What are the newest discoveries at Pompeii?

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
  • Join @DariusArya for a walk inside Pompeii, including a trip to REGIO V, with new, amazing discoveries. You'll also visit the newly opened Antiquarium, Pompeii's own on site museum, for amazing artifacts from the site, many on display for the first time.
    0:00 Introduction
    1:13 Pompeii's Forum
    1:27 The Basilica of Pompeii
    1:59 The streets of Pompeii
    2:44 New discoveries in Regio V
    5:00 Villa of the Mysteries
    6:04 Villa of Diomedes
    6:47 House of the Ceii
    7:41 The new Antiquarium
    Special thanks for @PompeiiSites79dc for the hospitality and access. You can plan a wonderful visit and stay up to date by visiting pompeiisites.org/en/
    The site also features links to related museums and sites in the shadow of Vesuvius, which we will visit in upcoming videos!
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Комментарии • 954

  • @henryellis1358
    @henryellis1358 2 года назад +1643

    UK - I am 85 and have travelled the wide world, yet I always wanted to visit Pompeii , just never got around to it, I thought my travelling days were over, until Christmas 4 yrs ago, my daughter gave me an envelope which I thought was a Christmas card, It was a first class flight to visit Pompeii and accommodation overlooking the Bay of Naples, my son in law took me and everything was planned like a dream, it was an amazing experience, that is why I am watching the latest finds. Thank you.

    • @hsmd4533
      @hsmd4533 2 года назад +107

      What a wonderful gift, thank you for sharing that story.

    • @Westyrulz
      @Westyrulz 2 года назад +51

      I say "BRAVO"!!!

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +69

      So wonderful! We do hope to return to Pompeii to share more. In the meantime we will share more in-depth videos on new aspects of Pompeii.

    • @henryottis295
      @henryottis295 2 года назад +33

      Lucky man !

    • @patrickpaganini
      @patrickpaganini 2 года назад +48

      My god what a clever daughter.

  • @ikizzkim1211
    @ikizzkim1211 2 года назад +12

    I took my mom when she was 75, with a wheelchair, it was her life time ambition! we made it, she loved it, we'd love to go again, she's now 81!!!

  • @raresaturn
    @raresaturn 2 года назад +285

    I was in Pompeii 20 years ago, and none of this was excavated. Amazing that they are still digging up wonderful treasures after all this time

    • @lindagadde7301
      @lindagadde7301 Год назад +6

      This is amazing, my mother and I visited Pompeii 45 years ago and none of this was discovered at that time. What beautiful architecture and relics.

    • @lorrainebishop3520
      @lorrainebishop3520 Год назад +5

      @@lindagadde7301 me too....Time to go back

    • @SMMBHQ-cg2zy
      @SMMBHQ-cg2zy Год назад

      YOU MEAN THEY HAVE BEEN COVERING IT UP FOR 20 YEARS HUH ? JUST JOKING ABOUT FAKE HISTORY AND ALL ITS MISCONCEPTIONS TOO.

    • @MsMesem
      @MsMesem Год назад

      It was delightfully messy .....like ruines should bé! So manicured now and aaagh all those masked idiots.

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  Год назад +1

      and a lot of great conservation work! That is the major focus these days!

  • @joebarbjb6668
    @joebarbjb6668 2 года назад +116

    I visited Pompeii in 1965. I was young, fascinated, but lacked the maturity and education to comprehend what I was seeing. I’ve always longed to go back and see the extraordinary changes. The scenes in your video are vast, whereas in 1965 there was so little excavation, and discoveries compare to today. Thanks for the journey.

    • @tariqkamil7853
      @tariqkamil7853 Год назад +5

      Yes, I agree, there are many places I visited as a younger man and even as a child, which I feel I need to go again to fully appreciate the things i saw

    • @williamlacentra2808
      @williamlacentra2808 Год назад +4

      1965----that's ancient history -you need to go back...!

    • @julieielasi4156
      @julieielasi4156 Год назад +1

      This is the year i was born Haha, you need to go back i am my Dad's from Calabria so i really need to go back too i love the history magical!! You walk where all theses people where before us that's unreal in its self..

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  Год назад

      Thanks for watching !

    • @artysqueezy184
      @artysqueezy184 8 месяцев назад

      I visited when I was six yrs old in 1966 and was utterly captivated, especially by the petrified dog and people. We also went up to the crater of Vesuvius in a rickety chair lift. Would not be allowed with our modern day health and safety. I was so excited as a 6 yr old and my Mum was trying to stop me leaning out of the chair lift too far as I was looking around so much and shifting around in the tiny chair. Much braver than I am now!! I longed to go back and did so for my second honeymoon in 2013 and it was amazing to see how much larger it was. Amazing place. I love it so much and appreciate the conservation which is going on there.

  • @redraven1410
    @redraven1410 Год назад +29

    My late husband grew up in Naples. He visited Pomoey many times.
    We were going to go see it together, but he passed away before we could..
    He said it was a truly amazing place.

