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Cinema Owners: Check your basement

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  • Cinema Owners: Check your basement

    An ancient Roman building has been found during excavations at a former cinema in the northern Italian city of Verona in what has been described as a “miniature Pompeii”.

    The discovery was made during excavations in the basement of Astra cinema, which is undergoing renovation after lying abandoned for more than 20 years.

    With its “magnificent frescoed walls”, the building, which dates back to the second century, “evokes a miniature Pompeii”, said Verona’s archaeological superintendent, the department in charge of archaeology for the area.

    It is not yet clear what function the building had, but experts said it appeared to have survived a fire as the roof had collapsed and there were items of charred wooden furniture among the finds.

    “A fire seems to have put an end to the attendance of the complex,” the superintendent said.

    Despite the fire, “the environment was preserved intact, with the magnificent colours of the frescoed walls dating back to the second century”.

    The find and evidence of a fire evoked connotations of ancient Pompeii, which was destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD79. “A calamitous event, in this case a fire, suddenly marked the end of the complex, leaving traces,” the report added.

    The discovery comes just over a year after a perfectly preserved Roman mosaic floor was found close to Verona. The multicoloured tiles, found beneath a row of vines, had been part of the foundations of a Roman villa, the remains of which were discovered a century before in a hilly area above the town of Negrar di Valpolicella. The villa is believed to have dated back to the third century.
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...-cinema-verona

    miniature-Pompeii-min.jpeg


    The article above states, "Astra cinema, which is undergoing renovation after lying abandoned for more than 20 years". However, the website, Cinema Treasures, notes that:

    Located in the San Giovanni Lupatoto district to the southeast of Verona. The Cinema Teatro Astra is almost not visible as it has little street presence and is located behind the Church of San Giovanni Battista. Seating is provided for 1,100 it orchestra & balcony levels.

    The Cinema Teatro Astra was closed in 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic. While closed, renovation was carried out and it was discovered that the cinema sits on an ancient Roman site.
    Link: http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/63934
    astra cinema.jpg


  • #2
    I'm not sure if such a find is a blessing or a curse... Usually, if you find something archeological important, the site needs to be excavated. If there are buildings on-site, a judgement has to be made whether or not those buildings can remain standing or also need to go...
    Last edited by Marcel Birgelen; 07-02-2021, 04:09 AM.

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    • #3
      It's not just archaeology. Sometimes a major construction project comes across a rare mouse or something and the whole multi-million dollar project gets held up or scrapped.

      I can't find the news article right now, but a bridge replacement in Fort Qu'Appelle (a town not too far from here) got held up for a couple of months this summer because of a bird nest.

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      • #4
        This sounds like that story where they found King Richard III's grave in a parking lot in Liecester.

        https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-...red-a-monument

        Now, the site is a protected monument.

        What would that be like? First, you have to let archeologists and historians dig up your property then, just when you think the fuss is over, the government comes in and says your property is hallowed ground and must be preserved as a monument.

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        • #5
          Reminds me of the final scene in the movie Sunshine State (plot spoiler alert: real estate developers are stopped from making bazillions by the last minute discovery of historic archeological remains on the lot they are about to build on) - IMHO, one of the finest and most underrated films of that decade.

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