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Rome Unwrapped - Pompeii - 4K
YouTube ^ | July 18, 2024 | Atlantic Productions

Posted on 07/20/2024 9:08:32 PM PDT by SunkenCiv

This is the story of a disaster like no other. When Mount Vesuvius erupted, it rained 7 million tonnes of debris onto Pompeii it sealed the fate of more than a thousand people. But it also sealed the city form the world: preserved it, protected it, like nowhere else on earth, the rediscovered Pompeii gives us access to the ancient world. And now, with new findings and new insights, we can tell the story of the ordinary people caught up in this disaster. These are the forgotten men and women who lived when Rome ruled and were buried when the volcano blew.
Rome Unwrapped - Pompeii - 4K | 50:25
Atlantic Productions | 8.56K subscribers | 5,610 views | July 18, 2024
Rome Unwrapped - Pompeii - 4K | 50:25 | Atlantic Productions | 8.56K subscribers | 5,610 views | July 18, 2024

(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...


TOPICS: History; Science; Travel
KEYWORDS: godsgravesglyphs; pompeii; romanempire; vesuvius; video
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Transcript
0:01·this is the story of a disaster like no other when Mount fuus erupted it rained
0:09·7 and 1/2 million tons of debris onto Pompei it sealed the fate of more than a
0:15·thousand people but it also sealed the city in preserved it protected it like
0:24·nowhere else on Earth the rediscovered Pompei gives us access to the ancient world
0:30·and now with new findings and new insights we can tell the story of the ordinary people caught up in this
0:38·disaster these are the Forgotten men and women who lived when Rome ruled and were
0:44·buried when the volcano blw
0:49·[Music]
1:02·ad. 79 as many as 20,000 people live in Pompei and for them it's boom
1:11·time their town is 150 mi from Rome 3 miles from a benign little Hill
1:19·called Vesuvius and it sits on the Bay of Naples both a trade Hub and a holiday
1:25·playground [Music]
1:37·the people who live here have no idea what's about to hit how death is coming
1:42·to many of them how within 48 Hours their town will become both a tomb and a time capsule
2:00·for more than 200 years archaeologists have been digging at
2:09·Pompei because of what happened here the way whole districts of the Town were perfectly preserved in the moment of
2:16·their destruction it shows like no other sight how the people of ancient Rome lived
2:22·their lives often Works focused on the rich and the powerful the most eye-catching
2:29·fines Furniture works of art even whole buildings offer a glimpse of the top level of Roman
2:41·society but now one team is looking at a different group of
2:47·pompeians people who've often been overlooked the blue collar workers the
2:53·ordinary men and women who don't belong to the elite we've got a a whole Suite here of
3:01·workingclass properties houses and shops and workshops and all the bits and pieces that made up a a workingclass
3:08·Zone in Pompei this has given us a fantastic and unique opportunity to look at the the lives of the other 98% of the
3:14·population who've been largely hidden from us for for so long
3:21·now this Block's made up of stores and workshops which are also people's
3:27·homes and the aim of the work here is to build a picture of who those people
3:34·were with this particular building it's even been possible to name the occupant
3:40·a single find unlocks the man's story it came from this storage Niche uh down in
3:45·the corner of this room which would have been next to a bed here and what was found was a a small bronze uh military
3:52·diploma which was a a document given to a person upon retirement from the Roman military service
4:04·now kept under lock and key the document amounts to a full
4:09·resume because it's made of bronze rather than paper it survived still
4:15·legible to this day it's a really important document because it establishes that the holder
4:23·is a Roman citizen his name down here is
4:28·Marcus son of dhama Sirus
4:34·gasos gasos that's a really weird Roman name it doesn't sound like a Roman
4:41·name and it's because he's a Syrian uh as are all his mates who have signed at
4:47·the back uh three of them come from Antioch one of them comes from caesaria and so on and this guy has served in the
4:56·fleet at myum it says Fant fantastic myum is just over the water from
5:02·Pompei they're essentially the police force that keeps the Mediterranean free
5:08·of pirates so he probably didn't see terribly much action um except just
5:14·being a presence there in the Mediterranean going out on their ships visiting various ports making sure that
5:21·no one was up to trouble so ginus is a veteran of the
5:28·Marines a force made of non-citizens Roman citizenship was the
5:34·reward for 26 years service and its proof is the diploma no wonder he kept
5:39·it close this is like your passport it's the most valuable thing you have it's no
5:45·it's more than your passport it's your birth certificate and your passport put together and he keeps it in the safest
5:51·place he knows and so we can be pretty sure that he's the name of the guy who
5:56·was sleeping in that bed in ad79
6:06·so this man is a respected member of the community and he's made a new life for himself as a Tradesman the building
