Villa of the Mysteries explained

Villa of the Mysteries
Native Name:Villa dei Misteri
Native Name Lang:it
Map Type:Italy
Mapframe:yes
Coordinates:40.7537°N 14.4774°W
Location:Pompeii, Italy
Region:Campania
Type:Roman villa
Built:2nd century BC
Abandoned:79 AD
Epochs:Roman Republic, Roman Empire
Event:Eruption of Mount Vesuvius
Discovered:1909
Excavations:1909-1910, 1929-1930
Archaeologists:Aurelio Item, Giuseppe Spano, Amadeo Maiuri
Condition:Well-preserved
Ownership:Public
Management:Soprintendenza Pompei
Public Access:Yes

The Villa of the Mysteries (Italian: Villa dei Misteri) is a well-preserved suburban ancient Roman villa on the outskirts of Pompeii, southern Italy. It is famous for the series of exquisite frescos in Room 5, which are usually interpreted as showing the initiation of a bride into a Greco-Roman mystery cult. These are now among the best known of the relatively rare survivals of Ancient Roman painting from the 1st century BC.

Like the rest of the Roman city of Pompeii, the villa was buried in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. It was excavated from 1909 onwards. It is now a popular part of tourist visits to Pompeii and forms part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site at Pompeii.

Location

The villa is located some 400 m northwest of the town walls, between the roads Via Delle Tombe and Via Superiore lined with funerary monuments leading to the Herculaneum Gate of Pompeii, and is near the Villa of Diomedes and the so-called Villa of Cicero. It lies on a hill with an expansive view of the current Gulf of Naples; it rests on a slope and is partly supported by a cryptoporticus formed by blind arches.

History

The villa was built in the 2nd century BC and reached its period of maximum splendor during the Augustan age when it was considerably enlarged and embellished. Recent research, however, has posited that the villa was built in the early 1st century BC around the time of Sulla. This analysis is based on stratigraphic evidence and the dating of the Second Style frescoes, which are the earliest decoration in the villa stylistically dating to the early 1st century BC. After construction, it was then a villa urbana, which is a type of suburban villa, with large rooms and hanging gardens, in a panoramic position. Following the earthquake of 62 AD, it fell into disrepair, as did much of the city, and was transformed into a villa rustica with the addition of agricultural equipment such as a wine press. The building was then mainly used for the production and sale of wine.[1]

The ownership of the Villa is unknown, as is the case with many private homes in Pompeii. A bronze seal was found in the villa that names L. Istacidius Zosimus, a freedman of the powerful Istacidii family, who was either the owner of the Villa or the overseer of its reconstruction after the earthquake of 62 AD. The presence of a statue of Livia, wife of Augustus, has led some historians to suggest that she was the owner.[2]

Discovery and excavation

The villa, initially called Villa Item, named after its discoverer, Aurelio Item,[3] [4] was uncovered between 1909 and 1910 in an excavation conducted by Giuseppe Spano; a more in-depth investigation was carried out between 1929 and 1930 by Amadeo Maiuri, following the expropriation imposed by the Italian State.

Important restoration and conservation work on the frescoes took place from 2013 to 2015.

In 2018, archaeologists discovered the unique remains of harnessed horses.[5] [6] [7] The stable was excavated following the discovery in 2017 of illegal tunnels around the walls of the villa to steal artifacts, which had destroyed one of the bodies.

Description

Although covered with meters of pumice and ash, the Villa sustained only minor damage during the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. Most of its walls, ceilings, and particularly its frescoes survived largely intact.

The ancient entrance, which is located directly opposite the modern entrance, had benches for waiting clients and led to service rooms, including a courtyard for storing and unloading produce, servants' quarters, and rooms for agricultural equipment.[8] A wine press discovered during excavations has been restored to its original location. It was not uncommon for the homes of the very wealthy to include areas for the production of wine, olive oil, or other agricultural products, especially since many elite Romans owned farmland or orchards in the immediate vicinity of their villas. Past the entrance is the peristyle, the bathing and kitchen quarters, and the main atrium with an impluvium which leads into a triclinium with access to a portico with a view of the Gulf of Naples. Room 5, which is decorated with the famous frescoes for which the villa is named, lies to the right of Room 4, which is a cubiculum often identified as a "nuptial chamber."

