Sign in or 

| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Apr 9 2009, 11:47 AM EDT (current) | clemio | |
| Mar 9 2009, 9:34 AM EDT | clemio | 3 words added, 5 words deleted |
| In late 1748 or early 1749 well diggers came across what turned out to be the belvedere of a sumptious Roman villa. For six years the remains of the building were explored by tunnelling operations under the supervision of Karl Weber, a Swiss engineer acting on behalf of Rocque Joaquín de Alcubierre. He made detailed plans of the layout of the villa that were well ahead of their time (see below). For an expanded view of this plan, you can display the three additional pages in this section from the Navigation Box or click here. .. The villa, believed to have been owned by the father-in-law of Julius Caesar, Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus, stretched for more than 250m along the shoreline. It would appear that it was originally built in the first century BC, as a formal atrium villa, subsequently extended to what we see today. (The J. Paul Getty Museum in Malibu, California, based on Weber's plans, gives a good good idea of what it would have looked like - see picture below). On the western side of the building is a large peristyle over 90m long and 35m wide, with an ornamental pool running down the centre. The peristyle contained many fine statues in bronze and marble including the five 'Dancers of Herculaneum' which can be seen in the National Archeological Museum of Naples. There were also busts of Greek men of letters, including philosophers and statesman, outside and inside the villa, lending credence to the belief that the owner was a reader and intellectual. All attempts to read the papyri (altogether over 1800 scrolls were recovered) resulted in the destruction of the document, until Antonio Piaggio, a priest from the Vatican Library, created a mechanical 'unroller'. His process was extremely slow, but it did allow the documents to be read. Most of the scrolls have turned out to be the work of Philodemus, an Epicurean philosopher of the first century BC. |