6:13·houses a workshop and here he produces bronze goods for
6:19·sale when the first excavators came here in the 1870s they found a whole series of of bronze artifacts that were that
6:25·were sold from here what we've since done is excavated in some of the rooms out the back and some of the rooms out the front and found all the different
6:32·bronze smithing facilities that help to do that early on the 23rd of August
6:40·ad79 ginus is amongst his tools and his pots the sun sets the rhythm of the day
6:47·in the ancient world and as soon as there's enough light work begins up and down the street
6:55·other businesses are opening up but what you would have seen here in ad7 9 is a Street Front teaming with wide
7:01·entranceways into shops and workshops but we've also found a series of stairwells that would add up to uh
7:07·second floor apartment above up there we can imagine hanging balconies that would have reached out over the street as
7:14·well when the eruption comes many of these upper stories will collapse under the weight of the
7:21·debris but today in the building next door to ginus a family starts its
7:28·day AR archaeologists have determined that the business here is a
7:35·restaurant in this threshold here there's a double door which opened up from the center here and so the guest
7:41·could come to the front here and look straight down the center of the property into a dining room up the far
7:51·end so one of the clues that this building was operating as a restaurant in Antiquity was found in this room in here in the corner of this space we have
7:58·an oven with a counter in front of it we also found many coins in this
8:04·space uh these give us a fantastic indication of just how much money was changing hands in this
8:13·kitchen it's a diner there are many like it across the Roman Empire simple
8:19·relying on regular customers passing trade and long hours within 48 hours all
8:26·they have will be gone but for now everyone has their job to
8:33·do and the streets are coming to life the Block's exclusively working
8:40·class but the street is a Melting Pot Rich poor all trades all
8:46·Races the people of Pompei are packed tight inside the city walls and their lives all
8:53·interconnect in fact the first business of the day is the coming together of people of different status our humble
9:00·restaurant owner also the head of his household leaves his family to their chores and walks the short distance to
9:06·the house of one of his
9:12·neighbors it's only a couple of streets but it's a world away from his own home
9:18·this is one of the most important addresses in the city and the buildings are very public display of wealth power
9:25·and status
9:32·a house like this is built to stun the visitor first with the view that you get as you come in through the narrow
9:39·entrance way and it opens out into this great space The Atrium and you look through the broad
9:47·tolinum and through to the Garden the peristyle garden
9:54·there and it's all using a standard Roman formula The Atrium is built
9:59·typically with the roof sloping into the center so that the water comes into a pool where it's connected and goes down
10:06·to the well and the light of course comes in
10:12·here this house takes up the same space as the entire workingclass block two
10:18·streets away and every morning outside its door
10:24·the rituals the same the local men form alive
10:30·they're here to make a formal gesture of respect and here is the tolinum which is
10:38·the traditional morning reception room of the house here traditionally the
10:43·owner of the house is meant to sit perhaps on a throne and you can see what an impressive position it'll be he's
10:50·framed in this space and the the the visitor coming in looks through and sees
10:56·him with a with a bright light behind him too a stunning
11:03·sight the owner of the house papus is a patron a Godfather figure to his clients
11:11·he safeguards their interest gives them advice even money in return for their
11:16·respect and their loyalty their daily morning ritual is
11:22·called the [Music] saluta the theory is that after the
11:28·salutat you set out to the Forum and the crowd that is gathered around you will
11:33·then accompany you to The Forum where as a magistrate you will give Justice or or
11:39·whatever and it's that retinue following you through the streets that's a sign of your importance big people never move
11:47·alone they've always got a crowd around them life in Pompei seems ordered
11:56·stable but as popus and his retinue make their way through the crowd something
12:01·else is happening miles beneath the surface of the Earth a terrible pressure
12:06·is building these people will soon learn that nothing is safe not even the ground
12:13·under their feet today volcanology is a science
12:20·experts try to predict eruptions by monitoring emissions they plot changes in surface
12:26·temperature and Subterranean vibrations of course the Romans of Pompei have none
12:31·of this few are concerned that their Hill Vesuvius is a
12:38·volcano nowadays if we look to the volcano behind me we can see a very deep
12:43·crater this deep crator tells us of the recent eruption of
12:52·vvus when the people of Pompei would look towards the mountain they could see a mountain with very Lush vegetation
12:58·full of flowering trees and Orchards that didn't give the impression of being an active
