Herculaneum: Town Layout (original) (raw)

- Herculaneum: Town Layout (Mount Vesuvius seen from Herculaneum)

You may wish to read a page on Mount Vesuvius in Goethe's Footsteps first.

## Modern Ercolano seen from Mount Vesuvius: the yellow dot indicates the archaeological area of Herculaneum; the red dot the Royal Palace of Portici

This is Vesuvius, lately green with umbrageous vines; here the noble grape had pressed the dripping coolers. These are the heights which Bacchus loved more than the hills of Nysa; on this mountain the satyrs recently danced. This was the abode of Venus (a reference to Pompeii), more grateful to her than Lacedaemon; this was the place renowned by the divinity of Hercules (a reference to Herculaneum). All now lies buried in flames and sad ashes. Even the gods would have wished not to have had the power to cause such a catastrophe. Martial, Epigrams. Book 4 - Mainly based on Bohn's Classical Library (1897). One hates writing descriptions that are to be found in every book of travels; but we have seen something to-day that I am sure you never read of, and perhaps never heard of. Have you ever heard of a subterraneous town? a whole Roman town, with all its edifices, remaining under ground? Don't fancy the inhabitants buried it there to save it from the Goths: they were buried with it themselves; which is a caution we are not told that they ever took. You remember in Titus's time there were several cities destroyed by an eruption of Vesuvius, attended with an earthquake. Well, this was one of them, not very considerable, and then called Herculaneum. Above it has since been built Portici, about three miles from Naples, where the King has a villa. This under-ground city is perhaps one of the noblest curiosities that ever has been discovered. It was found out by chance, about a year and half ago. They began digging, they found statues; they dug, further, they found more. Since that they have made a very considerable progress, and find continually. The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford - Volume I (June 14, 1740)

## Passages to the underground excavations near House of Argus

To his mother. Naples, June 17, 1740. The passage they have made, with all its turnings and windings, is now more than a mile long. As you walk, you see parts of an amphitheatre, many houses adorned with marble columns, and encrusted with the same; the front of a temple, and several arched vaults of rooms painted in fresco. Some pieces of painting have been taken out from hence. (..) The wood and beams remain so perfect that you may see the grain; but burnt to a coal, and dropping into dust upon the least touch. Thomas Gray, a companion to Sir Horace Walpole - Letters from France and Italy in 1739-1741 (December 1740) Some time ago in digging at Portici, they found ruins under ground, and since that they have dug in search of antiquities; there are two entrances to the works, one by a well, and another from a hollow way to the west of it, by which I went into it, and saw some fresco paintings. (..) In a room of the king's palace here, where they repair the antiquities, I saw some urns and beautiful feet of tables, some coarse mosaics and fresco paintings of boys. Many other things have been found here, which are not commonly shown, but they design to have them all drawn, engraved, and published. Richard Pococke - A Description of the East and Some Other Countries - 1745 The precise situation of this subterraneous city was not known till the year 1713, when it was accidentally discovered by some labourers, who, in digging a well, struck upon a statue on the benches of the theatre. (..) Little progress was made in the excavations till Charles, infant of Spain, ascended the Neapolitan throne; by his unwearied efforts and liberality a very considerable part of Herculaneum has been explored, and such treasures of antiquity drawn out as form the most curious museum in the world. It being too arduous a task to attempt removing the covering, the king contented himself with cutting galleries to the principal buildings, and causing the extent of one or two of them to be cleared. Henry Swinburne - Travels in the Two Sicilies. 1777-1780 After the interesting spectacle afforded at Pompeii, our subterraneous researches into its neighbouring fellow sufferer Herculaneum will in a great measure lose their interest but that interest will be speedily recovered on a view of the Royal Museum at Portici. (..) Here the eye will long dwell with rapture and amazement on the varied mass of articles restored to light by the industry of man, but at the same time it will regret that more industry has not been employed in the protection of such valuable researches. Sir Richard Colt Hoare - Recollections Abroad, During the Years 1785, 1786, 1787 - 1815 We must not any longer put off our visit to Herculaneum, and the Museum of Portici, where the curiosities which have been dug out of it are collected and preserved. That ancient city, lying at the foot of Vesuvius, was entirely covered with lava in 79 AD, which subsequent eruptions successively raised so high, that the buildings are at present sixty feet below the surface. It is a great pity that the excavation was not executed systematically by German miners; for it is admitted that the work, which was carried on at random, and with the hope of plunder, has spoilt many a noble monument of ancient art. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - Italian Journey - March 1787 - translation by Charles Nisbet

## 1827 plan of Herculaneum published by Andrea De Jorio in "Notizie su gli scavi di Ercolano"

Digging began in 1738, and it continued using the technique of underground passages and ventilation shafts until 1828, when the first open-air excavations were carried out. The plan by De Jorio is therefore based only on the results of the underground excavations. These were chiefly aimed at finding statues, jewels and other antiquities which could embellish the nearby Royal Palace of Portici. Searches were particularly successful at three locations: the basilica in the centre of the town, the theatre and Villa dei Papiri, a country house by the sea where many scrolls were found. In 1816 the works of art found at Herculaneum were moved to Museo Borbonico, today's Archaeological Museum of Naples.

