Days 37 and 38

(Rhia’s comments are italicized)

Continuing with the theme of places destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, we visited a little known place called Pompeii. 🤔 It was built starting from about the 8th century BC until August 24, 79 AD.

About 90% of Pompeii (that we know about today) was done before 1960, and was left to decay in the elements. Further excavations were limited to targeted areas.

This is an accurate 1:100 scale of unearthed Pompeii.
Mount Vesuvius as taken from the central forum.

Walking through the streets of Herculaneum a couple days ago gave us a taste of what Pompeii had to offer. We arrived at 9 AM, stayed until 4 PM, and only managed to see about a half of the excavation. Pompeii is Herculaneum on steroids in terms of scale. But what we saw in Herculaneum in terms of the layout of houses helped explain Pompeii. Visiting both sites helps one understand what one is seeing.

Places with the pots were hot food kiosks (sort-of 7-11s). Over 70 stalls have been uncovered in Pompeii.
This food place has a phallic to “ward off the evil eye” The evil eye must have been everywhere as there seemed to be much need to ward it off 😂

Nature and gardens, adopted from the Greeks, were very important to the Romans in their architectural planning.

Those with limited space opted for a fountain and a small garden area with ornate features.

There were a number of dedicated markets for fish, meat, produce, and cloth.

This place used to have a large jar for collecting urine. They used it as a degreaser for cloth. 🤮

Desire to live by the ocean coupled with the rich farm lands led to the prosperous Romans moving in. One house there is said to have been over 30,000 SQ ft. The wall paintings and flooring of these houses attest to their opulence.

It is impossible to capture in pictures the size and scope of Pompeii…but here’s an attemp.

Ruts from centuries of use.
The ruts were something I remembered from 38 years ago and I was equally impressed this time! I was pleased to note that my 26 year old eyes didn’t let me down. This time made much more sense, however, because we’d visited Herculaneum first. It truly gave a great perspective on the layout of the houses and the culture.

Here are but a tiny few of the monuments, temples, squares, and amphitheaters.

And then there is the reality of the severe atrocity of a moment captured beneath 4-6 meters of ash and pumice.

This body makes my soul sad…we know how impossible it was not to breathe in the noxious gas. I was stunned, once again, at how small the people were.

Not many original statues remain in place. Unfortunately, the real Pompeii was packaged up long ago, shipped out to places far away; some statues were replaced by replicas while others just disappeared from their original places with no markers.

Which brings us to the Archeological Museum of Naples. We were going to go to the beach for our last day in Naples. However, we found out that the museum houses a large amount of the treasures that were in Pompeii and Herculaneum, so off to the museum we went.

Original at the museum
Replica at Pompeii
Beautiful painting at museum
Where it came from in Pompeii

The amount of artifacts in every room was overwhelming, and quite frankly, numbing. Where there was context, scale, and understanding in Pompeii, there was a consolidation and condensation of tens of thousands of artifacts, each with a printed placard in four different languages briefly describing where it was found. Fortunately, having just visited both excavations, we could sometimes visualize them in situ.

I must note here that my intent today was to take photos of everything that had been displaced from Pompeii. But, by the second room, it became obvious that there was way, way too much! Here’s a small selection.

Walls

It got to the stage where I just started photographing piles of pictures at a time 😂
These (pillars and wall displays) were mosaics! The colors and inticrate design was phenomenal!

Floors

Decorations in nooks

Entryway storage

Temple Statues

And the people that called it home

Toward the end of the exhibit, there was a scale model of the portion of Pompeii that we had actually walked through! 😁

The detail was amazing! They even placed every documented painting on the walls where they had been found.

So, I guess it is not impossible to capture the size and scope of Pompeii in pictures after all! 😜

I ended the day taking photos of parts of the statues because of the detail they showed. These are CARVED into marble, yet the level of detailing and the implied movement is fantastic! It was a great way to end our visit to this part of the world. Tomorrow, we travel for over 24 hours as we move to our next country!

Dr. Rhia Avatar

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8 responses to “POMPEII”

  1. Jan Levin Avatar

    Love all the photos! Was like being there again!!! I too each time am amazed by the tracks in the stone streets and the artistic detail to everything!!!

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    1. Dr. Rhia Avatar

      We seem to be two peas in a pod; many think it’s odd to be so amazed by the tracks but there’s something about them…🤗

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  2. Betty Nee Avatar
    Betty Nee

    I had no idea of the size and scope of Pompeii- amazing! I understand the tracks- I have never forgotten the tracks left by the Wagons heading west on the Oregan trail! But no comparison to those ancient ones in Pompeii. It’s July- see you soon.Cheers

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    1. Dr. Rhia Avatar

      Yes, Pompeii was huge! I can’t believe it’s already July. What date do you fly?

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  3. Lisa Bolton Avatar
    Lisa Bolton

    Amazing! I would love to see Pompeii in person someday. It’s unbelievable that an entire city was destroyed in a few minutes that took years to build up. Lisa b

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    1. Dr. Rhia Avatar

      I know!! Pompeii really speaks to my soul! It was a settlement in 700 BC and a thriving Roman city for almost 600 years! It’s more commercialized than it was 38 years ago but still not bad at all.

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  4. Jacob Anthis-Roberts Avatar
    Jacob Anthis-Roberts

    Got goosebumps looking at all the photos, incredible that there’s still so much of it left! I had no idea. Were those real bodies “preserved” in the ash?

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    1. Dr. Rhia Avatar

      Hi babe. Pompeii really affects me too; you have to get there at least once in your life (probably more as they keep discovering new things). The bodies have disintegrated but the skeletons (and spaces where the bodies were) were left in the ashes and filled with some type of plaster. It’s incredibly moving to see them, especially to see them trying to protect their faces from the noxious gases. They moved me when I first saw them 38 years ago and they moved me equally this time

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