13:08·volcano what the town's people and the Shepherds who graze their flocks on the side of the mountain don't know is that
13:15·far beneath them a catastrophic chain of events has
13:21·begun if we could see deep under our feet we could see that under this volcano at 101 15 km of depth there is a
13:28·magma chamber the magma chamber is a space
13:33·deep underground filled with molten rock at a temperature of around 1,000°
13:39·C an extra amount of magma entered the magma chamber in this case creating a
13:45·higher pressure that forced to crack in the Rocks
13:52·above the molten rock is forcing its way out in fact it's effects have already
14:00·been felt some years before the people of the city have lived
14:05·through something which today would be seen as a terrible warning this is evidence of a major
14:10·disaster an earthquake that hit this city in 62 ad just 17 years before the
14:16·final eruption what we find is that in this wall for example where we have the brick in the corner which surrounds this
14:22·nice diamond shaped wall in fact is broken off at this point and is instead replaced by a much more poorly built
14:29·wall and so the walls have been rebuilt with that Rubble into this much more basic
14:36·[Music]
14:42·[Applause]
14:51·design even though the people on Pompei did not know it is clear to volcanologists today that this
14:57·earthquake of 62 BC was a precursor of the eruption it indicates that the magma is
15:04·about to reach the surface and that the new eruption is about to
15:15·occur and so it unfolds the 17 years between the earthquake and the final eruption are on
15:22·a geological scale just the blink of an eye but the Romans don't see the world
15:28·that way to them a natural disaster is the action of an Angry
15:34·God so instead of being able to take the warning and abandon a city that is already doomed the people of Pompei do
15:41·the opposite they try to appease their gods
15:48·by remaking the temples of the Forum the town's main public space bigger and
15:53·grander than before it's a demonstration of Pride and prosperity
15:59·clad in White marble on the eve of the eruption it must appear
16:05·[Music]
16:12·indestructible 2,000 years later and in ruins the Forum is now the focus of a
16:18·startling piece of research for decades archeologists have
16:23·puzzled over this building it's one of the largest here but no one has ever determined what it it was
16:29·full we're standing in some kind of cined porch with a special feature which
16:36·is a raised platform the sort of space which could be used for giving
16:44·speeches making public announcements and almost certainly for
16:51·auctions the question is what was actually auctioned
16:57·here whatever was it was clearly something of value slots in the
17:03·threshold Stones indicate that the doors could be barred there are also two guard houses
17:09·just inside this was one of the most secure buildings in the
17:15·city it appears that the merchandise itself was kept in a long enclosed Corridor whose only Windows opened onto
17:22·an internal Courtyard again the holes in the window
17:27·sills show that there were shutters that could bar the space and over here there's even a hole
17:35·in the wall that might suggest a bar now this has led various people to suggest
17:41·that what was in there was jewelry or something that needed to be guarded but
17:47·this is an odd way to look at Jewels this isn't a counter this is a window sill so what I actually think was one of
17:56·the functions of this Corridor was was the display of slaves for
18:05·sale slaves this building suggests a part of the Roman world that's been largely
18:14·invisible slaves are everywhere in ancient Rome households businesses even
18:20·government they make up 30% of Italy's population and yet because the Romans
18:25·treat them as a commodity rather than as a people were left with virtually no written accounts of their
18:32·lives the story has been pieced together from the archaeological evidence and that suggests that this building was a
18:38·Marketplace for human livestock it was set up to handle
18:45·shipments of slaves often transported from the fringes of the
18:50·Empire they were held and sold in this
18:56·space they were probably given a drink and maybe washed off at the
19:01·fountain they were brought up the ramp that leads directly into this krypter and then the buyers were able to
19:10·look at them examine them through these windows at a safe distance but close
19:15·enough to see whether there are any defects and then one by one they were brought outside to the auction block to
19:22·be sold the auction is a defining moment
19:28·for a Slave it can be the difference between a relatively comfortable existence and a
19:33·hellish one and yet whoever buys him his life is not his
19:46·own when the eruption comes some slaves will die still
19:56·chained this man will be found when where he fell unable to run
20:08·away the ash from Mount Vesuvius smothered more of Pompei than its buildings it captured people fleeing
20:15·cowering dying in the face of an unfolding
20:22·disaster as the ash hardened and solidified it held the shape of its victim's bodies long after their flesh
20:29·had gone archaeologists found cavities that they could fill with plaster and use to create
