Background colour

PREVIEW

Video

AssetID: 53168013

Headline: RAW VIDEO: Election Manifestos Discovered In Pompeii

Caption: New excavations in Pompeii have revealed evidence of a fraught election. The work being carried out in Regio IX is intended to improve the state of preservation of the houses and shops along via di Nola. The series of electoral inscriptions are the ancient equivalent of today’s electoral manifestos and posters. They have now been found in the room that contained the lararium, the household shrine. It is a quite extraordinary find. This kind of inscription is usually found on the outer façades of buildings where people could read the names of the candidates who wished to become city magistrates. However, their presence inside the house – may be related to the custom of organising events and dinners designed to promote the electoral campaign in the houses of candidates and their friends. The inscriptions invite people to vote for Aulus Rustius Verus, a candidate for the position of aedile (magistrate). He was a figure from the last phase of the existence of Pompeii, already known from other inscriptions, who, together with Julius Polybius, the owner of a splendid house in via dell’Abbondanza, reached the highest office – that of duumvir – in the 70s AD. The house, which is currently being excavated, appears to have belonged to a supporter of Aulus Rustius Verus, possibly one of his freedmen or a friend. It also contained a bakery which consisted of a large oven, near to which three victims of the eruption, two women and a boy who died due to the collapse of a roof during the first eruptive phase, were found several months ago. The presence of the bakery should not be considered a factor of secondary importance, particularly in regard to the electoral campaign in ancient Pompeii, where what is now known as “vote buying” was standard practice. Maria Chiara Scappaticcio, professor of Latin at Federico II University in Naples and co-author of the recently published study, explains: “Aediles and bakers collaborated in a way that verged on being illegal and, like Julius Polybius, Aulus Rustius Verus may well have realised from the start, when he was scheming to become aedile and at the height of his electoral campaign, that voters (above all else) live on bread.” This may also explain why the candidate’s initials, A.R.V., appear on a millstone made of volcanic rock, left in the atrium of the house where renovation work was being carried out at the time of the eruption. Aulus Rustius Verus probably directly funded the bakery, both for economic and political reasons. The remains of a votive offering, probably made shortly before the eruptions, were found on the masonry altar of the large painted Lararium (shrine), marked by two stucco serpents, known from a few rare parallels. Archaeobotanical and archaeozoological analyses have led to the identification of the contents of the sacrifice and have revealed various parts of the ritual carried out there. The offering consisted mainly of figs and dates that had been burned in front of the altar. The fuel used to burn the offering consists of numerous fragmentary remains of olive stones to which were added pinecones with pine nuts, an essential part of the rituals that were performed, especially in lararia (household shrines).

Keywords: pompeii,rome,roman,archaeology,photo,video,feature,history

PersonInImage: