The Ancients - Pompeii: The Buried City
Episode Date: June 1, 2025Buried in ash, frozen in time—Pompeii offers one of the most extraordinary windows into everyday life in ancient Rome.In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Gabriel Zuchtrie...gel, Director of Pompeii, to explore the latest discoveries at this iconic site. From slave quarters and gladiator graffiti to possible signs of early Christianity, uncover how new excavations are reshaping what we know about the lives—and final moments—of Pompeii’s ancient inhabitants.Presented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan, the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on
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Hi, I'm Tristan Hughes and if you would like the ancient ad free, get early access and
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HistoryHit.com slash subscribe. Pompeii, the buried city. A place that is on many persons life bucket list. A site that
has captivated visitors for generations, home to some of the most striking remains surviving
from ancient Rome. But it's also a site tinged in tragedy. Thanks to the devastating eruption of Mount Vesuvius in
79 AD, this Roman town was buried under metres of volcanic ash and rock along with hundreds
of its inhabitants. The grim yet obvious benefit for us today is that this disaster allowed
for the astonishing preservation of Roman remains that the site
is renowned for.
Slowly and carefully, expert teams continue to excavate more and more of Pompeii, unearthing
more and more incredible discoveries, statues, bath houses, graffiti, wall paintings, you
name it.
Their newly found treasures are never too far away from news headlines and the insights
they have given into the lost lives of everyday Pompeians are some of the most precious in
the world.
It's the Ancients on History hit. I'm Tristan Hughes, your host.
Now we've done episodes about Pompeii before,
but this episode is rather different
and it's really quite special
because our guest is none other than Dr. Gabriel Zugtriegel.
Gabriel is the director of Pompeii, the top job,
one of the biggest jobs in archeology.
It was a real privilege to have the opportunity
to interview him about
some of the recent projects and discoveries that have happened at Pompeii under his watch.
Over the next hour we will cover everything from poignant Roman slave quarters recently
discovered just outside Pompeii's walls in a villa, to evidence of early Christianity
before the eruption, to stick-men depictions of gladiators left by children on a wall,
and so much more.
The treasures being unearthed from Pompeii continue to fascinate and inspire people across the world,
and I really hope that this interview with Gabriel kindles that flame even more.
Enjoy! even more. Enjoy.
Gabriel, it is a pleasure. Such an honour to have you on the podcast today.
My pleasure.
Now, you have what I'm sure many would argue is the greatest job in archaeology. Am I correct
in saying that you are currently or have just completed overseeing the greatest job in archaeology. Am I correct in saying that you are currently,
or have just completed, overseeing the biggest project in Pompeii in a generation?
Well, actually, we have been excavating a lot. We are still excavating a lot in Pompeii,
which is something that may sound great. Maybe we can be proud of that, but it's quite ambiguous because excavating
in Pompeii is always a huge responsibility.
And so everything we excavate has to be preserved and looked after and monitoring.
And we see actually looking into the past of the excavations that enormous damage has
been done to the houses and structures and frescoes, especially in the early years of
the excavation.
So we're still excavating, but now very carefully and we try to take the decision looking at
all the consequences.
So through this chat, Gabriel, I'd love to explore a number of discoveries and projects central to your time as director of Pompeii through this interview and many of which do feature in your book. excavations today, and as you've highlighted very, very carefully too, how much of an impetus
is there now when finding and making these new discoveries to preserve them in situ,
to not take them out where they've been discovered?
Well, that's kind of the dream archaeologists had right from the beginning. When excavation
started in Pompeii in 1748, people imagined, wow, that's great.
Finally, we're not excavating just single monuments, but the entire city so we can understand
daily life and economy and how people spent their free time, everything.
It would be great if you excavate in Pompeii, you really get this emotion.
You find kind of the pot on the fire and the coins in the cash box.
And so you think that would be so great for everybody to see.
