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Friday, April 25, 2014

Tomb of the Diver ~ Paestum, Italy



Around 470 BCE, a young man died and was buried in a limestone vault.  The vault was not discovered until 1968.  The base of the tomb is the groundstone.  The four walls and the lid are of limestone upon which are applied frescoes.

The lid is painted with a diver, painted in sillhouette, diving into the ocean (into the unknown).
The person who died could look at the scenes.

The left and right sides depict a symposium.  It was suggested that these could be read as scenes from a movie.

The first fellow is requesting more wine.  The second is examining the cup.  The third  is checking out the activities of the fourth and fifth.



On the other side panel, the first is a musician.  The fourth is playing a flute.



The end panels 

The guests arriving.


I can imagine the excitement of discovering this intact tomb that had not been seen since 470BCE.
it was exciting for me to see something I had only read about.

More description and professional pictures can be found at

The walls and lid are now in the Archeological Museum in Paestum, Italy.

1 comment:

awwos said...

I'm surprised they let you take photographs!