excavation history

81
EXCAVATION HISTORY

Upload: jasper

Post on 23-Mar-2016

51 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Excavation history. Titus. Suetonius TITus 8.3. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Excavation history

EXCAVATION HISTORY

Page 2: Excavation history

TITUS

Page 3: Excavation history

.. Whether by offers of sympathy or by giving all the financial help he could. He selected by lot some senators of consular rank to regenerate Campania, and he allocated the property of those who had died in the eruption and who had no surviving heirs to the renewal of the afflicted towns

Dio Cassius. 66.24. 1, 3-4.Titus himself took no money from individuals or cities or kings although many kept giving and promising him large sums, but restored all the damage from his resources.

SUETONIUS TITUS 8.3

Page 4: Excavation history

CIL IV 2311 ( House of N. Popidius Priscus) VII, ii, 20)

Scratched on right wall of entranceway.

House tunneled through ( Latin in Greek letters)

Materials stripped from Forum

SALVAGE?

Page 5: Excavation history

LONG SLEEP

Page 6: Excavation history

120 CE

Page 7: Excavation history

4TH CENTURY C.E.

Page 8: Excavation history
Page 9: Excavation history

Late antique lamps and pottery dating from the 6 th to the 16 th c. CE found in Suburban Baths,

House of Julia Felix

House of Fabius Rufus

LOOTING/EXPLORATION

Page 10: Excavation history

LETTERS OF PLINY

Page 11: Excavation history

12TH C. CE COPY OF 4TH C .CE PEUTINGER TABLE

Pompeii, Herculaneum, Oplontis and Stabiae

Page 12: Excavation history

LA CIVITA

1500- 1700 CEAncient ruins found, but reburied.

Inscription ( POMPEI)(Pompey)

Geographer states that Pompeii lies underneath La Civita

Page 13: Excavation history

PERIODS OF EXCAVATION

Treasure Hunting 1709- 1859

Scientific 1860- 1978

Modern 1979- present

Page 14: Excavation history

TREASURE HUNTING--PRINCE D’ELBEUF

1709 well deepening

Page 15: Excavation history
Page 16: Excavation history
Page 17: Excavation history

CHARLES VII KING OF NAPLES

1738 ( New Villa)

Page 18: Excavation history

ROCCO ALCUBIERRE’S THEATER TUNNELS

Page 19: Excavation history

HERCULANEUMMARCUS NONIUS BALBUS

Page 20: Excavation history

BASILICA

Page 21: Excavation history

THESEUS( BASILICA)

Page 22: Excavation history

1740 ACCOUNT OF “EXCAVATIONS”

“ There might certainly be collected great light from this reservoir of antiquities, if a man of learning had the inspection of it; if he directed the working and would make a journal of the discoveries. But I believe there is no judicious choice of directors..”

Horace Walpole, Earl of Oxford

Page 23: Excavation history

1748- 50 “ La Civita”

1750 Herculaneum

1755 Return to Pompeii (1763 –inscription identifies site)

Page 24: Excavation history

Swiss Military Engineer, Assistant to Alcubierre

First systematic excavation ( respected lines of streets, detailed plans, weekly summaries of finds, entering houses through doors

KARL WEBER

Page 25: Excavation history

VILLA OF THE PAPYRI 1752-1765

Page 26: Excavation history
Page 27: Excavation history

4 levels terraced to the sea

Page 28: Excavation history
Page 29: Excavation history

DANCERS

Page 30: Excavation history
Page 31: Excavation history

SENECA?

Page 32: Excavation history

EPICURUS / SCIPIO AFRICANUS (?)

Page 33: Excavation history
Page 34: Excavation history

RUNNERS

Page 35: Excavation history

RESTING HERMES

Page 36: Excavation history

SLEEPING FAUN

Page 37: Excavation history

DRUNKEN SATYR

Page 38: Excavation history
Page 39: Excavation history

PAN

Page 40: Excavation history
Page 41: Excavation history

ATHENA

Page 42: Excavation history

MUSE ?