    • @SMMBHQ-cg2zy
      @SMMBHQ-cg2zy Год назад +1

      MANY CONDOLENCES TO YOU ,

    • @neilmccann5826
      @neilmccann5826 Год назад

      When you finish your mourning period, give me a call. I was there studying architecture after college, but I'd lov.e to return, and show you around

    • @stingfan16ify
      @stingfan16ify Год назад +2

      My condolences for your loss. I hope you evebtually made it there!

  • @lynnhwilson4135
    @lynnhwilson4135 Год назад +11

    I was just to Pompei with Ef tours. We had 34 students, teachers and adults. It is most amazing. Worth seeing. They are still discovering new areas. Love this area.

  • @mnhadley331
    @mnhadley331 Год назад +33

    In 1955 my parents took the four children to Pompeii. I was very young but my memory of walking down an excavated street, noting areas where untold hands wore down the stone and feeling prickles in the back of my neck because of Vesuvius looming in the background. I remember the casts in the museum of human bodies and feeling absolute horror at their twisted forms. My 6 year old imagination was actively reliving their experiences. I imagine how much better the city is after 65 more years of excavation and restoration. It must be extraordinary

    • @nancydemoss608
      @nancydemoss608 Год назад +3

      My father went to Pompeii around the very late 1940's. He was in the Marines after WWII and was part of a group to rebuild infrastructure in Italy. He's long gone now so I can't ask him about his experience there. He did purchase a charcoal drawing of what some of Pompeii looked like at that time. I still have it and I cherish it. There are so many things I now wish I could ask my parents and grandparents, etc.

    • @fredziffle5219
      @fredziffle5219 Год назад +1

      Our dad took us to see a movie about the last days of Pompeii, I was about five & I remember the fear too, such a horror.

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  Год назад

      We hope you enjoyed the video!

  • @patriciapalmer1377
    @patriciapalmer1377 2 года назад +3

    NO !! I just yelled out loud and scared the dog !! Those pictures of the dog etc were unbelievable !! Going back to vid, thanks so much. Pat. America

  • @pennymitchell8523
    @pennymitchell8523 2 года назад +40

    In 2010 we decided to go to Europe...from Australia. We asked out teenage sons where they wanted to go..Pompei was one those places. We loved it.

    • @jayjaynella4539
      @jayjaynella4539 2 года назад +1

      I would love to go there. I would need a house there, as I would not be allowed back in vicdanistan, even if I am pureblood.

  • @MrLuigiFercotti
    @MrLuigiFercotti Год назад +2

    Going to Rome this fall, Pompeii is on the list.

  • @adriennehunt1799
    @adriennehunt1799 2 года назад +91

    Visited Pompeii in 2015 with my husband and young daughter who'd just completed her Higher School Certificate in Sydney. She was very jet lagged and tired, but it was a delight to watch her face light up as she stood in this ancient place. She had just completed an exam paper on ancient Pompeii so was very excited to see it in "the flesh". She almost knew as much as the tour guide, as well as some other snippets the tour guide had forgotten. Had the best holiday!😁🐨🦘

    • @katerinapatiniotis5598
      @katerinapatiniotis5598 2 года назад

      What does the high school paper got to do with it? Lol ! Relax. She didn't discover the cure for cancer, it's just a paper saying she went to high school. Aussies' typical bragging for no reason. The sort of parents who post on social media just to brag about! "MY 17 yo daughter Olivia cut her cucumber with our new Jamie Oliver knives and made her first salad !"

    • @fredziffle5219
      @fredziffle5219 Год назад +2

      Sounds wonderful plus seeing things through your kid’s eyes. 👍

    • @gaylemc2692
      @gaylemc2692 Год назад

      @@fredziffle5219 it does indeed.

  • @christa2959
    @christa2959 Год назад +6

    I've always been fascinated with Italy I've even done a brochure of Italy when I was in elementary seems like a beautiful place.

  • @petersclafani4370
    @petersclafani4370 2 года назад +11

    I'm 71 and I traveled around the world also n when in Italy Pompeii was just about being dug up. The 2 best countries i loved is Italy n Greece. Loved walking on the ground of these great civilizations

  • @emanuelgaldes3515
    @emanuelgaldes3515 Год назад +10

    The first time I went abroad from Malta, must have been 1976, it was aboard a ship which took us to Sicily. We took a train, which eventually got onto a traghetto that sailed to the foot of Italy. The train disembarked from the traghetto (a specialised ship) and took us to Naples. Therefrom we hit Capri' and Pompeii. We were undergraduate students in our late teens with special passes to save us money when visiting sites and museums. My sensations have stayed curiously unchanged since that time in one respect at least. The more ruins I see, the more that comes to light through restoration, the deeper my sadness due to my ever increasing awareness of the monumental losses the ancient world has been subjected to through a whole range of disasters, both natural and man-made. In the case of Pompeii, Vesuvius, in that of the Coliseum, the Pope and so on. So, visiting these places is something I hardly do anymore. Anyway, I am 65 now and I have changed in certain ways though not others.. Before I used to feel so sad every time a plane touched down. Had it been up to me, I'd have stayed up in the sky forever. Nowadays I can't even bear to look at a plane. The waiting, the checking, the discomfiture, the press of people - can't imagine anything much worse except perhaps Poe's Red Death. However one place that I'd like to see with my own eyes ere their vision becomes black is that of Baalbek in Lebanon.