20:36·molds they were able to see centuries on exactly how the dead lay when the full
20:41·force of the volcano
20:47·struck they also found bones so far the remains of 1,100 people
20:56·have been pulled from the ground but one find is different from the others
21:01·because of what was discovered next to the [Music]
21:08·body when we excavated we found the shackle there are two of them so both
21:15·ankles would have been locked up inside the Big Iron rings [Music]
21:28·we found these two objects we definitely knew that the first skeleton we found was a
21:37·slave because he's a slave he has no identity no history Beyond what's
21:43·written in these bones individual number one is a male uh
21:49·we can see that by looking at these brow ridges on his skull he also has several
21:54·features of his pelvis which also indicate that he's a male he was between 5' 6 and 5'9
22:01·tall he was very young when he died probably between 20 and 25 um his collar
22:07·bone hasn't completed developing um as has the upper parts of his
22:15·pelvis certain bones continue to develop even after a person appears to have stopped
22:21·growing the fact that his collar bones haven't fused says that this man was in the prime of life
22:29·this individual has no signs of malnutrition or deficiency in their diet
22:35·he has no holes in his teeth so this individual appears to have
22:40·been reasonably
22:46·healthy the evidence suggests that this slave was one of the lucky ones probably well treated wellfed and
22:53·not forced into backbreaking labor he could have been a domestic slave
23:01·many Roman families had them and in a wealthy household they performed every menial
23:10·task in the main part of the house it's striking how open and visible everything is if you want to find where the slaves
23:16·are where the people who do the real work you've got to go around the corner to the invisible bits and no no eye
23:24·wants to come into this part of the house it's a a strange sort of dog leg suddenly we've lost all the beautiful
23:30·decoration we're down to to walls with if they're plastered these walls are plastered it's very very plain plaster
23:37·there's no color on it and over here we have a series of rooms that are evidently service rooms through there
23:43·there's a stable and they found a cart and various agricultural implements in it in here are sort of service rooms um
23:51·and it's in these that that the slaves must live and
23:57·work here at the bottom we have a sort of storage area you can see amrey stacked against the wall and then look
24:04·how narrow this passageway is uh it's it's a clear contrast with the rest of
24:09·the house uh everything there is open beautiful decorated everything here is
24:15·cramped narrow dark and it's meant to be different where the slaves
24:23·work remember the slaves are all over the house at all times there's a Slave at the front door there are slaves
24:30·serving you at tables it's not that the slaves aren't there in the grand bits of the house but their area their bit for
24:38·doing work has to be different and feel
24:43·[Music] different sometimes a slave could rise
24:49·to a position of importance in the household he could even be given his freedom in which case he might remain as
24:57·a member of his old Master staff he could hope to end his life as a respected
25:08·figure but that was not how it was for this
25:14·man it's likely that he was ignored as a person valued simply as property and the
25:21·only reason we know anything about him is down to the manner of his [Music]
25:27·death his body was found with that of another older
25:32·man and and what sort of building were they in near we found them near a tower
25:39·and they were escaping during the eruption to the trained eye of a
25:45·forensic anthropologist the state of the bones even 2,000 years after death is
25:51·very telling on skeleton number two um we have a lot of evidence of um exposure
25:56·to some kind of heat um on this vertebrae particularly you can see um
26:03·charring on the front um and that happens on on a number of these vertebrae here and on the foot
26:10·bone here again you can see charring on the inside of the bone uh which
26:15·indicates the bone fractured as well it takes tremendous heat to cause damage
26:21·like this the black color indicates that the bones were exposed to a heat of between
26:26·3 and 600° Celsius that's between about 600 and 1100
26:35·F the evidence says that this heat came in a sudden intense
26:48·blast we can see that the bodies were in what's known as a pugilistic pose which
26:54·is a boxers pose um this is caused because uh the muscles begin to shrink
27:00·um when exposed to extreme heat now the muscles that you use to clench everything and tighten everything um are
27:07·stronger than the ones that you use to stretch everything out so as they shrink those muscles take over and you adopt
27:12·this stance that would indicate that the individual died a very short period
27:19·before being exposed to those temperatures because if the individual has gone into what's known as rigor
27:25·mortis and gone stiff they won't go into this pugilistic
27:32·[Music] pose time and again at Pompei
27:38·archaeologists have found bodies posed in this way men and women killed by
27:44·something they just couldn't
27:53·[Music] outrun on the 23rd of August ad7
