Executive summary by darmansjah
The city of Pompeii was an ancient Roman town-city near
modern Naples in the Italian region of Campania, in the territory of the comune
of Pompei. Pompeii, along with Herculaneum and many villas in the surrounding
area, was mostly destroyed and buried under 4 to 6 m (13 to 20 ft) of ash and
pumice in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.
Researchers believe that the town was founded in the seventh
or sixth century BC by the Osci or Oscans and was captured by the Romans in 80
BC. By the time of its destruction, 160 years later, its population was
probably approximately 20,000, and the city had a complex water system, an
amphitheatre, gymnasium and a port.
The eruption was cataclysmic for the town. Evidence for the
destruction originally came from a surviving letter by Pliny the Younger, who
saw the eruption from a distance and described the death of his uncle Pliny the
Elder, an admiral of the Roman fleet, who tried to rescue citizens. The site
was lost for about 1,500 years until its initial rediscovery in 1599 and
broader rediscovery almost 150 years later by Spanish engineer Rocque Joaquin
de Alcubierre in 1748. The objects that lay beneath the city have been well
preserved for centuries because of the lack of air and moisture. These
artifacts provide an extraordinarily detailed insight into the life of a city
during the Pax Romana. During the excavation, plaster was used to fill in the
voids between the ash layers that once held human bodies. This allowed one to
see the exact position the person was in when he or she died.
Pompeii has been a tourist destination for over 250 years.
Today it has UNESCO World Heritage Site status and is one of the most popular
tourist attractions of Italy, with approximately 2.5 million visitors every
year
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