The Weekend Witness

Pompeii fresco revealed

Excavation reveals mythical figures

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A black-walled banqueting hall decorated with scenes from Greek mythology, where ancient Romans feasted by candleligh­t, has been unearthed in Pompeii, the archaeolog­ical park said on Thursday.

The exceptiona­lly well-preserved frescoes show the god Apollo attempting to seduce Trojan priestess Cassandra, and Helen of Troy meeting Paris, an encounter which would lead to war.

“The mythical couples were starting points for talking about the past and life,” Pompeii director Gabriel Zuchtreige­l said in a statement.

“The walls were black to prevent the smoke from the lamps on the walls from being seen,” he said.

“Here they gathered to feast after sunset, the flickering light of the lamps made the images seem to move, especially after a few glasses of good Campania wine,” said Zuchtreige­l, referring to the southern Italian region.

Pompeii was devastated when nearby Mount Vesuvius erupted almost 2 000 years ago in 79 AD.

The ash and rock helped preserve many buildings almost in their original state, as well as forming eery shapes around the curled-up corpses of victims of the disaster, thought to number around 3 000.

The hall, with its nearly intact white mosaic floor, was discovered during an excavation which has also uncovered a bakery, a laundry and houses with sumptuous frescoed living rooms.

TREASURE CHEST

“Pompeii is truly a treasure chest that never ceases to surprise us and arouse amazement because, every time we dig, we find something beautiful and significan­t,” culture minister Gennaro Sanguilian­o said.

The spacious hall shows “the high standard of living” in the domus, where building works had been under way when the volcano erupted, according to the statement.

It said the fresco themes appear to be heroism and destiny, with the relationsh­ip between individual­s and fate embodied by Cassandra, who is cursed by Apollo for rejecting him, so that she can forsee the future but is believed by no one.

“The frequent presence of mythologic­al figures on frescoes in the reception rooms of Roman houses had precisely the social function of entertaini­ng guests and guests, providing subjects for conversati­on and reflection on the meaning of existence,” the park statement said.

The banqueting hall—which measures some 15 metres by six metres — opens into a courtyard which appears to be an open-air service hallway, with a long staircase leading to the first floor.

A vast pile of constructi­on materials was found set aside under the arches of the staircase.

“Someone had drawn in charcoal, on the rough plaster of the arches of the great staircase, two pairs of gladiators and what appears to be an enormous stylised phallus,” the statement said.

Pompeii is now a Unesco World Heritage Site and the second most visited tourist site in Italy, after the Colosseum in Rome. Archaeolog­ists estimate that 15% to 20% of Pompeii’s population died in the eruption, mostly from thermal shock as a giant cloud of gases and ash covered the city. — AFP.

 ?? PHOTO BY HANDOUT / PARCO ARCHEOLOGI­CO DI POMPEI PRESS OFFICE / AFP ?? Frescoes depicting mythologic­al characters Helen of Troy and Paris, according to a Greek inscriptio­n placed between the two figures with his other name ‘Alexandros’, in a banqueting room with black walls which are part of the ongoing excavation­s of Pompeii, near Naples, Italy.
PHOTO BY HANDOUT / PARCO ARCHEOLOGI­CO DI POMPEI PRESS OFFICE / AFP Frescoes depicting mythologic­al characters Helen of Troy and Paris, according to a Greek inscriptio­n placed between the two figures with his other name ‘Alexandros’, in a banqueting room with black walls which are part of the ongoing excavation­s of Pompeii, near Naples, Italy.

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