Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Pompeii!

From: Dave Adair
Date: Wed, Jan 29, 2020, 00:50
Subject: [newsletter] Pompeii!

Lovely people! Oh, heavens. This is a little scary. It appears that I'm blogging again. I used to know how to do this, but after almost five years, I've forgotten. One thing I haven't forgotten, and that's how to procrastinate. That one is hard-wired.

For now I'm blogging to a different site, since I'm not traveling with my laptop. 

But enough about me - how are you? You look really good!

Love always, Dave


Published by Dave AdairJanuary 26th, 2020

Pompeii!

I visited Pompeii today, close to Naples, Italy, and in the shadow of the volcano Vesuvius that buried the Roman city in 6 meters (20 feet) of ash and volcanic pebbles in 79 AD. Speaking of ancient history - the first and last time I was here was in 1981, when I was married. I got buried by a volcano then, too!

I had come by ferry from Croatia, as I'm driving south towards Sicily.

One of the famous mosaics.


I had forgotten how massive the site is. And it's only about 60% uncovered.

"Venus on a shell," it's called.



I recognize this from setting the modern version in India: a street-side snack bar, serving hot food out of the containers embedded in the counter.

Beautiful, detailed carvings.



I learned today that Pompeii didn't have much plumbing. Mostly it ran into the street, which is why the sidewalks are so high. And why there are large stones are at every junction - so you can step across without stepping onto the street.





In the oldest excavations, they removed all murals and put them in a museum. The new method is to leave them in place as long as they can be protected.

There's an exhibit about Pink Floyd's live concert in Pompeii in 1971. It was recorded in the gladiator amphitheater, with no live audience, only sound recordings and film.

I'm amazed by the level of grooves worn into the rock by wagons. How long would that take?? I see references to the city dating back to 3rd century BC.

The theater (for plays, not gladiators.)

A replica of the original statue.



Some of the public squares were huge and impressive.

The audio guide described the owner of this house like he was a mafia don. In Italy? Maybe not a coincidence.

Beautiful!

Skeletons of slaves (maybe?) that died during the eruption.

(The End)