  • @MrDXRamirez
    @MrDXRamirez 2 года назад +55

    Astounding, seems archeology is enjoying a new golden age.

  • @christineingram55
    @christineingram55 Год назад +12

    I always wanted to visit but never did.Now I am disabled and cant.I have always been fascinated and somewhat saddened by what happened.It would have been different now.Most would have escaped.I am delighted your continuing to uncover these beautiful buildings from the past and it’s the best information you have of what time was like in a place full of people from rich and poor .It is so valuable to history .It must be wonderful finding new homes with the paintings ,the gardens with the pools inside and out.Before we could only imagine what life was like for the Romans.You have a priceless treasure with Pompeii 🥰

    • @saveriosalemme5366
      @saveriosalemme5366 Год назад +1

      I am not sure what your disability is but there are many parts of the Pompeii that are accessible for the disabled. If not The archaeological museum of Naples which holds all the most important treasures and artifacts of Pompeii is highly accessible for the handicapped. I hope you get the chance to see in person Pompeii, one of the ancient wonders of the world.

  • @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
    @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 2 года назад +50

    I visited Pompeii several years ago, but also Herculanum and the nearby Villa Oplontis, owned by Emperor Neros second wife and with a long pool. And the last, I think are much more interesting, as they are much more well preserved, being covered by boiling mud from Vesuvius and showing the upper class housing compared with Pompeii.

  • @Mr.56Goldtop
    @Mr.56Goldtop 2 года назад +8

    At 6:12, how may ancient Pompeiians walked down those very same steps!? How cool is that!?

  • @internationalicon
    @internationalicon 2 года назад +31

    It would be great to have a VR/AR version of Pompeii to see, while touring the town. Imagine being able to pop on goggles to view reconstructions of buildings and gardens as they would have appeared then, with people in their period outfits. In the distance, looking at Vesuvius, you could see it throw out boulders and ash.

  • @ln3804
    @ln3804 2 года назад +29

    I went to the fabulous Pompei some years ago. It was the most atmospheric, vibrant and mystical place I have ever been. Yet at the same time you could feel and see that it had been a real and lively community - a prosperous, happy and civilised place to live. Loved and laughed at the ancient speed bumps on the granite roads - still in place, to slow down the boy( chariot) racers going too fast! Nothing about human behaviour ever changes!!
    Would love to revisit but sadly ill health won’t allow- so glad I got to go there.

    • @johanconradie2120
      @johanconradie2120 2 года назад +2

      and the whole place was ra! and destroyed by G.!: they were playing and eating and drinking before the destruction so also pearl harbour they were playing early rounds of golf...

    • @PD-uc5st
      @PD-uc5st Год назад

      I have been to the sight if the seven wonders of the ancient world. I would dearly love to go too pompeii

    • @user-cf6te2ug2g
      @user-cf6te2ug2g Год назад

      Buried for a reason

  • @bluewaters3100
    @bluewaters3100 Год назад +3

    I went there in Sept. 1988 and it wasn't not very crowded with tourists. I do not remember seeing anybody doing restoration work. We got lost one day and I started freaking out and found myself running down a street. It was so strange because it felt like aI had tapped into the time of the great eruption and I felt the panic. I have beautiful pictures of the city at sunrise. It was a wonderful experience

  • @toinenprofessori771
    @toinenprofessori771 2 года назад +6

    I was astonished to hear the music at the end of this film. It is a version the Finnish "Säkkijärven polkka", which is very famous in Finland. In the war time the Finnish radio transmitted it continuously for several days in order to disturb the Russian transmissions they used to detonate radio-controlled mines.

    • @erinmcq
      @erinmcq 2 года назад

      I was going to comment that it sounded like "Säkkijärven Polkka," too! I briefly searched to see if there was some Italian connection to this Finnish folk song (haven't found anything yet).

    • @kingscairn
      @kingscairn Год назад +1

      My thoughts exactly - had no place supporting this documentary - kept thinking Buster Keaton was going to come dashing in

    • @zombywoof1072
      @zombywoof1072 2 месяца назад

      And it's annoying. Next time, maybe no music is the way to go.

  • @s3ra9h1m
    @s3ra9h1m Год назад

    Pompeii is must go to for anyone visiting Italy, it’s like stepping back in time

  • @billyshafer3182
    @billyshafer3182 Год назад +1

    I was there in the Navy in 1970. Would love to go back.

