Roman wall mural uncovered in London

Blackleaf

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Nearly 20 feet (6 meters) below the streets of London, archaeologists discovered a fragile Roman painting featuring deer and birds that may have once decorated the wall of a wealthy citizen's home.

Excavators from the Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) were carefully digging for Roman artifacts at 21 Lime Street, near Leadenhall Market in central London, ahead of the construction of an office building at the site.

They say the newly uncovered fresco was discovered facedown in the soil. The painted wall was likely toppled and sealed underground around A.D. 100, when Roman builders flattened the area to make way for construction of the civic center for the city, the forum basilica.


Rare Wall Mural from Roman Era Uncovered in London

By Megan Gannon, Live Science Contributor | February 09, 2016 01:41pm ET
Live Science


In total, the surviving section of the artwork measures 8 feet across and 5 feet high. It may have decorated the reception room of a wealthy person’s home.
Credit: MOLA


Nearly 20 feet (6 meters) below the streets of London, archaeologists discovered a fragile Roman painting featuring deer and birds that may have once decorated the wall of a wealthy citizen's home.

Excavators from the Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) were carefully digging for Roman artifacts at 21 Lime Street, near Leadenhall Market in central London, ahead of the construction of an office building at the site.

They say the newly uncovered fresco was discovered facedown in the soil. The painted wall was likely toppled and sealed underground around A.D. 100, when Roman builders flattened the area to make way for construction of the civic center for the city, the forum basilica.


This central panel shows the most detailed part of the fresco, with deer and birds decorating the painting. (Credit: MOLA)


Lime Street. London was founded by the Romans in A.D. 43 as Londinium. In A.D. 100, the city's population was probably around 45,000, whereas it is expected to reach 11 million by 2050

Paintings are far more fragile than stone and metal artifacts, so not many ancient wall murals survive intact in the archaeological record. There are famous examples from Pompeii, the city that was preserved in volcanic ash by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79. But in London, complete paintings are much more scarce, though fragments of Roman wall plaster have been found before, MOLA archaeologists said. The newfound fresco, its painted surface just a millimeter thick, may be one of the oldest artworks of its kind to survive from the time of Roman Britain, they added.

At the construction site on Lime Street, the painted plaster was lifted from the ground in 16 sections, still encased in dirt. Only after a "microexcavation"in a lab were the archaeologists able to see what the surviving section of the painting looked like: It had red panels on the sides and at the center, there were green and black vertical panels with deer reaching their necks up to nibble at trees above a set of blue-green birds and a vine woven around a candle holder. What’s left of the fresco measures about 8 feet (2.5m) across and 5 feet (1.5 m) high.


In this image, archaeological conservator Luisa Duarte, of the Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA), works on a section of the painting. (Credit: MOLA)

"This was a really challenging but rewarding conservation project," Liz Goodman, an archaeological conservator for MOLA, said in a statement. "We were up against the clock working on this huge and fragile fresco but it was a joy to uncover the decorative plaster that hadn’t been seen for nearly 2,000 years."

The researchers are still studying the painting and the archaeological records from the site to get a better idea of what life was like in this section of the city during the Roman period, but they said the painting most likely adorned the wall of a reception room of a private home where guests were entertained.


After archaeologists removed the 16 major sections of the fresco, still encased in dirt, they cleaned it during a microexcavation in the lab. (Credit: MOLA)


Archaeologists from MOLA discovered the artwork while digging ahead of the construction of an office complex in Lime Street in the middle of the city. (Credit: MOLA)


The painted wall was likely sealed underground ahead of the construction of the 2nd Roman Forum of London in the 2nd century A.D. (Credit: MOLA)

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Rare Wall Mural from Roman Era Uncovered in London
 
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darkbeaver

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Eight hours of silence from my friend blackleaf a very nice speci in I just naturally like the guy. He's offered to house me whenever I wan't rto visit.

Do you have a toilet?

Rome, do we dare\? Every generation must. AS a rep of mygen I will of course contest thou it cost an artery I have blood to give

Dead is a nice place to be.
 

Blackleaf

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Don't you mean Londinium? What did you do to the indiginous Romans of Britian?

There were no indigenous Romans of Britain.

And the British tribe, the Iceni, razed much of Londinium, as well as Camulodunum (Colchester) and Verulamium (St Albans), to the ground in AD60 during the Boudiccan Revolt, slaughtering many of the Roman inhabitants of the town in the process. Even today, whenever somebody digs several inches into the ground in central London, there is a layer of pinkish soil which is as a result of the town being set ablaze by the Iceni.
 

Curious Cdn

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There were no indigenous Romans of Britain.

And the British tribe, the Iceni, razed much of Londinium, as well as Camulodunum (Colchester) and Verulamium (St Albans), to the ground in AD60 during the Boudiccan Revolt, slaughtering many of the Roman inhabitants of the town in the process. Even today, whenever somebody digs several inches into the ground in central London, there is a layer of pinkish soil which is as a result of the town being set ablaze by the Iceni.

Horray for our side!

Did you know that for a couple of hundred years, 80 % of Rome's military assets were tied up in two of the Empire's 18 Provinces ... Judea and Brittania? They must have really hated us (not you German migrants).
 

Blackleaf

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Horray for our side!

Did you know that for a couple of hundred years, 80 % of Rome's military assets were tied up in two of the Empire's 18 Provinces ... Judea and Brittania? They must have really hated us (not you German migrants).

It's because the British didn't accept Roman rule as readily as other peoples and put up much more of a resistance.
 

Blackleaf

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Right. Good on them. The Romans were genocidal monsters.

The Iceni were initially allied with Rome when Claudius and his men invaded Britain in AD43. However, they were proud of their independence and had revolted in 47 when the then governor of the Roman Province of Britannia, Publius Ostorius Scapula, planned to disarm all the peoples in the area of Britain under Roman control following a number of local uprisings. Ostorius defeated them and went on to put down other uprisings around Britain. The Iceni remained independent.

However, when King Prasutagus of the Iceni died the Romans decided to rule the Iceni directly and confiscated the property of the leading tribesmen. The Romans ignored his will and took over, depriving the Iceni nobles of their lands and plundering the kingdom. Prasutagus's wife, Boudicca, was flogged and their daughters raped. Roman financiers called in their loans. Roman historian Tacitus wrote "The Icenian king Prasutagus, celebrated for his long prosperity, had named the emperor his heir, together with his two daughters; an act of deference which he thought would place his kingdom and household beyond the risk of injury. The result was contrary — so much so that his kingdom was pillaged by centurions, his household by slaves; as though they had been prizes of war."

Naturally, Boudicca was mightily angry about all this and she led her Iceni warriors on a rampage to destroy Roman towns. They successfully defeated the Ninth Legion and destroyed the capital of Roman Britain, then at Colchester (Camulodunum). They went on to destroy London (Londinium) and Verulamium (St Albans). The Iceni cut off the breasts of Roman noblewomen, sewed them to their mouths and hung the bodies or mounted them on spears. Thousands of Romans were killed. Finally, Boudicca was defeated by a Roman army led by Paulinus. Many Britons were killed and Boudicca is thought to have poisoned herself to avoid capture. The site of the battle, and of Boudicca's death, are unknown.

Today, Boudicca is, of course, a British national heroine.