Last week I was able to scope out the famous cities buried by the 79 AD eruption of Mt. Vesuvius. Ercolano and Pompei are both located near the volcano and the explosion quickly ended the life in the towns.
Ercolano is a smaller site, which is better preserved in most cases. You can read more about it
here. The town was so quickly buried in ash that it allowed more of the structures to remain intact. Ercolano is pretty easy to get to via the Circumvesuviana train that runs through Naples.
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Ercolano, from above |
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in a courtyard of one of the homes |
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a restaurant of sorts- those large ceramic pots were buried
into the stone counter and filled with food |
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pizza margherita- napolitano style |
The following day we headed off to
Pompei. Thank goodness we had plans outside of Naples. It is my least favorite European city to date. Naples is dirty, dangerous, and downright sketchy. We saw people snorting drugs and selling stolen iPads on the street. There's trash everywhere. It's like the cousin you don't want anyone to know you're related to.
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Naples |
The second day we were off to Pompei. Pompei is a huge area and full of tourists and annoying tour groups. We used the audio guide that was included and attempted to navigate our way around the site. Much of the ruins are closed to the public for restoration and it made it a little challenging to find our way from place to place since the map didn't reflect what was open and closed.
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Pompei, with Vesuvius in the background |
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doin' the tourist thing, audioguide and all |
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Pompei bakery |
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outer edge of ruins |
After our two nights in Naples, we were off to the Amalfi- so more to come soon!
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