The Guardian (USA)

New discoverie­s at Pompeii come amid renaissanc­e at site

- Angela Giuffrida in Pompeii

Teresa Virtuoso is more than used to digging up tombs. But when the archaeolog­ist found the skeleton of a man who died while trying to escape the catastroph­ic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD79, she couldn’t help but think about his final moments.

“At that moment, it wasn’t only about doing a job,” Virtuoso, who is coordinati­ng excavation­s in part of Regio V, an entire quarter of the ancient Roman city of Pompeii that is yet to open to the public, told the Guardian.

“It made me think about the eruption

and how afraid this man must have been as he ran. He was also found in an area that suffered most of Vesuvius’s damage; it would have been impossible to survive.”

He was the first victim to be found during excavation­s of Regio V, a 21.8hectare (54-acre) site to the north of the archaeolog­ical park. The dig is the most intensive since the 1960s and symbolises a renaissanc­e at the site, which earlier this decade was overcrowde­d and in parts crumbling.

Surprises unearthed so far this year include the remains of a horse; a home with an elaborate shrine; well-preserved mosaics and a bedroom fresco depicting an erotic scene from the Greek myth Leda and the Swan.

The discovery of the remains in May was even more startling as it appeared that the man had survived the initial phase of the eruption when the city was blanketed in volcanic ash and pumice. His torso was protruding from a large stone block but rather than being decapitate­d by it (the first appearance of his image online

led some to call him history’s unluckiest man) archaeolog­ist believe he was killed by the lethal gases of the eruption’s later stages.

The victim, believed to have been in his mid-30s, was also found with a small sack of 20 silver and two bronze coins, the equivalent of about €500 (£450) in today’s money.

Virtuouso said he probably took refuge in his home in the hours after the initial eruption, leaving only when he thought it was over. Experts establishe­d that he suffered from a physical defect that caused him to limp, thus hampering his escape from the doomed city.

In late October, the skeletons of two women and three children were discovered huddled together in the room of a villa in Regio V. A week earlier, the same villa revealed a charcoal inscriptio­n that suggested Vesuvius erupted in October AD79, and not in August of that year as previously thought.

Many of the homes uncovered had been damaged by a massive earthquake in Pompeii in AD62, but people continued to live in them, according to Francesco Muscolino, the archaeolog­ist leading the excavation­s.

Various scrawls have also been found – including one believed to have been done by a child and spelling out “Sabinus”, the surname of an esteemed family of ancient Pompeii.

The city, which attracts almost 4 million visitors a year, has come a long way since 2013, when Unesco threatened to place it on its list of world heritage sites in peril unless Italian authoritie­s improved its preservati­on.

The threat followed several incidents over the previous years, including the collapse of the House of Gladiators and a number of walls. Other shortcomin­gs included a lack of qualified staff, structural damage and vandalism. Wide-ranging preservati­on works have taken place since then, while homes and alleys that were previously closed have been reopened, alleviatin­g pressure on tourist congestion in popular areas.

Authoritie­s have also discussed a new evacuation plan in case Mount Vesuvius erupts again.

For Massimo Osanna, the park’s superinten­dent, the biggest challenge is ensuring that the higher management standard is maintained.

“It doesn’t take much to slip backwards,” he said. “Previously there was a problem with supervisio­n, but we need to be constantly monitoring.”

Part of that monitoring entails trying to educate people to respect the site.

“We had an issue with French schools organising treasure hunts, so children would be running around, touching frescoes and everything else,” added Osanna.

“Then you get those who climb on top of pillars to take selfies – it makes me so angry. The problem is stupidity, not understand­ing how fragile and unique Pompeii is.”

Tourists stealing artefacts is less of an issue nowadays after a museum displaying relics returned by repentant thieves was created. Park officials have received many letters expressing guilt, with some of the transgress­ions dating back to the 1980s.

The Pompeii ruins were discovered in the 16th century, with the first excavation­s beginning in 1748. One thousand five hundred of the estimated 2,000 victims have been found over the centuries.

Contempora­ry technology and DNA testing, as well as an interdisci­plinary team that includes engineers, geologists, anthropolo­gists and technical experts, helps to not only yield new finds but also shed more light on life in Pompeii before it was destroyed by Vesuvius.

With exploratio­ns at Regio V continuing into next year, there will no doubt be more to come. Osanna’s favourite discovery so far? “The man with the block on his head, it was astonishin­g, and the first time we found a victim that was so contextual­ised.”

 ??  ?? An archaeolog­ist works on the fresco of Leda and the swan in Pompeii. Photograph: Cesare Abbate/EPA
An archaeolog­ist works on the fresco of Leda and the swan in Pompeii. Photograph: Cesare Abbate/EPA
 ??  ?? The first body found in the Regio V excavation. Photograph: Pompeii
The first body found in the Regio V excavation. Photograph: Pompeii

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