Investigating the archaeology of death in Pompeii, Italy

Investigating the archaeology of death in Pompeii, Italy INVESTIGATING THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF DEATH IN POMPEII: PORTA SARNO - PORTA NOLA NECROPOLIS PROJECT Typology, location, architecture of the depositions.

DEATH ARCHAEOLOGY INVESTIGATION PROJECT
NECROPOLIS AND FUGITIVES OF PORTA NOLA, POMPEII (ITALY)
The British School at Rome (BSR), the Museu de Prehistoria de Valencia (MPV), de University of Valencia and the Parco Archeologico di Pompei organize the scientific project: Investigating the archaeology of death at Pompeii: The necropolis and fugitives of Porta Nola, which integrates the practical tra

ining program in death archaeology. The necropolis of Porta Nola at Pompeii offers an exceptional opportunity to study the population of Pompeii, as well as more broadly wider trends in the Roman population. An examination of the necropolis will permit an investigation of the people’s physical and social characteristics, as well as their habits and customs, and how they lived, died and were buried. The project and practical program are directed by Stephen Kay (BSR), Llorenç Alapont (CDL) and Rosa Albiach (MPV) and coordinated by the Soprintendenza di Pompei.

1. AIM AND OBJECTIVES:
The necropolis of PORTA NOLA is one of the most ideal site for to know how the population of Pompeii was, and in extension the people who lived in imperial Roman Time. La Necropolis of PORTA NOLA seems the ideal site for to know their physical and social characteristics, their habits and customs, modus vivendi, how they lived and died. And how they faced the transcendental moment of the death, both in his daily life and in the catastrophic moment of the eruption of the Vesuvius. It’s an eminently multidisciplinary investigation with the participation of diverse archaeological sciences, funerary archaeology, physical anthropology, bone-archaeology, palynology, etc. All with the most modern technologies applied to the topography, geophysics, radiology, increased reality, etc. The necropolis of PORTA NOLA seems a small and isolated necropolis, but unlike other cemeteries, it offers extraordinary possibilities to know as the members of the different social strata were facing the transcendental fact of the death in a very organized and hierarchy community. The management of the death is also an element of definition and identity of a certain social class as faithful reflection of the status of the alive ones, because the biological and cultural dimension have an evident prolongation after the death. Therefore the necropolis of PORTA NOLA allows us to know the rites of the death and to interpret the gestures and funeral customs of the privileged classes, but also of low classes, as the praetorian soldiers and even the slaves. In fact every social group transforms the natural fact of the death in a cultural, social, ideological and economic standardized phenomenon by means of the practice of gestures and funereal rites. Therefore to reach this aim, our work is based on the investigation of interpretation of:
The human remains and the treatment of the body. The offerings, the symbolic objects and the funeral gestures. The memory of the deceased, the epigrafy, painting, sculpture, the exterior image of the tomb. The symbolism, the religion, superstition. The virtual reconstruction of what really happened after the death and how the deceased lived and died.

2. BACKGROUND TO PROJECT. Our Project, therefore, through a complex synthesis of the data obtained from geophysical survey, studies of the evidence and of old excavations, and new stratigraphic investigation, aims to threw light on the historical and cultural development of the life a and death of the people from a roman city as Pompeii. The GPR survey found many interesting anomalies in the area of the Tomb of Obellius. This fact led us to conduct a methodological cleaning of the interior of Obellius’ tomb, which has provided surprising results. In fact, the tomb was excavated and cleaned up from soil and, moreover, especially from the archaeological material; instead, in a small mound artificially built up into a corner of the tomb, many fragments of burned human bones perhaps attributable to Obellius and decorated bones presenting similarly evident traces of burning belonging to the funeral bed on which was placed the body on the pyre were found. In addition, it was possible to recover several remains of unburned animal bones and few tiny fragments of pottery and a bronze coin identified as an AS issued by Augustus. In front of the gate there is an anonymous schola tomb, on which a podium with an altar decorated with cista mistica was built. The GPR found several series of specific small, rounded, and aligned anomalies located about one meter below the current level at the center of the triangular wedge formed by the walls that closed the tomb. They may be interpreted as funerary urns. In fact, their shape, their alignment, and their measures can represent a series of ollae, the vases usually used in imperial age for the deposition of the funerary ashes. Some humble graves marked by simple inscriptions on the city wall, a type of burial attested in Pompeii only in the necropolis outside Porta Nola. These tombs, as Senatore (1998) says, are specially interesting because they are burial placed out of the wall, in public area, therefore, they are the only tombs of poor people known in Pompeii, which they remain without excavating and which they deserve a systematic study. We also have start a physical anthropologic investigation on the casts of fugitives discovered in 1975 near the necropolis outside Porta Nola. In particular, in the last campaign, besides the direct examination of the bones visible through the plaster, a survey with laser scanner and X-Ray examination were conducted. Studies of physical anthropology on the individuals preserved in the casts has never been done before, even they are the most humane archaeological remains of Pompeii, and in its interior preserves the best anthropologic material to know how the inhabitants of Pompeii lived and died.
3. WE HAVE 4 AIMS FOR THE NEAR CAMPAIGN 2015:
1. To continue and to finish the excavation of Obellius Firmo's tomb, in order to recover all the materials that allow us to reconstruct the gestures and funeral rituals and especially regarding the funereal bed.
2. To excavate the triangular tomb to confirm the presence of the funeral urns
3. The excavation of tombs of poor people corresponding to the inscriptions of the wall of Porta Nola
4. To continue with the investigation of the fugitives of Porta Nola
We will give to the participants a complete dossier with the information about methods, practice and theory of archaeology of death, physical anthropology, funerary archaeology, etc. English, Spanish and Italian are the official languages of the program

