2016 Amedeo Maiuri From Rhodes To Pompei
2016 Amedeo Maiuri From Rhodes To Pompei
2016 Amedeo Maiuri From Rhodes To Pompei
A. Maiuri
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
Preface
3
Crusader Knights. With Gerola he restored the old Hospital of the Order of the Knights and
turned it into the Archaeological Museum where he also took care of the setting up.
In quite a short time he was able to show his interest for both all of the Ancient Times and
for all aspects of methodology of archaeology: from the digs to the publishing, from the re-
storations to the musealization of the finds.
He was called back to Italy from Rhodes and he received in 1924, when he was only 38, the
charge of Soprintendente alle Antichità della Campania e del Molise. At the same time he
also received the leadership of Pompeii and Herculaneum Ruins which he kept for 37 years,
until his retirement in 1961.
Since then his interest was focused on the city of Campania and above all on those buried
by the eruption of Mt Vesuvius in 79 A.D., that is to say Pompeii, Herculaneum, Stabiae,
which were able to see the light mostly
thanks to his intense work.
In the specific, in Pompeii Maiuri dug the
largest part of the insulae who were still
buried; he investigated the evolution of the
ancient city all the way to the Samnite
layer; he restored the buildings which had
been damaged by the bombing of World
War II.
He also cleared the city walls from the soil
that had been accumulating for two centu-
ries by the previous archaeologists , who
had used the fortifications as a dumping
area for the soil removed during the digs.
The esteem on the soil removed to set the
city walls free was of about 1 million cubic
meters.
With his intelligence Maiuri was also able
to turn this worthless stash of earth into a
soil used for the reclamation of the near
marshy lands, thus gaining a big public
funding from the Cassa per il Mezzogiono.
Even the motorway Napoli-Salerno was
partly built thanks to the soil from Pompeii
ruins. Not only we owe him the modern
look of the ancient city, but also the one of
the surrounding lands that, after the recla-
mation, still look lovely with their intense
cultivations of fruits and vegetables.
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
7
investigation of this particular building had to stop to a mere theory, he was able to dig up
the theater, the capitolium and the basilica of the ancient city.
He also had an intense academic activity, he was given the chair of Antichità Pompeiane ed
Ercolanesi at the University of Naples , first as professor in charge and then since 1942 as
full professor, while from 1937 to 1963 he was also professor at Istituto Parificato “Suor Or-
sola Benincasa” first for Ancient History and then Roman History.
Despite the heavy institutional duties and scientific obligations, he had the profound need
of publishing with literary tones as a reflex of his rich personality, a need - as his daughter
Bianca once told me- that pushed him to be sitting at his desk at 6 in the morning in the ser-
vice house in the Royal Palace of Naples, to write those articles he used to give periodically
first to the Mattino and to Giornale d'Italia and then to Correiere della Sera.
It was Amedeo Maiuri,
Roberto Longhi and Ro-
berto Pane who in the
first half of this Century-
respectively for archaeo-
logy, art history and hi-
story of architecture-
introduced the literary
prose in scientific disser-
tations. It was not like
the previous archaeolo-
gists were without a lite-
rary culture - for
instance, Vittorio Spinaz-
zola was famous both as
Soprintendente and for
his public "lecturae Dan-
tis" – but nobody had made an actual model yet. Maiuri can be considered the progenitor of
that archaeological divulgation with literary taste in Italy, then kept alive by the other scholars
after him.
While in the didactic publications he was more like a “romantic archaeologist”, with the
need to fill in the missing pieces of history with creative but plausible reconstructions, he
abandoned every divagation in the scientific publications, being very precise and strict to
the facts.
On November 30th 1961, at 75, Amedeo Maiuri retired, leaving the University, the Soprin-
tendenza and the Direction of the Ruins.
Being very humble, he never took advantage of the prestige he had achieved. On this subject,
a story told me by his daughter Bianca is very interesting. Once the President of the Italian
Republic Giovanni Gronchi, during an official visit to Campania, was very enthusiastic for
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
9
It is indicative that he was processed after the War for collusion with the Regime by the
Allies Force of Occupation and after the tip off of Giuseppe Spano, we has fully acquitted.
