hav·er·sack (noun): a single-strapped bag worn over one shoulder and used for carrying supplies; a bag for rations, extra clothing; a bag used by workers or travellers to carry havercake (oat-bread) in 19th-century England. From the French Havresac and German Habersack (18th century)
Showing posts with label Romans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romans. Show all posts
Tuesday, 26 March 2013
Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum at the British Museum
Without Mount Vesuvius, we would know far less about life in the Roman world than we do. What is good fortune for today’s archeologists, historians and scholars, though, was rather less lucky for the citizens of the two towns that lay at the base of the mountain.
It is a point that is made clearly at the British Museum’s major spring exhibition: Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum.
The erruption of AD79 that brought with it disaster served also to preserve an intimate snapshot of Roman life, from election posters, to portraits, to a carbonised loaf of bread complete with the name of the slave who made it.
Labels:
AD79,
British Museum,
exhibitions,
Herculaneum,
news,
Pan and goat,
Pompeii,
Romans,
Rome,
volcano
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