And you also see the destruction of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD that destroyed the city,
but also preserved it for us. And so there's a great desire and temptation to make this all
available. But it's always a question of techniques and how can you do it? And so in the beginning, when people started excavating Pompeii, there was no archaeology,
there was no restoration techniques and science.
So they cut out frescoes from the walls, which they deemed important, the rest remained in
place and often was subject to a very rapid decay and today maybe it's there's
no trace anymore of entire walls and frescoes and so forth. This is also a
story of loss and people tried new ways, new methods. I think it's very important when people started in
Pompeii, the end of the 19th century, to imagine the houses
being rebuilt with their roofs and everything. So somehow the
house, the ancient building becomes its own museum.
Well, can you explain to me a phrase that I know
you use and it also seems important in the setup to our chat today which is the
phrase the Pompeii effect and how this all relates to what we're talking about.
Well it's what everybody I think coming to Pompeii can feel. Sometimes you go
into a room and it's so perfectly preserved that you have the feeling
that the owner has just left. The people who lived there were here just five minutes ago.
So this also scientific opportunity to find the things really really were used in their original position.
Normally we find things that were thrown away or rarely in their original primary position.
And so this opens many, many new perspectives on ancient life in the city.
And it's what we call the Pompeii effect. So you can see it in other sites sometimes,
but every archeologist tends to think of Pompeii.
Oh, this is like Pompeii.
And actually there are many Pompeii.
If you look search on internet,
you'll find the Pompeii of prehistory
and the Pompeii of the South American Pompeii
and the Pompeii of the Alps and so forth.
So this shows that the idea of Pompeii, the perfect dig, the perfect excavation,
is really a global theme.
Mason I think you're right. The one that immediately
came to my mind was either Akrotiri or Dura Europos on the Euphrates, which have similarly
been described as Pompeys for their
preservation. Gabriel, if we then move on then to one of the first key themes I'd like to ask about,
which is the size of Pompeii, because this feels like recently there's been new evidence and new
scientific developments that is making people re-evaluate just how many people lived in Pompeii.
So what do archaeologists now think about the size of Pompeii, how many people lived there,
when the eruption of Vesuvius happened?
That is a highly debated question.
And I think it also reflects much of us who are looking at the site and trying to populate it.
You go into the site and you see the rooms and houses and immediately start to think,
well, how would it be to live there?
And often in doing so, we imagine ourselves being,
you know, the house owner and having a huge garden,
but obviously there were many poor people in Pompeii too.
And there were also many slaves and enslaved
workers.
We estimate that up to a third of the ancient population were property of someone else.
This too is part of the history of the site.
So now you can start playing around with numbers.
If you look into the history of the excavations, you can see that initially people were quite
optimistic about the number of people who lived in Pompeii, 20,000, 30,000 maybe, and
then later the numbers started to fall.
After World War II, archaeologists arrived at saying, well, 10,000 maybe, only 10,000
or even less, maybe 8,000.
And so you get these numbers and then boom, suddenly, and that's great in archaeology,
you always get surprises.
An inscription was found in 2017 outside Porta Stabia on a tomb. Now it doesn't give the number, okay? So that's a
disclaimer. But it has some information because it talks about a very wealthy inhabitant of Pompeii
and he celebrates what they called his toga Virili. So when he becomes a man,
when he becomes of age, he organizes a huge party and he invites basically the
whole male population. That's what our impression is to this feast and so this
is more than 6,000 people. If these were all male citizens then you have to
imagine a population of 30-40 000 people, women, children, unfree, so enslaved workers, people
without citizenship and so forth. So that's a huge number.
You know, if you have more than 6,000 male citizens,
10,000 is not an option for the whole population of the city.
But I have to say, you could also question this, of course,
as often in archaeology and history, say, is it really only the male citizens,
also women and children and so forth.
So it's not really clear, but it's a very strong indicator
that points toward a higher population.
