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Herculaneum
Herculaneum was destroyed by the eruption of Vesuvius on
August 2, 79 AD and sits on the western hem of the volcano.
On a full day's outing it can be combined with an ascent
to the summit. Unlike Pompeii, an important commercial centre,
Herculaneum seems to have been a wealthy residential town
only about one-third the size, and as such it makes a more
manageable site, less architecturally impressive but better
preserved and more easily taken in on a single visit. Because
Herculaneum wasn't a commercial town, there was no central
open space or forum, just streets of villas and shops, cut
as usual by two very straight main streets that cross in
the centre. Also, Vesuvius destroyed them in different ways.
Pompeii was buried under layers of ash, while Herculaneum,
much closer to the volcano, drowned under a sea of mud.
Over time the mud hardened to a soft stone, preserving the
city and nearly everything in it as a sort of fossil, so
that the furniture, clothing and even some of the goods
in the shops have survived. Most of the house's treasures
are in the National Archaeological Museum in Naples Things
to see Herculaneum excavation site - House of the Argus,
Thermae, Samnite House, House of the Wooden Partition, House
of the Carbonized Furniture, House of Neptune Mosaic, Palestra,
House of the Mosaic Atrium, House of the Deer, House of
the Gem, Bakery.
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