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EXCAVATION ZONE WITH VIEW OF ERCOLANO,L'ILLUSTRAZIONE ITALIAN,Italian Art print,1920 Sepia Print
EXCAVATION ZONE WITH VIEW OF ERCOLANO ,1920s Vintage Italian Art print L'ILLUSTRAZIONE ITALIANA
FINE ANNI '20 - PRIMI ANNI '30
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THE
NEW EXCAVATIONS OF ERCOLANA - HERCULANEUM
ROAD
EXCAVATION - HOUSE VIEWS
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JACKHAMMERS
IN THE EXCAVATION ZONE
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EXCAVATION
ZONE WITH VIEW OF ERCOLANO
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FROM
PHOTOGRAPHS
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BACK TO BACK FULL PAGE PRINTS
SCANS MINIMIZED TO FIT PAGE
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Approx
Image Sizes : 11 x 8 ins - 6 x 8 (2)
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Approx
Overall Size With Borders : 15 x 11 Ins |
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Excellent Condition.
Image is clean, clear, sharp with beautiful detail. As scanned.
Ercolano (named Herculaneum until 79 AD) was most likely
founded by the Oscan, an Italic tribe of the 8th century BC, and later
became part of both the Etruscan and Samnite dominions. Under control
of the Romans, the city was a renowned seaside resort where some of
the richest Roman citizens passed their summer vacations. After the
79 AD eruption of Mt. Vesuvius, the town was abandoned and remained
largely uninhabited for about 1000 years. Unlike neighboring Pompeii,
the citizens of Herculaneum were suffocated to death by poisonous fumes
rather than buried under heavy ash. The town was partially buried under
hot mud and remained so for those 1000 years. Records of rehabitation
in the area begin to appear around the year 1000, when the sanctuary
called Castel di Resina, one of the most visited in the Campania region,
was recorded to have been located on a hill in that area. The area was
largely repopulated over the next 500 years, creating the small town
of Resina, named after the old sanctuary, with homes and neighborhoods
being built above the uncovered ancient ruins of Herculaneum. In 1709,
the old ruins from around the time of the 79 AD eruption were uncovered
along with nearby Pompeii. Since then, Herculeaneum has been entirely
uncovered with all of its ancient riches and petrified inhabitants extracted.
Over time, the town of Resina became part of the Kingdom of the Two
Sicilies, up until the Italian Unification of 1861, and eventually became
part of the metropolitan area of the city of Naples. In 1969, the town
changed its name from Resina to Ercolano, the Italian modernization
of the ancient name in honor of the old city.
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