And if you go into the site, you know, we tend to walk through Pompeii like,
oh, wow, the house of the Vecci and oh the house of the Monano
beautiful frescoes but there's much more to it. If you look to all the small apartments and the
little shops and texture of the ancient city you can really feel the density of population that you have its two, you have enormous gardens. They just had so much space,
400 square meters only for the garden, 600 maybe. And then you have others who live,
an entire family live on 12 square meters and they have maybe two stories of like a small tower.
You can see actually the traces of people trying to optimize the use of space and they
would work there and sleep there and live there.
I think it's also a story of social inequality in a way.
Well, I think we're going to keep on that a bit longer now, Gabriel. And you mentioned
the House of the Veti in passing there, and we will return to that. But I feel that this
is a good time actually to go outside of the walls of Pompeii and a discovery that I know
is very close to your heart. I mean, Gabriel, first of all, as the director of Pompeii and
when telling the story of Pompeii, how
important actually is it to explain that there was much more to this ancient town or city
than what is within the walls? That you need to explore the archaeology beyond the site
of Pompeii itself.
Richard Pate Well, I think it's really essential because
we have this idea, archaeology started from people actually living in cities.
And so what they did was looking at cities in the ancient world.
And there's a huge tradition and a huge amount of knowledge produced every year on ancient cities,
which is, of course, important.
But we tend to forget that there's a countryside and you can't understand Pompeii
without the countryside and without the wealth produced in the countryside, the agricultural
production, especially wine, which was exported into the entire Mediterranean. So we find
amphoras from Pompeii in Spain and southern France in Turkey
and northern Africa. So that was a huge business. But it's also many of the problems
right of this society. You can trace them in the countryside. So people were investing into the wine business the wine from from pay supposedly wasn't the best at least that's what someone wrote on the wall in pump saying
eat the bread in pompey but drink the wine of the cherry which is that another ancient town and they were kind of competitive at the time. So specializing on wine export, great business activities meant that at some point they couldn't
produce the grain necessary to feed the local populations.
So they had to import grain from other parts of the Mediterranean, which is something that to us seems normal today.
But in antiquity, this was potentially risky because of things that could happen.
And so suddenly it could be without the necessary provisions.
It's one thing in Rome, which had a huge population, maybe up to a million at that time, but it's
a different thing in a town like Pompeii.
And actually we see that the same inscription mentioning the possible number of male citizens
talks about a famine in Pompeii, four years, there was a shortage of supply and this wealthy man
bought grain and bread and gave it to the poor and so forth.
But this means in this great network, where you export wine and import grain and other
things, there's a small thing out of balance and you feel the problems
around the whole Mediterranean.
Because that is something I'd have never thought about, Gabriel. I mean, the idea you get with
the fertile volcanic soils, with vineyards everywhere around Pompeii and all of this land
and the Bay of Naples as well, that they would be able to have enough food. But as you're saying there, the importance of importing food and the fact that there were famines. I would have never
thought there would have been famines in ancient Pompeii. That's something I guess you don't really
see from the surviving archaeology, at least if you're visiting. Well, I think inscriptions are
extremely important. And I actually think we are going toward a very critical
direction in our disciplines, our field. Archaeology of the classical world
should never forget the texts, which is not only the great tradition of
manuscripts and history writing and so but so the thousands of inscriptions you have to
see this all together and then you get the picture and you can see also the
and the corruption and the problems this society had and it really makes you
think about our own present because you you start to understand that it's not that people were simply not informed or
they didn't know better. But maybe some new and others didn't want to hear it. And that
makes us maybe think of things like climate change. Right? So what's really going on?
There's a discussion. Is it caused by humans or by, in antiquity,
maybe the gods, you know, or whatever? You start to understand the complexity and
how humanity and human progress, if you want to call it like that, is often not
so much about discoveries, genius, you know, the new insight, the new thing,
but it's more about how can we find a way together, collectively, to deal with that new thing and with
change and with, you know, climate change, which existed already in antiquity. It was much slower,
but people had to adapt too.
And so you understand it's much more about what we're doing now. We're trying to explain something.
