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London Exhibit Shows Moving Picture of Pompeii Life, Death


Dog believed to have been buried from the volcano that destroyed Pompii in AD79 (Photo courtesy British Museum)
Dog believed to have been buried from the volcano that destroyed Pompii in AD79 (Photo courtesy British Museum)
An exhibition showing daily life and tragic death in the ill-fated Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum opened in London on Thursday to glowing reviews and the highest advance tickets sales at the British Museum in five years.

Over 450 objects, many of which haven't been seen outside Italy, are arranged to show everyday life in the Roman Empire before Mount Vesuvius erupted in AD79, burying the two Southern Italian cities in volcanic ash.

Paul Roberts, senior curator at the British Museum, said the once bustling urban centers had been brought back to life by items such as bread left in a baker's oven and a baby's crib.

"What we see are real people, ordinary cities,'' Roberts told Reuters ahead of the opening of "Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum'', the biggest Pompeii show in London for 40 years.

"[These are] not museum artifacts [but] possessions, things that people commissioned, bought, loved, enjoyed, used, handled,'' he said.

Onions, almonds and figs were found in drains in Herculaneum while a pot of toothpicks showed the care with which the Romans looked after their teeth.

A wall painting from Pompeii pictures a baker and his wife holding writing materials, showing they are literate while their pose suggests they are equal partners, in business and in life.

Some items from the smaller, seaside town of Herculaneum were preserved in better condition, buried under hot volcanic material four times the heat of a boiling kettle.

"That carbonized wood ... so the seven pieces of furniture we have from Herculaneum are the most special things we have," Roberts said.

The furniture includes a linen chest, an inlaid stool, a garden bench, and a crib that still rocks on curved runners.

Pompeii was discovered accidentally in the 1590s but excavations did not start until 1748. In the 1860s archaeologist Giuseppe Fiorelli pioneered a technique of pouring plaster into the cavities left by rotted bodies.

In the exhibition, casts show a family of two adults and two children huddled together in their final moments while another shows a dog, arched in distress before the volcano submerged the city that was home to about 15,000 people.

"These were the people of Pompeii, people in the moment of their deaths, and that's one of the things that's so moving about Pompeii,'' Roberts said.

A spokeswoman for the British Museum said more than 60,000 advance tickets have been sold for the exhibition - which runs until Sept. 29 - the highest number for any show staged in the past five years.

Sales have been helped by glowing reviews.

"This majestic event will hopefully remind the world that Pompeii is not some tourist attraction to treat shabbily but the world's most revelatory survival of the human past,'' Jonathan Jones wrote in The Guardian.
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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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