Resurrecting Pompeii
A new exhibition brings the doomed residents of Pompeii and Herculaneum vividly to life
- By Doug Stewart
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2006, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
Pompeii’s patron deity was Venus, the Roman goddess of love and beauty. Small wonder that the city’s ruins were filled with erotic art, perfume bottles and extravagant gold jewelry, including earrings set with pearls, gold balls and uncut emeralds bunched like grapes. “I see they do not stop at attaching a single large pearl in each ear,” the Roman philosopher Seneca observed during the first century A.D. “Female folly had not crushed men enough unless two or three entire patrimonies hung from their ears.” The showiest pieces of jewelry in the exhibition are the catenae: gold chains up to six feet long that wrapped tightly around a woman’s waist, then crossed her chest and shoulders bandoleer-style.
Like the family of four found in the alley with a Cupid statuette and a good-luck charm, Pompeii’s victims often died carrying the objects they valued most. A woman fleeing through one of the city gates clutched a gold-and-silver statuette of fleet-footed Mercury, the god of safe passage. Across town at the city’s colonnaded outdoor gymnasium, where close to 100 people perished, one victim was found holding a small wooden box against his chest. Inside were scalpels, tweezers and other surgical tools. A doctor, he may have grabbed his medical kit to help the injured, expecting the worst would soon be over.
In a small room at an inn on the southern outskirts of Pompeii, a woman of about 30 died wearing two heavy gold armbands, a ring and a gold chain. In a handbag were more bracelets and rings, another gold chain, a necklace and a long catena of thick, braided gold. Roman jewelry was rarely inscribed, but inside one of her armbands, shaped like a coiled snake, are the words: DOM(I)NUS ANCILLAE SUAE, “From the master to his slave-girl.”
“Since its excavation in the 18th century, Pompeii has acquired the reputation of being a permissive, sybaritic place,” says University of Maryland classics professor Judith Hallett. “Throughout the ancient Greco-Roman world, slaves had to cater to the whims of the elite. I think all slaves, male and female, were on duty as potential sex partners for their male masters. If you were a slave, you could not say no.”
Evidence of Pompeii’s class system abounds. While many victims of the eruption died carrying hoards of coins and jewelry, many more died empty-handed. During the night of the 24th, the worsening rain of ash and stones blocked doors and windows on the ground floor and poured in through atrium skylights at the House of the Menander, one of the city’s grandest homes. In the darkness, a group of ten people with a single lantern, likely slaves, frantically tried to climb from the pumice-filled entrance hall to the second floor. In a nearby hall facing a courtyard, three more struggled to dig an escape route with a pickax and a hoe. All died. Aside from their tools, they left behind only a coin or two, some bronze jewelry and a few glass beads.
In contrast, the master of the house, Quintus Poppeus, a wealthy in-law of Emperor Nero who wasn’t home at the time, left behind plenty of loot. Hidden in an underground passage, archaeologists discovered two wooden treasure chests. In them were jewels, more than 50 pounds of carefully wrapped silverware, and gold and silver coins. His artwork, at least, Quintus left in plain sight. Under a colonnade was a marble statue of Apollo stroking a griffin as it playfully jumped up against his leg. The statue is in such superb condition that it might have been carved last week.
By encasing objects almost as tightly as an insect trapped in amber, the fine-grained volcanic ash that smothered Pompeii proved a remarkable preservative. Where the public market used to be, archaeologists have dug up glass jars with fruit still in them. An oven in an excavated bakery was found to contain 81 carbonized loaves of bread. A surprising amount of graffiti was also preserved. Blank, mostly windowless Pompeiian houses, for instance, presented seemingly irresistible canvases for passersby to share their thoughts. Some of the messages sound familiar, only the names have changed: Auge Amat Allotenum (Auge Loves Allotenus) C Pumidius Dipilus Heic Fuit (Gaius Pumidius Dipilus Was Here). A half-dozen walls around town offer comments on the relative merits of blondes and brunettes.
Several inscriptions salute local gladiators. The city’s 22,000-seat amphitheater was one of the first built specifically for blood sport. Gladiators came mostly from the region’s underclass—many were slaves, criminals or political prisoners—but charismatic victors could rise to celebrity status. Celadus the Thracian was “the ladies’ choice,” according to one inscription.