It also seems significant the spontaneous statement – quoted in this book - when he refers
about the visit of Mussolini to Paestum “ That day of the visit to the temples, I was in charge
of accompanying him... I remember that I made a summary of the dual lives of the Greek
and the Italic Paestum and the tour was, with my big relief, very brief”.
Neither he loved - like other colleagues of his - to wear the orbace during official events.
Moreover in the correspondence saved in the Office of Herculaneum ruins, there is a corre-
spondence between him and the Prefect of Naples who hopes that they will build a bust of
the Duce in front of the entrance of Herculaneum ruins - funded with resources of the Re-
gime. Maiuri takes his time, postpones to better times with great elegance...the point is that,
that bust was never put in place.
At last, in the archive of Istituto Archeologico Germanico in Rome there is a letter of April
19th 1943 (provided to our
Fondo in a copy by the
friend Hubertus Mander-
schied) in which Maiuri
shows his sympathy to Her-
mine Speyer, a German Je-
wish, removed from the
Istituto Germanico because
of the racial laws, but she
luckily found - thanks to
the intervention of the
Pope- protection and a job
in the Vatican Museum:
“Dear Miss Speier, I have
received Your letter with
the communication of Your
removal from the Institute;
I get this news with deep
sorrow, remembering the
kindness You have always
showed in the relations
with my Institute and Your
fervid activity of works. I
hope that You can keep on working in Rome and I wish, kind Miss, that You can keep in the
most possible peaceful way Your noble profession of scholar. Kind regards. Yours faithfully,
Amedeo Maiuri”.
If Maiuri really was a racist – as it has been told - he would have neither showed his sympathy
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
11
Umberto Pappalardo
International Prize Amedeo Maiuri
Maiuri is without any doubt a versatile character, fully immersed in the “job” of the
archaeologist: the intense research activity, the thick net of friendships and his pro-
fessional relations give us back a library full of features to be interpreted.
The book collection is made up of about 2000 volumes, 1700 abstracts and 200 boo-
klets, related
- most of the time - to the following subjects: Classical Literature, Ancient History,
Art and Archaeology.
The years of publishing cover a time period that goes from the 1700s until 1960s,
with the only exception of the volume Ab Urbe Condita by Tito Livio published in
1556 in Venice by Paolo Manuzio.
The Fondo has a substantial presence of ancient sources, to be connected for sure to
the original philological education of Maiuri and to his archaeological investigation,
often revealed by a careful analysis of the ancient written records.
When Maiuri comes back to Campania after having been in Rhodes, he is soon cap-
tured by the appeal of the Campi Flegrei; with his usual audacity he starts a new ad-
venturous archaeological research: led by the verses of Virgil he finds in Cuma the
alleged Cave of the Sibyl. The trace of this studies is proved in his book collection
by several editions of Virgil and some writings concerning the history of the Flegriean
area.
In the library of a classical archaeologist, with particular philological inclinations
like Maiuri, it's inevitable to find Greek and Latin historiographical volumes. In fact
works of Erodoto, Tu-
cidide, Polibio, Plu-
tarco, Svetonio, Tacito,
Nepote, Cesare and
Sallustio are not mis-
sing.
Moreover, the collec-
tion has other editions
of Greek and Latin Li-
terature that deserve
particular attention:
the Opera Omnia by
Marco Tullio Cicerone
made up of 16 volumes
printed by the publi-
sher Pomba between
1823 and 1835; an in-
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
13
ten production of the 1800s concerning the archaeological findings in the Vesuvian
cities. Among the most significant editions we can mention some books by Michele
Ruggiero (Degli scavi di antichità nelle province di terraferma; Degli scavi di Stabia
e Storia degli scavi di Ercolano) and the Guida di Pompei by Giuseppe Fiorelli,
which shows on the first guard page a peculiar pencil sketch of a view of ancient
Pompeii .
