Digs, Discoveries, Travel, Exploration

  • About us
  • News
  • Features
  • Travel
  • Regions
    • Most popular
      • Italy
      • Greece
      • Egypt
      • Turkey
      • France
    • Africa
    • Asia
      • Iran
      • Iraq
      • Israel
      • Japan
      • Java
      • Jordan
      • Kazakhstan
      • Kodiak Island
      • Korea
      • Kyrgyzstan
      • Laos
      • Lebanon
      • Malaysia
      • Mongolia
      • Oman
      • Pakistan
      • Qatar
      • Russia
      • Papua New Guinea
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Singapore
      • South Korea
      • Sumatra
      • Syria
      • Thailand
      • Turkmenistan
      • UAE
      • Uzbekistan
      • Vanuatu
      • Vietnam
      • Yemen
    • Australasia
      • Australia
      • Fiji
      • Micronesia
      • Polynesia
      • Tasmania
    • Europe
      • Albania
      • Andorra
      • Austria
      • Bulgaria
      • Croatia
      • Cyprus
      • Czech Republic
      • Denmark
      • England
      • Estonia
      • Finland
      • France
      • Germany
      • Gibraltar
      • Greece
      • Holland
      • Hungary
      • Iceland
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • Malta
      • Norway
      • Poland
      • Portugal
      • Romania
      • Scotland
      • Serbia
      • Slovakia
      • Slovenia
      • Spain
      • Sweden
      • Switzerland
      • Turkey
      • Sicily
    • South America
      • Argentina
      • Belize
      • Brazil
      • Chile
      • Colombia
      • Easter Island
      • Mexico
      • Peru
    • North America
      • Canada
      • Caribbean
      • Carriacou
      • Dominican Republic
      • Greenland
      • Guatemala
      • Honduras
      • USA
  • Museums
  • Issues
  • Subscriptions
    • Subscribe now
    • Renew
    • Digital Archive
    • Institutions
    • Back issues & binders
  • Photo Competition

Suggestions

  • About
  • Archaeology Newsletter
  • Archaeology Newsletter
  • Archaeology Newsletter
  • Binders and slipcases
  • Christmas Gift Subscriptions
  • Contact
  • Contact Us
  • Current Publishing Data Protection Privacy Policy
  • Current World Archaeology Digital Archive
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Home
  • Institutional Subscriptions
  • Meet the Team
  • Purchasing and Returns
  • Subscriptions
  • Terms and Conditions
  • What our readers think

Issue 4 - Page 2

Until recently, Pompeian archaeologists spent most of their time clearing volcanic debris to expose extensive areas of the city or trying to classify the architecture, frescoes and artefacts uncovered. Now all that is changing. Only small areas are excavated at one time, but the idea is to dig deep, going below the AD 79 level to see a sequence of layers and tell the story of the city from its origins. At the same time, house layout and interior design are being analysed to reconstruct the city's social and cultural life. In the hands of a new generation of researchers, ancient Pompeii is returning to life as never before.
First, though, we report new thinking about the eruption itself. The old idea that most people died under a rain of pumice has gone. Now vulcanologists believe most survived the 'air-fall' but were killed by the searing heat of 'pyroclastic ground-surges' during the last and most terrible phase of the eruption.
Then we review Reading University's five-year excavation of the House of Amarantus. Beneath the house destroyed in AD 79 excavators have found evidence for buildings on the same alignment dating from the sixth century BC. So was Pompeii originally an Etruscan new town? They have also found a grand house converted to a seedy bar by the time of the city's destruction - with empty amphorae dumped in a disused garden.
Next we discover that Bradford University, working on the other side of the city, have been digging up one the smartest houses in the city: the House of the Vestals. This elite residence gobbled up neighbouring properties and then piped in water from the new city aqueduct to create a spectacle of gushing fountains set against colonnades and frescoes. Thus we reveal Pompeii's culture of conspicuous consumption under the early emperors.
But is the picture accurate? CWA editor-in-chief Andrew Selkirk challenges the 'greed is good' interpretation of Pompeii and offers an alternative: a city where a wide range of society benefited from the prolonged economic boom in the two centuries before the eruption. (Let us know what you think.)
Rick Jones, Bradford's leading Pompeii archaeologist, then brings us up to date on new excavations at the House of the Surgeon, and new international efforts to rescue Pompeii's crumbling remains.
Our next article reveals that Pompeii was threatened by traffic gridlock but for a one-way system enforced by the local council. Then, from the congestion and noise of the city streets, we first accept an invitation to dinner at the House of the Chaste Lovers, and then get an introduction to interior design and lifestyle choice in the ancient city.
We open the magazine with a look at a very different culture: the Maya of the Roaring Creek valley of western Belize. A whole landscape comes under the spotlight as we uncover a middle range settlement, with houses set round plazuelas rather than plazas, with the remains of numerous houses and feasting halls.

Issue 4/Belize/Features

Roaring Creek, Belize

Current excavations and survey in the Roaring Creek valley in Belize bring to life an ancient Maya community…

Placeholder Photo
Issue 4/Russia

Mammoths at Lugovskoe, Siberia

Fascinating finds at west Siberian mammoth burial site…

Placeholder Photo
Issue 4/Egypt

Rameses I Mummy Returned to Cairo

A number of artefacts formerly held in Canada, including the body of Ramases I have been returned to Cairo…

Issue 4/Italy/Travel

Urgent Postcard from Pompeii

Rick Jones, of Bradford and the Anglo-American Project in Pompeii, shares his urgent views on the conservation and future of the town…

Placeholder Photo
Issue 4/Books/Italy

Houses & Society in Pompeii & Herculaneum

Interpreting Pompeii Many of the older studies of Pompeii seem rather dry today. Architecture, mosaics and frescoes were classified into types. Houses…

Placeholder Photo
Issue 4/Books/Italy

Pompeii: Public & Private Life

Paul Zanker’s Pompeii: public and private life (Harvard, £15.95) is another book in the same vein. The German author is an archaeology…

Placeholder Photo
Issue 4/Books/Italy

Pompeii: The Last Day

What is the best book to read for a basic introduction to Pompeii? Paul Wilkinson has just produced Pompeii: the last day…

Placeholder Photo
Issue 4/Books/Italy

Lost World of Pompeii

The crisis in Vesuvian archaeology runs deep. Pompeii is fast degrading, with walls crumbling, frescoes erased by the sun, plaster dropping off…

Placeholder Photo
Issue 4/Books/Italy

Pompeii: a novel

Pompeii has featured in fiction many times. The first-century Roman novelist Petronius set his Satyricon in the Bay of Naples, and one…

Previous 1 2

Advertisement

Popular articles

  • The lost world of Sanxingdui
    The lost world of Sanxingdui
  • Rosetta Stone
    Rosetta Stone
  • Driving the streets of Pompeii
    Driving the streets of Pompeii
  • Japan’s royal tombs
    Japan’s royal tombs
  • Records of the pyramid builders
    Records of the pyramid builders




© 2024 Current Publishing. All rights reserved.

  • Contact Us
  • Subscriptions
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Purchasing and Returns
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe
  • About Us
  • Issues
  • Features
  • Travel
  • Books
  • Museum
  • Photo Competition