  • @josephsmith3908
    @josephsmith3908 Год назад +4

    It's amazing how well preserved some sites at Pompeii are

  • @davidswagger3085
    @davidswagger3085 2 года назад +11

    Did 2 weeks Italy in September 2010. Took the train out of Rome south and stopped at Herculaneum. Continued south to overnight in Sorrento. The next morning we took the train back north and stopped at Pompeii. Was truly one of the most magical 48 hours of my life.

  • @daisyy99
    @daisyy99 Год назад +2

    I visited Pompeii 4 years ago. Fascinating, the historical preservation work is mind boggling. Beautiful frescos and mosaics. What I wasn't prepared for was the castings of some people who perished, agony on their faces. Gasping for breath it seemed.

  • @chrisebbesen5798
    @chrisebbesen5798 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for these fastenating documentary on Pompeii. If more should develope please don't hesitate to share. Thank you for your toil.!

  • @mtgne5351
    @mtgne5351 2 года назад +31

    I visited Pompeii 5 times in 2004 - 2008.
    I recommend reading a few books on Pompeii beforehand. The experience will be much stronger then.

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +3

      Absolutely! We have a series of Pompeii articles with bibliography by our PhD editor- go over to ancientromelive.org

    • @patrickpaganini
      @patrickpaganini 2 года назад +2

      I'm desperate to visit.

    • @samsmom1491
      @samsmom1491 2 года назад

      That, and visiting the museum in Napoli where almost all artifacts from Pompeii are exhibited. Unfortunately, the museum was closed during the two days we were in Napoli. I really enjoyed that city. The streets are similar to what would've been in Pompeii; shops on ground floor, living quarters above, narrow, pedestrian-only streets, although the buildings were not so tall in Pompeii. I have a book of what Pompeii looked like before the eruption and I took it with me for reference. It makes you realize not only how bad the devastation was, but how beautiful this town was.

    • @samsmom1491
      @samsmom1491 2 года назад +1

      @@AncientRomeLive I will definitely check that out. I've been obsessed with Pompeii ever since I found my mother's books on it when I was only five year's old.

  • @NewShockerGuy
    @NewShockerGuy Год назад +3

    Was just there last month. I couldn't believe how big it is... seriously. If you want to see it all you need a solid 2 days to explore this area, I feel like we cut ourselves short by what we saw and realizing how much more there is to it. I can remember when teachers talked about it when I was a kid, I always for some reason thought it was a small area.... it's not.

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  Год назад

      You need to come back- more than a lifetime is necessary!

  • @dreamerworld1495
    @dreamerworld1495 Год назад +2

    I visitedPompeii in summer before Covid. It was a particularly hot, very hot summer. There was a heat wave. I can say I not just saw the site, but experience the feeling of being cooked alive. They have all petrified bodies behind iron bars. The frescos are precious, statues at the fertility house are very interesting. Frescos at the market showed actually the painting of goods with prices. The guide told us so many slaves bying for their masters were non italian speaking they needed to show it that way. Very amazing site.

  • @davidevans3227
    @davidevans3227 2 года назад +2

    ..the one thing we said when we left, "..got to go back.." what an amazing place.. thankyou for sharing this 🙂

  • @suburbiaprepper2526
    @suburbiaprepper2526 Год назад +5

    We visited about 10 years ago and so much has been discovered since we were there! I want so badly to go back and see it all again! Hope to do it soon!

  • @Thepriest39
    @Thepriest39 2 года назад +10

    The wife and I just got from a trip to Italy. My son lives in Naples and we went to Pompeii. Absolutely awesome. A place that has to be visited!

  • @deborahross9974
    @deborahross9974 2 года назад +1

    I read somewhere that the people of Pompeii liked fast food. Not like today's but there were stands were all kinds of food were being sold. I found that very interesting. God bless.

  • @duncanmckeown1292
    @duncanmckeown1292 Год назад +1

    Been to Pompeii twice and Herculaneum once...but to be honest, you could keep coming back here and still never see everything of interest! Fascinating, unique experience. Don't forget to visit the archaeological museum in Naples though, where many of the most beautiful finds from Pompeii over the centuries are preserved!

  • @John-gv2ug
    @John-gv2ug 2 года назад +132

    A great up date. Ancient Roman historical sites are fantastic. I have been fortunate to have visited Pompeii twice, in 1993 and 2007, the equally fascinating Ostia Antica (far less visitors than Pompeii gets, so much quieter and only 30 minutes by train from Rome), also in 2007, Hadrian's Villa in 2017 and Roman sites in the UK (1987 and 1997), Morocco (2005) and Malta (2014).