The largest part of the archaeological volumes focuses on subjects connected to his
professional experience, thus being , doubtless, functional to his research.
Several books were donated to Maiuri from other scholars and there are many auto-
graph dedications recurring on some of them, as for instance on some of Benedetto
Croce's work regarding History, Philosophy and Literary Criticism.
To make the collection even more valuable there are also some limited editions like
Pompei alla luce dedili scavi nuovi di via dell’Abbondanza by Vittorio Spinazzola
and a beautiful replica of the Bibbia miniata by Borso d’Este, with silk antiporta and
dedicated autograph by Gio-
vanni Treccani.
The collection also includes the
largest part of the publications
of Maiuri.
The archaeologist often deman-
ded a writing style « capable of
reaching and emotionally in-
volve the highest number of
people» as it is stated by Benito
Izzi in the assay A proposito di
Maiuri prosatore.
This double image of expert ar-
cheologist and skilful narrator
marked all of his written pro-
duction: from the diaries of the
digs to the vibrant tales of his
“archaeological strolls”.
The reason why Maiuri chose
to combine scientific disserta-
tions together with writings
with didactic purposes, can be
summed up by the premise in
Vita d’Archeologo:
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
15
Beyond the books collection, the Fondo Maiuri also includes some archive materials
of great historical interest, which belonged to the archeologist and his family.
Among the documentation there are five notebooks dated between 1924 and 1955;
they are travel diaries on which there are some observations on the places visited by
Maiuri during his Sunday strolls and the reports of the surveys made together with
his assistants in the archeological areas of Liternum, Sepino, Paestum,and Molise.
The collection also includes some pieces of newspapers with several interviews made
to Maiuri and his daughter Bianca, and some memorial newspaper articles.
The correspondence instead is made up of brief letters between Maiuri and persona-
lities of the academic world and not only: we can name the Principal of Università di
Napoli Adolfo Omodeo and his successor Ernesto Pontieri, and the Mayor of Capri,
Edwin Cerio.
The most important correspondence is the one he had between 1927 and 1938 with
the publisher George Macmillan, founder of the Hellenic Society of the British School
in Athens and of the Archaeology sector of the British School in Rome. These letters
talked about a collaboration for some papers between Maiuri and the publisher, for
the issuing of a volume in English about Herculaneum Ruins
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
17
Pio Manzo
International Prize Amedeo Maiuri
tion, with pictures in colors, by the title “ La Villa dei Misteri” (Roma 1947) - of the suburban
villa known at the time as “Item” after the name of the owner of the field, and since then rena-
med after the Mysteries. Together with his huge, intense and methodical work of restoration
of the main structures, he also led exploratory surveys, aiming to investigate both the layers of
the life of the city previous to the dominion of Rome (since 89 B.C.) and the time period bet-
ween the earthquake of 62 A.D. and the eruption of 79 A.D.
Maiuri also regularly took care of the fruition by the public of the vast archaeological area and
set up an Antiquarium right at the entrance of the ruins where the plaster casts and the most si-
gnificant finds were displayed. He added two new ticket offices, one in piazza Anfitetatro and
the other next to the Antiquarium, making the entrance of Porta Marina much easier, he arran-
ged gardens in the southern areas of the archaeological area, replanted some of the ancient
gardens and installed a lighting system. In such an enormous activity of digs, restoration, pro-
motion and fruition, Maiuri was helped by the technical staff and some support by the Soprin-
tendenza and never used scientific collaborations. The endless bibliography on Pompeii by the
archaeologist was focused on the history of the edification, on the phases of life of the city, on
the architecture and a little less on the materials or on decorative aspects of the ancient city.
