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DUKAS_186586248_FER
DNA reveals ingredient of Ancient Roman sauce
Ferrari Press Agency
Garum 1
Ref 16954
02/07/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Themudo et al./ Archaeology Department of the University of Vigo,
Scientists have used new methods for extracting DNA to look at the ingredients of an Ancient Roman fermented fish-based sauce called garum.
They sifted remains at a salting plant in Spain and found that European sardines were the key ingredient.
Fish was an important part of the ancient Roman diet, and Romans processed their catch for long-term preservation in coastal fish-salting plants called cetariae.
There, they crushed and fermented small fish into pastes and sauces such as garum.
Analysing the fish used in Roman condiments could provide insight into the diets and culture of ancient people as well as information on fish populations of the time.
The intense processing that took place at the salting plants has previously made it almost impossible to visually identify species from their remains.
To overcome this limitation, an international team of researchers tested using DNA analysis.
Despite the fact that grinding and fermentation accelerate genetic degradation, they were able to sequence DNA from fish remains found in a fish-salting vat at a cetaria in Adro Vello, northwest Spain.
OPS:Fish remains from the bottom of a salting vat separated into spines (b), vertebrae (c) and scales (d).
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_186586247_FER
DNA reveals ingredient of Ancient Roman sauce
Ferrari Press Agency
Garum 1
Ref 16954
02/07/2025
See Ferrari pictures
Picture MUST credit: Themudo et al./ Archaeology Department of the University of Vigo,
Scientists have used new methods for extracting DNA to look at the ingredients of an Ancient Roman fermented fish-based sauce called garum.
They sifted remains at a salting plant in Spain and found that European sardines were the key ingredient.
Fish was an important part of the ancient Roman diet, and Romans processed their catch for long-term preservation in coastal fish-salting plants called cetariae.
There, they crushed and fermented small fish into pastes and sauces such as garum.
Analysing the fish used in Roman condiments could provide insight into the diets and culture of ancient people as well as information on fish populations of the time.
The intense processing that took place at the salting plants has previously made it almost impossible to visually identify species from their remains.
To overcome this limitation, an international team of researchers tested using DNA analysis.
Despite the fact that grinding and fermentation accelerate genetic degradation, they were able to sequence DNA from fish remains found in a fish-salting vat at a cetaria in Adro Vello, northwest Spain.
OPS:Fish remains from the bottom of a salting vat, as they were found
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_184733974_NUR
Rome, Italy
A view on the Colosseum in Rome, Italy on May 10th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184733969_NUR
Rome, Italy
A view on a fragment of the Colosseum in Rome, Italy on May 10th, 2025. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184733964_NUR
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DUK10162684_015
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_003
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_017
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_004
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_013
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_014
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_010
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_005
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_012
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_006
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_016
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_011
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_008
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_009
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_007
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_002
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162684_001
FEATURE - Aus Forschung und Wissenschaft: 2.000 Jahre alte Fresken in einem grossen Bankettsaal in Pompeji entdeckt
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
A newly discovered fresco in Pompeii is shedding fresh light on the mysterious Dionysiac cults of the ancient world - and how they depicted “wild” women who broke free of the male order.
More than a century after the famous Villa of the Mysteries was unearthed, archaeologists have revealed a strikingly detailed frieze depicting the procession of Dionysus, the god of wine.
The nearly life-sized fresco, known as a "megalography" due to its large-scale figures, was found in a grand banqueting room in Insula 10 of Region IX in central Pompeii. It spans three sides of the room, while the fourth side opens onto a garden.
The vivid artwork portrays bacchantes, or maenads, as both dancers and fierce hunters. Some carry slaughtered kid goats or wield swords while holding the innards of animals. Young satyrs, with their distinctive pointed ears, are shown playing the double flute. At the centre of the frieze stands a mortal woman accompanied by an aged Silenus holding a torch, suggesting her initiation into the Dionysiac mysteries—a cult promising rebirth and the possibility of an afterlife.
Explaining its significance, Gabriel Zuchtriegel said: “These frescoes have a profoundly religious meaning which, however, was also designed to decorate areas for holding banquets and feasts, rather like when we find a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam on the wall of an Italian restaurant in New York to create a little bit of atmosphere.
“Behind these magnificent paintings, which play with illusion and reality, we can observe the signs of a religious crisis that was affecting the ancient world, but we can also grasp the grandeur of a ritual that dates back to an archaic world.”
He also said the bacchante or maenad, “expressed the wild, untameable side of women,” who “break free from male order to dance freely” and take on traditional male pursuits like hunting.
Intriguingly, all the figures appear to *** Local Ca
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_157396793_FER
Carrie Fisher's Princess Leia dres sfails to sell at auction despite $1million bid.
Ferrari Press Agency
Leia 1
Ref 14915
29/06/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Propstore
A ceremonial dress worn by actress Carrie Fisher as Princess Leia in the first ever Star Wars movie failed to sell at auction, despite a bid of $1 million USD / €920,000 euros.
The dress had been expected to fetch up to $2 million USD / €1.84 million euros but fell short of the reserve price.
It was offered as the highlight of a movie and television memorabilia sale in Los Angeles being held over three days with over 1,400 original items valued at around $12 million USD / €11 million euros.
The sale is organised by UK company Propstore and the Leia dress was in the collection of the firm’s founder Stephen Lane.
It was reported the failed $1 million bidder will try and negotiate an agreement privately.
