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Pompeii: Rebirth of Italy's dead city that nearly died again
ABC News
Pompeii, the ancient city destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, is experiencing a kind of rebirth
POMPEII, Italy -- In a few horrible hours, Pompeii was turned from a vibrant city into an ash-embalmed wasteland, smothered by a furious volcanic eruption in A.D. 79.
Then in this century, the excavated Roman city appeared alarmingly close to a second death, assailed by decades of neglect, mismanagement and scant systematic maintenance of the heavily visited ruins. The 2010 collapse of a hall where gladiators trained nearly cost Pompeii its coveted UNESCO World Heritage Site designation.
But these days, Pompeii is experiencing the makings of a rebirth.
Excavations undertaken as part of engineering stabilization strategies to prevent new collapses are yielding a raft of revelations about the everyday lives of Pompeii’s residents, as the lens of social class analysis is increasingly applied to new discoveries.