iTaggit encourages our users to show
off their antique furniture collection in our gallery, but
this newly unearthed piece leaves most others in the dust. The
remnants of the first known surviving Roman throne have been
discovered 82 feet below the surface in the buried city of
Herculaneum. Herculaneum was engulfed in lava and ash in the year 79
when Mount Vesuvius erupted, killing thousands. Luckily for our
generation, the layers of volcanic ash preserved the sites and are
providing historical information on what domestic life was like in
the ancient world. Even more remarkable about this piece is that it
was found in the Villa dei Papiri, a first century country home
believed to have been the residence of Julius Caesar's father-in-law.
Archaeologists first dug the two legs and part of the back of the
wooden throne that was decorated with ivory bas-reliefs
depicting Greek mythological figures absorbed by Rome's culture. It
is also decorated with images of pine cones and phalluses, as well as
images of the gods Attis and Dionysus. A throne of this sort had only
been seen in artistic depictions before now. The fragile antique
remains will undergo a lengthy restoration while the dig in the Villa
dei Papiri continues. The Villa dei Papiri was named as such due to
the hundreds of ancient papyruses found in a library, and the site
has only been partially excavated.