Pompeii is one of the most
significant proofs of Roman civilization and, like an open book, provides
outstanding information on the art, customs, trades and everyday life of the
past.
The city has re-emerged from the
darkness of centuries precisely as it would have been when it was unexpectedly buried
in the thick layer of ash and lava which poured down from the devastating
eruption of Vesuvius.
It was the year 79 A.D. The scale of the tragedy was
appalling: in what had been one of the most active and splendid Roman centres,
life came to a permanent standstill.
The thick layer of volcanic material which submerged it, made up to a large extent of ash and lapilli - non-hard material, unlike that which covered Herculaneum and which solidified into extremely hard stone -has meant that the city has remained intact until the present day, not only as far as its buildings are concerned, but also as regards the contents inside the houses and shops, providing an absolutely fascinating picture of "daily" life.
The thick layer of volcanic material which submerged it, made up to a large extent of ash and lapilli - non-hard material, unlike that which covered Herculaneum and which solidified into extremely hard stone -has meant that the city has remained intact until the present day, not only as far as its buildings are concerned, but also as regards the contents inside the houses and shops, providing an absolutely fascinating picture of "daily" life.
The walls of the houses are covered
with electoral propaganda messages or risque jokes aimed at particular
citizens. The signs on the shop doorways indicate the activity carried out
there or the name of the owner. Alongside the elegant villas belonging to the
nobility and the luxurious residences of the middle class, stand modest houses
where several families lived.
The peasant dwellings on the other
hand are situated around vegetable gardens or small plots of land.
On the edge
of the city stood the brothels, squalid rooms intended as places of pleasure for
sailors and travellers passing through, in the narrow lanes, the workshops and
utility rooms provide further evidence of the daily routine performed by
workmen and slaves as well as the women of the house. The houses still contain
furniture, ornaments, gold and silverware, work tools, kitchenware, bronze and
terracotta lamps, foodstuffs of all kinds, counters for serving drinks, grain
mills and grindstones, workshops for manufacturing cloth, smithies and outlets
selling groceries, fruit and vegetables.
There is a remarkable record of
Roman painting, of which, without the finds made in Pompeii, virtually nothing
would be known.
Our visit to Pompeii would have to be one of the highlights of
this trip. I loved walking along the
original cobbled streets and seeing the stepping stones spaced so that the
wheels of the chariots could pass freely by. The sheer size of it all was overwhelming.
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