Page 43: Excavation history

13 large bronze

7 large marble

18 medium and small bronzes

32 bronze busts

15 marble busts

TOTAL SCULPTURE ( 90 PIECES)

Page 44: Excavation history
Page 45: Excavation history
Page 46: Excavation history

1,787 VOLUMES

Page 47: Excavation history
Page 48: Excavation history
Page 49: Excavation history
Page 50: Excavation history

Fr. Antonio Piaggi ( 1756) 3 scrolls in 4 years

Page 51: Excavation history

POEM ON ACTIUM IN LATIN

Page 52: Excavation history

MOST= GREEK=PHILODEMUS/ EPICUREANISM

Treatise on Music

Page 53: Excavation history
Page 54: Excavation history

EPICUREAN PHILOSOPHY

The most important thing in life is pleasure. ( But not in excess). Pleasure and happiness are caused by freedom from disturbance. The world is explained by natural causes so one does not have to worry about the gods. If you understand the universe you will be free from anxiety. The soul dies with the body. Avoid competition and intense emotional commitments

( removes jealousy and failure).

Page 55: Excavation history

“Friendship dances around the word, calling us to awake to the joys of a happy life”

“ It is not a succession of drinking feasts and of revelry ,not sexual love, not the enjoyment o fish and other delicacies of a luxurious table that produces a pleasant life; It is sober reasoning.

Page 56: Excavation history

“ Sexual intercourse never did anyone any good and he will be lucky if it did not actually do harm”.

Page 57: Excavation history

PISO?

Page 58: Excavation history

WINCKLEMANN “ FATHER OF ART HISTORY” 1758

Page 59: Excavation history
Page 60: Excavation history

THE GRAND TOUR

Page 61: Excavation history

SOCIETY OF THE DILETTANTI 1778

Page 62: Excavation history

1748- 50 “ La Civita”

1750 Herculaneum

1755 Return to Pompeii (1763 –inscription identifies site)

Page 63: Excavation history

POMPEII, TEMPLE OF ISIS 1764

Page 64: Excavation history

Temple of Isis, not back-filled

Objects left in site for visitors

Paintings still removed to museum, but drawn first

Attempts to preserve things in situ and repair ruins

INTEREST IN PRESENTATION AND PRESERVATION

Page 65: Excavation history

VILLA OF DIOMEDES ( 20 DEAD) 1771-1774

Page 66: Excavation history

END OF 18TH CENTURY

Page 67: Excavation history

CAROLINE BONAPARTE (1808 RULER OF NAPLES WITH HER

HUSBAND)

Page 68: Excavation history

MAZOIS ( 1812)

One of first real scholarly studies.

Page 69: Excavation history

NEO-CLASSICAL STYLE

Page 70: Excavation history

TOWN WALLS, FORUM, AMPHITHEATER

Page 71: Excavation history

FERDINAND IV ( KING OF NAPLES)—SON OF CHARLES ( 1815)

Page 72: Excavation history

REGION VI AND VII

Forum Baths, House of the Tragic Poet

Page 73: Excavation history

HOUSE OF THE FAUN

Page 74: Excavation history

TOURISM/TRAIN FROM NAPLES ( 1840)/ MARINE GATE ENTRANCE

Also theft and corruption

Page 75: Excavation history

BRIULLOV ( 1827)

Glaucos and Ione/ Nadia

Page 76: Excavation history

BULWER-LYTTON-1834

Glaucos and Ione/ Nadia

Page 77: Excavation history

THE LAST DAYS OF POMPEII

“ He caught his beloved in his arms and with difficulty and labour gained the temple He bore her to the remoter and more sheltered part of the portico, and leaned over her , that he might shield her, with his own form, from the lightning and showers! The beauty and unselfishness of love could hallow even that dismal time!”

Page 78: Excavation history

WINTER PALACE, ST. PETERSBURG (1830-40)

Page 79: Excavation history

Villa of Diomedes ( 1770’s) imprint of a woman’s breast found

1852

Page 80: Excavation history

PERIODS OF EXCAVATION

Treasure Hunting 1709- 1859

Scientific 1860- 1978

Modern 1979- present

Page 81: Excavation history