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Pompeii Excursions
One
quick glance at the lay-out of the city and a fundamental fact immediately
catches one's eye: Pompeii, unlike Herculaneum and ancient Naples, is not the
fruit of an organic design of city planners. In the regular town design two
atypical nuclei stand out: one, roughly quadrilateral, around the "civil forum"
and the other around the tiny "triangular forum" next to the theatres district.
To those nuclei is linked the rest of the city which by contrast looks "new":
all this enclosed within solid city walls.
This observation reveals the secret of the origins and development of Pompeii:
its port on the mouth of the river Sarno is evidence of its Mediterranean
vocation - from the earliest history - with respect to its vast hinterland which
in time came to include Acerra, Nola, Nuceria, as the ancient historian Strabo
attests.
On a bed of prehistoric lava, Pompeii is founded in the second half of the VIIth
century B.C. with an organization effort that presupposes objectives of lookout
and defence connected to the nature of the relations between the Greeks and the
natives.
The natives, peaceful when first colonized, later matured notions of armed
action when the Chalcidenses, who held defensive posts along the sea-coast,
threatened to cut off for ever the peoples of Campania from access to the sea.
Despite the documented existence of a Doric temple dating from the second half
of the VIth century B.C. on the terrace of the triangular forum, and other
indications that were held valid until only a few years ago, Pompeii was not a
Greek city, even though it had been influenced by Greek culture ever since the
most archaic epoch. In the light of the results obtained from the stratigraphic
researches carried out in these last years, it appears that Pompeii, at the time
of its foundation and its first development, was much more conditioned,
politically, by the Etruscans than by the Greeks.
There is also evidence that it was connected to an "Etruscan territory" centred
on Capua (Santa Maria Capua Vetere), which comprised large portions of inland
Campania and, through the Sarno valley, the Sorrento peninsula. Disconcerting
evidence of this has been found at Vico Equense.
Pompeii's commercial vocation upsets completely the former architectural and
decorative order, transforms the habits of its inhabitants, generates self-made
entrepreneurs and exploiters.
A "vertical section" of the city in the last decades of its life before the 79
A.D. eruption of Vesuvius, would offer a picture - in contrast with the calm of
former times - of roads, inns, taverns bustling with people, brothels in full
activity, stall keepers in the forum, the amphiteatre cram-full of people,
slaves of an irrational passion for sport, always ready for a brawl, walls
covered with election slogans in favour of this or that candidate, graffiti with
names, quips, love messages everywhere.
House building in the meanwhile was capriciously spreading beyond the walls, it
consolidated westwards in dismal phalansteries. Painting lost its capacity of
perspective. The former articulation which can be seen in the vast cycles of
paintings of the "Villa of the Mysteries" (Villa dei Misteri), is often reduced
to nothing but commonplace and poor quality decoration.
In the last few years
every possible effort has been concentrated on restoration but excavations have
also been going on the city walls, bringing to light the walls from "Porta di
Sarno" to "Porta di Nola" and beyond towards "Porta Vesuvius".
Stratigraphic research work has also been given a substantial boost.
The four-storey building that incorporates the walls, north of "Porta Marina",
has been excavated while the diggings at the "House of Julius Polybius" (Casa di
Giulio Polibio) have brought to light new and sensational discoveries.
The zones that still have to be excavated in the north-eastern area may hold
some more unexpected surprises in store but at this point we can say that the "picture"
of life in Pompeii, thanks also to stratigraphic research, has already been
quite clearly defined.
The eruption
The eruption of the Vesuvius, which
raged from the afternoon of August 24th through to the 26th, were recorded,
albeit a few years later, by Gaius Plinius Secundus, who in 79 AD was seventeen
years old and staying with his uncle, an admiral in the imperial fleet and a
keen naturalist. He was persuaded to narrate the events by Tacitus in two
letters when the latter was acquiring material for the second part of his "Historiae".
Those last days of August had been preceded by earth tremors, a common enough
phenomenon in Campania that aroused no particular apprehension. But early in the
afternoon of the 24th an enormous cloud in the shape of a pine tree appeared and
it changed colour continuously.
The admiral was studying the cloud, not knowing its cause, when a call for help
arrived from Rectina, the wife of Tascio, who lived at the foot of Vesuvius. She
found herself hemmed in by the eruption, with only the sea offering a possible
route to safety. The admiral ordered the entire fleet to put to sea, intending
to take off as many as possible of the numerous inhabitants along that part of
the coast.
During the crossing the ships were covered in the ash pouring out of the volcano,
which as they drew nearer the coast became hotter and denser, containing flaming
pumicite and lapilli. The force of the eruption was such that the ships could
not land and had to sail on the port of Stabiae, four miles to the south of
Pompeii.
The admiral went ashore and had dinner as guest of Pomponiano, continuing to
scrutinising the spectacle that, with nightfall, had become truly awesome.
There was no let up in the shower of ash, which built up in drifts in the
central courtyard of the house, forcing the diners to leave the dining room
before they were trapped inside. What is more, the tremors went on unabated,
shaking the buildings to their foundations, and everybody chose to stay out in
the open, covering their heads with cushions to protect themselves from the
storm of scorching particles, rather than risk being buried under falling
masonry.
At dawn on August 25th the light of the sun was unable to penetrate the thick
veil of soot hanging over the never-ending eruption, while the condition of wind
and sea continued to make escape impossible. The admiral was overcome by the
choking ashes mixed with sulphurous exhalations and he died along with many
other inhabitants of Pompeii. The contorted corpses of some of them have been
restored to us in plaster casts, bringing home the excruciating suffering of a
death by suffocation from fumes.
During the years the city passed into total oblivion, such that even its name
was forgotten. Even in the first years of excavations, which began in 1748, no
one was quite sure whether the site was Stabiae or Pompeii, until, as
Winckelmann recorded, an inscription came to light which proclaimed
unequivocally the name of the Pompeiian colony.
Since then more than two centuries have gone by, and millions of visitors have
come to experience one of the most significant legacies of the ancient world,
carrying away with them sensations and reflections which may indeed be of use in
charting their future lives
The Visit
Porta Marina. The name
is modern and indicates that the roads passing through this gate led down to the
sea. The gate originally had two arches (one for pedestrian only) made into one
barrel vault in opus cementitium (a compound of mortar and stones)
The Antiquarium is a museum which
assembles the evidences of the life and the civilisation of Pompeii including
the famous casts of the corpses of some inhabitants and animals died during the
eruption. We can found other
important founds to the Archaelogical National Museum in Naples.
The Forum centre of the city, a large rectangular square rich of columns and bases of innumerable statues.
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