A never before attempted history of the long-standing relationship between Rome and Pompeii, the exhibition aims to reconstruct the complex dialogue that linked the two most famous sites in Italian archaeology from the Second Samnite War to the eruption of 79 AD. The exhibition’s high scientific quality is based on the reconstruction of social and cultural relations traceable in particular through archaeological research.
The exhibition was conceived and curated by Mario Torelli, the great, recently deceased archaeologist. It is also dedicated to the memory of his many years of activity in the scholarship of the ancient world as a committed intellectual and founding father of the new school of Italian archaeology.
Nearly 100 pieces, enriched by videos and virtual projections, are divided into three large sections – the alliance phase, the Roman colony phase, the decline and end of Pompeii –, and dedicated to two crucial moments that shaped the long history of Pompeii: the Roman siege of 89 BC and the earthquake of 62 AD, up until the catastrophic event of 79 AD that brought about the destruction of the Vesuvian city while Rome continued on its path to become a metropolis without precedent.
The exhibition is promoted by the Parco archeologico del Colosseo with the organization of Electa and the scientific collaboration of the Parco archeologico di Pompei and the National Archaeological Museum of Naples. Exhibit installations and graphics are curated by Maurizio di Puolo.
Parco Archeologico del Colosseo
Archaeological area of the Imperial Fora
The Trajan's Markets - The Museum of the Imperial Fora
Informations
From February 9 to June 27 2021
Museums and Cultural Sites are subject at the COVID containment policy.
For visiting schedules and procedures, please contact the official websites