We feature each fortnight Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
“THE BURIED CITY – Unearthing the Real Pompeii” by Gabriel Zuchtriegel (English translation by Jamie Bulloch) First published in English in 2025.
It may seem odd that I am here reviewing in my “Something New” section a book that was published last year and that has already been widely read in many English-speaking countries; but then I had only recently came across it. It was given to me as a present by a very generous person and I read it over the days after Christmas. Whenever I think of Pompeii and Vesuvius, I remember a number of things. From my father’s shelves when I was young, I read the heroic story Pliny the Younger told of [his uncle] Pliny the Elder, who bravely attempted to rescue people fleeing from the catastrophe when the volcano exploded. It came up again when I was learning Latin at secondary school. Later, complete and unabridged, I read to my children [when they were young teenagers] Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s popular 19th century novel The Last Days of Pompeii. They found much of it to be very silly – and so did I – but some parts of it were engaging. And of course as a kid I saw a couple of Hollywood-type films that were based on the novel. Now I understand that Bulwer-Lytton’s narrative had little to do with what really had happened to Pompeii. Some years later, when I was in Italy, I twice visited Pompeii – the first time on my own, the second with my wife. Though we spent a whole day walking among the ruins, we were aware that it would take very many weeks to see everything that could be seen in Pompeii. One amusing moment came when an Italian guide proudly told a group of tourists that a certain house was the house that “Bulwer” had described. The tourists scratched their heads, not having the least idea of whom “Bulwer” was, which probably shows that Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s novel is rarely read now.
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So much for my musings. Let’s get to The Buried City. Gabriel Zuchtriegel, an archaeologist, is German by birth but Italian by having been naturalised. He is a polymath speaking many languages, including Italian, and he knows the ancient Greece and Latin languages thoroughly. UNESCO has declared that Pompeii is now a World Heritage Site, and Zuchtriegel is now the official director of Pompeii and its environs. In his forward, he talks of those tourists who come to Pompeii merely to “tick off their bucket lists” and of thieves who try to steal antiquities to sell to the rich. Such people do not understand what Pompeii was before Vesuvius destroyed it in 79 A.D. Zuchtriegel says that too many archaeologists become obsessed with the minutia of the sizes of pillars, while he himself is more concerned with how ordinary people lived in ancient Pompeii.
More than anything, he says, “Pompeii offers us a unique profile of a provincial city in the ancient Roman world. With its houses, shops, bakeries, brothels, pubs, fountains and cemeteries (which in antiquity always lay outside the city walls) Pompeii is an immeasurably rich source for archaeology.” (p.20) He also notes that “On the day that Mountain Vesuvius erupted the city was frozen, so to speak, offering a unique opportunity for modern archaeology to plunge into the ancient world.” (p. 21). Stones [lapilli] rained down on the day of disaster, fumes suffocated people trying to reach the sea, buildings were crushed as were the people within. There had been a major earthquake in Pompeii seventeen years before the great blast of 79 A.D., but nobody worried about it and there were no attempts to alert the city to what could possibly happen.
Zuchtriegel makes it clear that Romans followed and copied Greek art. In fact at one point he notes that Pompeii did not ever have the best art work. He says that ancient Rome, Capua and Verona had more great art works than Pompeii ever had, and they had larger arenas. He spends some time examining the famous copy of the statue of the Greek god Apollo and its connection with Greek culture. Sensuality and eroticism were displayed in some of the houses of the rich. Zuchtriegel spends some time with freaks and hermaphrodites as they were depicted in Greek tales. Wealthy people’s walls were painted with images of Greek fables and the doings of the Greek gods, sometimes dealing with rape or violence but just as often dealing with images of serenity or weddings. One house, excavated in the early years of archaeologism [in the late 19th century] was named as the House of the Vetti, generally interpreted as a brothel. Wealthy people also had slaves, and the prostitutes were slaves. Slaves could be freed sometimes, but often this would simply mean that an old slave was of no worth anymore and the freed slave was left in poverty and would have nowhere to go.
Having explained all of this, Zuchtriegel notes that in the last years of Pompeii there was a god that was very popular. This was the Greek Dionysus. But he also notes that the very ground Pompeii was built on was originally Etruscan land, and the Etruscan gods were related to nature and agriculture. There were many rituals that had been carried through to the late years of Pompeii. He then returns to the state of the city as it now is. Among other things, some of the ruins were destroyed during the Second World War due to American bombing near to Naples. For a long time there were misunderstandings about the meanings of some buildings that had been buried in the 79 A.D. earthquake. For example, one building that was dug up by amateur archaeologists in the early 20th century, became known as the Villa of Mysteries because it looked dark and there was a long frieze whose meaning was difficult to understand. Could it have been the site of a forbidden cult? But it is now understood that there was no mystery at all. The villa, as it originally stood, was open to the passing public, there were no orgies taking place in it, and the images on the wall had to do with celebrations of a wedding.
It is in the last parts of The Buried City that Gabriel Zuchtriegel goes back to what actually happened when Pompeii was almost obliterated. He likes to show how ordinary people – not just the rich – were going through the streets of the city just before the sky fell in. One example was a chariot that has only recently been dug up by modern archaeologists. Only parts of it survived, but it was clearly being driven on its way to some ordinary event. Zuchtriegel also often reminds us that those who lived in the most horribly cramped quarters were the poor people – who made up most of the population – and the slaves. As he sees it, the most important people in Pompeii were the poor and the slaves who kept the city running. They were the ones who drove carts bringing into the city the food that came from the fields and the fishing boats, cooked and produced meals, looked after the children of rich etc. Yet they had to live in the worst houses.
Regrettably, says Zuchtriegel, despite all the help of the police, there is still in Naples the Camorra – the Neapolitan version of the Sicilian Mafia - which illegitimately raids parts of Pompeii, stealing antiquities and selling them to the rich in the black market. But things are now being tightened. There is the frequently-asked question “How many people lived in Pompeii at the time it was destroyed?” Answers range from 40,000 to 20,000, but one also has to be aware of the fact that the rural areas, which brought in grain, stock and milk, should also be seen as part of Pompeii. At an odd point, too, Zuchtriegel says that Pompeii was probably economically declining in the years before its ruin. Apparently more local farmers now raised grapes as wine became most important… but this meant that grain had to be imported from different countries – like Egypt - at great price.
I regret to say that I found the last section of The Buried City to be the least interesting. Zuchtriegel speaks of the difficulties he had before UNESCO made him the official supervisor of Pompeii and environs. He says that there was a campaign against him when some Italian professors thought he was too young for the job. After this he talks of the things he has inaugurated, such as getting troops to play ancient plays in the ancient arena of Pompeii. He also campaigns for schools to get more young people to come from Naples and be aware of the important site that is so near to them. And of course he and his fellow archaeologists continue to dig. There is much more to find. Interestingly, he spends a little time critiquing Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s The Last Days of Pompeii. He notes that much of the novel turns on a young Christian woman and some other Christians who are in danger of being persecuted. Zuchtriegel does remind us that Nero did persecute Christians in Rome as scape-goats for the great fire. But, he says, there is no evidence that any Christians lived in Pompeii.
And here is an interesting fact. After the destruction of Pompeii, Romans quickly understood that Pompeii could not be rebuilt. It was really only in the 18th century that Pompeii began to be examined by early archaeologists. He adds an afterword about what work is being done… a never-ending story.







