Sorrento is so different, really beautiful in a rough way.This is a good place to spend a week.
I will be glad to get out of this place the Town Suites, tomorrow.. the Bathroom smells of cat wee.ugh
Oh, well, one mistake, and it was just for 2 nights...
Then 6 days with Mario and Elise.
We found a travel agent, called Carla, who is scottish, moved here 17 years ago, and she is finding us an apartment in Rome,so I trust her totally on that,, She is Janet Brown with a map! and recommended Elise and Mario as well when we told her we had booked in there
She organised a private tour of Pompeii for us today..
We packed Ham and Salad rolls, and headed off on the train.
Luigi(yes, really) met us at the station, about 10 steps from the entrance and took us in.
He iwas a Professor of Archaeology in Napoli, and has been privately taking people through Pompeii since he retired.
and he was so amazing, his knowledge was unbelievable, pointing out things that we would never have noticed, such as the cuts in the stone indicating sliding doors, which meant it was a shop, the width of the roads, and the gutters cut for the chariots in the street.
It is well worth seeing, truly incredible
Here is a city, that with in 6 hours was frozen under 60 feet of ash and pumice.
It was not touched for 1700 years and then excavation started.. but where the bodies were were just empty cavities, and they worked out to pour in plaster of paris to preserve them, but not until the spanish had crunched their way in to the base, and on finding bones, crushed them for fertiliser, so out of the 20,000 or 30,000 preserved here, there are less than 500 samples available.
Then of course, 2 centuries of pillaging and plundering the marbles, the mosaics, the pottery, brass, lead piping etc, for houses being built in Naples, there is a lot missing.. a lot of it is in Naples in the Museum, and a lot in bathrooms around Campalia!
But, it is pretty awesome.
60 million tonnes of Ash taken away in the excavation, and used to build roads around the place.
Yes, Luigi was a man well worth spending money on.
Then we found a place near the gladiator arena, and had lunch near some cyprus trees, and finally home at dark.
Cooked dinner in the room, Pasta Pomadora, with bruschetta, suing the last of the tomatoes, and cheese etc, plus a huge Salad.
Not many cooked lunch in their homes and there were 35 of these places, with a heating system under the stones.. They cooked up soup, or stews, and served people.. So the Romans beat Maccas to the game, as Luigi told the ikids.They also on examination of remains have found arthritis, gout, gall stone etc, and Obseity as health problems

4 comments:
Figured out the blog reply thingy. Thank you for the pattern- it's that cube/hexagon illusion thing- Leonardo drew it. Very nice.Any more like that please snap them for me. I wish I could go to Pompeii- the paintings in the 'House of Dyonisian Mysteries' or some such name are pretty amazing in repro- did you see them? Here is a little website the kids may or not like- Molly and I used to play the Mystery game because the illustration are so nice: http://www.bbc.co.uk/cbbc/romanmysteries/
Love Auntie Sandra.
Hi Ruth,,wouldn't mind some hyperlinks when you do your blog, would be very confusing for nanna but save me some time confusing her, just tell her it is magic
Donna
Ruth, I just want you to know how much I am loving your journey! Truly! And Pompeii has been on my "bucket" list for ages...I'm so bloody jealous that you are there! (And taking notes!) Thank you so much for the details, as it all looks so wonderful. I'm thrilled that you are doing this and getting on so well!
D'oh...me, Shonna, above.
Post a Comment