27:58·9 this fate is fast approaching in fact the end is already
28:14·underway as pompei's last day of normality draws to a close the warning signs start to
28:23·appear though the citizens have no idea what is about to happen the world starts to change before their
28:34·eyes the day before the eruption the magma rises towards the surface during
28:40·this process the magma goes in between cracks and the rocks and the rise of the magma itself creates a physical mutation
28:46·of the volcano the volcano grows in height and the external slopes start
28:52·tilting more and the coastline moves slightly further away all these factors could also be noticed by the people of
29:04·Pompei if people don't notice the altered shape of the mountain or the drop in sea level they must feel the
29:10·ground beneath their feet begin to
29:18·shift unfortunately according to contemporary Roman accounts this region
29:23·is used to Earth Tremors the p pans see them as a fact of
29:29·everyday life rather than a cause for [Music] alarm so they carry
29:36·on for most the Working Day which began at Sunrise is
29:44·over now the City
29:49·Eats in the Roman world the day's main meal is eaten in the afternoon like everything else it's
29:56·governed by class the wealthy can eat in their homes
30:02·couches are arranged around a low table family members recline with their invited guests and it can be an
30:08·elaborate luxurious business in this world it's a key social
30:15·activity for the people lower down the scale it's different they don't have kitchens or a space to
30:22·eat from the sheer number of taverns and diners in the town it looks as if for
30:27·many the norm is to eat out so here we find ourselves in one of the other restaurants that we've been Excavating
30:33·in this town block uh as customers would would come up through this long passageway they would reach the end of
30:39·the property where they would find out on the left hand side here two dining rooms in the second one here if we enter
30:46·in what you could expect to have found in 79 ad was uh a few couches around the
30:51·side and the back walls and also very simple very basic
30:56·wall decoration nothing like the fancy kinds of decoration we find in the much better appointed
31:02·[Music] restaurants what we've also found in this area are many of these gaming
31:09·pieces with this kind of a heads and a Tails feature to it these are fantastic reminders that not only eating and
31:16·drinking was important in this establishment but also gambling as well
31:27·[Music] the archaeologists working here have pieced together what was on the
31:33·menu they've taken the garbage and the waste that was trapped 2,000 years ago
31:38·in the drains of this building and sifted through it they add water and force air bubbles through the fragments
31:45·which float the surface are then removed for analysis here we've got some little seeds that we've picked out through the
31:52·flotation got an apple seed in here so we know that they're eating a
31:58·wide variety of apples you know fruit different kinds of fruit like pears and figs a lot of grape seeds there's a lot
32:04·of grape in the diet so those are very common fish a lot of Fishbones fish
32:12·scale in fact even the lower class citizens have access to a wide range of
32:19·foods they're benefiting directly from the power of the Roman Empire vast trade
32:25·networks that brought in goods from thousands of mil away for example we found one restaurant here that had a
32:31·drain that was full of a really varied diet it had everything from small um young mammals like young piglets uh
32:38·sheep even dmice a real delicacy in the Roman [Music]
32:45·world so the people of Pompei eat well but this is also a special
32:52·day oddly enough the very night before the eruption out here would have been the Festival of the Vulcan alad
32:58·this is a a festival to appease the god
33:04·Vulcan Vulcan is the god of fire fire as the force which brings
33:10·warmth and light into every Roman Life he's the blacksmith
33:16·God the patron of metal workers like ginus Roman poets imagine volcanoes as
33:24·the chimneys above his workshop and so he gives them their name [Applause]
33:30·Vulcan is also a God of destruction vcan was the the god of fire
33:37·and earthquake and volcanoes and so what you could imagine out here would have been a series of bonfires into which
33:44·were thrown life sacrifices of fish this was all designed to appease
33:49·the volcano of course the great ironers very next day uh Theus completely obliterated
33:56·the entire city here [Music] many of these people have only hours
34:06·left as millions of tons of molten rock begin to push the mountain
34:11·apart so Pompei begins its last
34:23·night the name Pompei will forever be linked with two things
34:30·disaster and decadence this city has been portrayed
34:36·time and again as a place of sexual Freedom even
34:42·Deery there is some truth in the idea the archaeologists who came here in
34:49·the 19th century were scandalized by what they
34:54·found this is the house of a wealthy Banker a former slave made good it's
35:00·here that we have the evidence for an amazing removal it's the removal of a beautiful painting found by the
35:07·excavator in 1875 and promptly cut from the wall and removed to the museum in
35:14·Naples dozens of pieces considered too explicit for public display were
