Pompeii is the little Roman town that became a byword for sudden, violent death.A new exhibition at the British Museum wants it to be equally famous for raucous, exuberant life.
Most visitors will know how residents of Pompeii
and its neighbor Herculaneum died - in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in
79 A.D. The volcano, long thought dormant, belched out a superheated
cloud of fast-moving gas and debris that incinerated residents where
they stood - and preserved the towns as museums of Roman life, frozen in
time.
"Pompeii and Herculaneum were ordinary towns, but
it was an extraordinary disaster," said Vanessa Baldwin, assistant
curator of the exhibition. "It was a tragedy, but it preserved them for
us."
Pompeii's extraordinary end still fascinates,
making it one of the world's most-visited ancient sites. "Life and Death
in Pompeii and Herculaneum," which opens Thursday and runs to Sept. 29,
looks set to be one of the museum's biggest-ever hits. It has sold
50,000 advance tickets, and will reach an even bigger audience when a
live event in June is broadcast to hundreds of movie theaters across
Britain.
It aims to un-freeze the picture, bringing to life a vibrant society completely unaware that disaster was about to strike.
Many of the 450 objects in the show have never left
Italy before. They have been loaned by Italian archaeological
officials, who have themselves come under fire for the fragile state of
the ancient site on the Bay of Naples.
The exhibition aims to give a vivid sense of how
the towns' ancient residents lived, through artifacts including mosaics,
paintings, carbonized furniture and even the charred remains of
residents' meals.
"We want people to take a fresh look at the
Romans," Baldwin said Tuesday. "We want them to come away feeling a bit
closer to them, feeling like they can relate more to them. They can go
into their kitchens and recognize things that they have in their own
kitchen."
The exhibition is structured around the rooms of a
typical wealthy resident's house, from the shops at the entrance to the
atrium, bedrooms, kitchen and garden - and even the latrine. Among the
items proudly displayed are the contents of a cesspit: broken jars,
lamps and perfume bottles, coins and jewelry - though not, thankfully,
the 700 bags of ancient excrement also found there.
Elsewhere there are sturdy cooking pots, elegant
serving dishes and sleek mass-produced tableware, along with wooden
items whose survival for 2,000 years - carbonized by the heat of the
volcano - seems miraculous.
An elegant wooden side table and a baby's crib are
not much different from versions in use today. The heat also preserved
items of food, including bread, grains, dates and pomegranates.
Then, as now, food was a key part of home life and
the economy. Some merchants grew rich from fish sauce, or garum, a Roman
kitchen staple made from fermented mackerel heads and guts. Both
ordinary and kosher varieties were available, and several of the elegant
clay jars are on display.
British Museum Director Neil MacGregor said that
what has emerged from the ash at Herculaneum and Pompeii "was not at all
the Rome people thought they would find. It was much more complex - a
much funnier, a much livelier place to live."
The exhibition shows that it was certainly a richly
decorated, colorful world. Floors and walls were adorned with mosaics
and frescoes of plants, animals and humans - the latter often in
explicitly sexual poses.
Phalluses abound - on monuments, good-luck charms,
even wind chimes - and there are examples of erotic art that shocked the
18th-century Europeans who rediscovered them. A marble statue of the
god Pan coupling with a nanny goat is likely to stop 21st-century
visitors in their tracks, too.
For all the familiarity of this Roman world, there
are surprises. The exhibition reveals that Pompeii and Herculaneum were
less stereotypically "Roman" places than we might think. Many residents
were descended from Greeks or other groups, and more than half were
slaves or freed slaves.
It was also an era of considerable social mobility.
Freed slaves, known as liberti, were a powerful segment of society,
owning businesses and properties.
A prominent role was played by women, who could own
wealth and go into business, but not vote or hold public office. A
fresco of a baker and his wife shows them as business partners and
apparent equals.
Inevitably, the towns' sudden end casts a poignant shadow over the exhibition.
It's not known how many people died in the eruption
of Vesuvius, but 1,500 bodies have been found in the two towns, which
are still only partially excavated. Two-thirds of Herculaneum and a
third of Pompeii remain buried.
In one room of the exhibition is a floor mosaic of a
guard dog - an ancient "Beware of the Dog" sign. Elsewhere is the dog
himself, contorted in agony in his final moments. Volcanic ash hardened
around the canine corpse, which eventually rotted away. Centuries later,
archaeologists poured plaster into the gap, creating a perfect
dog-shaped mold.
The same technique has been used on some of the
human victims, including a whole family, hunched against the deadly
heat, a child huddled in its mother's lap.
Despite all the death, it is the vivid life of the towns that makes the strongest impression.
One exhibit is a sign from a dining room, which
advises guests: "Don't dirty the couch covers, keep your eyes off other
people's partners and take your quarrels home with you."
That's good advice, even now.
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