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
21
Rosaria Ciardiello
International Prize Amedeo Maiuri
Amedeo Maiuri
and the latest digs in the south-western area of Pompeii
Introduction
Since 2004 the University “Suor Orsola Benincasa” in Naples, with its International Center
for the Pompeian Studies “Amedeo Maiuri” has been participating in Pompeii with the wide
project of study and re-
search, “Pompei Insula
Occidentalis – Le case
sulle mura”. The rese-
arch focuses on two dif-
ferent highly interesting
areas to understand the
urban development, in-
side and outside the city
walls of Pompeii, speci-
fically in the areas
South of Porta Marina
(Imperial villa, Grana-
ries) and the Insula Oc-
cidentalis (Regiones VI
e VII), both brought to
light by the great Supe-
rintendent Amedeo Ma-
iuri between 1947 and 1961. The archaeological investigation through stratigraphic digs
carried out in the area of the garden of the Imperial Villa, of the House of Marco Fabio Rufo,
of the Golden Bracelet, and soon of Maius Castricius, reached the goal of documenting and
studying this section of the South-western border of Pompeii in all of its urban, architectonic,
decorative and social aspects, adding an important piece to the comprehension of the birth
and development of this urban area of the city, that was eventually dug out only since 1959
with the excavations led by Amedeo Maiuri, that achieved the discovery of a new exit passage
of the city from Via Nolana, never identified yet but only foretold by Maiuri himself: the Oc-
cindentalis Gate.
lis, is affected by all those elements that characterized the investigation and the study of this
part of the city. In fact, looking the plan of the La Vega brothers closely, it's possible to notice
how only the first floor had been recorded , even if with some imperfection, as for instance
in the disposition of the circular exedra, wrongly reported in a more southern point.
To dig out the houses we must wait for Amedeo Maiuri that chose to free all of the west front
of the city from the Bourbon accumulations. Maiuri immediately restored the house that see-
med to have withstood quite well to the destructive impact of the eruption, except for the cen-
tral circular exedra. The restoration was followed by the first publications that were mainly
focused on the most important finds, like the two cameo-glass plates with Dionysian subject.
At the end of 1970s the house was the focus of a new archaeological campaign that brought
to light the underlying garden , leading to a second round of restorations. In 1974 a seal-ring
with the inscription M. Fab. Ruf. was found in the basement 10 of the close House of the Gol-
den Bracelet, proving the name of the last owner of these houses as it had already been partly
noted by Giordano while reading the graffiti found both in the House of Marco Fabio Rufo
and in the so called house of Maius Castricius.
Such architectonic complex had been waiting a long time for a publishing that would include
the analysis of both the planimetric development and the walls structures, seen in relation to
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
25
that crypt, that is on the right if you go up and contains the MUSEO POMPEIANO, the de-
stination of which cannot be certain, not until the monuments will be transported elsewhere
and it will be given its previous state back.”
Fiorelli described in this way the area of Porta Matina in his Descrizione di Pompei, highli-
ghting many interesting data. First of all, with the sentence “ The modern road who leads to
this Gate...” Fiorelli implied that the exterior of the city walls in those years still appeared oc-
cupied by the stack of debris from the previous Bourbon excavations.
In a following passage he explicitly mentioned a building next to Porta Marina of which “
only few ruins are visible...”; with “pillars” that should be those pertaining to the porticoed
sidewalk leading to the entrance of the Suburban Bath, dug out in recent years. Later Fiorelli
also described two interesting discoveries, occurred few meters away from each other “on
the right there is an aedicule in which a fragment of a simulacrum of Minerva was found...The
votive lamp in gold was found not far from there ...”. A terracotta statue of Minerva was inside
the niche built outside the entrance of what nowadays we know to be one of the access to the
Villa Imperiale, while the golden lamp, now in the Archaeological Museum of Naples, was
found few meters far away.
With a careful look to the map of Pompeii made by Fiorelli it's possibile to notice that both
the place of finding of the Minerva and the access to that crypt, mentioned in the successive
passage, are showed, “ that crypt that is on the right if you go up and that has the MUSEO
POMPEIANO...” . The crypt mentioned by Fiorelli seems to be very well documented in the
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
27
museum or “Antiquarium”, that is the one still visible nowadays, was places on an artificial
terrace below the western side of the terrace of the Temple of Venus. By clear will of Maiuri,
that didn't want to farther destroy the underlying ruins, it came to largely overlap the founda-
tions of the old Museum. In fact, apart from small changes, the focus point of the rooms in
the central axis of the entrance from Porta Marina corresponded to the old big room of the ni-
neteenth century, while new constructions were made by the jutting part South of the “Esedra
dei Pompeianisti” and of the access stairway.
