Monstrous

Monstropedia => Forbidden Archaeology => Topic started by: prezhorusin04 on October 10, 2006, 01:50:15 AM

Title: Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets
Post by: prezhorusin04 on October 10, 2006, 01:50:15 AM
Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets After Escaping Construction
By Adam L. Freeman
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=a9rf3G03kTTU&refer=home

Oct. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Visitors to the Vatican will be able to view its museums' latest addition: a 2,000-year-old pagan burial ground filled with mausoleums, scattered bones and headstones, including one that belonged to one of Nero's slaves.

The cemetery almost never saw the light of day in modern times. The Vatican announced its discovery almost four years ago after a truck was spotted hauling tombstones with Latin `inscriptions on the construction site for a parking lot.

``It's not easy to dig with all the wonderful things that are underground,'' said Cardinal Francesco Marchisano, head of the Pontifical Commission for Sacred Archaeology, in an interview.

The 500 square meters (5,380 square feet) of mostly pagan crypts will be opened to the public on Oct. 13 as part of the Vatican Museums' 500th anniversary. The necropolis is part of three other sections that in their entirety consist of about 1,000 square meters of graves.

It will be years before the conservation is completed, said Giandomenico Spinola, the archaeologist heading up the excavation. Until now, the work has cost about 400,000 euros ($508,000), financed by the Vatican Museums and Vatican City.

For the time being, visitors will look over the cemetery -- located just inside the Vatican walls -- from a walkway, as workers below pick through and preserve urns and headstones, some with brief Latin inscriptions about the lives of the dead.

Alcimus may have been Nero's slave, but according to his headstone his job was the rough equivalent of a set designer at the Theater of Pompey, once the world's largest theater.

Honey, I'm Home

Visitors will also view terra cotta tubes inserted in graves into which family members would pour food such as honey to nourish the dead. Some of the tombs, dated from the first century B.C. to the first century A.D., are decorated with faded floral designs, carvings and mosaics. Urns contain bones spared by the crematory flames with the texture of pumice.

Rich and poor alike were buried there, although in different fashions. The wealthy families kept decorated mausoleums. Individual graves belonged primarily to the poor, who where interred simply ``in a hole in the ground,'' Spinola said.

One tomb contains about 30 family members. There's evidence the last interred was a Christian. In all, there are 500 to 600 people buried in about 40 tombs, containing layers of generations, tracing pagan Rome to the birth of Christianity, Francesco Buranelli, director of the museums, said in an interview.

Marchisano says nothing was lost to the parking garage.

When the discovery was announced, archaeologists and art historians feared the Vatican would sacrifice the site to relieve its parking problem. Something similar happened leading up to the 2000 Jubilee, when the frescoed wall of a second-century Roman villa had to be removed by the Italian Culture Ministry to make room for a new car and bus parking garage.

You can't always stop the future to save the past, Spinola said. ``In archaeological work at the Vatican and in Rome you can save almost everything, but there always has to be a compromise.''
Title: Re: Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets
Post by: beans on March 18, 2008, 07:27:31 PM
why is it that the Vatican will show us this but not the hidden books that they keep in the libary? instead of desocrating a burial ground  they should leave it be and show us the thruth that they hide from us.
Title: Re: Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets
Post by: rave phillaphia on March 19, 2008, 09:36:52 AM
the church decided along time ago what should be apart of their religion. Thats why they don't include all of the books. The thing is that they get all the credit for hidding the books but in reality they read more books then the jewish orthodox or protestant church either. So we do have to give them credit that they accept more then most do.

P.S the some books are kept in the library the secrets are kept stored away in the tombs under the vatican.
Title: Re: Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets
Post by: beans on March 24, 2008, 04:03:01 PM
ha i dint kno they kelpt them in the tombs under the vatican trippy.
Title: Re: Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets
Post by: rave phillaphia on March 25, 2008, 11:11:40 AM
I do know that some things have been stolen from there over the years. Just due to wars and invasions throughout time the most recent cases were in WW2 but I know there was one more case that a document got stolen somehow the guy got in there and took it but they caught him and he was sentenced for life in prision  :spy: (sadly I wish I could remember the guys name and a lot of sources try to deny this account but the WW2 stuff did happen but supposeidly it was returned).
Title: Re: Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets
Post by: beans on March 25, 2008, 01:50:11 PM
like what did they take in ww2?
Title: Re: Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets
Post by: Vince_03 on January 18, 2009, 03:54:18 AM
the vatican is like a big vault. all the secrets and cornerstones of the christian faith are in that city and they will do anything to hide it from people
Title: Re: Vatican Necropolis Gives Up Secrets
Post by: rave phillaphia on June 14, 2010, 01:54:37 PM
http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/2009/06/berwyn-antiquities-john-sisto.html (http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/2009/06/berwyn-antiquities-john-sisto.html)

This is one of the few people who have come into possession of many items that have been stolen over time and then collected.