Europa and the BullThick layers of ash covered two towns located at the base of the mountain, and eventually their
names and locations were forgotten. Then Herculaneum was rediscovered in 1738, and Pompeii in 1748. These towns
have since been excavated to reveal many intact buildings and wall paintings. The towns were actually found in
1599 by an architect named Fontana, who was digging a new course for the river Sarno, but it took more than 150
years before a serious campaign was started to unearth them. Giuseppe Fiorelli took charge of the excavations in
1860. It was he who devised the technique of injecting plaster into the spaces left by the decomposed bodies to
perfectly recreate the forms of Vesuvius's victims. Until that time, Pompeii and Herculaneum were assumed to be
lost forever.
Some have theorized, without proof, that Fontana initially found some of the famous erotic frescoes and, due to
the strict modesty prevalent during his time, reburied them in an attempt at archaeological censorship. This view
is bolstered by reports of later excavators who felt that sites they were working on had already been visited and
re-buried. A detailed discussion of the erotic art of Pompeii, with pictures, can be found in a separate article.
The Forum, the baths, many houses, and some villas remained surprisingly well preserved. A hotel (of 1,000 square
meters) was found a short distance from the town; it is now nicknamed the "Grand Hotel Murecine".
Pompeii is, in fact, the only ancient town of which the whole topographic structure is known precisely as it was,
with no later modifications or additions. It was not distributed on a regular plan as we are used to seeing in
Roman towns, due to the difficult terrain. But its streets are straight and laid out in a grid, in the purest Roman
tradition; they are laid with polygonal stones, and have houses and shops on both sides of the street. It followed
its decumanus and its cardus.
Earthquake damage and volcanic damage
An important current field of research concerns structures that were being restored at the time of the eruption
(presumably damaged during the earthquake of 62). Some of the older, damaged, paintings could have been covered
with newer ones, and modern instruments are being used to catch a glimpse of the long hidden frescoes. The probable
reason why these structures were still being repaired 10 years after the earthquake was the increasing frequency
of smaller quakes that led up to the eruption.
During early excavations of the site, occasional voids in the ash layer were found that contained human remains.
Someone had the idea of filling the empty spaces with plaster. What resulted were highly accurate and eerie forms
of the doomed Pompeiani who failed to escape, in their last moment of life.
Unique snapshot
Nevertheless, the town offers a snapshot of Roman life in the 1st century. This moment in time shows that Pompeii
was a lively place before the eruption, and evidence abounds of literally the smallest details of everyday life.
For example, on the floor of one of the houses (Sirico's), a famous inscription Salve, lucru (Welcome, money),
perhaps humorously intended, shows us a trading company owned by two partners, Sirico and Nummianus (but this could
be a nickname, since nummus means coin, money). In other houses, details abound concerning professions and categories,
such as for the "laundry" workers (Fullones). Wine jars have been found bearing what is apparently the
world's earliest known marketing pun, Vesuvinum. Graffiti carved on the walls shows us real street Latin.
Pompeii's well-preserved frescoes offer an unparalleled insight into the culture of an ancient city.At the time
of the eruption, the town could have had some 20,000 inhabitants, and was located in an area in which Romans had
their vacation villas. Many services were found: the Macellum (great food market), the Pistrinum (mill), the Thermopolia
(sort of bar that served cold and hot beverages), the cauporioe (small restaurants), and an amphitheater.
In 2002 another important discovery at the mouth of Sarno river revealed that the port also was populated and that
people lived in palafittes, within a system of channels that suggested a likeness to Venice to some scientists.
These studies are just beginning to produce results.
Pompeii in popular entertainment
Pompeii served as the background for the historic novel The Last Days of Pompeii and the British television series
Up Pompeii, and Robert Harris' recent novel, Pompeii, a fictional account focused on aquarius (engineer) Marcus
Attilius who must repair a fault in the largest aqueduct in the world, the Aqua Augusta, which has failed somewhere
around Mount Vesuvius.
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