Built from 1945 to 1947, it was inaugurated on June 13th 1948. During the works on the slope
to build the new ramp of southern access, the imposing supports of the Temple of Venus and
the western section of the city walls of the IV-III century B.C. emerged from the stack of de-
bris, while during the works for the clearing to build the new museum and the entrance of
Porta Marina, the ruins of the building, of what at the time was guessed to be a suburban villa,
came out. The digs started on December of 1946 and went on till April 17th 1948 and after
that the restoration of the wall paintings began. In the mean time, from 1946-1947 Amedeo
Maiuri started the first digs of the area outside the fortification walls of the south-western side
of the city of Pompeii, related to the plan of removing the Bourbon accumulations outside
the city, that were covering the houses in some areas, for instance the Regio VIII.
During this time, also the fornix of the Granary, that was leaning on the 29 structures of the
Villa already abandoned by the time, was excavated and inside it Maiuri found some bodies,
which he described in this way “A group of fugitives found shelter under the vaulted room
that today works as an entrance and their bodies were found next to a pile of coins and some
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
29
and pillars supporting the upstairs of the Villa. The cisterns with signs of wreckage, were al-
ready not in use by 79 A.D. and filled in with debris (fragment of painted plaster, stucco, ce-
ramics, rocks, a bone comb etc.)
Thus, 28 boxes were filled with one-color painted plasters, among which some with architec-
tonic motif (many) and figurative (few) have been examined and for the largest part belonging
to the III style. In 1992-1994 other surveys were carried out by Jacobelli in the area next to
the access road to Porta Marina. The surveys, that are still waiting for a publishing, showed
the existence of a further inhabited layer, the third one below the one of the portico (c), be-
longing to the Villa.
From 2004 to 2006 a new research, carried out in the area of the first floor of the Villa and
connected to the restoration and modernization of the Antiquarium in Pompeii, intended to
study the structures of the area that are witnesses of the important supporting works, made
necessary by the urban location of the villa, leaning on the city walls, and the following in-
tervention of function-changing of the building with the regular demolition of the inhabited
strata.
Mario Grimaldi
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
Amedeo Maiuri,
31
His workers and assistants kept a loving memory of this polite man with the straw hat that personally
took care of the digs with a never-changing enthusiasm. And today, now as yesterday, we almost
have the feeling of reliving these moments in the faded images of the Istituto Luce that go with the
exhibit. For many students and scholars, the places promoted by him evoke precious memories.
Mine is related to his passage in Cuma and the reading of the Passeggiate Campane, the fascinating
report of many years spent “strolling” around the historical and natural beauties of our region. He
was tireless. He was so in love with his Campania, that he used to describe it with the passion of the
artist, the dedication of the historian and the precision of the scientist. With the virtuosity that only
the most skilled among the communicators have, he talked about characters of past and present in
a mix of reality and imagination. Colorful folk figures meeting Roman emperors and poets of all
eras, medieval queens and modern innkeepers, in an extraordinary twirl of newly found and re-
membered worlds that, now as yesterday, populate Naples, Sorrento, Baia and Cuma, Capua, Nola
and the Flegreian islands.
Today the city of Pompeii dedicates an award to this great scholar of the last Century. Our wish is
that this may be the opportunity to remind all those who bear the responsibility of the protection
and promotion of our common assets, that our cultural heritage is a fragile resource and has to be
managed with respect and love.