    • @patriziapreite8875
      @patriziapreite8875 2 года назад +1

      Ostia Antica is where I live....the escavations site is regularly visited all year around with picks during the summer....😀

    • @robinryan4429
      @robinryan4429 2 года назад +1

      @@patriziapreite8875 I agree about Ostia Antica. A good day out is to use the one train line to visit St Paul's without the Walls (with a small archaeological site), then Ostia Antica, then modern Ostia - for an Australian, that's mostly to be amazed at what Europeans consider a beach.

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +1

      Thank you so much! We will have more Pompeii videos in the coming weeks. We already have a series on Ostia on our RUclips channel. Please enjoy them! (We need to go back and do more videos there!)

    • @johnvrabec9747
      @johnvrabec9747 2 года назад

      We also enjoyed Ostia Antica when we were there years ago. The mosaics were beautiful.

    • @redhammer9910
      @redhammer9910 Год назад

      🇦🇺 We used Ostia Antica as our base for our week in Rome in 2007. What an amazing village. We stayed withing the walled medieval village a short walk from the train station and what an experience. The history centered around the fortress, the Roman Catholic Chapel established in 450 AD surrounded by a pilgrims grave yard and the village within the walls itself which were the primary residence for the Bishops of Rome. The fortress was used by the Pope in 1550 AD as his summer residence following a storm caused the mouth of the Tigress further along the coast and the castle ceased being used to protect the city. The Ostia Antica ruins were in remarkably good condition and the whole town strewn with structures and building rubbles of ancient Rome.
      If anyone decides to explore this remarkable region near Rome, within the narrow cobbled streets of the walled village ( Circa 1100 AD ) there is a small coffee shop that makes the best hot chocolate in all of Italia, supperb.

  • @annadeflorio6000
    @annadeflorio6000 2 года назад +17

    I was in Pompeii in 1994 & 2005 completely enthralled, breathtakingly beautiful. There is no place like Italy -Viva Italia & baci !! My bucket list is to get back there again!

  • @wifeofagrumpyoldmarine428
    @wifeofagrumpyoldmarine428 2 года назад +6

    I love that I just stumbled on your channel! My great-Aunt was an archaeologist and the stories she could tell!

  • @beerybill
    @beerybill Год назад +1

    In the early 1960s I was stationed at the NATO HQ in Bagnoli (Naples) and visited Pompeii several times. Now, thanks to the net, I can see what has been excavated and restored since back in the day.

  • @ZephrusPrime
    @ZephrusPrime 2 года назад +3

    What also amazes me is how colorful the ancient past really was.

  • @mariazimdars4058
    @mariazimdars4058 Год назад +4

    We loved Pompeii. The new discoveries are breath taking and just waiting for my husband and I to see them first hand. Thank you for the most interesting, educative video I have watched in a long time. Keep them coming

  • @thesweetestteas.4534
    @thesweetestteas.4534 Год назад +2

    What a beautiful landscape, I'm sure they loved life there!

  • @gaylemc2692
    @gaylemc2692 Год назад

    What a debt of gratitude we all owe the conservationist around the world. Thank you

  • @Brummie31
    @Brummie31 2 года назад +11

    Pompei is a magical place to visit. I was fortunate to visit twice, and, it didn't cease to amaze me. I lot of the buildings looked new because they had recently been rebuilt in areas due to previous damage from earthquakes. A wonderful place to see.

  • @traj00
    @traj00 Год назад +3

    I visited back in 1978 while in the US Navy. It's amazing how much more has been excavated. It's a wondrous place to visit.

    • @mikehenson819
      @mikehenson819 Год назад +1

      I was there too at that time; serving on the USS Independence. Loved that area and all of Italy. I've wanted to go back there for a long time.

  • @conniecarroll747
    @conniecarroll747 Год назад +2

    I remember seeing in National Geogaphic Magazine years ago when they had uncovered the bodies. It's amazing so much has been discovered since then. Those mosaics, so detailed.

  • @johnbehneman1546
    @johnbehneman1546 Год назад +1

    THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!! TOTALLY AWSOME!!!! A MUST WATCH!!!!

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  Год назад

      Thanks for watching. You definitely need to peruse our videos- esp the new Via Appia series.

  • @P-G-77
    @P-G-77 2 года назад +3

    It is a show that REALLY DESERVES TO BE VISITED ... walking and looking around you, you will feel like you are identifying with the place ... crazy. Fantastic place... then if you use a little imagination trying to think of that time when many people walked to shop, to work, to live ... incredible sensation really.

  • @emiliaarya3614
    @emiliaarya3614 2 года назад +3

    What a fantastic video! Stunning images and wonderful narration! Bravo papà😍

  • @johnbehneman1546
    @johnbehneman1546 Год назад

    PLEASE KEEP US UPDATED ON YOUR DISCOVERIES!!!! THANK YOU FOR ALL OF YOUR HARD WORK, DEDICATION AND COMMITMENT !!!!!

  • @rays7437
    @rays7437 Год назад +1

    My wife and son took me to the Pompeii exhibit at the Reagan Library a few years back as a Father's day gift. I learned a lot. I'd like to see the real thing someday. I love old architecture.