And it's not only the great discovery. The steam engine basically had been invented in antiquity,
but without any consequences.
I always think of Architas' steam-powered
bird, which is one of my nerdy little favourite stories. But I'm hoping then, Gabriel, if you
wouldn't mind, if we keep outside of the walls of Pompeii a little longer, if you wouldn't mind
telling me the story of Civita Juliana, I hope I've said that correctly or near enough,
Juliana, I hope I've said that correctly or near enough. What this is and the amazing discovery, we could say discoveries, that were made there in 2021, because I know this
is a story really close to your heart.
Well, and it still continues, we're still excavating there. In Pompeii, there's a unique
thing which doesn't exist in any other site, not even in Haculenium, which is another
town destroyed by the Suvius. The eruption had two phases, the first one was
characterized by the fall of the lapilli, small pumice stones, and the second by the arrival of the pyroclastic flow.
So very hot ash, kind of dust-like, that then became solid soil.
And because it was so hot and so much, it basically killed everybody
and all humans and animals were still in Pompeii, covered them, bodies, human bodies
dissolved and aren't there anymore, but the soil became solid and so the organic
material left an imprint, a negative, an empty space in the soil and you can
fill it. If you excavate you find actually a hole in the soil and you can fill it. If you excavate you find actually a hole in the
ground and you can fill it with plaster and then you can reconstruct the forms
and you can actually look into the faces of people who died in Pompeii. There are
about a hundred of these plaster casts which is really chilling in a way. Some
people call them statues,
of course they're not statues,
they are people but they aren't there anymore.
So it's a very special type of archeological discovery.
And with the same methodology,
you can reconstruct other things that were covered by ash
and then dissolved like wood, leather,
wooden baskets and so forth. So what we found in Chivita is incredibly well preserved slave
rooms. So we're excavating now in the slave quarter, which is the same size like the quarter where the owners lived.
So a huge, many rooms, I think at least 60 people could live there because they had so much land to work.
And so what we start to see is the furniture, the small daily use objects, the blanket thrown on one of the beds.
How the beds are made, they're very primitive.
There's no mattress.
People are sleeping like on a net of ropes.
Not very comfortable.
You know, no floor, only stamped earth, basically.
We found also several remains of rats and mice, so you can really imagine the precarious
life situation of these people.
And this is really important because we have this idea of the classical
world as a cradle of democracy and philosophy and science and beautiful art and marble.
That's all true. That's part of it, but it's only one part. It's also a society where you had enslaved people, where you had this huge differences
between the wealthy and the poor, maybe only one wall, a wall separating the two parts
of the building.
That's why we had an exhibition here, we called it The Other Pompeii. It's of course the same city, but
you can look at it from different perspectives. And I think if you walk through Pompeii, you can
see The Other Pompeii everywhere. You can see the traces of precarious lives and slavery and
beautiful artworks and wealth. Mason- Gabriel, and just a bit more context, forgive my ignorance. The Civita Giuliana
is a big villa just outside of Pompeii, but the discovery of the slave quarters almost
feels like the greatest part of it, as you say, because it's not highlighting the wealth
of the rich. It's giving an insight into those people who are usually missed in
the ancient record.
Well, yeah, but it depends on us. In Civita Giuliana, which was, I think, one of the biggest
villas in the countryside around Pompeii, known so far, it's very interesting because
it's not the first villa, of course, that has been excavated in Pompeii and the countryside.
There has been found a beautiful chariot with bronze and silver decorations, also very important.
So you could present the whole complex as the villa of the chariot and try to create a narrative around that.
Or you can try to say, well, this is so unique because of the slave rooms and the furniture
and all that. It really depends on us. And what we try to do is to say, well, it's not
that the chariot isn't important or that one aspect is more true or more important
than the other.
But I think for our visitors, it would be very important to know more about what was
life like in ancient Pompeii.
