Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter

Pompeii victims wore heavy wool during deadly 79 CE eruption

Share your love

  • Victims of Mount Vesuvius’ eruption in 79 CE wore heavy woolen tunics and cloaks when they died, according to research by archaeologist Llorenç Alapont of the University of Valencia, who analyzed fabric impressions in 14 plaster casts from Pompeii.yahoo
  • The findings have reignited debate over whether the disaster occurred in unusually cold weather or if the wool provided protection from volcanic gases and ash, though some experts argue wool was simply standard clothing in Roman times, comprising about 90% of all garments.yahoo
  • The research adds to ongoing controversy about the eruption date, with Pliny the Younger’s account placing it on August 24, 79 CE, while archaeological evidence including autumn fruits and braziers suggests a later, cooler month.yahoo

Pompeii Victims Wore Heavy Wool During August Eruption

Victims of Mount Vesuvius’ catastrophic eruption in 79 CE wore thick woolen tunics and cloaks when they perished, according to new research that has reignited debate over whether the disaster occurred during a scorching August day or during cooler autumn weather.

Llorenç Alapont, an archaeologist at the University of Valencia, presented findings in late November at an archaeological conference near Pompeii showing that at least four of 14 plaster casts examined featured victims dressed in heavy wool garments. The fabric impressions preserved in the plaster revealed a coarse, dense weave that Alapont described as “clearly heavy wool”.yahoo

“From studying the casts, we can learn how people dressed on a specific day in history,” Alapont said in a statement from the University of Valencia. “Most of the victims wore two garments: a tunic and a cloak, both made of wool”.uv

Divided Expert Opinion

The findings have sparked conflicting interpretations among scholars. Pedar Foss, a historian and archaeologist at DePauw University who was not involved with the research, argues the clothing proves little about the weather. “They were wearing wool because that’s what people wore at that time,” Foss told Live Science. “About 90% of all clothing anywhere was wool”.yahoo

Sheep’s wool was durable, warm even when wet, and relatively inexpensive in Roman times, while linen was fragile and only elites wore silk and cotton. Foss said the research establishes what Pompeii residents wore when killed but “doesn’t make an argument either way” about temperature.livescience

However, Alapont suggested the heavy garments point to two possibilities: unseasonably cold weather for late August, or the need for protection from volcanic gases, heat, or falling ash during the roughly 18-hour eruption. “The clothing worn by the victims suggests not only the possibility of a colder-than-usual climate, but also a day with a harmful environment from which they needed to protect themselves,” he said.uv

Ongoing Date Debate

The widely accepted eruption date of August 24, 79 CE, comes from letters written by Pliny the Younger to historian Tacitus about 30 years after witnessing the disaster as a teenager. Allison Emmerson, a historian and archaeologist at Tulane University, explained that “the manuscript tradition is quite secure—the only date provided by the text is August 24,” though “whether that reflects the date of the actual event, however, is still subject to controversy”.yahoo

Archaeological evidence has long suggested a later date. In 2018, excavators discovered a charcoal inscription dated to October 17, leading some scholars to propose the eruption occurred around October 24. Other evidence includes calcified branches with autumn berries, heating braziers found in houses, and sealed wine jars suggesting the grape harvest had concluded.bbc

The research analyzed casts from the Porta Nola Necropolis, discovered in 1975. Alapont noted that victims both indoors and outdoors wore identical clothing, suggesting uniform conditions across the city on the day of the eruption.uv

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay informed and not overwhelmed, subscribe now!