Vatican
City, 11 December 2013 (VIS) – The Necropolis of the Via
Triumphalis reopens to the public next year, following excavation
works which have lasted two years and which have made it possible to
unite the two sectors of the burial ground, previously separated. The
necropolis, which extends from the north-easterly part of the Vatican
hill, covers an area of one thousand square metres containing tombs,
mosaics, mouldings and frescoes, which date from the first century
before Christ to the fourth century of our era.
The
extension of the areas of the necropolis that may be visited by the
public is the result of excavation works carried out by the
Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities of the Vatican Museums,
generously funded by the Canada Chapter of the Patrons of the Arts,
an international community of benefactors which has for three decades
“adopted” and given economic support to projects for the
conservation, restoration and appreciation of the treasures of the
Vatican Museums.
During
the works, the central area of the Necropolis was investigated and an
ancient path excavated, uniting the two previously divided sectors,
and bringing to light a zone intended for cremations (ustrino), which
is rarely conserved in a complex of this type. It is characterised by
two superimposed layers of baked clay and earth deposits, with
fragments of charcoal and burnt pine cones, used to light the pyre.
The grave goods accompanying the deceased are conserved in two
recently installed display cabinets, while a third illustrates the
most recent excavations, using a stratographic archaeological method,
showing a synthetic panorama of the sections excavations carried out
since 1956, the year in which the necropolis was discovered.
The
tombs belong mostly to freemen or common people, such as Alcimus,
slave of Nero and scene painter for the theatre of Pompey, or
Tiberius Claudius Optatus, an imperial bookkeeper. The necropolis, as
explained by Giandomenico Spinola, director of the Department of
Greek and Roman Antiquities of the Vatican Museums, was
“multi-ethnic”, in that people of Asiatic and Palestinian origin
were also buried there, as is revealed by the inscriptions on the
tombstones.
Thanks
to the new display itinerary, including walkways and a multimedia
installation, visitors accompanied by a guide may admire small
mausoleums, sarcophagi, statues and bas-reliefs. The director of the
Vatican Museums, Professor Antonio Paolucci, explained that “The
aim is to create an excavation laboratory, open to the public. A
place where people are able to view the area and the works while they
are being carried out”.
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