And if we focus only on the beautiful things, that's nice and maybe entertaining,
but it doesn't maybe touch us in the way
the stories of children and women and men
living in very difficult situations sometimes do.
And it makes us think about our own society and justice and you
know inequality and that's important.
Gabriel, I remember when the story of the slave quarters broke to the media, I mean
to the public world and there was that massive reaction to it, lots and lots of excitement
around it.
Did you expect that?
I mean were you expecting
there to be such a massive reaction to the discovery of these slave quarters?
Yes and no. We were working behind the scenes, so we tried to launch it and to give it importance.
So we were happy to see that the story was taken up by many new outlets. Sometimes I think maybe outside archaeology
there's maybe more openness to certain themes. We have to do more in this direction, but also
how do you open Pompeii? There are highlights, and that's also important,
but even the highlights.
The House of the Vetti is just one of the most famous
houses of Pompeii.
You can look at it and say,
it's basically in all of the manuals of ancient art
and painting and so,
but there's also a slave quarter inside the house and you can ask where did these
people get their wealth from and then probably the wine business, right, and so you can connect it to
the countryside and to other facilities, the harbour and so even the great art is part of this economic and cultural and social history,
which is, I think, very exciting.
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Hit, a podcast from History Hit. I mean, so exciting. And Gabriel, we will go on and talk about the legacies of children
in Pompeii as well, and also projects around young men and women today in Pompeii that
I know is also very close to your heart. But I will ask now about the beauty, about the more
kind of elite part of Pompeii briefly now if you don't mind and to kind of go to the house of the
Veti that you mentioned because near the start of your book you do highlight very early on
this presence, I mean this striking presence of Greek art and scenes from Greek mythology
that regularly when new announcements are made to the press, the discoveries normally
feature images from Greek culture in these very rich houses. Gabriel, first of all, why
is that? Why is there such a presence of scenes of Greek mythology and Greek culture in Roman
Pompeii?
Where we tend to think about Pompeii as a Roman city, actually, we could look at it
as a Greek and Roman city because it's so full of Greek culture. The Romans looked at
Greece. They were superior in terms of military and political force. They conquered Greece at a certain point,
but they felt themselves somehow inferior culturally. And so they learned Greek. All the
great politicians and writers had to know Greek. We can see in Pompeii people
writing in Greek, some make mistakes, but there were also many people from the
Eastern Mediterranean. Greek was the main language, not only in Greece but also in
Palestine and Egypt and Syria and so forth. So this is one reason.
Then the Greeks had such a sophisticated literature and culture, and they had, you
know, paintings and statues and, and even such things like erotic manuals and things, you know, the Romans very pragmatic had also difficulties
to accept. And so there was a discussion inside the Roman society. Isn't this corrupting?
You know, isn't this something that will in the long run make us weak. All this Greek culture and drinking and feasting, at the
end they couldn't resist. But there was always this kind of ambivalent relation to Greek
culture. And then of course the Romans made something new of it. And that's what we often maybe don't see. But the great authors of Latin literature,
virtual, orbit and so forth, they all had Greek models, but they did something new. They weren't
just translations or imitations of Greek literature. And that's what you see in Pompeii. You see the traditional Roman houses with the ground plan, which is strictly linked
to the social function of the house.
So you have the atrium with the opening in the roof and the tablinum where the house
owner every morning for the salutatio would receive his clients, right,
which were the people who asked for favors and who then would vote for him when he would
run for an office in the town.
But these very traditional houses are full of Greek paintings. So it says if they were trying to live two lives, two cultural codes, maybe in the morning
you're the traditional Roman house owner and you do your social and political business
and then in the afternoon and in the evening you become a bit more Greek and you drink
some Greek wine and meet with friends and Greek poems are performed and you look at
the paintings and they become really stories to reflect on the lives of the people who
were there.
So they often, we know this from texts, they would say, well, you
know, Peneanope, the wife of Odysseus had to wait 10, 20 years until he came back, 10
siege of Troy and then 10 years to come back. And then from there you start talking about,
you know, marriage problems or whatever.