  • @tommonk7651
    @tommonk7651 2 года назад +6

    A few years ago I was lucky enough to take a trip to Italy which included a stop in Pompeii where I had a great tour with an archeologist there. It was fantastic! The place is much bigger than I had imagined, and, of course, more is being discovered. Over 20,000 people lived there before the eruption.

  • @lisachild6100
    @lisachild6100 2 года назад +4

    Went to Pompeii in 2019 l loved it. I would love to go back some time.because I don’t see everything.

  • @avapineda8813
    @avapineda8813 Год назад +1

    Beautiful

  • @c.joyceb.8991
    @c.joyceb.8991 Год назад +2

    This is so Amazing. The artwork..mosaic floors and its being restored. My brother went to Pompeii 40 years ago.
    Thank you for the video.

  • @thegrayknight71
    @thegrayknight71 Год назад +3

    Great video. Thx. I've been to a brothel once in my life, it was in Pompeii. :-) What a beautiful city. It was crazy to see massive slabs of marble used as doorsteps.

  • @jeanmurgatroyd3221
    @jeanmurgatroyd3221 2 года назад +4

    I have been to both Pompeii and Herculaneum and I think I prefer Herculaneum as the site was better preserved due to the material that covered it. Both sites are really well worth visiting. I suggest you visit in the morning as it gets really hot in the afternoon

  • @caltblake6112
    @caltblake6112 2 года назад

    uk 64 year old, went three years ago, going back next year, great video thanks

  • @Wayzor_
    @Wayzor_ 2 года назад +2

    Wonderful information with a wonderful soundtrack. I felt like an opera was about to begin.

  • @silviamari1677
    @silviamari1677 2 года назад +25

    What an amazing job! A true and felt tribute to life in Pompei. The music, the narration, the deep respect and genuine wonder and depth of the narration made this video such a pleasent and informative experience. Thank you, Darius!

  • @loi63
    @loi63 2 года назад +20

    We were just there last October 2021 and didn’t get to see all. It’s a huge area. Hope to go back again and visit.

    • @msjannd4
      @msjannd4 2 года назад +1

      I had no idea how large it was either! I visited in 2016. 🌋

  • @donaldwyant3483
    @donaldwyant3483 Год назад

    Pompeii, is on my bucket list..

  • @melissastreeter22
    @melissastreeter22 Год назад

    Beautifully produced, elegantly narrated. A real pleasure, Monsieur.

  • @n0w3lly90
    @n0w3lly90 Год назад +6

    My partner and I went there a number of years ago, staying quite close to the site (walking distance), and we spent 3 days scouring that place, and its wonders. Following on from that, the archaeological museum in Naples. It really was a bucket list trip... we want to return

    • @AT-jm4dl
      @AT-jm4dl Год назад

      Are there good/decent accommodations near the site?

  • @bokhans
    @bokhans 2 года назад +12

    I was 15 years old, it was 1973 and I was travelling all over Europe on my own, from Finland in the north to Greece in the south and I also visited Pompeii, seeing this I believe there has been a bit of development. 😉 I would love to go back!

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +2

      Yes you will find it in pristine shape- tons of houses open and conservation work everywhere! Go back!

    • @henryottis295
      @henryottis295 2 года назад +5

      You travelled alone at 15 ?

  • @lynmcnorton9627
    @lynmcnorton9627 2 года назад +2

    I love Pompeii have been there 4 times in fact I spent my 70 birthday there & Herculaneum they’re both amazing places too visit 🥰

  • @blanchard5312
    @blanchard5312 2 года назад +2

    Behind Apollo in the mosaic is a scorpion other a lobster. You can tell by the stinger at the end of its tail. Beautiful Pompeii. I wish that I'd had more time there. Thank you for this video.

  • @zzyzx686
    @zzyzx686 2 года назад +15

    Glad to hear that finally something is being done to protect the buildings. I especially hope that the fragile two-story structures still held together by the original wooden timbers of nearly 2,000 years ago will receive protection from the elements which otherwise will ultimately rot the wood. Thanks for the tour of the newly discovered tavern. I would have really enjoyed this video if it weren't for the incredibly annoying music.

    • @eileenbell8965
      @eileenbell8965 2 года назад +6

      Oh I’m glad someone else found it irritating, wasn’t it dreadful

    • @georgebronte840
      @georgebronte840 2 года назад

      I thought the traditional music of Stefano Civetta was complementary which added another dimension to my watching experience. But then, I'm from the central Mediterranean.

    • @murphychurch8251
      @murphychurch8251 2 года назад +2

      I found the happy music while showing the cast shapes of the deceased really tasteless. Something a bit more toned down would be appropiate. Unfortunately I haven't been to Pompeji and Herculaneum yet, I hope I will one day. But I've seen an exhibition about 17 years ago, with some of the cast shapes and I felt so sorry for these people as you could see their struggles. I especially remember seeing the cast of a toddler. I wept.