OPS: The Propstore sale also included Russell Crowe’s Ancient Roman General Maximus cuirass body armour from 2000’s multi-Oscar winning Gladiator went for $125,000 USD.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_145589658_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUKAS_145589678_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUKAS_145589651_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUKAS_145589629_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUKAS_145589605_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUKAS_145589656_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUKAS_145589679_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUKAS_145589667_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUKAS_145589630_EYE
Mary Beard at the Cheltenham Literature Festival.
Mary Beard at Cheltenham Literature Festival. 9th October 2022.
© Si Jubb / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Si Jubb / eyevine -
DUK10148902_010
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_009
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:pot is being joined by a drone being used to make a detailed 3D map of the site
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_008
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_007
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_006
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_005
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_004
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_003
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii. Another piece of high tecj being used is a drone capabale of making 3D scans of the city
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_002
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148902_001
FEATURE - Roboterhund hilft bei der Bewachung der antiken römischen Ruinen von Pompeji
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 13822
30/03/2022
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit : Archaeological Park of Pompeii.
The ancient ruins of Pompeii are being guarded – by a robot dog. The authority running the site near Naples in Italy have signed up the four legged Spot created by US company Boston Dynamics to patrol the city.The Roman town of Pompeii was preserved almost in tact after it was buried by an eruption from nearby volcano Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.Around third of it is yet to be uncovered.The fleeing population left behind many treasures still awaiting discovery.The autonomous Spot will inspect the ancient Italian city's streets and tunnels dug in the past by gfrave robbers, instead of humans. Acting as a robotic guard dog, it head out at night or whenever the site is closed to tourists, providing a live feed for human officials situated off-site. Part of Spot's job is to investigate tunnels dug by ithe relic hunters of the past which are causing structural issues but would be dangerous or too tight for officials to access safely. Spot is equipped with cameras and sensors to provide a feed of hard-to-reach Pompeii structures.
OPS:Robot dog Spot on patrol in Pompeii
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10144768_008
FEATURE - Ein römisches Schnellrestaurant in der antiken Stadt Pompeji hat zum ersten Mal seit fast 2000 Jahren wieder geöffnet
A Roman fast food restaurant in the ancient city of Pompeii, Italy opened to the public again for the first time in almost 2000 years on Thursday (12 August 2021).
The Thermopolium of Regio V, an ancient snack bar, was unearthed during recent excavations in an area of the once buried city which had never been investigated before.
The Thermopolium served hot food and drinks stored in large dolia (jars) embedded in the masonry counter to patrons. They were a common sight in the Roman world, where it was customary for the middle and lower classes to eat out.
While there are at least 80 examples of Thermopolia in Pompeii alone, the Thermopolium of Regio V is notable for the exceptional decoration of the painted counter, featuring images of animals that were likely prepared and sold there - just like a modern fast food restaurant today.
Massimo Osanna, Italy’s Director General of Museums said the discoveries have, “provided a unique opportunity for interdisciplinary research which led to a greater understanding of the diet and daily life of Pompeians.”
He added: “A new visiting experience in an entirely new area of the site has been created for those who are returning to populate the streets of the ancient city.”
The commercial complex, located in an open space at the intersection between Pompeii’s Vicolo (alley) delle Nozze d’Argento and Vicolo dei Balcon, emerged at two different times. It was only partially investigated in 2019, during the work of the Great Pompeii Project to stabilise and consolidate the historical excavation fronts. Taking into account the exceptional nature of the decorations, and in order to restore the complete layout of the restaurant, in 2020 it was decided to prepare for a further intervention aimed at completing the excavation, with the restoration of the rooms and surviving decorative elements. A new wooden roof has also been constructed to protect the painted counter.
Unfortunately, visitors will not be able to buy
(c) Dukas -
DUK10144768_007
FEATURE - Ein römisches Schnellrestaurant in der antiken Stadt Pompeji hat zum ersten Mal seit fast 2000 Jahren wieder geöffnet
A Roman fast food restaurant in the ancient city of Pompeii, Italy opened to the public again for the first time in almost 2000 years on Thursday (12 August 2021).
The Thermopolium of Regio V, an ancient snack bar, was unearthed during recent excavations in an area of the once buried city which had never been investigated before.
The Thermopolium served hot food and drinks stored in large dolia (jars) embedded in the masonry counter to patrons. They were a common sight in the Roman world, where it was customary for the middle and lower classes to eat out.
While there are at least 80 examples of Thermopolia in Pompeii alone, the Thermopolium of Regio V is notable for the exceptional decoration of the painted counter, featuring images of animals that were likely prepared and sold there - just like a modern fast food restaurant today.
Massimo Osanna, Italy’s Director General of Museums said the discoveries have, “provided a unique opportunity for interdisciplinary research which led to a greater understanding of the diet and daily life of Pompeians.”
He added: “A new visiting experience in an entirely new area of the site has been created for those who are returning to populate the streets of the ancient city.”
The commercial complex, located in an open space at the intersection between Pompeii’s Vicolo (alley) delle Nozze d’Argento and Vicolo dei Balcon, emerged at two different times. It was only partially investigated in 2019, during the work of the Great Pompeii Project to stabilise and consolidate the historical excavation fronts. Taking into account the exceptional nature of the decorations, and in order to restore the complete layout of the restaurant, in 2020 it was decided to prepare for a further intervention aimed at completing the excavation, with the restoration of the rooms and surviving decorative elements. A new wooden roof has also been constructed to protect the painted counter.
Unfortunately, visitors will not be able to buy
(c) Dukas