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Fresco of Bacchus adorned with grapes in front of Mount Vesuvius
POMPEII’S DARKEST SECRETS (8 Things You Never Knew)
Everyone knows the story of Pompeii- the ancient Roman city buried by volcanic ash- trapping people alive to be preserved forever. But they are constantly uncovering new secrets here- and some of the details are absolutely 😱😱😱
👉1. Among its many city buildings, Pompeii had what was basically a prison bakery.
One of the darkest recent discoveries at Pompeii was not a temple, a villa, or a dramatic skeleton. It was a bakery.
But this was not a cozy “ancient bread shop.” Archaeologists found a cramped work space where enslaved people and donkeys appear to have been shut inside and forced to grind grain. The windows were barred, locking them inside. The people working there may have had little or no way to leave.
👉 2. The “bodies” of Pompeii are not really bodies.
This one might be a bit more common knowledge, but I couldn’t NOT include it…
The famous Pompeii victims are not preserved bodies in the way many people imagine. They are casts.
When people died, ash hardened around them. Over time, the soft tissue decomposed, leaving empty human-shaped spaces in the volcanic material. Archaeologists later poured plaster into those spaces, creating the forms we see today.
👉3. One Pompeii snack bar was found with food still in it.
Pompeii was frozen in the middle of ordinary life. And part of their daily life included ‘fast food’- places they could stroll up to on the street and buy a quick bite to eat.
At one ancient food counter, archaeologists found painted walls, serving jars, food remains, animal bones, and evidence of people nearby who did not escape.
👉 4. Some victims appear to have died before they even knew what hit them.
When people picture Pompeii, they usually imagine everyone slowly choking under ash. But for some victims, the end may have been much faster- and much worse.
As the eruption collapsed over the city, waves of burning gas, ash, and volcanic debris rushed through the streets. These weren’t just dusty clouds. They were superheated surges powerful enough to kill almost instantly.
👉 5. The famous date of Pompeii’s destruction may be wrong.
For generations, the date was tied to Pliny the Younger’s account, often given as August 24.
But a recent charcoal inscription found in the city points to October 17, which suggests the eruption may have happened later in the year. Other clues, like autumn fruit and warmer clothing, also make the later date more believable to many scholars.
👉 6. Pompeii was an "Anything-Goes" kind of city.
Pompeii was not shy. Erotic images were painted in houses, baths, taverns, and public spaces- even street signs (which back then were basically stone engravings on street corner walls).
Modern visitors are often shocked because we expect the ancient world to be marble statues, temples, and serious men in togas. But real Roman life was messier, dirtier, funnier, and a lot more ‘anything-goes’ than we like to admit.
👉 7. Archaeologists recently found a box of charms that may have belonged to someone practicing folk magic.
One Pompeii discovery sounds like it came straight out of a dark fantasy story: a small box filled with tiny objects, beads, amulets, carved figures, and other items that may have been used for protection, fertility, love magic, or divination.
Charms, rituals, symbols, and private magic were part of everyday Roman life, maybe similar to getting a tarot card reading or checking the horoscope in today’s world.
👉 8. Some people may have moved back into Pompeii after the eruption.
Evidence suggests some people may have returned afterward and lived among the ruins. Maybe they had nowhere else to go, or maybe they tried to scavenge among the wreckage for whatever they could find or reclaim whatever was left.
But we tend to think of Pompeii as being decimated and abandoned- so it’s interesting to think of survivors trying to return, like some sort of post-apocalyptic tv show.
There’s lots more to uncover about Pompeii- so if you visit, make sure to grab a tour guide so you know what you’re looking at- it’s worth every penny. (Even I learned a crap ton even though my master’s degree is in ancient Roman history! But tbf, my thesis was on Roman women so there’s a lot I couldn’t cover in detail during my degree. I was SO glad we got a tour guide for this!)
⚠️⚠️ Anyhoo- if you like this kind of post and want more, PLZ COMMENT below so I know to create more content about history’s dark secrets. 💀
Pompeii
Watercolors by Hansen, Josef Theodor (1848-1912)
House of Marcus Lucretius Fronto, Pompeii (1905)
Tepidarium at the Forum baths in Pompeii (1884)
House of Sallustius, Pompeii (1886)
Snakes in various ancient Roman frescoes and mosaics.
The Ruins and Frescoes of Pompeii, Italy (pt. 2).
A city domus with fancy mosaics. House of the Wild Boar.
Pompeii
P o s i t a n o
Lago d'Iseo - ITALIA
Inside the Mariano Rossi Hall of the Borghese Gallery in Rome.
Source: Exploring Ancient Architecture , Castle, Travel
Photography by Pearl Ferreira-
Poppies.
source: simpleisbeautifulphotography
(by marc.hennige)