The Pompeii Cast Project
  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Contact

BLOGGING the
POMPEII CAST PROJECT

New Publication!

2/9/2021

0 Comments

 

​INSIDE THE CASTS OF THE POMPEIAN VICTIMS: RESULTS FROM THE FIRST SEASON OF THE POMPEII CAST PROJECT IN 2015

Estelle Lazer, Kathryn Welch, Dzung Vu, Manh Vu, Alain Middleton, Roberto Canigliula, Stijn Luyck, Giovanni Babino and Massimo Osanna
Papers of The British School at Rome. Cambridge University Press, 2020
Abstract
The first casts of the forms of Pompeian victims of the AD 79 eruption of Mt Vesuvius were successfully achieved under the directorship of Giuseppe Fiorelli in 1863. To date, 104 individuals have been cast by restorers and archaeologists during the course of excavation. The methods used to obtain these casts were not well documented. It was always assumed that plaster or lime cement was merely poured into voids which preserved the impression of organic remains buried in the ash that covered the site during the catastrophe. It was also assumed that the undisturbed skeletal remains of victims were encased within the casts. The initial aim of the Pompeii Cast Project was to study these bones to build on and test the results of an earlier study of the large sample of Pompeian human remains that were disarticulated by post-excavation activities. Apart from providing information about the people who did not manage to escape the eruption, the project aimed to challenge previous interpretations of the lives and activities of these victims that were solely based on superficial inspection and circumstantial evidence.
​
Twenty-six casts were subjected to CT scanning or X-ray analysis in 2015. The results were unexpected. It was clear that the casts had been considerably manipulated. Bones were often removed prior to casting, and other elements had been introduced. This ongoing project has now been expanded to establish how these casts were achieved, to better understand nineteenth- and twentieth-century archaeological and restoration practice.

DOWNLOAD A COPY TODAY

​DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0068246220000264
0 Comments

    RSS Feed

    AuthorS

    Archaeologists, historians, forensic scientists and uni students all contribute their expertise to the blog. Find out more about our team here.

    blog subjects

    All
    Latest News
    LEGO
    Publications

    Archives

    September 2021
    November 2020
    October 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    August 2019
    June 2019
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    November 2017

    Comments Help

    To leave a comment on the blog, or read what others have said, click on Comments link in blue at the top or bottom of each post. Then leave your reply in the form supplied.

COPYRIGHT

Every effort has been made to secure permission for any copyright material. In the event of any material being used inadvertently, please contact us, stating the location and nature of the copyright issue, your contact details and whether you are the copyright holder or what your role is in relation to the copyright holder. 
The pictures on this site are copyright © The Pompeii Cast Project
THEY MAY NOT IN ANY CIRCUMSTANCES BE USED FOR GAIN OR REWARD COMMERCIALLY.
Permission is granted to use the material for personal research or study provided that each item is acknowledged and copyright is credited to The Pompeii Cast Project.
Copyright © 2018 · All Rights Reserved · The Pompeii Cast Project 
  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Contact