Pompeian Memories
Interview to Vincenzo Sicignano
November 23rd 2014
How old were you when you first met Maiuri, which
were the circumstances, and which were your fee-
lings and what is your opinion on this great scholar?
tiful Impluvium, thought to be part of the Regio II, Insula I at first and then allocated to
the Regio I. Therefore, I took part to the working campaign till 1953; later, always sta-
ying in the ruins area, I worked in the sector of the Necropolis of Porta Nocera. All of
this was happening under the superintendency of Maiuri! Only later, in 1953, when also
the Professor Carlo Giordano, disciple of Maiuri and employed in the Regional Admi-
nistration, came to work in Pompeii, I had the chance to be for a long time in close con-
tact with Don Amedeo, whom I met for the last time on April 1962, when, during the
digs of the Insula Occidentalis, a vault with a beautiful Medusa came out; that was hap-
pening after five months I had been put in retirement.
Don Vincenzo, how was Maiuri with his assistants and what opinion do you have about
Maiuri as Superintendent?
Maiuri had a quite small circle of collaborators, but, as far as I know, he was greatly re-
spected , above all in Pompeii (there was Alfonso D'Avino who was his valid assistant
for many years, in fact he was also mentioned in the book of the Professor “L'ultima
fase edilizia a Pompei”). In my humble opinion, Maiuri had an immense vision not only
about Pompeii but about the whole Campania territory with its digs, as he had already
started his working activity in 1915, when he was Inspector in Rhodes and he arranged
for the restoration of the “Palazzo dei Cavalieri”, together with the big Museum. As far
as the opinions of other pompeianists go, we enter in a minefield because there was a
lot of competition : there was the School of Bianchi Bandinelli, the other schools....so
everyone had their own vision.
Maiuri came often to Pompeii on Sundays to talk to the different executives and to get
news.
Every time Don Amedeo came, the Prof Giordano always gave him candies. Once Gior-
dano was not able to come and after announcing me Maiuri visit, he entrusted me to give
him candies, and I was up to the task . I saw him again when the nine bodies, of which
casts were made, emerged from the digs; they were lined up on the highest part of the
future Garden of the Fugitives . One of them seemed crouched and had a bag with him,
accessory that helped Maiuri recognize him as a “beggar”. The only cast put in the exact
place where the body was found is the one out from Porta Nocera- I should have a picture
somewhere because in that occasion a journalist, of whom I cannot recall the name, came
- but if I find the negative I'll bring it to you because it is a rarity that no one else owns
- if I find it I'll give it to you as a present. I've never seen the daughter Bianca in the
Ruins, who at that time was working in the National Museum of Naples. Instead, on a
picture of 1932, there is the first daughter Ada, if I'm not wrong, who married a famous
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
35
When did you meet Maiuri and which was your role
in the archaeological ruins of Pompeii?
who understood everyone's needs, and life used to go on like that...He personally took
care of the digs and the restoration and sometimes he got quite angry when, for instance,
an architrave was wider or less wide of what he expected (as it happened in the House
of the Four Styles that was still under excavation was I was a child). Maiuri was in our
everyday life...With the war, the always present Professor,decided to move most of the
materials to Cassino to save them ( I also remember the name of the two guardians in
charge of safeguarding this assets of Pompeii: one man called Giovanni Racise and an
other very young one, Troschi...). The attention was then focused on the horrors of the
war and Maiuri managed to remove from the houses of Pompei all the items that he had
instead showed in place (he had made a nice showcase in the House of Menander, he
had left the items on the selling counter of the thermopolium of Asellina, he had saved
the bronze vases and the various obscene items, among which also the famous phallic
lamp with the bells in the shop of Verus)...We were waiting everything but the bombs
on Pompeii, instead in September a bombing hit all the area of Porta Marina and destro-
yed the old Museum build by Fiorelli. I remember one night the poor Professor, exited
from his house at Porta Stabia, reached our house in Casina dell'Aquila to comfort us.