We are delighted by the opportunities for interdisciplinary research offered by our project at Pompeii Porta Sarno, part...
25/04/2026

We are delighted by the opportunities for interdisciplinary research offered by our project at Pompeii Porta Sarno, particularly the sculptural relief discovered in 2023

Request PDF | Digital Archaeology and Interdisciplinary Diagnostic Strategies for the Funerary Monument of the Spouses in Pompeii: A Complex Methodological Approach to the Conservation of the Tomb in the Porta Sarno Necropolis (Parco Archeologico di Pompei) | In recent years, the progressive integra...

18/04/2026

Nuovo documentario sul vetro nell’antichità

10/04/2026
During the season this past July, some of the students had a privilege that only a few mortals have the right to enjoy: ...
21/11/2025

During the season this past July, some of the students had a privilege that only a few mortals have the right to enjoy: A VISIT TO THE HOUSE OF TIASO, guided by archaeologists from Pompeii Park... Other students unfortunately decided not to be there, or do not remember having been there.

Orgogliosi e felici di contribuire a una conferenza così interessante con archeologi e storici pompellanisti di tale pre...
06/11/2025

Orgogliosi e felici di contribuire a una conferenza così interessante con archeologi e storici pompellanisti di tale prestigio

18/10/2025

New book!

La Universitat de València impulsa la internacionalización con una microcredencial pionera en Pompeya6 octubre, 2025La U...
08/10/2025

La Universitat de València impulsa la internacionalización con una microcredencial pionera en Pompeya
6 octubre, 2025
La Universitat de València ha dado un paso decisivo en su apuesta por la internacionalización y la formación práctica con la Microcredencial Universitaria en ‘Investigando Pompeya: curso interdisciplinar en historia, arqueología y patrimonio’, una innovadora iniciativa académica que ha permitido que una veintena de estudiantes se trasladen al Parque Arqueológico de Pompeya, uno de los yacimientos más emblemáticos y mejor conservados del mundo.

Dirigida por los profesores y expertos Miguel Requena, María Luisa Vázquez de Agredos, Gianni Gallello y Llorenç Alapont, esta microcredencial ha ofrecido una experiencia formativa única que combina historia, arqueología y patrimonio cultural desde una perspectiva interdisciplinar.

Este programa constituye un hito en la política de internacionalización de la Universitat de València al ofrecer una experiencia docente en un entorno arqueológico de referencia mundial.

A lo largo del curso, el estudiantado ha podido trabajar sobre el terreno en algunos de los espacios más singulares de la antigua ciudad romana —como la Casa de los Vettii, el Foro o las termas públicas—, donde se conservan excepcionales muestras de la vida cotidiana y del arte mural del siglo I d.C.La vicerrectora de Cultura y Sociedad de la Universitat de València, Ester Alba, ha acompañado al grupo en este primer viaje a Italia, y ha destacado «el valor de la microcredencial como modelo de aprendizaje innovador que conecta el conocimiento académico con experiencias internacionales de excelencia». Pompeya, convertida en aula viva, ha sido el escenario de una lección inolvidable para quienes, desde la Universitat de València, miran al pasado para construir un futuro académico y profesional más global.

Indirizzo

MARRA/Via Marra 84/Boscoreale
Naples
80041

Notifiche

Lasciando la tua email puoi essere il primo a sapere quando Investigating the archaeology of death in Pompeii, Italy pubblica notizie e promozioni. Il tuo indirizzo email non verrà utilizzato per nessun altro scopo e potrai annullare l'iscrizione in qualsiasi momento.

Contatta L'università

Invia un messaggio a Investigating the archaeology of death in Pompeii, Italy:

Condividi