This Might Be The Oldest-Ever Image of Pizza 🍕 | Pompeii: The New Dig
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
- Official website: to.pbs.org/3ysvubQ
A team of archaeologists unearth a lavishly decorated fresco. The wall painting seems to show what looks like an ancient pizza. It’s a first for Pompeii, one of the oldest-ever depictions of a pizza.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: www.pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: / pbs
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS App: to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
FOLLOW US:
Facebook: / pbs
X: / pbs
Instagram: / pbs
TikTok: / pbs
Shop: shop.pbs.org/
#pompeii #archaeology #pizza
Pompeii: The New Dig
The series follows the biggest archaeological excavation in Pompeii for a generation. Exciting discoveries and fresco-inspired animations tell the story of life in Pompeii AD 79. It also imagines the horrors faced by resident as Vesuvius erupted. Stream now: to.pbs.org/3ysvubQ
The excavation aims to unearth the buildings, their purpose, who lived there, and what happened to them during the eruption. Alongside the present tense story of the dig, the series investigates the timeline of the eruption. From the violent earthquakes that shook the city in the years before the eruption to the day of the disaster, Vesuvius first slowly buries Pompeii and then delivers the killer blows in the form of pyroclastic flows.
And, for the first time, pioneering new research finds hard evidence that some Pompeiians escaped the city and survived the eruption. From evidence hidden in Pompeii’s storeroom of prominent Pompeiians, the investigation discovers inscriptions that date from after the eruption and bear the same name in the area surrounding the destroyed city. - Развлечения
Was the pizza discovered inside the remains of a hut?
*Slowly stands, and gives a hearty, slow-building clap*
Hahahaha
I can tell from her accent while she speaks Italian that she is a local from the Napoli area, and that is truly heartwarming.
Amazing how the colors were preserved
being this early for a pbs video about pizza is a beautiful moment in my life rn
I'm always amazed at how luxurious Roman houses were for their time.
The ultimate Italian.
Important for our midwestern friends to note: it doesn’t look like a casserole.
Still better than Papa Johns.
For reals
Are they still around? Every one near me closed down years ago.
@@bbartky I have one in my neighborhood, as well as all the others. But I prefer to go to a real Italian instead of these fake ones.
PBS is our national treasure. I love everything PBS and it's affiliates do. 😊 thank you
Pompeiizza !!! 😁
Yeah but, do they deliver ?
Some things are just classic. :)
That was a Focaccia a kind of pita, ancestor of Pizza whereby its formula was set in 17th century in Napoli. Archeolog and gastronom Mr Kubilay Özben made a great explanation for this.
Why they had to talk this down is beyond me. It would have tasted better than any ham sandwich anytime. They used what they had and it looks fine to me. Not all pizza's have to have tomato on them!
Wow interesting
Okay you guys crazy and very blunt about a picture of a pizza. It is not that serious 😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
As long as it's not Chicago Style...
original recipe
But if tomatoes came from the new world, there would not be pizza sauce until after the late 1400s??