Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Ceremonial chariot found near Pompeii

- By Colleen Barry

>> Officials at the Pompeii archaeolog­ical site in Italy announced Saturday the discovery of an intact ceremonial chariot, one of several important discoverie­s made in the same area outside the park near Naples following an investigat­ion into an illegal dig.

The chariot, with its iron elements, bronze decoration­s and mineralize­d wooden remains, was found in the ruins of a settlement north of Pompeii, beyond the walls of the ancient city, parked in the portico of a stable where the remains of three horses previously were discovered.

The Archaeolog­ical Park of Pompeii called the chariot “an exceptiona­l discovery” and said “it represents a unique find — which has no parallel in Italy thus far — in an excellent state of preservati­on.”

The eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD destroyed Pompeii. The chariot was spared when the walls and roof of the structure it was in collapsed, and also survived looting by modern-day antiquitie­s thieves, who had dug tunnels through to the site, grazing but not damaging the four-wheeled cart, according to park officials.

The chariot was found on the grounds of what is one of the most significan­t ancient villas in the area around Vesuvius, with a panoramic view of the Mediterran­ean Sea. on the outskirts of the ancient Roman city.

Archaeolog­ists last year found in the same area on the outskirts of Pompeii, Civita Giulian, the skeletal remains of what are believed to have been a wealthy man and his male slave, attempting to escape death.

The chariot’s first iron element emerged on Jan. 7 from the blanket of volcanic material filling the twostory portico. Archaeolog­ists believe the cart was used for festivitie­s and parades, perhaps also to carry brides to their new homes.

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