Villa Poppaea
Photo by Paola Di Silvio

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Villa Poppaea
Photo by Paola Di Silvio

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Villa Poppaea, Oplontis
Torre Annunziata, Campania
2017
Oplontis, Villa di Poppea
La città di Torre Annunziata contiene al suo interno gli scavi di Oplontis. In realtà si tratterebbe più probabilmente di un'area periferica di Pompei, tipo una nostra contrada, piuttosto che una tessuto urbano vero e proprio. Questi scavi sono composti da due ville di cui visitabile, al momento, è solo quella di Poppea.
La villa di Poppea Sabina, seconda moglie di Nerone, è inserita nell'elenco dell'UNESCO relativo al patrimonio dell'umanità ed in effetti si tratta di una monumentale residenza, molto ampia al punto da contenere addirittura un piccolo complesso termale e ricca di affreschi che creano giochi prospettici con finti elementi architettonici quali porte o colonne o che abbelliscono le pareti con raffigurazioni di animali, frutta o maschere.
Al momento dell'eruzione la villa era disabitata perché oggetto di lavori di ristrutturazione come dimostrato dalle suppellettili ammassate in poche stanze e dal materiale edilizio.
May has given me coloured pencils, poppies, adventures, blue sea, magical ancient cities and some really hot weather!
Let's hope June keeps up the trend <;
New reference pack: Ruins of Pompeii and Herculaneum!
--> cbr.sh/6untxr
This is the kind of resource I use as reference for my own work! :) 500 photos of ancient ruins, plus a bonus folder of 100+ additional photos of ancient mosaics and frescoes in museums.
That's over 600 photos altogether, as reference for any kind of drawing/painting, as well as mattepainting, photobashing, photomanipulation, etc. 😍 No credit needed. Commercial license included. Enjoy! 😄

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Oplontis
Villa Arianna
30/12/23
The Eruption of Mt. Vesuvius
The Eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 CE remains one of the deadliest natural disasters in recorded history. Not only did the volcano destroy the economically powerful city of Pompeii, but Herculaneum, Oplontis, Stabiae were also buried and thus lost to the Roman Empire. The number of victims is unknown, but given the size of the four cities, estimates have reached over 18,000 individuals.
Today only one first-hand account of this horrific event survives in two letters from Pliny the Younger to the Roman historian Tacitus. They are preserved as letters 6.16 and 6.20 in the collected Epistles of Pliny. Among our holdings of the works of Pliny is this 3-volume set of the Epistles with William Melmoth’s 18th-century translation edited by Clifford Herschel Moore, and printed by the Harvard University Press in an edition of 405 copies for members of The Bibliophile Society, Boston, in 1925.
While the term ‘volcanic eruption’ evokes scenes of lava and fire, the reality is much more frightening. Curiously, there is no word for volcano in the Latin language. While ancient Romans were aware of the destructive power of volcanoes, there’s some debate about whether they were aware that Vesuvius was a volcano before its eruption. Signs of the eruption began back in 62CE with a great earthquake that caused much of the city to collapse. Smaller earthquakes continued over the next 15 years until one was accompanied by the rise of a column of smoke from Mt. Vesuvius in October 79 CE.
The hot gases that made up the column of smoke began to cool, darkening the sky, and not long after a rain of pumice began to fall, and after 15 hours ceilings began to collapse. Nevertheless, many residents chose to take shelter rather than flee. At 4am the first 500C pyroclastic surge barred down the volcano, burying Herculaneum. Six more of these surges occurred before the end of the eruption, destroying Pompeii, Oplontis, and Stabiae.
The 17-year old Pliny was in the port town of Misenum across the Bay of Naples from the volcano at the time. Pliny’s uncle, Pliny the Elder, commander of the Roman fleet at Misenum, launched a rescue mission and went himself to the rescue of a personal friend. The elder Pliny did not survive the attempt. In Pliny the Younger’s first letter to Tacitus, he relates what he could discover from witnesses of his uncle's experiences. In a second letter, he details his own observations after the departure of his uncle.
Mt. Vesuvius is still active and according to volcanologists, erupts about every 2000 years, which would be right about now. Who will be our next Pliny the Younger?
Our copy of The Epistles of Pliny is another gift from our friend and benefactor Jerry Buff.
View more of my Classics posts.
– LauraJean, Special Collections Undergraduate Classics Intern
• VILLA POPPÆA | Villa A, Oplontis [Torre Annunziata] Calidarium [3], a bath room, recess: Wall painting [depicting Heracles-?]
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