Because it does seem like, isn't it, with those wall paintings,
those frescoes, those scenes of Greek mythology, in those great houses, Gabriel, could you say
kind of conversation starters if they're adorning the walls? Or maybe just thoughts, as you say,
if you're in the afternoon, you're feeling a bit more Greek. I mean, things to ponder over almost.
It's an interesting insight into how they thought and how they lived. Right. You have to understand that people didn't have
all these books. They had books, but they were scrolls, and they copied by hand and so forth.
They didn't have, of course, television and newspapers and all that. So there was no public
school. There's no place where you could go and someone would tell
you the story of our country and how did everything become like it is. So these images had a great
importance for the whole society to imagine who are we, where do we come from. They didn't make
a big difference between myth and history, so the boundary was somehow fluent. How do we come from? They didn't make a big difference between myth and history.
So the boundary was somehow fluent.
How do we look into the future is really dependent on what's our imaginary history,
you know, all these stories. That's literally where people live their lives.
And when Mount Vesuvius erupted,
people didn't know really what was going on.
They had no geology and vulcanology and so forth.
So some saw giants in the smoke
and in the ash over Mount Vesuvius.
And Pliny writes, many prayed to the gods, many others thought
there weren't any gods anymore in the world and a new age of eternal darkness had begun.
So this is what they take from this world of images and stories and myths. And then you live with that and you approach the catastrophes of life
with that baggage. And Pilly the Younger that you mentioned there who was an eyewitness of the
eruption and his letters, two letters on it, have survived. And Gabriel, and just mentioning the
House of the Veti because as you've highlighted earlier, one of the most striking houses in Pompeii
with all of those scenes, various scenes from Greek mythology. I guess the other thing to highlight is if you have
a guest coming over for them to be able to recognise just from the painting that you have, they have to
identify what myth that is. I guess that's also another marker, isn't it? You might have two
figures from Greek mythology on a wall, but maybe you're almost testing the guest who's coming along.
Can you tell us who that is and the myth that they're from?
And who was very wealthy, but maybe didn't have such a profound education, paid or had
a slave standing nearby during the dinner parties, and he would whisper the stories and the poems, the beginning, so you could at least
pretend to be one of the cultural elite. That was very important.
Mason. And do we sometimes see with these beautiful frescoes, these wall paintings,
my last question on this before we move on. Do you also see beneath the beauty
and beneath them being symbols of, well, elements for conversation starters and high status,
a religious origin to them, like a religious background to these beautiful paintings?
Absolutely. But I think what we see in Pompeii is how this is getting lost because it's so omnipresent that the
images started to lose their magic.
We tend to look at antiquity and say, well, how was it here?
How did people live?
But actually, it's more than a thousand years.
And so there's a huge development. In the early centuries of
Rome and Athens and Greece and also Pompeii, images were magic objects.
So you had them basically in the sanctuaries, in the temples,
and in the tombs. they weren't just representations.
They had the function of making the presence of the divinity manifest.
The deities would be present through the image.
And then if you have this huge production of images, not only in holy places and sacred
spaces, but also in private houses, certainly something changes.
And so you can still see the religious origin,
but evidently it had become more like some kind
of cultural code and almost some kind of decoration.
And I think you can also see some kind of nostalgic memory.
And in Pompeii, there are many of these small landscape pictures, images,
where you often see temples and shrines and statues of divinities.
But it's all a bit run down,
and you have trees growing through the columns of the small temple.
What I see there is kind of the memory.
Once there was this unity of nature, landscape, gods.
The landscape was inhabited by gods and humans who lived in the landscape.
