Imperial Valley Press

Subway digging uncovers ‘Pompeii-like scene’ in Rome

- B6

ROME (AP) — Digging for Rome’s new subway has unearthed the charred ruins of an early 3rd-century building and the 1,800-year-old skeleton of a crouching dog that apparently perished in the same blaze that collapsed the structure.

Archaeolog­ists on Monday said they made the discovery on May 23 while examining a 33-foot-deep hole bored near the ancient Aurelian Walls as part of constructi­on work for the Metro C line.

“A Pompeii-like scene” was how the Culture Ministry described the findings that evoked comparison­s to the inhabitant­s trapped by the 79 A.D. Vesuvius volcanic explosion and preserved for centuries in the ruins of Pompeii.

“The fire that stopped life in this environmen­t allows us to image life in a precise moment,” said Francesco Prosperett­i, in charge of Rome’s archaeolog­ical ruins and excavation­s.

Experts say the Rome ruins might be from an aristocrat’s home at the foot of the nearby Celian Hill or from a nearby military barracks, which itself had been explored in other excavation­s for the subway line.

One of the reasons Rome has such a limited subway system for a metropolis is that constructi­on of an undergroun­d transport line inevitably reveals layers of what had been buried slices of life from one of the ancient world’s most important capitals.

In this dig, items found included a leg of a stool or table; another one, more massive, possibly from a wooden trunk; a small table; a larger table; a wooden railing or handrail; frescoed wall fragments — with a reddish hue; and black-andwhite mosaic floor tiles on the upper story of the collapsed building.

They offer clues to how Romans then lived, as well as how they constructe­d their buildings, in what’s called the mid-Imperial period of the former Roman Empire.

The archaeolog­ists said the fire hardened the artifacts, giving them a quality of preservati­on that is rarely found.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States