Posted on 08/29/2022 7:40:13 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
It took a lot of Drano to get that baby opened!
Pompeii as a city dates back 300 years before the disaster of 79 AD. That’s how they figure 2300 years.
CC
Only about 2000 people died in 79 AD. The rest evacuated.
CC
They built good stuff to last back in those days, not CCCP, cheap Chinese crap products...................................
There’s no way to know that.
bump
[singing] Pompeii, you’re my home...
Based on the number of bodies found in Pompeii, scientists estimate that approximately 2000 died. It’s a estimate, but one based on the best evidence available.
CC
Some of the excavated ruined houses showed signs of former vertical shafts that were dug down into them, presumably by the owners (or under their orders) to retrieve cash or personal papers or whatnot. It's at least somewhat possible that some of those roofs lasted long enough, and survivors hidden inside the homes dug their way out. OTOH, these shafts may have been to search for missing family members.
It was formerly believed that the beginning of the eruption scared off most of the people in the Bay of Naples, and no remains had ever been found in Herculaneum, which was right on the slopes. Then in the last couple of decades of the 20th century, a group of remains were found in a newly-discovered storage room on what had been the Roman-era harbor. Apparently they were waiting for evac, or just found that to be the only available shelter.
The cities were damaged years earlier by the earthquake, which was probably a precursor of the eruption itself. While the population of Pompeii at one time may have been 20,000, there may not have been that many living there in 79 AD. The House of the Vettii was about 200 years old when it was buried and ruined, and by that time was owned by a couple of freedmen. Down the street, in another house, the owner's lending records were found, and the owners of the House of the Vettii were among his clients/borrowers.
Unfinished repairs from the quake are still in evidence. I wouldn't be too surprised if it turns out that most of Pompeii was semi-abandoned by the time of the eruption, and social rankings had changed a great deal. The imperial period was one of upward mobility, opportunity, wealth, and of course ostentatious displays, kinda like the rap/hiphop industry today.
Entirely plausible. On youtube there is a narrated video of a walking tour of Pompeii. It is nearly 5 hours in length! Search for “prowalk tours Pompeii”. It is incredibly informative and I highly recommend it.
CC
I’ll look for that. Most of the walking tours of Pompeii (and most other cool places along the Seven Seas etc) are just vids taken by some YT tourist, and the only soundtrack is the ambient one of the other tourists and locals.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUYJ8LbF1Ys
preview
https://m.facebook.com/Prowalks/videos/634640597336941/
Probably Herculaneum too?
I went to 6th, 7th and 8th grades in Naples and we lived in Pozzuoli. (Navy brat.) We had some cool field trips. LOL
We also studied the Vesuvius eruption in 6th grade history class while looking at it out of our classroom window.
This one has what you are looking at, facts and general knowledge if you turn on the closed captioning.
No not Herculaneum ...
I had planned to go there in 2020 but the Wu Hu Flu happened ...
I went to Pompeii for the first time in 1971 ...
3 more times since ...
Ive also been to Capri ...
Thanks. The Roku YT app is plagued by their tone-deaf ads and lack of access to CC.
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