Artemis fresco stolen from Pompeii
'The work of experts'
(ANSA) -
Naples, March 18 - A portion of a fresco of Apollo and Artemis has been stolen
from the world-famous archeological site of Pompeii, Italian dailies reported
Tuesday. Citing an employee at the world's largest open-air museum, newspapers
Il Mattino and Il Messaggero said the fresco portion, measuring roughly 20x20
cm, has been missing from the House of Neptune for one week. The missing
portion depicted the goddess Artemis, who was seated before her brother Apollo.
It was stolen by experts, police say.
The area is a part of Pompeii currently receiving funds under the ambitious
Great Pompeii Project, which includes 105 million euros allocated by the
European Commission for restoration and conservation. In addition to thefts,
collapses in recent weeks have drawn renewed calls to increase protection at
the ancient site, with UNESCO warning it could fall down completely without
"extraordinary measures".
Italy's newly appointed superintendent for Pompeii and the related sites of
Herculaneum and Stabiae, all buried by Vesuvius in 79 AD, has asked for an
extension to this year's deadline for spending the EC's 105 million euros to
shore up the city miraculously preserved by ash.
UNESCO in July gave Italy until December 31 to apply a series of upgrade
measures or face having Pompeii removed from its prestigious list of World
Heritage sites.
The measures included video surveillance of 50% of the area and a buffer zone
around the site.
Rome implemented most of the measures and got an extended deadline for the others.
Heavy rain was blamed for a wall of a Roman-era shop collapsing in Pompeii at
the start of the month, a day after two other precious parts of the ancient
city - a wall at the Temple of Venus and another wall on a tomb in the famed
necropolis of Porta Nocera - suffered serious damage from bad weather.
These followed a long and worrying catalogue of bits of Pompeii falling off.
In November 2010 the House of the Gladiators came down, prompting Italian
President Giorgio Napolitano to say: "This is a disgrace for the whole of
Italy".
In February 2012 a piece of plaster came off the the Temple of Jupiter, one of
Pompeii's main attractions.
Then, in September 2012, at the Villa of the Mysteries, an even more iconic
building, a five-metre-long flying buttress gave in and went crashing to the
ground.
Last November, finally, a wall in one of the ancient city's main thoroughfares,
Via dell'Abbondanza, keeled over while another piece of decorative plaster, at
the House of the Little Fountain, dropped from the ceiling.
Pompeii has been plagued for decades by accusations of mismanagement, neglect
and even infiltration by the local Camorra mafia.
Nessun commento:
Posta un commento