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POMPEII: PORTA NOLA NECROPOLIS PROJECT (COMUNE DI POMPEI, PROVINCIA DI NAPOLI, REGIONE CAMPANIA)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2017

Stephen Kay
Affiliation:
British School at Rome. s.kay@bsrome.it
Llorenç Alapont Martin
Affiliation:
Ilustre Colegio Oficial de Doctores y Licenciados en Letras y Ciencias de Valencia y Castellon, Departamento di Arqueologia. llor.alapont@gmail.com
Rosa Albiach
Affiliation:
Museu Valencia de la Illustracio i de la Modernitat, MuVIM, Diputacio de Valencia. rosa.albiach@dival.es

Abstract

Type
Archaeological Fieldwork Reports
Copyright
Copyright © British School at Rome 2017 

The 2016 international fieldschool at the Necropolis of Porta Nola (Pompeii) continued research into various aspects of the necropolis. This was achieved primarily through a series of targeted excavations, but also through material analysis, conservation and the study of cremations, in particular of two Praetorian soldiers excavated in 1970s.

Following the excavation in 2015 of the tomb of Marcus Obellius Firmus, an anonymous schola-type tomb and the burials alongside the city wall (between Porta Nola and Tower VII) (Kay et al., Reference Kay, Alapont, Albiach, Ceccarelli and Panzieri2016), in the 2016 season the focus was a rectangular structure opposite Porta Nola and the area to the north and west of the tomb of Marcus Obellius Firmus.

The low rectangular structure alongside the schola-type tomb of Aesquillia Polla measures 6.4 × 6.39 m, and was cleared of the ad 79 eruption layers in 1908 (Spano, Reference Spano1910: 393). It occupies a prominent position opposite Porta Nola. The early excavation found no trace of any burials, and instead recorded a large dump of mixed material including coins, bottles in glass and terracotta, a bone hairpin and a fragment of pasta vitrea. Given the lack of cinerary urns, Spano hypothesized that the walled area formed a funerary garden for the adjacent tomb of Aesquillia Polla. Subsequently there has been considerable debate concerning its function, including interpretation as a bustum, or a burial area, or the hypothesis that the structure was simply incomplete and/or not used in antiquity.

The aim of our new excavation was to clarify the purpose of this structure. Following the removal of layers dating to the previous exploration of the structure (which included the burial of a dog), the excavation revealed several large deposits of construction material, used to artificially raise the ground level beneath the building. Whilst a floor level was identified by the new excavations (at a greater depth than Spano's excavation), no cremations were recorded within the structure, perhaps suggesting that the construction was chronologically quite late and the structure was not used before the eruption of ad 79.

The excavation of an area immediately to the north and west of the tomb of Marcus Obellius Firmus followed the 2015 work inside the monument. In that phase, we identified a second burial overlooked by earlier exploration (De Caro, Reference De Caro1979). The aim of the new excavations was to contextualize the stratigraphy within and below the tomb, as well as to understand the role of a tufa wall built 5 m to the north of the tomb. The wall was initially exposed by the excavations of 1908 and was interpreted as demarcating the pomerium of the city. This hypothesis was later challenged, following the discovery of a gateway in the wall and a beaten-earth road leading from the basalt road that runs around the city. The structures were interpreted as possibly forming part of the pagus set aside for the tomb of Obellius Firmus, who belonged to one of the most powerful families in Pompeii at the time of the ad 79 eruption.

Following the clearance of a shallow level of topsoil and some lapilli, a series of deposits was recorded that contained the clearance of material from inside an ustrinum, including fragments of a funerary bed, burnt bone, ash and charcoal. Furthermore, immediately to the north of the tomb of Obellius Firmus, at a depth of 0.77 m, an ustrinum cut into the ground was discovered, and this will be excavated in 2017. To the west of the tomb a further stretch of the beaten-earth road was exposed, which led from the basalt road through the small gateway. Alongside this road was discovered what appeared to be a burial (Fig. 1) with an uninscribed marble funerary stele with a circular cut placed vertically, supported by pieces of tufa, immediately under which was a glass unguentarium. However, excavation of the cut below revealed no traces of a burial or funerary goods.

Fig. 1. An apparent burial alongside a beaten-earth road leading away from the city, west of the tomb of Obellius Firmus. (Photo: S. Kay.)

Both areas therefore seem to show preparations for activity that never took place — perhaps because of the eruption —, and remind us of the real nature of urban life.

In 2016 the analysis of the cremations from the necropolis of Porta Nola focused on the burials of two Praetorian soldiers. These had been discovered by the excavations in the 1970s (De Caro, Reference De Caro1979) but were not subject to osteological analysis. The first of these was the burial of Lucius Betutius, as revealed by the funerary stele that recorded his rank as a praetorian soldier of the II cohort, in which he served for two years. This would suggest an age of 22, and the anthropological analysis of the cremated bones, specifically the morphology of the pubic symphysis and the femoral head, indeed confirmed that he was a robust man, aged about twenty years.

The second cremation was discovered behind the burial of Lucius Betutius further up the slope towards the city walls. The cremation urn was discovered at a greater depth and had been disturbed by the later burial (De Caro, Reference De Caro1979). The anthropological study revealed a male individual, aged about 30 years. Due to his mature age and physical activity during his eleven years of service, some of his bones showed pathological characteristics, such as the formation of enthesiophytes in the pelvis. This may have been caused by the micro-trauma of repetition action, and it is interesting to note that this is a pathology that often affects archers in modern times.

Finally, our conservation work continued at the necropolis, with the cleaning of the interior of the tomb of Obellius Firmus, and the consolidation and conservation of the artefacts recorded by the excavations.

Acknowledgements

The Porta Nola Necropolis Project is jointly directed by Stephen Kay, Llorenç Alapont Martin and Rosa Albiach, working in close collaboration with the Soprintendenza Pompei under the guidance of Dott.ssa Annalisa Capurso (2015–16) and Dott. Fabio Galeandro (2016–17). The project greatly benefits from the support and guidance of the Soprintendente of Pompeii, Professor Massimo Osanna.

The programme of conservation and restoration is led by Dott.ssa Trinidad Pasies Oviedo, head of restoration of the Museo de Prehistoria de Valencia. The research team is comprised of many specialists who are gratefully acknowledged for their work: Letizia Ceccarelli, Pedro Corredor, Ilaria Frumenti, Tomas Jirak, Monika Koroniova, Pasquale Longobardi, Pilar Mas, Fabio Mestici, Roberto Piccirillo, Adrià Pitarch and Sheyla Sancho. The project is indebted for the logistical support provided by the Soprintendenza Pompei excavation assistant Sig. Vincenzo Sabini.

References

De Caro, S. (1979) Scavi nell'area fuori Porta Nola a Pompei. Cronache Pompeiane 5: 61101.Google Scholar
Kay, S., Alapont, L., Albiach, R., Ceccarelli, L. and Panzieri, C. (2016) Pompeii: Porta Nola Necropolis Project (Comune di Pompei, Provincia di Napoli, Regione Campania). Papers of the British School at Rome 84: 325–9.Google Scholar
Spano, G. (1910) Scavi fuori Porta di Nola. Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità: 385–99.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. An apparent burial alongside a beaten-earth road leading away from the city, west of the tomb of Obellius Firmus. (Photo: S. Kay.)