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The 5 facts about Pompeii

An insight on the vicious life of people at Pompeii

By GhufranPublished 3 years ago 2 min read
The 5 facts about Pompeii
Photo by Vijay Sekhar Sadineni on Unsplash

One of the most well-known natural disasters is the Mount Vesuvius eruption in 79 AD. These are the five most amazing statistics regarding Pompeii, arguably the most well-known victim of that ill fated day.

Number five: The Vesuvius explosion was more potent than an atomic weapon, killing thousands of people and completely destroying several Roman settlements, including Pompeii. It's hard to understand the scale of the Soo veces eruption. around one thirty. Little Boy the bomb that was dropped in Hiroshima in August 1945 is said to have been so potent that it left human-shaped imprints in the pavement. The bomb released energy that was roughly 15 kilograms of TNT, which annihilated the city within seconds. The mountain exploded and the entire brush was blown off. A massive cloud of gas, ash, and stone was released into the air, turning the city dark as the debris blocked out the Sun. the eruption of SU visas nonetheless, is thought to have released 100,000 times more heat energy.

Number four: The bodies of the deceased have been cast, so number four, you're likely to see an amazing work of archaeology, these body casts have preserved some of the victims' final moments before death. To try to lessen the perspiration, they just imagine cold thoughts. When human bones were found in empty spaces in the ash during the early pompeii excavations, Italian archaeologist Giuseppe Fiorello concluded that these spaces had been left by the victims of the pyroclastic flow and filled them with plaster to create the first Pompeii body castings. Because of how lifelike these casts are, many types of clothing and facial traits can be recognised.

Number three: The graveyards of Pompeii weren't just used to bury the dead; archaeologists have discovered graves scattered across the city that were strewn with trash, including burnt animal bones, shattered ceramics, and abandoned equipment. They came to the conclusion that the cemeteries were so heavily trashed because these ancient Romans simply didn't care where their garbage was discarded in their eyes a cemetery was the perfect place to dump trash because they had very few rules about garbage disposal and the city's cemeteries were placed alongside heavily travelled roads and along city walls for everyone to see.

Number two: Vesuvius issued numerous warnings prior to erupting, so you can't say that Pompeii residents weren't warned seventeen years prior to the eruption a major earthquake severely damaged Pompeii, leaving the otherwise luxurious city in disarray and forcing many residents to flee as 600 sheep were killed by poisonous gas in the air some experts believe this was an early sign of the volcano's awakening while repairs were still being made in 79 AD strange things started happening around that time.

Number one: In North America, we still deal with the stifling legacy of Puritanism when it comes to sex, but not so in ancient Rome. In Pompeii, sex was a normal and everyday concept of life, and as such, the city was littered with symbols of it. Brothels were common, and they even had explicit graffiti that is still legible today. Frescoes containing images of sex were also common. 

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