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Comments (20)
This helped me understand more about Pompeii
Posted by Jesse Ramos on March 13,2013 | 06:10 PM
wow i am so glad i wasn't alive when this happened all of them innocent children who died :(
Posted by history geek on November 17,2012 | 04:05 AM
this is so stupid and it is to informational
Posted by cory on October 3,2012 | 11:58 AM
this doesnt tell us anything because it doen't have all of the information in it such as how the wood was preservative with all of the high temperaturesand it has more it the stinkin movie!!!! GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT please! :)
Posted by mr jimmy pants on April 23,2012 | 07:42 PM
What an amazing city! I recently visited Pompeii and it was truly inspirational!
Posted by Amber Suarez on December 2,2011 | 09:09 PM
I always wondered how everyone gets this information! its so amazing!!!!! How do they now that pompeii is accually called pompeii and the writeings on the walls how do they translate this! I really wanna now! history is pretty amazing if you think about it in a way!
Posted by Amber on October 9,2011 | 06:09 PM
Its really amazing about pompeii!!! =] truly amazing...
Posted by taylor on October 9,2011 | 06:02 PM
I want to know how the city of pompeii was accedently discovered.
Posted by Kristian Mann on April 8,2011 | 07:58 PM
the information you have presented here is excellent. The stories, the discoveries, the culture... I wish I had read this before actually being in Pompeii. My tour guide didn't do much for me. Excellent work.
Posted by francine on March 13,2011 | 12:03 AM
if only everyone lived!
Posted by mikaela on February 28,2011 | 12:17 PM
Thanks so much. You guys really helped me on my Renaissance Faire project. The information you have is way better than any of the information I found in books. I'm really excited about visiting the Smithsonian in D.C. in 8th grade. I hope I will be able to use this site for other projects not only my remaining 6th grade year but also in years to come. Thank you again.
Ella
Posted by Ella on January 26,2011 | 05:51 PM
i need to know about Giuseppie Fiorelli and how he worked out what the strange holes were.
Posted by emily on March 25,2010 | 02:05 AM
I would like to see more photos and less type, everyone knows the story ,what we really want are some pics to see the place.
Posted by cn on March 22,2010 | 09:04 AM
HI i am researching but i found nothing. Its cool anyway as kevin sayz
Posted by Tim Bob on January 29,2010 | 02:00 PM
i love latin!
Posted by mr gunn on March 13,2009 | 08:08 AM
How are researchers able to distinguish between houses collapsed by the AD 62 earthquake and those destroyed by the eruption? Has anyone postulated that some of the "victims" of the eruption could have been casualties of the earlier earthquake, still buried in collapsed structures?
Posted by Jennifer Bryan on March 4,2009 | 02:13 PM
After the Plinian stage of the eruption, the pyroclastic phase began. The core of Vesuvius exploded outwards and a combination of ash, lapilli, molten rock and lava flowed down the sides of the mountain towards the city of Herculaneum at approx. 120km per hour. This is known as a pyroclastic surge, which sounds a lot like the mud slide you are referring to. There were 6 pyroclastic surges in total, all of which reached Herculaneum, thus covering the city in approx. 24m of ash and lapilli etc.
Posted by erin on November 18,2008 | 06:06 PM
I had learned that Herculeum was covered by a mud slide. That there was a great rain storm and the ashes on the sides of the volcano flowed into the city and covered it. Not true??
Posted by Frank De Maio, M.D. on October 19,2008 | 12:13 PM
The holes are all that is left in the petrified ash of the bodies that used to lie there. Over the millennia the bodies decomposed, leaving the space they occupied. When plaster is poured into one of these spaces and left to harden, the shape that emerges is that of the poor individual who died there. See the photograph at the top of the page of just such a plaster child.
Posted by Timothy Stroud on June 20,2008 | 04:53 AM
sad and intruiging at the same time but nothing about what the strange holes were that fiorelli found! xoxoxoxoxoxox
Posted by . on May 1,2008 | 03:48 AM