## Underground passages near the Palaestra

From these gloomy vaults I returned with eagerness to contemplate the riches they once contained, now arranged in a wing of the palace. Swinburne Presently going down, with lighted torches, we are perplexed by great walls of monstrous thickness. Charles Dickens - Pictures from Italy - 1846 It is almost impossible to realise that the ruins which we now see in their black gulf can have been once beneath the blue sky, "before," as Tacitus says, "the burning mountain of Vesuvius changed the face of the country". Augustus J. C. Hare - Cities of Southern Italy and Sicily - 1891 Some of the underground passages, and in particular those leading to Villa dei Papiri, had to be closed because of exhalations of volcanic vapours.

## Excavated area seen from its north-eastern end; the yellow dot indicates the ancient coastline

In 1927-1961, after a very long interruption, systematic excavations unearthed approximately a quarter of the ancient town. More recent archaeological activity led to the conclusion that the ancient coastline was closer to Herculaneum than it was shown in the 1827 plan. In 1969 Resina, the town which was founded in the Xth century above the ancient one changed its name into Ercolano. The theatre and the north-western section of Herculaneum lie beneath its houses.

## Depth of the 1980s excavation

In Herculaneum, where the flood was of a different and a heavier kind (than at Pompeii), it rolled in, like a sea. Imagine a deluge of water turned to marble, at its height - and that is what is called 'the lava' here. Dickens Herculaneum was covered by flows of volcanic rock which solidified to an average height of approximately 16 m/ 50 ft. Its aspect is not similar to that of the lava which covered parts of Catania after the 1669 eruption of Mount Etna.

## Skeletons in shelters for boats

In 1980 approximately 300 human skeletons were found in shelters for boats along the beach; here, along with any valuables they were able to recover, especially necklaces and coins, the people of Herculaneum had sought escape. They were killed by the high temperatures caused by the blazing clouds exploding from the volcano.

## Decumanus Maximus, the main east-west street

According to tradition Herculaneum was founded by Hercules on his way back to Greece from Spain. The town was much smaller than Pompeii and it was most likely redesigned at the time of Emperor Augustus. Although its population is estimated in just 5,000, yet Herculaneum had all the facilities of a wealthy Roman town: a forum, a basilica/tribunal, a theatre, an aqueduct, a system of public fountains, baths and a city layout divided into regular blocks.

## Decumanus Inferior; in the foreground the entrance to the Palaestra and on the right side of the street Casa Sannitica, one of the oldest and tallest houses of Herculaneum

The town had at least three_decumani_. Only two of them have been fully identified, but nearly half of their western section is still underground. Herculaneum was affected by a major earthquake in 62 AD and some of its buildings were restored at the initiative of Emperor Vespasian. The eruption of Mount Vesuvius occurred shortly after the Emperor's death in 79 AD. According to the account by Pliny the Younger, as reported by medieval manuscripts, it occurred on August 24, but today most archaeologists agree that it occurred in October, because of fruit, food and coins which were found at Herculaneum and Pompeii.

## Cardo V

The decumani were intersected by five perpendicular streets (cardi) of which the two western ones lie under the modern town as well as the northern sections of the other three. The archaeological area open to the public does not include the theatre, the basilica and Villa dei Papiri, nor access to the underground passages.

## Seafront of Herculaneum: the image shows the Terrace of Marcus Nonius Balbus, Porta Marina (a gate leading to Cardo V) and the Suburban Baths, the building to the right of the terrace

The town stood on an elevation between two small streams which provided natural harbours. The material erupting from Mount Vesuvius added a strip of land to the sea side which is approximately 400 m wide. Imposing structures on the beach, most likely shelters for boats, supported a terrace outside the city walls where the citizens of Herculaneum erected a funerary monument to M. Nonius Balbus, a great benefactor.

## House of the Inn on the seafront and Cardo III to its left

The image used as background for this page shows the old ticket office of the archaeological area.