Portland Public Library

Pompeii's living statues, ancient Roman lives stolen from death, Eugene Dwyer

Label
Pompeii's living statues, ancient Roman lives stolen from death, Eugene Dwyer
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 145-153) and index
resource.biographical
contains biographical information
resource.governmentPublication
government publication of a state province territory dependency etc
Illustrations
illustrationsplates
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Pompeii's living statues
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
466344616
Responsibility statement
Eugene Dwyer
Review
""By focusing on Pompeii's most iconic finds, Dwyer has produced a masterful account of how changing attitudes and political circumstances profoundly affected the presentation and preservation of this famous city."--J. T. Berry, Swansea University" "In AD 79, Mt. Vesuvius erupted in two stages, killing thousands of people and animals in Pompeii and burying them in ash and mud. During excavations of the town in 1863, Giuseppe Fiorelli, the director of the dig, poured plaster of paris into a cavity under the soil revealed by a workman's pick. When the plaster set and the mound was uncovered, all were amazed to see the secret that the ground had held for 1,800 years: a detailed cast of an ancient Pompeian such as no one had seen before, frozen in the instant of dying and complete in every respect, including outlines of the clothes he was wearing at the time of the clothes he was wearing at the time of the destruction." "In AD 79, Mt. Vesuvius erupted in two stages. While the first stage was incredibly destructive, it was the second stage, a so-called pyroclastic flow, that inundated Pompeii with a combination of superheated gases, pumice, and rocks, killing thousands of people and animals and burying them in ash and mud." "During excavations of the town in 1863, Giuseppe Fiorelli, the director of the dig, poured plaster of paris into a cavity under the soil revealed by a workman's pick. When the plaster set and the mound was uncovered, all were amazed to see the secret that the ground had held for 1,800 years: a detailed cast of an ancient Pompeian such as no one had seen before, frozen in the instant of dying and complete in every respect, including outlines of the clothes he was wearing at the time of the destruction. The bodies, photographed and exhibited in the specially built Pompeii Museum, completely changed the world's ideas of life in ancient Italy."
Sub title
ancient Roman lives stolen from death
Summary
"Pompeii's Living Statues is a narrative account, supported by contemporary documents, of the remarkable discovery of those ancient victims preserved in the volcanic mud of Vesuvius." "Eugene Dwyer examines these casts and related records, the originals of a number of which (along with their museum) were lost in World War II bombing. As he considers the casts as archaeological and cultural pieces, he also discusses Pompeii and its artifacts in the context of Italian unification and party politics, the development of modern excavation methods, and the challenges of maintaining a very large archaeological site. Dwyer's clear organization and writing style, combined with a collection of photographs and engravings, make for a fascinating exploration of Pompeii and its victims."--BOOK JACKET
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