35:19·forcibly removed for much of the last century
35:25·this collection's been off limits to the public and as late as the
35:30·1980s women weren't allowed to see some of its contents it's called The Secret
35:36·cabinet so here's the context of a bedroom they've displayed a bed they've decorated the walls very much like pompe
35:44·and bedroom and here they've put the scenes of Love Making in which the
35:49·lovers are on a bed and you can even see here's a here's a little marble plaque and again you've got the bed with the
35:55·lovers on it
36:00·this is where the Banker's painting now hangs it's a rather innocent
36:06·representation it's not showing actual intercourse but rather kind of the delance that might lead up to it it's
36:12·got lots of clues in it about ancient Roman sexual mores for one thing it
36:17·doesn't have a sense of privacy we think that privacy is the most important thing
36:23·about sexual activity but here we have a bedroom servant right in the corner on the left hand side looking out at us and
36:29·attending to the couple in the modern era it's been
36:36·locked away but it hung in the Banker's house for one purpose only it was to be
36:42·displayed it took pride of place between a dining room and a bedroom guests Were Meant to see it and
36:49·see their host as a man of taste and refinement every well-born Roman knew
36:55·that to have a proper picture collection you had to also have the fine erotic
37:00·paintings even if they were very explicit so what we have is a painting
37:07·of luxury love making not in a private place not squired away somewhere but
37:14·instead right in in view of all the guests were invited to the
37:21·house sexual imagery wasn't only to be found in Fine Art you'd be exposed to it
37:27·simply walking down the street here we find a representation that's almost
37:33·everywhere in Pompei and it is the fallace when excavators first found it
37:39·they thought that it meant that this was a house of prostitution or more impossibly that had pointed the way to a
37:45·house of prostitution but in fact this particular establishment is of all things a bakery and this Bakery used the
37:53·symbol of the fallace like many businesses at Pompei to to Signal good fortune and to bring prosperity to the
38:01·business perhaps even to make the bread
38:06·rise this symbol is carved and painted on walls throughout the city it was even incorporated into
38:14·everyday objects found in the home these bells they're called tinter
38:20·abula and what you have is a phus which sometimes there's an extra phus growing on the phus and from it a suspended
38:28·bells and we really don't understand what they're for maybe some sort of doorbell good
38:34·luck charm um a religious object not all
38:41·clear what is clear is That explicit images were also used with the simple
38:46·intention of selling [Music] sex in a narrow side street is a
38:52·building that was once a dedicated brothel it's still one of the site's biggest tourist
38:58·attractions a pretty startling aspect of this space is that when you look inside
39:04·these rooms they're very unpleasant and it's hard to imagine much more than
39:09·Rough and Ready action going on here yet when we look at the paintings
39:15·in the corridor outside they're quite luxurious they're beautiful in fact the
39:21·men and women are quite handsome there are beautiful bed covers on the beds so
39:27·what we have is the artist feeding the fantasies of the customers outside
39:32·making them think about upper class representations of sex and of course
39:38·matching that with the reality of what he would find
39:44·inside scratched into the walls of one of the cubicles is a remarkable informal
39:50·record it's a selection of customer reviews what we find in this graffiti
39:56·are the names of people people who came here for a quick toss with the
40:02·prostitutes in fact we find that the amount that they paid was very little
40:08·and the graffiti tell us that as well I paid two OES that's pretty cheap because
40:13·you could get a cup of common wine for two to four asses the most expensive one in fact was probably 16 asses or a
40:20·Denarius and that would be a very special slave and I say slave because
40:26·what we know ALS also from these graffiti is that the names of the prostitutes are mostly slave
40:34·names because it was cheap this was a place where men from the lower classes came for
40:40·sex a richer man could keep slaves for the purpose but across this Society there
40:47·was very little embarrassment attached to seeking sex outside
40:53·marriage there was no particular stigma attached to visiting a house of prostitution in fact we know this even
41:00·from literary sources we have Horus talking about the moralist K the Elder
41:06·who praised a young man of elite status for visiting a house of prostitution why because this saved the
41:14·married women and virgins of his class from his lust from the graffiti there is
41:21·evidence that male prostitutes were also available for a Roman man there was no
41:26·shame attached to having sex with either a male or a female as long as he was the
41:32·one taking the active role the people of ancient Rome live by
41:38·their own set of rules compared to almost anywhere in the
41:45·world at the time to be free and live here is to enjoy a high standard of
