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POMPEII AND HERCULANEUM

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Title: POMPEII AND HERCULANEUM


1
POMPEII AND HERCULANEUM
  • Rescuing the Past for the Future

2
Know the Syllabus
  • Issues of Conservation and Reconstruction
  • Italian and International contributions and
    responsibilities
  • Impact of Tourism
  • Ethical Issues

3
CONSERVATION
  • Is defined as the preservation of cultural
    material for the foreseeable future in a way that
    allows the maximum information to be retrieved by
    further study and analyses. Kate Foley
  • Positive Aspects. It safeguards the physical
    fabric of the object from loss and deterioration
  • Negative Aspects. Conservation can also be
    destructive- by treating the object it can
    destroy valuable information contained within the
    dirt or corrosion products surrounding the
    object.
  • RECONSTRUCTION
  • Measures to preserve historical materials and are
    based on accurate duplication of documented
    features through archaeology
  • Positive Aspects. It provides greater impact and
    interests for tourists, creating almost outdoor
    museums
  • Negative. It can be done in an unsympathetic way
    with materials not compatible. The
    reconstructions are criticized as largely
    imaginative since they reflect present mindedness
    rather than the object as it existed in ancient
    times.

4
THE SECOND DEATH?
  • The excavated cities are vast open-air museums
    which together include almost 2000 buildings,
    many kilometres of paths and roads, and thousands
    of square metres of frescoed walls and paved
    mosaic flooring still vulnerable to decay.
  • There are many causes of deterioration and
    problems facing the sites of both Pompeii and
    Herculaneum. Poor restoration work on the sites
    has been done by local firms with little
    specialised knowledge of restoration techniques
    and in some places incorrect construction methods
    have been

5
What are the Problems?
  • Just when Pompeii was being rediscovered, it
    began to die its second death
  • Henry de Saint-Blanquat
  • Insufficient finances
  • Lack of sufficient care in excavated parts
  • Unsympathetic restorations of the past
  • Nature weeds, acid rain, sunlight, wear and tear
  • Human impact negatives of humans

6
MONEY, MONEY MONEY
  • 1997 a special law was passed giving the
    superintendant the right to retain gate money.
  • 1997 a law declaring private donations tax
    deductible
  • World Monument fund contributed 600,000 over 3
    years to finance an assessment of the site and
    draft a plan for restoration.
  • Funding from the European Union is being used to
    create facilities such as bookshops, and
    restaurants, which in turn will generate funds
    for conservation projects

7
European Union Any one read Italian??
8
INTERNATIONAL AID TO THE RESCUE
  • Justification for Inscription on UNESCO WORLD
    HERITAGE LIST
  • The Committee decided to inscribe this property
    on the basis of criteria (iii), (iv) and (v),
    considering that the impressive remains of the
    towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum and their
    associated villas, buried by the eruption of
    Vesuvius in AD 79, provide a complete and vivid
    picture of society and daily life at a specific
    moment in the past that is without parallel
    anywhere in the world.

9
New focus
  • New approaches to conservation are being
    implemented. Instead of concentrating on single
    buildings, restoration and conservation are
    focusing on whole insulae in order to achieve a
    more integrated result.
  • "Towards an understanding of the shape of space
    at VIII.7.1-15, Pompeii preliminary results from
    the 2006 season." Steven Ellis, Gary Devore,
    2006..

10
  • Bureaucracy.
  • Government red tape is blamed for some of the
    inefficiencies at Pompeii. If I have to fix a
    broken wall, said Pietro Giovanni Guzzo, the
    superintendent of the ruins, I first have to put
    out a tender for an architect to evaluate the
    damage.
  • Then I have to put out a tender for a company to
    fix the wall. Then I have to see if I have enough
    money in my budget to pay for the repair, and
    then finally the work begins.

