Pompeii
Pompeii
December 30, 2018
Yesterday in the late afternoon
we had a wonderful hour with an art historian, setting the place of Roman and
Greek art in a timeline, and placing the frozen art and architecture of 79 CE,
when Vesuvius erupted, in context for us.
Especially interesting was her description of the advances the Romans
made in the formulas for concrete, allowing for much more advanced construction
techniques. These advances explain some
of the changes in architecture even between the terrible earthquake which
devastated Pompeii in 62 CE and the destruction of the volcano.
Today was truly, a
remarkable day. The drive along the
Sorrento peninsula is breathtaking and somewhat scary, reminiscent of Highway
101 along the northern California coast.
It’s about 45 minutes back towards Naples to Pompeii, and our guide
lectured us on the history of Rome up to and including the year 79. Although the capitol of the state was in
Rome, the emperors spent most of their time on the Bay of Naples and especially
on Capri. Pompeii was an important city,
12 km from Mt. Vesuvius. The eruption was
unexpected and buried the city of 10,000 in less than a day in 20 feet of ash
and volcanic material. Although discovered
in the 16th century, meticulous excavation by skilled archeologists
didn’t begin until the mid-19th century and continue to this
day. A quarter of the enormous 170-acre site
is still to be explored.
The archeologists tapped
for hollow places as they excavated, which were left by the decomposed bodies
of the people who perished. They drilled
into the spaces and filled them with plaster, thus making casts of the
people. There’s a display of these casts
at the entrance to the site:
We began our four-hour
tour of the site at the coliseum, which held 18,000 people for bloody entertainments,
ranging from gladiator fights to animal contests:
The main street running
through the city is more than a mile long, with cross streets and houses on both:
We visited a number of
houses, some of which were very impressive.
The walls were beautifully decorated:
Many of the homes had
lovely atriums:
On one wall of this home was
a beautiful Venus/Aphrodite on a shell (Botticelli painted before Pompeii was
uncovered):
There was a Jewish population
here, integrated into the community.
Here’s a floor from a Jewish home with a “Flower of Life” in the center
of a Mogen David:
A Genesis portrayal from
the same home:
There are a number of wine
bars here; the upstairs apparently often was a brothel:
We came across this sacrificial
altar with a portrayal of an ox, the slaughterer, and others. The ox would be sacrificed to the gods:
In the center of the city
was the main square where, apparently, you went to see and be seen:
One house had an amazing
optical illusion mosaic floor:
There was a sophisticated
plumbing system bringing water to the houses via lead pipes:
We saw at least two
representations of Priapus:
In one home there were
phenomenal wall paintings, including this representation of the Punishment of
Ixion, a legend I had never heard of (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ixion
):
At this bakery you can see
the grinding implement and the ovens:
This small store, called
Mensa Ponderaria, served as the holder of reference standards for weights and measures. We were told that disputes over buying and
selling quantities were brought here by the equivalent of the local police:
There’s so much more, but
I can only post so much. Enough for
now. Tomorrow we’re off to Capri, and
then New Year’s Eve celebration in downtown Sorrento where, if I understand
correctly, they’ll set a straw donkey on fire.
Or some such.
Astonishing! I'd heard about how advanced the Romans were in technology, but I thought more large-scale. Your photos and descriptions show all kinds of things that were unknown elsewhere, I believe, even to the Greeks at the time (e.g., concrete!). And the wall decorations and tile-work are enormously sophisticated. Thanks for sharing with us what you've been seeing! (The technology of the archaeologists is amazing, too--those plaster casts. Good that a decision was made to leave some portion of the site untouched, since even more sophisticated techniques are bound to be developed, e.g., using various kinds of non-invasive imaging such as MRI.)
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