(ANSA) - NAPLES, 21 NOV - (by Silvia Lambertucci) To see them like this, the blood seeming to still pulse in the veins of those hands resting on their chests, their curled fingers, the cotton of the tunic rumpled up on the belly, it almost seems as if no time at all has passed. They are the almost complete and unblemished bodies of two men, a 40-year-old wearing a warm woolen cloak and his young slave already bent by life's labours; these are the thrilling new revelations of Pompeii, the fruit of an excavation that went ahead even in these hardest weeks of the pandemic and which ANSA has been able to exclusively document.
But after digging, the marquis had his men re-inter those areas without leaving an adequate documentation. The current digs, entirely funded by the Pompeii Park to the tune of one million euros, are the product of a joint operation with the prosecutor's office in Torre Annunziata, prosecutor Pierpaolo Filippelli, and the Carabinieri, to stop the local tomb raiders, who have left ample traces of their painstaking activities here.
After the investigation of the stables, since January 2020 there have been excavations under the very long cryptoporticus, built under one of the large terraces. ."We were lucky," says Osanna, "because the area where we found the bodies of the two men had eluded both the excavations at the start of the 20th century and the tomb raiders: a trench dug by the tomb raiders passed virtually beside the feet of one of the two victims". An almost intact area, and for that reason particularly precious. The last few weeks have seen archaeologists working at a fever pitch. "We detected the presence of pockets in the layer of pyroclastic material and then got the surprise of human remains," says an enthusiastic Osanna.
Conditions were optimal to try to get casts of the victims, following the technique perfected in 1863 by Giuseppe Fiorelli.
The last attempt was made in the 1990s, sadly without any great success. But this time the experiment succeeded perfectly. "It also worked for what the pair were carrying, which proved to be a piece of woolen fabric, perhaps another cloak, perhaps a blanket".
And preliminary studies seem to have already identified the moment of the end, on the second day of the eruption, the morning of October 25 (according to a recent new proposed dating), of that fateful 79 AD. There remains the riddle of the men's identity. The director shakes his head and shrugs, citing the precedent of the Villa of Diomedes, where the fist digs, at the end of the 18th century, restored precisely in the cryptoporticus the remains of many people, men, women and children, who had probably felt shielded from the cataclysm in those underground chambers. Who knows, perhaps the man with the cloak and the slave who was with him were trying to reach the rest of the family after having guarded the property from the outside up to the last moment. The mystery is still open for now. Osanna, who in a few months will pass the baton to the next director, urges patience: "Now it is fundamental to continue the excavations," he concludes. "It will take time, but in the end the Villa of the Harnessed Sorrel, just like the Villa di Diomedes where work will conclude in the spring, will be able to open to the public with all its fascinating stories". And at a time of a pandemic, he smiles, "the continuation of the restorations, excavations and studies is also a light illuminating the future". (ANSA).
Pompeii gives back whole bodies of two fugitives
Casts revive two bodies, master and slave, riddle of cloaked man