  • @marcusaetius9309
    @marcusaetius9309 2 года назад +3

    Absolutely spectacular!

  • @robertkruchell5534
    @robertkruchell5534 2 года назад +2

    I was thear in 1968 Boy thear is a lot of new things to see thanks for your Vido

  • @davidmoore1264
    @davidmoore1264 Год назад +1

    I was there in 2016 and it was amazing!

  • @kaindog100
    @kaindog100 2 года назад +14

    We visited Europe from Australia in May 2019 and went to Pompeii and absolutely loved it. The chariot wheel tracks in the stone roads are incredible. Such a great place to visit.

  • @cl5342
    @cl5342 2 года назад +4

    So incredible to see all of that and to see things as people saw them a couple thousand years ago. That was amazing thank you!!

  • @nahidpebdani2237
    @nahidpebdani2237 Год назад +1

    I visited Pompeii twenty years ago and I see how different is now , love this old city and I hope to go back there one more time .

  • @Torchriver67
    @Torchriver67 2 года назад

    It was spectacular and sobering!

  • @annikboyer3395
    @annikboyer3395 2 года назад +3

    Just with the images, it add reason for Pompeii to be on my bucket list!

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +2

      YES! Next week we'll show a new video of sites NEAR Pompeii that the archaeological park has asked us to promote.

  • @r.p.8906
    @r.p.8906 2 года назад +7

    we were there in 2010. It was amazing. One needs to block time like 4 blocks of 4 hours each, good shoes, umbrella for the sun, cameras and a notebook for the notes and history, a guide ( maybe) and lots of breathing and touching of the amazing constructions of 200 years BC. After 4 hours, we felt saturated with the experience and needed a break. My daughter grabbed an entrance of a house and said : " Look momma, I am holding a house that is 2200 years old. I can't believe it." She was more excited than me! 13 years old 🙂I was mostly impressed with the baths. They had the cold bath pool and the hot bath pool, alternating from one to the other. In 2021, people start realizing the benefits of the so called " cold showers". They also have a restaurant that was so well preserved, it was unreal. The mosaics and colors were absolutely breathtaking. Bright colors that lasted 2200 years!!

  • @helenavondrakenstein4969
    @helenavondrakenstein4969 2 года назад

    I have never been able to travel.....thank God for you tube

  • @roses9339
    @roses9339 2 года назад +1

    Great tour, lovely music. Cheers Rosemary Perth Western Australia (71 yrs)

  • @marcelthecat6846
    @marcelthecat6846 2 года назад +12

    My paternal grandmother’s maiden name was Secondo. She and her family lived just outside Naples in a village called Amo Rosa. To see the House of Secundi at Pompeii blew my mind! Could I have Pompeiian blood in me? I’ll never know but it’s cool thinking I might.

    • @byblispersephone2.094
      @byblispersephone2.094 2 года назад

      The surviving refugees of Pompeii did indeed flee across the bay to the Neopolis (New City) AKA Naples !

  • @marthaarya167
    @marthaarya167 2 года назад +3

    WAITING to go there again!

  • @kaarlimakela3413
    @kaarlimakela3413 2 года назад

    Stunning!

  • @kathymoorehead7827
    @kathymoorehead7827 Год назад +1

    I just got back from Pompeii and just want viewers to know that you won’t be able to see Pompeii as this guide was able to. Access for him will not be the access you experience, but, it’s still amazing. Just know that you’ll be looking from a distance, if at all, to some of this. It’s nice they let him in so we could see it!! Mostly, you peer through plexiglass. It makes sense. They need to preserve what they can.

  • @PanglossDr
    @PanglossDr 2 года назад +6

    I was there in 1983. There seems to be a lot more to see now.

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +1

      An understatement!!! Yes go back! We will share more videos shortly

  • @albtub
    @albtub 2 года назад +4

    Darius, your passion in Roman history you showed along these years is a clear example for us all (expecially italians). Thanks.
    (Cortesemente, se puoi, chiedi alle amministrazioni locali di migliorare un pò l'area intorno Pompei. Magari se glielo chiedi tu lo fanno).

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +1

      Thanks so much! Si ho visto c’è molto da fare negli intorni… ma- much progress!!!

  • @tim2468
    @tim2468 2 года назад +2

    Outstanding presentation. This has been a dream destination for me all of my life.

  • @robynguinn8941
    @robynguinn8941 2 года назад +1

    Because of a series of fortunate events I visited Pompeii one beautiful July day in 1998. It was all the stars aligning perfectly to get me there and the experience was spiritual and very emotional, still is this many years later.

  • @dansmith5280
    @dansmith5280 2 года назад +8

    Well narrated, filmed, and edited. Music zesty. Thank you Darius.

