The Phnom Penh Post

Pompeii’s grand thermal baths unveiled, with hidden tragedy

- Ella Ide

MAGNIFICIE­NT thermal baths designed to be the jewel of Pompeii but destroyed by a volcanic eruption before they could be completed opened to visitors for the first time on Monday after a painstakin­g excavation.

Marble pillars and blocks lie where they were abandoned when the city was submerged by a pyroclasti­c flow from Mount Vesuvius in the 79 AD disaster.

But excavators also found a victim of the disaster, the skeleton of a child who had sought shelter there in vain.

The architects “were inspired by Emperor Nero’s thermal baths in Rome. The rooms here were to be bigger and lighter, with marble pools”, the archaeolog­ical site’s director Massimo Osanna said.

The Central Baths lie in an area restored under the Great Pompeii Project, launched in 2012 to save the historical site after the collapse of the 2,000-year-old House of the Gladiators, which sparked outrage worldwide.

“It was an emotionall­y charged dig,” said Alberta Martellone, 43, the archaeolog­ist who led a team of an anthropolo­gist, geologist and vulcanolog­ist in studying the skeleton of the child, who died aged between eight and 10.

“He or she was looking for shelter, and found death instead”, she said.

‘Life interrupte­d’

The excavation “was also moving from an architectu­ral point of view, because it is unusual to find a building so large, with such ample rooms, in this densely built up city. It transmits a sense of grandiosit­y”, she said.

The constructi­on site with its small skeleton “is a sign of life interrupte­d, on more than one level”, she said.

The city’s original public bathhouses were smaller, darker and often overcrowde­d – the new complex would have provided a more luxurious setting for all those who could afford it – most citizens, but not slaves.

Recent digs at Pompeii have offered up several impressive finds, including an inscriptio­n uncovered last year that proves the city near Naples was destroyed after October 17, 79 AD, and not on August 24 as thought.

Archaeolog­ists in October discovered a v iv id fresco depicting an armour-clad gladiator standing v ictorious with his wounded opponent gushing blood, painted in a tavern believed to have housed the fighters as well as prostitute­s.

Along with the baths, visitors could from Monday visit a small domus sporting a racy fresco depicting the Roman god Jupiter, disguised as a swan, impregnati­ng the Greek mythologic­al figure of Queen Leda.

‘Biggest challenge’

Across the cobbled Via del Vesuvio, the striking House of the Golden Cupids reopened after work on its mosaic floors.

While treasure hunters reg ularly pillaged Pompeii down the centuries look ing for precious jewels or artifacts, whole areas have yet to be explored by modern-day archaeolog­ists.

Each discovery helps historians understand not only what life was like in the ancient city, but also what happened in the dramatic final hours, as the skies turned to fire and ash, Osanna said.

The Grand Pompeii Project, which was partly funded by the EU, winds up at the end of this year, but the Italian government has earmarked € 32 million for the digs to continue.

Violent weather events caused by climate change “are our biggest challenge,” said Osanna, whose new book Pompeii – Time Regained describes t he race to preser ve t he v ulnerable Unesco world heritage site.

“We have 50 people – restorers, archaeolog­ists, architects, engineers – on site permanentl­y, who carry out inspection­s and intervene where necessary, and that number will rise to 70 next year,” he added.

The ruined city in southern Italy is the second most visited tourist site in the country, after the Colosseum in Rome, with just under four million visitors in 2019.

 ?? FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP ?? Pompeii’s thermal baths opened to visitors for the first time on Monday after a painstakin­g excavation.
FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP Pompeii’s thermal baths opened to visitors for the first time on Monday after a painstakin­g excavation.

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