11
Unsympathetic restoration of the past
  • Amedeo Mauri director from 1924-1961 made an
    effort to improve the infrastructure of the two
    towns. Unfortunately many of the materials used
    were mostly concrete and steel which were not
    only different to the original materials but
    ultimately damaged the original structure even
    further.The alkaline in the masonry reacted with
    the ancient walls producing soluble salts which
    migrated to the surface causing the surface to
    crumble as in the House of the Coloured Capitals.
  • Scaffolding and roof erected over the remains of
    a two-storey building in Pompeii.
  • In the lower right of the slide, a Perspex sheet
    has been placed over a painted sign

12
A case of poor restorationHouse of Meleager
  • A new timber roof erected on the House of
    Meleager in Pompeii was poorly designed and could
    not support the weight of the tiles and collapsed

13
INTERNATIONAL ARCHAEOLOGISTS TO THE RESCFUE
  • In 1990 an International team of Archaeologists,
    Conservators planned a rescue mission for the
    decaying house.
  • Rotting wooden beams have been replaced with new
    ones stained a rich dark brown, mosaic floors
    scrubbed to a bright white and glossy black, and
    wall paintings cleaned and restored to better
    show their deep red, yellow, and blue hues

14
RISING DAMP/FLOODING OF SUBURBAN BATHS
Monica Castaldi and Giorgio Torrata, structural
engineers have been commissioned to study ways in
which the water rises in order to channel it
better in the future
15
Drainage, Rising Damp and Humidity
  • Herculaneums Suburban Baths are the best
    preserved bath complex.
  • The main problems facing its preservation are
    humidity. The baths are in fact saturated both by
    surface water that drains off the domus above and
    by groundwater as it flows down to the sea.
  • This has led to deterioration of the vault
    linings of the tepidarium and has caused the
    Superindendant to close the building to the public

16
The Solution- Laser Technology
  • Herculaneum Conservation Project
  • In 2006 trials were carried out to see how laser
    scanning could help, not only in documentation
    but monitoring of progress of decay. This would
    allow more informed decisions about conservation
    but also preserve the rich visual material for
    future generations

17
DONT WALK ON THE ??????
18
INSTABILITY OF WALLS/ FLOORS AND CEILINGS
  • House of the Wooden Shutters
  • Palaestra in Herculaneum

19
INVASION OF IVY
The roots of ivy are very invasive and contribute
to the disintegration of mortar and plaster. The
weight of such vegetation also damages
unsupported walls.
20
NOXIOUS VEGETATION
  • The Pompeian soil is very fertile and allows
    plants of all types to invade cracks in walls and
    open areas of dirt.
  • Amongst the species of plants causing problems
    ,the acanthus whose leaves adorn corinthian
    columns and walls, wild strawberry, ivy, lichen
    and mosses. Henry De St Blanquet identified 31
    types of parasitic plants, which over time can
    dislodge tiles and mozaics, weaken mortar which
    destabilizes walls.
  • Large root systems can also undermine foundations
    of buildings and invade drainage systems, adding
    to the existing problems of water damage.

21
Solution REPLANT WITH THE ORIGINAL SPECIES
  • A research project was designed by the University
    of Sheffield to retrieve evidence for the date,
    layout and landscaping of this major sanctuary.
    Work began in 1998 and was completed in 2007.

22
REPLANTING ORCHARDS
Archaeologist Wilhemina Jashemski made an
extensive study of the gardens, orchards and
vineyards within the walls of Pompeii. Using
plaster casts of the cavities, which formed
around the roots of trees and vines and the
analysis of pollen found in the ash, Jashemski
was able to identify the plants that were growing
at the time of the eruption. This orchard
includes olive and fruit trees and grapevines. A
section of the city wall can be seen in the
foreground while Mount Vesuvius dominates the
background.  
23
Restored Garden in House of Venus in the Shell
24
Weathering, Wear and Tear
  • Buildings, artifacts and surfaces have been
    exposed to the natural errosive processes of
    wind,sun and rain. In the 20th century the
    increasing acidic nature of rain from pollution
    has increased the damage to surfaces.

25
EXPOSED LEAD PIPES
These exposed lead pipes carried water to houses
in this street in Pompeii. Judging by the
relative height of the doorstep and the
kerbstones, the pipes would have been quite close
to the surface when originally laid. Note the
evenly cut and precisely laid kerbstones.
26
Exposure to sunlight and acid rain
27
Solution Via DEll Abbondanza Project ( Italian
see pompeiisites.com )
  • The restoration project avails itself of an
    advanced 3D technology supplied by the Kacyra
    Foundation of the American firm bearing the same
    name which invented the three-dimensional laser
    scan system. Thanks to the surveys which have
    been carried out, a 3D data bank of the area of
    the Fori Civili in Pompeii has been created. As a
    consequence, the project of restoration and
    protection of the wall paintings of Regio IX,
    Insulae 7 and 11 has been developed. The
    restoration work will be completed in January
    2005.