Though often believed to be a triclinium, Room 5 could have been a cubiculum or, as Brenda Longfellow posits, even multifunctional and used by various family members at different times of day or on different days.[9] Because the exact use of the room is uncertain, it is also often referred to as an oecus, but it cannot securely be characterized as such. Room 5 is located at the back of the villa off of a peristyle with only one entrance and exit, making it one of the least accessible rooms in the villa to visitors. Because of its rich decoration and relative inaccessibility, it is thought to have been used on special occasions for invited guests.

The bodies of two women and a child were found in lower pumice eruption layers of the Villa,[10] suggesting that they were caught in the early stages of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. They were on the upper floor of the farm section and plaster casts were made of them as in other areas of Pompeii and Herculaneum. Six bodies (one girl near the entrance, one woman, four others in the cryptoporticus) were found in the later higher pyroclastic eruption layers indicating they had survived the first part of the catastrophe.

Frescoes

The villa is named for the paintings Room 5, which are in the Second Style and dated to about 70-60 BC.[11] Although the actual subject of the frescoes is debated,[12] the most common interpretation is that they depict the initiation of a woman into matrimony in accordance with the Dionysian Mysteries, a mystery cult devoted to the god known to the Romans as Bacchus.[13] [14] Specific rites were required to become a member. A key feature that helps to identify these scenes as Bacchic is the depiction of maenads, the deity's female followers. These devotees are often shown dancing with swirling drapery on painted Greek pottery from the sixth century BC onward.[15] [16] There are many different interpretations of the frescoes, but they are commonly believed to depict a religious rite in some form. A common theory is that the frescoes depict a bride initiating into the Bacchic Mysteries in preparation for marriage. In this hypothesis, the elaborate costume worn by the main figure is believed to be wedding apparel.[17]

Restorations

The famous frescoes of the villa were first discovered in 1909, but they were soon damaged by a combination of poor protection from the elements and an earthquake that occurred in June.[18] The major problems that developed were damp and salt-residues that leached from the ground, causing white stains to appear on the surface of the paintings. To counteract this, large sections of the frescoes were removed and re-attached after the walls were rebuilt with new stone to better resist the damp and salt leaching.

According to the preservation methods prevalent at the time, coatings of wax and petroleum were applied to remove the residues and provide protection, which accounts for the glossy sheen which was characteristic of the frescoes in the 20th/early 21st centuries. These coatings proved remarkably effective in protecting the paintings from further damage, but one side effect was that they distorted the original colouring, making the red background appear darker than the original pigment.[18] Later in 1909, a German team of archaeologists undertook further restorations onsite.

Between 2013 and 2015, restorations were undertaken on the frescoes using modern techniques. This included treatment with the antibiotic amoxicillin, which removed the manganese dioxide that had leached into the paintings from the ground, and the streptococci bacteria which feed on the pigments and cause deterioration.[18] [19] Other treatment included the analysis and restoration of the original colour tones, after laser technology was used to remove the layers of wax and petroleum applied in the early 20th century.[20] [21]

Interpretation of the frescoes

Based on the subject matter and order of the frescoes, they are intended to be read as a single narrative. The scenes represent different moments in the initiation ritual into the Bacchic Mysteries. Women and satyrs are featured prominently, with the villa owner's family possibly acting as models for the women and children depicted in the frescoes.[22] Given the widely accepted theory that the murals portray aspects of the cult of Bacchus, some propose that the frescoed room itself was used to conduct initiations and other rituals, although the exact use of this room is heavily debated. Molly Swetnam-Burland has argued against this interpretation of the room, stating that that when compared to other depictions of Bacchus in religious contexts around Pompeii, the Bacchus in these frescoes is different in key aspects, demonstrating that this is not a religious space.[23]

In light of the recent restorations, Elaine K. Gazda has reexamined the figures and their relationship to each other in the frescoes and in life. Gazda argues that the restorations have made possible the identification of the women depicted in the frescoes, not as the same woman repeated throughout an initiation scene, but as portraits of different women with their own individualized features. She identifies the matron in the last mural as the domina of the villa, the bride in the sixth mural as her daughter, the Bacchus as the dominus, and the others as the men and women of the familia, such as relatives and enslaved people.

Music and mass media

in 2011 the band Corde Oblique released the track "Slide", inspired by the frescoes of the mysteries. Few ancient musical instrument reconstructions have been performed in this song, like the lyre and the Pan flute. The song is included in the album "A hail of bitter almonds".

