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Pompeii re-inhabited soon after Vesuvius


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New excavations there reveal construction of fire pits and cooking areas and the discovery of numerous table and fire pottery, dating from the end of the 1st century AD until the 5th century AD

 

 

Here are interesting articles that suggest the Romans quickly returned to Pompeii to live after the eruption in AD 79.
 

🏛️ Pompeii’s Post-Eruption Reoccupation

Sources: Daily Mail and Gulf News

🔍 Key Discoveries

Archaeologists have found evidence of reoccupation in Pompeii following the eruption, dating from the late 1st century to the 5th century AD.

Finds include fire pits, cooking areas, pottery, and converted cellars with ovens and mills, showing that people lived among the ruins (pictured above).

Survivors and newcomers probably returned to retrieve valuables or because they had no other options.

🏚️ Living Conditions

The settlement was informal and unstable, lacking Roman infrastructure such as sanitation, roads, and water systems.

Director Gabriel Zuchtriegel called it a “favela”—a slum-like camp among the ruins.

People might have lived on the upper floors of damaged buildings, while the ground floors were repurposed.

đź§  Historical Oversight

Earlier excavations concentrated on the dramatic destruction, often neglecting or removing traces of post-eruption life.

The rediscovery of this phase questions the long-standing idea that Pompeii was quickly abandoned and stayed untouched until it was rediscovered.

 

https://gulfnews.com/world/europe/new-discoveries-at-pompeii-show-signs-of-life-post-eruption-2-1.500225585


 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14978805/Pompeii-survivors-live-ruins-Mount-Vesuvius.html

 

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  • guy changed the title to Pompeii re-inhabited soon after Vesuvius
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Here’s another article on the reoccupation of Pompeii after the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79, including a newborn burial that dates to AD 100-200.

🏛️ Key Discoveries

Post-eruption Reoccupation: Contrary to long-held beliefs, Pompeii was not entirely abandoned after Vesuvius erupted. Excavations in the Insula Meridionalis reveal that survivors and later settlers—often of lower social status—returned and repurposed the ruins for their own use.

Living Among the Ashes: People repurposed buried structures, using upper floors for living and converting lower levels into cellars. Warehouses were subdivided, ovens built, and cisterns reused—evidence of a subsistence economy.

Material Culture: Finds include ceramics, coins from successive emperors, and Christian oil lamps bearing the Chi-Rho symbol, indicating two major phases of reoccupation: late 1st–early 3rd centuries CE, and 4th–mid-5th century CE.

Poignant Evidence: A newborn’s burial dated between 100–200 CE underscores the human dimension of this reoccupation.

đź§  Historical Context

Ancient authors such as Suetonius and Cassius Dio mention imperial efforts to rebuild Pompeii, including funding from estates of heirless victims. However, the city never regained its civic vitality or infrastructure.

Director Gabriel Zuchtriegel critiques the “archaeological unconscious” that has long overlooked post-eruption Pompeii in favor of its dramatic destruction.

🌋 Final Abandonment

Pompeii’s final inhabitants fled following another eruption in 472 CE, just prior to the fall of the Western Roman Empire.

 

https://archaeologymag.com/2025/08/pompeii-after-vesuvius-reoccupation/

 

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