28
Light Exposure to painted walls, frescoes and
paintings
  • Problems with wall paintings is the high calcium
    content which dissolves under the influence of
    acid rain
  • Artists in ancient Pompeii painted the town red
    2,000 years ago with a brilliant crimson pigment
    that dominated many of the doomed city's wall
    paintings. They were protected by a protective
    layer of punic wax
  • Scientists now believe that a chemical reaction
    takes place between chlorine elements in rain and
    either the wax or the cinnibar to produce the
    blackening
  • The wall at right shows the heavy damage due to
    blackening of cinnabar in the Poppea's villa in
    Oplontis

29
Salts coming to the surface, fade and damage
outdoor frescoes.
30
Stabilizing Frescoes
  • Frescoed walls absorb moisture from the
    atmosphere. The moisture carries to the wall
    soluble surface salts that effloresce and injure
    the fresco pigments. To halt such injury
    water-permeable fixatives may be applied to help
    stabilize the pigment and prevent it from flaking
    off. A more drastic treatment is transfer, by
    which the mural and upper layer of plaster are
    cut away from the wall altogether and made fast
    to a new support. A major instance of successful
    transfer was carried out on many frescoes
    unearthed at Pompeii.

31
(No Transcript)
32
PROTECTION AND STORAGE
33
Feral DogsSolution Guards and strict
instructions to tourists, not to feed the dogs
34
DONT FEED OR PAT THE DOGS!!!!!!!
35
Pigeon Poo!!! And its solutions- Trained Falcons
36
(No Transcript)
37
Tourism-A Double edged Sword
  • Each year Pompeii alone admits 2.5 million
    tourists through its gates.
  • The general movement adds to the wearing down of
    street surfaces, particularly in frequented areas
    like the Forum complex.
  • Accidental brushing as well as deliberate
    touching of walls, columns and frescoes allows
    perspiration and body oils to react with the
    ancient surfaces.
  • Flash photography in the past has magnified the
    damage caused by light exposure.
  • Looting and vandalism has currently become a
    major security problem for Management.

38
RESTRICT AREAS AT RISKHave varying tour routes
  • Less than ¼ of the excavated town is now
    accessible to the public.
  • In 2006 only 16 monuments, villas and houses
    could be viewed as opposed to 60 in 1956

39
STOLEN POMPEII FRESCOES-2003
Italian police have recovered two famous frescoes
that were stolen last weekend from a house in the
Roman city of Pompeii, near Naples. The 1st
Century frescoes were found at a construction
site close to the historic city, after roadblocks
were set up across the whole of Naples province.
The authorities said they had already been
packed, and that the aim may have been to smuggle
them abroad. Both panels were damaged during the
theft. Pompeii has a long record of art thefts.
A chronic lack of resources means there is a
shortage of security staff, which forces the
authorities to keep large areas of the site
closed to the public.
40
Solutions Superintendant Guzzo
  • 1. Guards
  • 2. Upgrade CCTV system
  • International Legislation and prosecution for
    traffiking in illicit cultural property.
  • Significant houses fitted with alarms

41
SOUND MANAGEMENT
  • The combined sites of Pompeii, Herculaneum,
    Stabia and Oplontis are managed by Superindent de
    Archaeologica di Pompeii, a regional agency of
    the Italian Ministry of Culture and Environment.
  • The current director is Pietro Guzzo whose
    initial approach was to place a moratorium on
    new excavations
  • http//www.pompeiisites.org/ Click on Work in
    progress and make brief notes about the varied
    projects

42
Choose at least 2 International Projects and make
brief notes about the aims, work carried out and
any results.
43
PRACTISE RESPONSE
Sir Henri De Saint- Blanquat once said, that the
moment P H began to be excavated , they began
to die their second death. Discuss this statement
in relation to Conservation and Reconstruction
efforts in the two towns 600 words
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