The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Antiquitie­s, plucked from storeroom, on Roman Forum display

- By Frances D’Emilio

Hundreds of remnants of ancient Roman life — including colored dice, rain gutter decoration­s depicting mythologic­al figures, and burial offerings 3,000 years old — have long been hidden from public sight. Until now.

For the next few months, a limited number of visitors to the Roman Forum, Colosseum or Palatine Hill can view a tantalizin­g display of ancient statuettes, urns, even the remarkably well-preserved skeleton of a man who lived in the 10thcentur­y B.C. All the exhibits have been plucked from storerooms in the heart of the Italian capital.

Indeed, so many artifacts are kept in storerooms that “you could open 100 museums,” said Fulvio Coletti, an archaeolog­ist with the Colosseum archaeolog­ical park. On Wednesday, Coletti stood at the entrance to a “taberna,” a cavernous space which had served commercial purposes in ancient Roman times and belonged to the palace complex of the 1st-century Emperor Tiberius.

Three such “tabernae” now double as exhibition rooms for once-hidden antiquitie­s. To give an idea of just how many more artifacts are still not on display, curators stacked enormous see-through plastic tubs, chockful of discoverie­s from some 2,000 years ago and bearing minimalist labels like “Ancient Well B Area of Vesta,” a reference to the temple in the Forum erected to the goddess of the hearth.

One display holds row after row of ancient colored dice — 351 in all — that in the 6th century B.C. were tossed into wells as part of rituals. Also in the exhibit is a decoration from a temple rain-gutter depicting a bearded Silenus, a mythologic­al

creature associated with Dionysus, the wine god.

Some artifacts are displayed in showcases custom-made by archaeolog­ist Giacomo Boni, whose excavation­s in the first

years of the 20th century revealed dozens of tombs, including many of children. Some of the tombs dated from as far back as the 10 century B.C., centuries before the constructi­on

of the Roman Forum, the center of the city’s political and commercial life, when the city’s inhabitant­s dwelt in a swampy expanse near the River Tiber.

 ?? DOMENICO STINELLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An archaic antefix, the upright terminatio­n of roof drain lines, shaped as the head of a silenus, the mythologic­al companion and tutor to the Greek wine god Dionysus, is on display in the Roman Forum in Rome, April 19.
DOMENICO STINELLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An archaic antefix, the upright terminatio­n of roof drain lines, shaped as the head of a silenus, the mythologic­al companion and tutor to the Greek wine god Dionysus, is on display in the Roman Forum in Rome, April 19.

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