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Pappalardo, Umberto . The Splendor of Roman Wall Painting . Getty Publications . 2009 . 9780892369584 . Los Angeles, California . 46.
  2. Web site: Hayes . Emily . 2015-03-13 . Pompeii's Villa of the Mysteries Finally Restored After 2 Years . 2020-04-28 . www.iitaly.org.
  3. Web site: Messina . Mario . 2023-01-21 . Aurelio Item, el suizo que descubrió la Villa de los Misterios de Pompeya . 2024-04-21 . SWI swissinfo.ch . es-ES.
  4. Web site: Saving the Villa of the Mysteries . 2024-04-21 . www.archaeology.org . Archaeology Magazine . en-us.
  5. News: 2018-12-24 . Pompeii horse found still wearing harness . en-GB . BBC News . 2021-01-31.
  6. Web site: Remains of a horse still wearing a harness found in ancient Pompeii stable . 2021-01-31 . Global News . en-US.
  7. Web site: White . Megan . 2018-12-24 . Remains of horse found still wearing harness in ancient Pompeii stable . 2021-01-31 . www.standard.co.uk . en.
  8. Book: Pappalardo, Umberto . The Splendor of Roman Wall Painting . Getty Publications . 2009 . 9780892369584 . Los Angeles, California . 46–49.
  9. Book: Longfellow, Brenda . The Villa of the Mysteries in Pompeii: Ancient Ritual, Modern Muse . The University of Michigan Museum of Art . 2000 . 9781930561021 . Gazda . Elaine . Ann Arbor, Michigan . 30–33 . A Gendered Space? Location and Function of Room 5 in the Villa of the Mysteries.
  10. Giuseppe Luongoa et al., Impact of the AD 79 explosive eruption on Pompeii, II. Causes of death of the inhabitants inferred by stratigraphic analysis and areal distribution of the human casualties, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 126 (2003), pp. 183–190.
  11. Giuntoli, Stefano. Art and History of Pompeii. Casa Editrice Bonechi, Florence, 1995. Page 126.
  12. Hearnshaw . Victoria . The Dionysiac Cycle in the Villa of the Mysteries: A Re-Reading . 1999 . Mediterranean Archaeology . 12 . 43–50 . 24667847 . 1030-8482.
  13. [Antonio Virgili]
  14. Book: Pappalardo, Umberto . The Splendor of Roman Wall Painting . Getty Publications . 2009 . 9780892369584 . Los Angeles, California . 49–50.
  15. Gantz, Timothy. Early Greek Myth, Volume I. The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993. Page 114.
  16. Web site: Villa of the Mysteries Pompeii by Raichel Le Goff. www.raichel.org. 2015-11-19. 2019-05-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20190506023107/http://www.raichel.org/articlesRaichel/Art-Research/N-vases.htm. dead.
  17. Web site: Pompeii.html . 2015-11-19 . umich.edu . 2016-06-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160623051335/http://www.umich.edu/~kelseydb/Publications/spring2000/pompeii.html . dead .
  18. News: The frescoes in the Villa of the Mysteries treated with antibiotics. E. Bramati. www.arte.it. 2014-06-09. 2020-04-28.
  19. Lobell . Jarrett A. . Sorrentino . Pasquale . 2014 . Saving the Villa of the Mysteries . Archaeology . 67 . 2 . 24–31 . 24364039 . 0003-8113.
  20. News: Pompeii's Villa dei Misteri reopens-Update 2. Redazione ANSA. www.ansa.it. 2015-03-20. 2020-04-28.
  21. News: King . Carol . 2013-07-25 . Laser Used to Restore Frescoes at Pompeii's Villa of Mysteries . 2020-04-28 . Italy Magazine.
  22. Book: Zanker, Paul . Roman Art . Getty Publications . 2010 . 978-1-60606-030-8 . Los Angeles, California . 26 . Heitmann-Gordon . Henry.
  23. Book: Swetnam-Burland, Molly . The Villa of the Mysteries in Pompeii: Ancient Ritual, Modern Muse . The University of Michigan Museum of Art . 2000 . 9781930561021 . Gazda . Elaine . Ann Arbor, Michigan . 68–69 . Bacchus/Liber in Pompeii: A Religious Context for the Villa of the Mysteries Frieze.
  24. Web site: Dionysian Mysteries. www.hellenica.de. 15 November 2014.
  25. Book: Gazda, Elaine K. . Women's Lives, Women's Voices: Roman Material Culture and Female Agency in the Bay of Naples . University of Texas Press . 2021 . 9781477323588 . Longfellow . Brenda and Molly Swetnam-Burland . Austin, Texas . 133–150 . Portraits and Patrons: The Women of the Villa of the Mysteries in their Social Context.