But now it's separated because we are in the city
and we are looking at these paintings but we are not part anymore of the natural landscape because
who's working the fields? Enslaved workers. Who goes into the woods hunting and cutting wood?
goes into the woods hunting and cutting wood, not the people who had villas in Pompeii. Mason- Is this what makes, I mean, arguably the most famous wall painting ever found at
Pompeii, the mysteries freeze and this new discovery or recent discovery Gabriel announced
to the press, the one that the House of Theacis, so interesting if it reveals more kind of
clearly, please correct me if I'm getting my words
wrong here, but almost an outright religious event being shown or ritual event being shown
in a wall painting?
Well, yes and no, because it has always been a question.
We know that from 186 BC, the Dianesian mysteries were forbidden by the Roman Senate in Rome, in Italy, because
there had been a big scandal and sex and money and murder. And so no mysteries anymore. But
then you see these images in the Villa of the Mysteries, so people initially thought
maybe they secretly continued to celebrate these mysteries here.
And the same holds true for the recently found frieze, which is very similar, but also with
important differences.
And in a way it's true, the ancient Senatus Consultum, which forbid the mysteries was never abolished officially
as far as we know. So yeah, what's happening? Probably people were playing with this, right?
I mean, it's not really, it's only on the wall, it's only a painting. And as long as we're not engaging again in sex orgies and murder and stealing money from
others and so forth, there's nothing wrong about it.
There shouldn't be.
On the other hand, I think there's a longing for meaning and the mystery is so exciting
and so fascinating because there's something hidden.
The famous psychologist cargustof young sad only something that's incomprehensible.
Can make sense because we try to find a sense if everything is clear, then it's also boring in a way. I think people were working on
that, they were trying to figure it out, and they had this feeling that there must be something,
but it was fading away. And so I think this is also an explanation why new religious movements like Christianity were so appealing in a society that
had nothing to do with the ancient Jewish religion and that was all seen as very awkward and strange
and not being part of the Roman tradition and culture but still it had such a success at the end, right?
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American History Hit, a podcast from History Hit. Because you mentioned it there, I must ask, because 79 AD doesn't feel very long after
the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, but is there potentially any evidence of Christianity at
Pompeii, very early Christianity?
People always imagined, and this was fascinating because theoretically, yes, there could be.
The early Christian texts were already circulating, like the Gospel of Mark, which is dated around
70 and even older, around many of the letters of Paul. You have novels and movies with this idea
that there was a small community of Christians in Pompeii.
Actually, we don't have any evidence,
but there's basically two very strange
and interesting graffiti.
So not official inscriptions carved in marble,
but things people were writing on the walls,
like today, maybe in the bathroom of the local school, you can see many of these.
So people wrote one set, just two words, Sodom Gomorrah.
Oh, no way.
From the Old Testament, which were destroyed because they were so sinful and so the Lord.
Let's have fire and brimstone and this is so similar to pump and people notice that.
Already in the past and then suddenly in the 19th century this inscription is discovered and it seemed really incredible. So people
even wondered if someone had come back and excavated in Pompeii and made this inscription.
I don't believe that. I think it's probably someone who saw Pompeii from a distance and
saw the sensuality and the sexual exploitation also,
prostitution and so forth, and said,
well, that's what we were experiencing.
And then there's another inscription, a charcoal inscription,
which is not preserved, unfortunately, but we know drawings.
And it's not really clear what it said,
but clearly it mentioned the name of the Christiani,
the Christians, and it probably was some kind of deformation.
So he said, look at this guy here.
He is part of this crazy movement.
So we don't know if it's true or not, but evidently people had heard of this.
That's very interesting.
Toby It's also interesting. I must admit that
that has become one of my favourite facts that there is evidence of Sodom and Gomorrah,
a mention of it in Pompeii before the eruption. Gabriel, that is extraordinary. But if we
quickly move on to children at Pompeii, it seems there's been some really interesting
discoveries there. Another group of people usually hidden from the archaeological record, but at Pompeii,
I saw some images recently, almost look like ancient Roman stickmen done by children.
Is that true?
Giles Yeah.
