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Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome by Apicius, Translated by Joseph Dommers Vehling
Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome by Apicius, Translated by Joseph Dommers Vehling

Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome (1936)

by Apicius, Translated by Joseph Dommers Vehling

Submitted by deroche
Book Educational
8.11 | Ranked
Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome by Apicius, Translated by Joseph Dommers Vehling
Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome by Apicius, Translated by Joseph Dommers Vehling
Cookery and Dining in Imperial Rome
by Apicius, Translated by Joseph Dommers Vehling

Though only a provincial town, Pompeii was a prosperous mercantile place, a representative market-place, a favorite resort for fashionable people. The town had hardly recuperated from a preliminary attack by that treacherous mountain, Vesuvius, when a second onslaught succeeded in complete destruction. Suddenly, without warning, this lumbering force majeur visited the ill-fated towns in its vicinity with merciless annihilation. The population, just then enjoying the games in the amphitheatre outside of the "downtown" district, had had hardly time to save their belongings. They escaped with their bare lives. Only the aged, the infirm, the prisoners and some faithful dogs were left behind. Today their bodies in plaster casts may be seen, mute witnesses to a frightful disaster. The town was covered with an airtight blanket of ashes, lava and fine pumice stone. There was no prolonged death struggle, no perceivable decay extended over centuries as was the cruel lot of Pompeii's mistress, Rome. There were no agonies to speak of. The great event was consummated within a few hours. The peace of death settled down to reign supreme after the dust had been driven away by the gentle breezes coming in from the bay of Naples. Some courageous citizens returned, searching in the hot ashes for the crashed-in roofs of their villas, to recover this or that. Perhaps they hoped to salvage the strong box in the atrium, or a heirloom from the triclinium. But soon they gave up. Despairing, or hoping for better days to come, they vanished in the mist of time. Pompeii, the fair, the hospitable, the gay city, just like any individual out of luck, was and stayed forgotten. The Pompeians, their joys, sorrows, their work and play, their virtues and vices - everything was arrested with one single stroke, stopped, even as a camera clicks, taking a snapshot.🏁

Submitted by deroche - 06/04/2025
Book Educational 8.11 Ranked

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