Wednesday, April 22nd, 2015

Damage found in ancient ruins of Pompeii; Areas affected have been closed the public

March 4, 2014 by  
Filed under Antiques & Archaeology

POMPEII (AFP).- The Temple of Venus and walls of a tomb and shop in the long-neglected ruins of Pompeii near Naples have been damaged, possibly due to heavy rain, officials said on Monday.

Custodians found that a two-metre wall of an ancient shop in the ruined city — which had recently been restored — had collapsed under the weight of another wall that crumbled onto it.

It followed the discovery Sunday that parts of an archway in the temple had fallen off and a wall in the necropolis — the biggest in the ancient Roman city — had tumbled down.

The areas affected have been closed the public.

Photo taken on March 2 2014 shows the damaged wall of a tomb at the ancient ruins of Pompeii 580x388 Damage found in ancient ruins of Pompeii; Areas affected have been closed the public

Photo taken on March 2, 2014 shows the damaged wall of a tomb at the ancient ruins of Pompeii, near Naples, southern Italy. The Temple of Venus and the wall of a tomb in the long-neglected ruins of Pompeii near Naples were found damaged on March 2, possibly due to heavy rain. Custodians found that parts of an archway in the temple had fallen off and a wall in the necropolis, the biggest in the ancient Roman city — had tumbled and have closed the areas to the public. AFP PHOTO / MARIO LAPORTA.

Italian Culture Minister Dario Franceschini has called a meeting this week to assess the damage and progress made in an EU-backed project to restore the archaeological site.

“The news of these collapses comes at a time in which there is an unprecedented vacuum in the management of Pompeii,” said Antonio Irlando from the Cultural Heritage Observatory, a non-governmental group that follows work on Pompeii.

“For every collapse that is reported, there are another nine that do not make news,” he said, calling the state of the ancient site “dramatic”.

Conservation workers last year began a 105-million-euro ($145-million) makeover of the UNESCO World Heritage landmark, funded by the European Union to the tune of 41.8 million euros.

Officials last month reported the completion of the first project under the plan — the restoration of the frescoed House of the Cryptoporticus — but the project has been badly delayed by bureaucracy.

The project is seen as crucial to the survival of Pompeii after a series of collapses at the 44-hectare site in the shadow of Mount Vesuvius — the volcano that destroyed the city in 79 AD.

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