Pompeii dig
unearths fighting fresco in 'gladiators' tavern'
Well-preserved
find on wall beneath stairwell is latest discovery at Regio V site
Angela
Giuffrida in Rome
Fri 11 Oct
2019 13.42 BSTLast modified on Fri 11 Oct 2019 14.25 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/oct/11/pompeii-dig-unearths-fighting-fresco-gladiators-tavern
A detail
from the fresco of two gladiators fighting that was found at a site north of
Pompeii’s archaeological park. Photograph: Italian Culture Ministry Handout/EPA
A
well-preserved fresco depicting fighting gladiators has been unearthed by
archaeologists in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii.
The scene
is of the end of a fight between two types of gladiator – a murmillo and a
Thracian – where one wins and the other succumbs. The two types were
distinguished by their armour and weapons.
It is the
latest discovery in Regio V, a 21.8-hectare (54-acre) site to the north of the
archaeological park that is yet to open to the public.
The fresco
was found on a wall beneath the stairwell of what was probably a tavern
frequented by gladiators and which provided accommodation on a higher floor for
them to sleep with sex workers.
The fresco
was discovered on a wall in what was probably a tavern frequented by
gladiators. Photograph: Pompeii archaeological park.
“It’s very
probable that this place was frequented by gladiators,” said Massimo Osanna,
the director general of Pompei’s archaeological park. “We are in Regio V, not
far from where there was a barracks for gladiators, where among other things,
there was graffiti referring to this world.
“Of
particular interest in this fresco is the very realistic representation of
wounds on the wrist and chest of the unsuccessful gladiator … we don’t know the
outcome of the fight, he could have died or was given grace.”
Excavations
at Regio V have yielded dozens of discoveries since work began last year as
part of the EU-funded Great Pompeii Project. A frescoed “fast food” counter, or
thermopolium, was found in March and another depicting the mythological hunter
Narcissus enraptured by his own reflection in a pool of water was discovered in
February. Human remains have also been found, including the skeletons of two
women and three children huddled together in a villa, as well as the remains of
a harnessed horse and saddle.
An
archaeologist inspects the remains of a horse skeleton in Pompeii’s
archaeological site. Photograph: Cesare Abbate/AP
Much work
has been done across the entire park, which has attracted almost 4 million
visitors a year since 2013, when Unesco threatened to place it on its list of
world heritage sites in peril unless Italian authorities improved on
preservation.
“A few
years ago the archaeological site of Pompeii was known throughout the world for
its negative image: the collapses, the strikes and the queues of tourists under
the sun,” said Italy’s culture minister, Dario Franceschini. “Today’s story is
one of redemption and millions more tourists. It is a welcoming site, but above
all we have returned to doing research through new digs.
“The
discovery of the fresco shows that Pompeii is an inexhaustible mine of research
and knowledge for today’s archaeologists and for those of the future.”
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