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View Full Version : Pompeii Exhibit at the Field Museum


Criminal
02-15-2006, 08:23 AM
http://www.fieldmuseum.org/pompeii/

I went there last Saturday. I must say it was very moving. Never had I cared so much for people who had died 2000 years ago. It was a pretty shocking story how a lively and vibrant resort city perished in an instant.

The behavior of the people was not much different than how people today would behave. The wealthy took their gold, money and jewlery and ran into the streets. The slaves ran for cover. Entire families were buried alive.

We see Pompeii for what it was. It was a resort town on the coast. Its people were pleasure loving. The men went to brothels (34 existed). Women kept jewlry. There were gladeatorial fights. On the gladeator's barrecks a woman of high status (we know this because of the jewlery she wore) was visiting her lover, a gladeator. In a villa a slave girl wore the bracelet given to her by her master. We can only guess why a slave would be given a gold bracelet but its probible she was her master's mistress.

This is the drama we see before us in this amazing exhibit.

"A fearful black cloud was rent by forked and quivering bursts of flame, and parted to reveal great tongues of fire…. Darkness fell, not the dark of a moonless or cloudy night, but as if the lamp had been put out in a dark room.”

One of nature’s most violent cataclysms was vividly described by Pliny the Younger, who survived the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79. But untold numbers were buried in its volcanic debris, and a vibrant, cosmopolitan society vanished overnight, while other societies sprang up in its place. Now the exhibition Pompeii: Stories from an Eruption brings this lost world to life.

Casts made from human remains show real people caught as they fled with their most prized possessions. Past and more recent excavations in the area around Pompeii have revealed hundreds of objects that illuminate the inhabitants’ daily lives: gorgeous room-size frescoes and mosaics, gold coins and precious jewelry, marble and bronze sculptures, and a variety of everyday household objects. Visitors will visit three sites devastated by the eruption, seeing for themselves how the inhabitants lived and died. Visitors will learn how volcanoes are born—and how they wield their destructive power.

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