41:52·living but on the 24th of August ad79 this life life
41:58·ends the morning brings
42:04·Terror at 9:00 in the morning on the 24th of August 79 ad the people of
42:10·Pompei could see a weak eruption column coming out of a crater like this one that was depositing a thin layer of Ash
42:16·on the slopes around the
42:22·volcano then suddenly at 1:00 the full eruption
42:33·the explosion throws almost one cubic mile of rock and Ash into the
42:40·air and the people of Pompei are
42:51·underneath some people are still inside some can't get out
42:58·in one rich man's house a team of painters is trying to finish a
43:04·job for them it's the sound and the vibration which finally tells them of the
43:11·danger they feel the Earth splitting and Spitting Fire 27 miles into the
43:19·sky this is the moment when all normal life in Pompei
43:25·stops when the those who can
43:30·run so when the eruption comes the painters are already at work and they decide to leave in a terrific
43:38·hurry such a hurry that one of them knocks over his bucket of plaster spills
43:44·against this Central painting So this isn't some later concretion this is the
43:50·moment the plaster hit the wall as the painters attempted to get
43:55·away in this piece of plaster that one moment of panic almost 2,000 years ago
44:02·is perfectly preserved they leave so fast that they leave their tools behind them and they get
44:12·[Music] out the wind has pushed the cloud of gas and rock Southeast from the mountain
44:19·directly over the city it cools and loses energy it falls
44:27·the painters emerge into a scene of chaos according to ancient eyewitness
44:34·accounts some tried to protect themselves by covering their heads but the city is now being
44:41·bombarded with rocks some are stunned some don't
44:49·survive by late afternoon The Fallout has filled the streets and Gardens to a depth of around 5 ft
44:57·then for those still Sheltering inside their houses there comes a new danger so
45:03·as many of the buildings are now starting to fall down under the weight of all the volcanic debris we can expect that our workingclass district with its
45:10·poor architecture was one of the first to [Music] go people flee their wooden roofed homes
45:18·believing that sturdier stone structures will keep them
45:25·safe at the back of the restaurant owner's block is a theater with a covered
45:30·walkway it's at this time that many of the inhabitants are now fleeing to these public spaces which held the promise of
45:36·much greater and stronger architecture uh in the weight of all the
45:42·debris 24 hours ago these people had a home a business a job a comfortable
45:50·life now they watch as what hasn't burned is buried and then they are
45:59·helpless in fact it was in here that the first excavators found many of the bodies of pompei's victims many in fact
46:04·probably came from our workingclass
46:11·district most of those victims died in the next phase of the
46:17·eruption a series of pyroclastic currents clouds superheated to over 700°
46:24·C and traveling at up to 200 miles an hour the pyroclastic flows are a mixture
46:31·of gas and Ashes that move very fast on the slopes of the volcano they have a very large kinetic energy with the power
46:38·to destroy anything that is in their way the victims are hit by a wall of heat and enveloped in dense unbreathable
46:55·gas okay this suffocated them at first and then
47:00·other pyroclastic flows buried the bodies these left a deposit in this area of more than a meter of volcanic
47:10·[Music] ash and this is how the two men the
47:16·Shackled slave and His companion meet their end were they trying to escape right up
47:23·to the moment they died so far the bodies of over 1,000
47:30·individuals killed in this way have been recovered there may be hundreds more
47:35·still buried beneath the layer of Ash which blankets this entire region so much excavation has been done
47:43·here that it is easy to forget that these buildings were completely
47:48·[Music] buried archaeologists have left this area of the city untouched simply to
47:55·illustrate the volume of mat material that the volcano dumped on
48:02·Pompei what we can observe is that this is the basic Roman ground level at 79 ad
48:09·the level was completely changed in a few hours in fact after the 79 ad eruption
48:16·there was an accumulation a huge volume of volcanic materials in this area
48:26·the eruption lasted 3 [Music] days within the city walls 7 and a half
48:35·million tons fell but what this blizzard of Ash fire
48:40·and stone didn't destroy it preserved and the city that had vanished
48:47·suddenly from the map slowly slipped from memory
48:53·too Pompei lay safe forgot en for 1500 years until it was found again purely by
49:04·accident the Roman Empire which had mourned its destruction had gone forever but Pompei could take on a new
49:16·life the volcano has erupted again many times its Ash falling as far away as
49:25·Istanbul but still every year archaeologists historians and tourists
49:30·come back every year they find something
49:37·new though excavations have yielded the finest collections ever found of Roman
49:42·treasures and Roman art they've also revealed something more
49:49·precious the life of a society long dead the lives of individuals who would
49:57·otherwise be forgotten

