A good disaster story never fails to fascinate — and, given that it actually happened,the story of Pompeii especially so. Buried and thus frozen in time by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, the ancient Roman town of 11,000 has provided an object of great historical interest ever since its rediscovery in 1599. Baths, houses, tools and other possessions (including plenty of wine bottles), frescoes, graffiti, an ampitheater, an aqueduct, the "Villa of the Mysteries": Pompeii has it all, as far as the stuff of first-century Roman life goes.
The ash-preserved ruins of Pompeii, more than any other source, have provided historians with a window into just what life in that time and place was like. A Day in Pompeii, an exhibition held at the Melbourne Museum in 2009, gave its more than 330,000 visitors a chance to experience Pompeii's life even more vividly.
Source: http://www.openculture.com/
‘A Ziarella va in America. Non è un titolo da film, ma una piacevole realtà. Il...
"ITALIAN AMERICAN SONGBOOK", questo il titolo del progetto che ultimamente il pianista d'o...
by Maureen Corrigan If you don't know Elena Ferrante — and judging by conversat...
by Hunter Davis 'You went to one of the best hotels in the world, in one of the s...
The harmony and the refined nature of the ceramics of the Capodimonte Museum alongside San...
Archaeologists have unearthed 'Nativity-like scene statues' in the ancient ruins of the Ro...
A woman was found dead and around 10 people were still missing on the southern Italian hol...
Overlooking sparkling sea and overshadowed by Mount Vesuvius, the Italian city of Naples i...