Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
( 081 857 53 47; www.pompeiisites.org ; entrances at Porta Marina & Piazza Anfiteatro; adult/reduced
€11/5.50, combined ticket incl Herculaneum €20/10; 8.30am-7.30pm summer, to 5pm winter, last entry
90min before closing) Of Pompeii's original 66 hectares, 44 have now been excavated. Of
course that doesn't mean you'll have unhindered access to every inch of the Unesco-listed
site - expect to come across areas cordoned off for no apparent reason, a noticeable lack
of clear signs and the odd stray dog. Audio guides are a sensible investment.
At the time of writing, the Casa dei Vettii was closed for restoration. The Terme
Suburbane, just outside the city walls, can be visited on weekends subject to prior booking
at www.arethusa.net . It's here that you'll find the erotic frescoes that scandalised the Vat-
ican when they were revealed in 2001. The saucy panels decorate the changing rooms of
what was once a private baths complex.
PORTA MARINA
The site's main entrance is at Porta Marina OFFLINE MAP GOOGLE MAP , the most impressive
of the seven gates that punctuated the ancient town walls. A busy passageway now as it
was then, it originally connected the town with the nearby harbour, hence the gateway's
name. Immediately on the right as you enter the gate is the 1st-century-BC Tempio di
Venere (Temple of Venus), formerly one of the town's most opulent temples.
THE FORUM
Continuing northeast along Via Marina you'll hit the grassy foro OFFLINE MAP GOOGLE MAP
(forum). Flanked by limestone columns, this was the ancient city's main piazza and the
buildings surrounding it are testament to its role as the city's hub of civic, commercial,
political and religious activity.
At its southwestern end sit the remains of the basilica OFFLINE MAP GOOGLE MAP , the
2nd-century-BC seat of the city's law courts and exchange. Their semicircular apses
would later influence the design of early Christian churches. Opposite the basilica, the
Tempio di Apollo OFFLINE MAP GOOGLE MAP (Temple of Apollo) is the oldest and most important
of Pompeii's religious buildings. Most of what you see today, including the striking
columned portico, dates to the 2nd century BC, although fragments remain of an earlier
version dating to the 6th century BC.
At the forum's northern end is the Tempio di Giove OFFLINE MAP GOOGLE MAP (Temple of
Jupiter) , which has one of two flanking triumphal arches remaining, and the Granai del Foro
OFFLINE MAP GOOGLE MAP (Forum Granary) , now used to store hundreds of amphorae and a
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