1 posted on 07/20/2024 9:08:32 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
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To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...
The other GGG topics added since the previous digest ping, alpha:

2 posted on 07/20/2024 9:12:07 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Truly wonderful, Sunken. Transcript is a great thing to find.


3 posted on 07/20/2024 9:22:12 PM PDT by mairdie (Trump (I Will Win) - Pavarotti's Nessun Dorma https://youtu.be/MigUKGKr-nQ)
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To: SunkenCiv

Most people don’t realize that a substantial portion of the population got out. Approximately 2/3rds to 3/4.

CC


4 posted on 07/20/2024 9:23:08 PM PDT by Celtic Conservative (My cats are more amusing than 200 channels worth of TV.)
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To: SunkenCiv

With Etna and Stromboli erupting I’m wondering if Vesuvius will kick in. I hope not, could cover what wonderful things they have uncovered.


5 posted on 07/20/2024 9:29:03 PM PDT by Beowulf9
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To: SunkenCiv; SaveFerris; PROCON

his building was operating as a restaurant in Antiquity was found in this room in here in the corner of this space we have
an oven with a counter in front of it we also found many coins

**********

George got thrown out for trying to take a tip back, and Newman refused to deliver mail due to the volcano.


6 posted on 07/20/2024 9:41:37 PM PDT by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
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To: Beowulf9

Camping Flegrei, The Phlegrean Fields, is the one to worry about. Imagine putting the Yellow Stone volcano just out side Chicago or Houston.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phlegraean_Fields


7 posted on 07/20/2024 11:45:44 PM PDT by Fai Mao ( The US government is run by pedophiles and Perverts for pedophiles and perverts.)
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To: SunkenCiv

The entire series by Atlantic Productions is worth the watch. I think there are 4 or 5 other ones with more coming...no idea how many.
The one on Julius Caesar was pretty good.

Love this stuff...


8 posted on 07/21/2024 3:14:06 AM PDT by Adder (End fascism...defeat all Democrats.)
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To: Adder

I hope to watch some more of them, there’s a link to their vids page in the title post as well.


9 posted on 07/21/2024 4:57:30 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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To: Larry Lucido

Pompeii probably had a calzone place...


10 posted on 07/21/2024 5:02:46 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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To: SunkenCiv

It certainly had take away. :-)


11 posted on 07/21/2024 5:04:55 AM PDT by mewzilla (Never give up; never surrender!)
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To: Adder; SunkenCiv

Mark!


12 posted on 07/21/2024 5:08:29 AM PDT by thesearethetimes... (Had I brought Christ with me, the outcome would have been different. Dr.Eric Cunningham)
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To: mewzilla

Yup, lots of takeout, most Romans didn’t have kitchens, partly a money problem, partly a fire risk and most were renters and their landlords and local authorities didn’t want the city to burn down.

There’s a place near here that makes regular pizzas, but also offers the Roman-era experience (doesn’t call it that), pizza crust with no tomato (the tomato being post-1492).


13 posted on 07/21/2024 5:08:44 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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To: Beowulf9

The upside is, if modern Ercolano were erased, the excavation of ancient Herculaneum would be a lot easier. Too bad about all the death and destruction though.


14 posted on 07/21/2024 5:10:32 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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To: mairdie

:^) Thanks m!


15 posted on 07/21/2024 5:11:12 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Best pizzas we have ever had were in Italy.

We stayed in the south, many, many moons ago, not far from Naples.

Locals always told us it was the volcanic soil that made the locally grown tomatoes taste so good.

I believe them.

We got to Pompeii a few times. I’d love to go back again.


16 posted on 07/21/2024 5:11:49 AM PDT by mewzilla (Never give up; never surrender!)
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To: Celtic Conservative

Yup, at least, if based on the number of known bodies (about 1100, sez here) in a population circa 20,000. The towns were probably comfortably well off, there appear to be too many entertainment venues. Baiae was a sort of resort town and didn’t get buried, but much later on the former posh waterfront went underwater due to seismic activity.


17 posted on 07/21/2024 5:18:43 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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Hey, this guy:

https://jeanclaudegolvin.com/oplontis/


18 posted on 07/21/2024 5:20:35 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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To: mewzilla

When younger, I wanted to live in Italy, where being near an archaeological site can involve just having a shovel. :^) The Bay of Naples would have been one of my choices, but I’d probably want either an ultralight or a speedboat to make my getaway in case of eruption. :^) Eating the food everyday, I’d probably want the latter, at some point an ultralight wouldn’t help.


19 posted on 07/21/2024 5:25:42 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I'd rather be in a boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.)
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Fresco from the House of the Centenary in Pompeii, showing the fertility of the mountain. The reason for the fertility was not understood, or perhaps was, but only after the cities were buried. :^)

Brave robot: “Bacchus is the central figure, surrounded by grapes and a panther, symbolizing his association with wine and fertility. Mount Vesuvius is depicted as a vine-covered slope, reflecting the region’s reputation for wine production. The serpent [is] Agathodaemon, the “good spirit” of vineyards and grain fields... The fresco’s depiction of Vesuvius as a vine-covered slope is consistent with literary sources, including Plutarch and Martial, which describe the mountain’s pre-eruption landscape.”

https://www.worldhistory.org/img/r/p/1500x1500/9694.jpg

(I didn’t even have to try to find the book I have here, uh, somewhere)


20 posted on 07/21/2024 5:33:34 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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