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +2

      THANK YOU

    • @chriswar535
      @chriswar535 2 года назад +1

      Loved the video found music extremely irritating

    • @dansmith5280
      @dansmith5280 2 года назад

      @@chriswar535 what would you suggest differently?

  • @Aeternuss
    @Aeternuss 2 года назад +4

    As part of Operation Avalanche to liberate southern Italy in the autumn of 1943, Allied forces fought to dislodge German soldiers and disrupt their resupply routes. Important targeted roads, railways, bridges, and overpasses were located near the archaeological site of Pompeii, whose ruins were badly damaged by a series of bombings carried out by American and British fighters. Significant destruction occurred throughout the site, and some of Pompeii's most famous monuments, as well as its museum, were struck. After the war, many of the structures were rebuilt. Ironically, the recent, highly publicized collapse of some Pompeian buildings did not involve ancient structures but rather post-World War II reconstructions.

  • @laowaistudieschina7470
    @laowaistudieschina7470 Год назад +1

    I was lucky enough to see Pompeii some decades ago. Absolutely amazing!

  • @davideylerYT
    @davideylerYT Год назад +1

    Fascinating - loved the recently discovered dog painting. The music in this video is borderline nuts.

  • @jassonsw
    @jassonsw 2 года назад +3

    Incredible, thank you for this video. What strikes me is the image of Roman cities I have in my mind from so many films is one of rather pure white, marble buildings and the reality is they were very richly decorated with frescos in a multitude of colours. Quite garish actually. I suppose it was a way to signal your wealth.

  • @lindak7499
    @lindak7499 2 года назад +29

    I was in Pompeii 2010 and enjoyed every minute of it. The thing I remember the most were the "streets" of stone. You could still see the grooves in the stones that the chariot wheels made. Also the placement and visual impact the larger stones made at the point of what we would call today "a crosswalk". The stone streets are recessed and the large stones at the "crosswalks" are separated. I made the assumption that was so the chariot wheels could pass. I also assumed the recessed streets and separation of "crosswalk" stones was so water and sewage could run freely. You can see some of what I am describing in this video. The entire place was amazing.

    • @brainwashingdetergent4128
      @brainwashingdetergent4128 2 года назад +2

      Thats a lot of chariot travel to carve out the rock like that.

    • @Userqvcqt
      @Userqvcqt 2 года назад

      We were there , unfortunately a hurried visit . I remembered the smooth rocks that made up the streets in Pompeii were similar to the Rocks on the Appian Way in Rome , Large, like the back of a sea turtle.

    • @Userqvcqt
      @Userqvcqt 2 года назад

      The timeless beauty of stone and italian craftsmanship got to me when being back home in the US. We build using rebar and concrete.

    • @jpdj2715
      @jpdj2715 2 года назад

      The recessed street level was because of the street doubling as sewage

    • @lindak7499
      @lindak7499 2 года назад

      @@jpdj2715 Yes, as I noted that in my comment.

  • @howardjohnson2138
    @howardjohnson2138 2 года назад +1

    Great information. Thank you

  • @TheFrog767
    @TheFrog767 2 года назад

    Wonderful thanks 🥂👏👏👏👏

  • @bluejay3945
    @bluejay3945 2 года назад +9

    We were at Pompeii in July 2021. So many things were closed to public view. I sure hope that these new discoveries will be open to the public

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад

      We filmed in July! We found a lot open/ but Covid has had its effect on the openings.

    • @SteveVi0lence
      @SteveVi0lence 2 года назад

      Imagine how a flu prevents you from visiting some place that was covered in volcanic spice

    • @jayjaynella4539
      @jayjaynella4539 2 года назад +1

      That was to keep the skeletons and ghosts from getting covid19 and having to isolate for 2 weeks.

    • @TesterAnimal1
      @TesterAnimal1 2 года назад +1

      @@SteveVi0lence Thousands of people died of COVID in Italy. Show some fucking respect.

  • @lcg5790
    @lcg5790 2 года назад +7

    It is good too see that preservation work is being done here. Ten years ago when I was there nothing, or maybe one house, was protected. Most of the site was open to the elements even famous mosaic flooring.

    • @AncientRomeLive
      @AncientRomeLive  2 года назад +5

      It is a great moment for preservation and discovery! I’m so pleased to see all the work!

    • @staroceans8677
      @staroceans8677 2 года назад

      @@AncientRomeLive I'm 70 and I have mobility issues with my knees is there anyway someone who has long desired to see the ancient ruins of Pompeii and Herculaneum able to do so who have handicap issues?

  • @springcrocus7flower635
    @springcrocus7flower635 Год назад +2

    Wow! So interesting!! Thank you!
    If I may, the music seems a bit loud compared to the speaker. Perhaps it could be down a bit so the speaker is louder and the music is fun, upbeat, but a bit softer back ground music.

  • @neronevetti4540
    @neronevetti4540 2 года назад

    Darius Arya digs rules 🔥