And they are very interesting because they are gladiators and animal hunts. So things you could usually see in the
amphitheater and they are drawn in a typical children-like way. So we called
some psychologists from the University at Naples to help us to understand how old were these kids who made
the drawings. And based on the drawings, you have the legs and arms coming directly out
of the head, which is a way still today, children, until the age of five or six draw the human figure. So it
seems very constant in the history of mankind but we didn't really know if
this was the case 2,000 years ago. They had no you know drawing books and
kindergarten and all that so maybe they were drawing like that even at an older age.
But then we had another fantastic discovery because these children did another thing which
is very typical still today. They put their hands, their small hands on the walls and with a piece
of charcoal made a drawing around and so we
could compare the size of the hand with the drawing style and it's yeah we're
there five six years these very young children evidently had seen something in
the the local amphitheater of these bloody brutal games. Today we talk a lot about violence in social media and videos.
And so this was real life violence.
People died there.
Actually, sometimes it was part of the performance in the amphitheatre
to punish, to crucify, to throw people to the beasts.
And so you could see blood and you could see people die, and it was entertainment.
And you have to imagine that very young children were exposed to that kind of violence.
And that's what we take from these drawings.
It's that idea, isn't it? You have to be 18 or over to attend the amphitheatre, as you say, if those
young people could go. Gabriel, it's such an amazing insight. And I remember also going to a
corridor very close to both of the theatres and just next to the gladiator barracks, where I think
you see some more etchings of gladiators potentially at a child's height. So once again it's so interesting how that type
of figure is so ingrained in a child's mind. Lastly I mentioned the theatre
there and I feel that brings us nicely on to the last project I want us to talk
about which I know is very close to your heart and slightly different to what
we've been talking about but no less important which is the Sogno di Volare project. Now Gabriel, can you tell us a bit about this and why it's
so important?
In archaeology and museum studies, we talk a lot about communities and heritage. And
so we thought in Poppe, how can we bridge the gap? Because we have visitors from all
over the world and millions of people come here and that's great, of course. But we felt there's less involvement
with the local community. And so we started working with young people, teenagers, basically
children who are doing theatre workshops during the school year. and then at the end of the year they stage and then a
classical play Aristophanes, these are comedies so it's not to laugh, in the ancient theatre of
Pompeii. So the idea is that they take possession of their, our collective heritage, the site Pompeii is theirs too, and so they become actors in
every sense. And it's amazing if you see people who usually don't come to Pompeii
or if they come, they come because they are they are forced to come with a
school excursion or whatever. And if you start explaining them,
well, you know, Pompeii, wall paintings,
and it's very easy to lose them in a second,
because they have no emotional connection.
They don't feel it, no interest.
Whereas if you have them as part of the project,
they're actually on stage, then after that
it's really a game.
They want to see the new exhibitions, they want to see the excavations.
And so by creating this kind of involvement and emotional connections, then you can really start bringing the content and
the historical and art historical knowledge to them and it suddenly
becomes automatic and that's really fantastic.
I can imagine, I can also hear it in your voice Gabriel, how rewarding a project it is for you
and how important it is as well. So I'm very glad we could mention that
before we wrap up. Gabriel, it has been a privilege to have some of your time to talk about
all of these projects and the work at Pompeii. I really appreciate it. Last but certainly not
least, you are of course promoting your new book and it is called? It's called The Buried City Unearthing the Real Pompeii, the other Pompeii, the everyday
life Pompeii but also the great art and it's published in May.
I hope you enjoy it.
Absolutely.
I hope everyone enjoys it.
Who reads it?
And I'm sure they will.
Gabriel, it just goes to me to say one more time, thank you so much for taking the time
to come on the podcast today. Thank you.
Well there you go there was the director of Pompeii Dr. Gabriel Zuck-Triegel
giving us an hour of his time to explain and explore some of the most recent
discoveries and projects that are happening at Pompeii under his watch. I hope you enjoyed the episode that really was quite a special
interview for us to get and we were really excited to now have shared it
with you. Thank you once again for listening to this episode of The
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