He talks about it himself when he tells that in the moment in which the flares were shot,
it seemed noon in the Casina dell'Aquila....Maiuri was also wounded in a leg. After the
war, the damages in Pompeii were inestimable and were spread to the whole area ; via
dell'Abbondanza seemed to have survived an earthquake, all the facades of the houses
had to be consolidated, the glass that protected the electoral graffiti was all
shattered....So it was a huge disaster...Nevertheless Don Amedeo soon made an effort
trying to save whatever was possible through restoration works; nowadays often these
rushed works are criticized but we need to keep in mind that at the time the funds were
very scarce and that for some restorations the manpower used was the one the Admini-
stration had at the time. And yet, big recovery works were carried out. Among the most
important interventions I remember the lifting of all the colonnade of the House of Epi-
dio Rufo where the sixteen columns of the Corinthian atrium were all in pieces on the
ground... In the mean time I finished my high school in classical studies in tragic cir-
cumstances, due to the death of my father and the extreme poverty that made University
unaffordable for me. At that time, always thanks to Don Amedeo, some works were about
to start, by using the funds of the Cassa del Mezzogiorno which saw, among other inter-
ventions, the reclamation of the Gardens of Schito, between Pompeii and Castellammare
through the use of the soil accumulated all around the fortifications. Maiuri always cared
about modern Pompeii as well and made sure that the whole area between the old and
the new Pompeii was set, that is why he opened the square of the Anfiteatro, by removing
the big stacks of soil that were still accumulated along the road. I still needed to find a
job and having turned 18, my mother asked Maiuri if he would let me work in the Ruins.
Knowing me as the son of Lindinerro and as a too "refined" person, the Professor did
not want me to be a manual laborer, but it was the only position he could offer at the
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
37
me how things were going in the site. I told him that, due to the increasing number of
thefts, they were about to close all the houses and to take away the last material left in
the site, like the small marble statues. And Maiuri gave me an answer that still resonates
in my mind : “the more houses are closed the more they will get damaged”. Of course,
when I heard about Maiuri's death I went to the funeral. I remember the casket passing
from the National Museum and reaching the University where a big crowd had gathered
and the Archaeology Professor Domenico Mustilly delivered his eulogy .
How much ancient Pompeii , of which Maiuri had a romantic vision, has changed com-
pared to nowadays?
Maiuri mainly wanted the ancient world to be known and he especially took care of the
divulgation of the antiquities, and that's maybe also the reason why he was accused of
fascism. He preferred to be surrounded by common people and he was quite rarely spot-
ted walking around the Ruins with an Inspector; he used to go alone and was sometimes
accompanied by the technician of the site Alfondo D'Avino or even by the master mason
in charge of the restoration activities...He loved having a direct relation with the workers
rather then with the theoretical researchers, to whom he allowed to do their job anyway.
That, of course, sometimes hurt the sensibility of the Inspectors which aimed to be the
direct collaborators and that should have been those allowed to join him in those visits.
Instead, when Don Amedeo used to came to Pompeii, Alfonso D'Avino was there waiting
at the entrance, ready to go along with him. Even I , just a common man, was given the
task of making a survey of all the portals with squared capitals, proving that Maiuri pre-
ferred to establish a direct connection with more humble people because he loved people
who were interested in learning about the ancient world. For this reason he stated that
to close the house of Pompeii meant to lead them towards a relentless fate thus denying
the future knowledge and fruition. As further proof of this there was the fact that the
Professor, in occasion of the planning of the shows in the Teatro Grande, was always
able to obtained from the acting company the dress rehearsals to be open to the public.
Thanks to this, we all, including me, the technicians, the workers, the guardians, the far-
mers...could go with our families to see the show and maybe to see Sofocles...Maiuri
stated that this direct contact with people was fundamental! The Professor had his own
very personal connection with the city of Pompeii, even if the Pompeians seem to have
forgotten about it now, he wanted the city to develop around the ruins, so to welcome
the tourism and benefit from it. The decline of Pompeii started when Maiuri left, that is
to say when they began to do things with too much bureaucracy involved and the loving
relation between the high profile functionary and the monument just went missing. Then,
Unions problems occurred, leading to the lack of that working class that with Maiuri
was able to start a career from simple manual works and then to get more specialized,
rising the level and getting rich, but still giving important contribution to the Ruins any-
from Rhodes to Pompeii A life for archeology
39
Fabiana Fuschino
International Prize Amedeo Maiuri
Summary
Preface pag. 3