The banquet hall in Pompeii was found to be stunning
Archaeologists make'stunning' find of banquet hall in Pompeii. Pompeii, a doomed city in Italy, was destroyed by a volcano in A.D. 79. Archaeologists recently unearthed a "stunning" banquet room. The discovery was announced this week.
A frescoed dining room is the latest find in an excavation campaign to shore up an area of the site. Pompeii was destroyed by a powerful volcanic eruption, and better preserve it. The discovery is part of a campaign to save Pompeii from being destroyed by an eruption.
New paintings discovered in ancient Roman city of Pompeii unearthed during new excavation work. The paintings were found in a banquet hall depicting mythical Greek figures such as Helen of Troy and the Greek God Apollo. Archaeologists in Pompeii discovered several frescoes during new excavations.
Bronze Age settlement, dated to around 850 B.C., was destroyed by a catastrophic fire when it was less than a year old. The settlement, which dates back to 850 BC, was destroyed in a fire that destroyed it less than one year old in 2011. It was destroyed after a fire broke out in the early 2000s, when the settlement was under construction.
Ancient Britons were much more developed than once thought as 'Britain's Pompeii' opens lid on Bronze Age life. The site was a hamlet of roundhouses before a fire burnt it down. Ancient Britons may have been more developed in Bronze Age times than thought, experts say.
Ancient Britons were much more developed than once thought as 'Britain's Pompeii' opens lid on Bronze Age life. The site was a hamlet of roundhouses before a fire burnt it down. Ancient Britons may have been more developed in Bronze Age times than thought, experts say.
Analysis of the exceptionally well preserved remains of a Bronze Age village reveals the cozy domesticity of life in Britain 2,850 years ago. The village was discovered in the early Bronze Age days of Bronze Age life in the region of the Bronze Age, which dates back to 2,800 years ago, in the area of Britain.
Analysis of the exceptionally well preserved remains of a Bronze Age village reveals the cozy domesticity of life in Britain 2,850 years ago. The village was discovered in the early Bronze Age days of Bronze Age life in the region of the Bronze Age, which dates back to 2,800 years ago, in the area of Britain.
Settlement on stilts dropped into River Nene after a fire nearly 3,000 years ago and preserved in silt. Settlement dropped into river after fire and was preserved in the silt. Bronze age objects from ‘Pompeii of the Fens’ to go on display.
Settlement on stilts dropped into River Nene after a fire nearly 3,000 years ago and preserved in silt. Settlement dropped into river after fire and was preserved in the silt. Bronze age objects from ‘Pompeii of the Fens’ to go on display.