Categories: World News

Tourist on vacation ruins walls dating back to Ancient Rome

Spread the love


A young man from the Netherlands was reprimanded by Italian police after he allegedly vandalized a historic Roman wall while on holiday.

Advertisements

The incident took place in Herculaneum, an Ancient Roman town that – like Pompeii – was covered in volcanic ash from the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.

In a press release published Monday, the Carabinieri, an Italian law enforcement agency, explained that the tourist “signed” the walls of a domus in the town on Sunday night. A domus was a townhouse-like residence for families in antiquity.

Advertisements

The 27-year-old was touring southern Italy on vacation at the time.

Advertisements
Advertisements

ANCIENT ROMAN WALL PAINTING DOES NOT DEPICT PIZZA AFTER ALL, ARCHEOLOGISTS SAY

Advertisements

A 27-year-old Dutch man was arrested for allegedly vandalizing an Ancient Roman wall. (Getty Images / Carabinieri)

“A 27-year-old Dutchman, on holiday in Campania, decided to leave a sign of his passage, writing with a marker on the ancient stuccoes of a house torn from the ashes of Vesuvius,” the police’s statement read. “A signature, with a black marker, [was] indelible.”

“The man was immediately identified and reported for damage and smearing of artistic works.”

Italian Culture Minister Gennaro Sangiuliano said on Facebook that the suspect was punished for “damaging and [the] oxidation of [the] artwork.”

WOMAN OUT FOR WALK STUMBLES UPON ONCE-IN-A-DECADE DISCOVERY

Advertisements

The Dutch tourist was on vacation in Italy when he vandalized the ancient wall, police say. (Carabinieri/Handout via REUTERS)

“Any damage hurts our heritage, our beauty and our identity and that is why it must be punished with the utmost firmness,” Sangiuliano said in a statement obtained by Reuters.

This incident is not the first time a tourist in Italy was tempted to leave their mark. Last summer, a British tourist apologized for defacing the Colosseum in Rome.

Ivan Danailov Dimitrov, who was then 31, carved a wall with his name and his fiancée’s name, writing: “Ivan+Haley 23.”

“I admit with deepest embarrassment that it was only after what regrettably happened that I learned of the monument’s antiquity,” a letter he wrote read. “[I apologize to] Italians and the entire world for the damage done to a monument, which is, in fact, heritage of all humanity.” 

A general view shows the archaeological site of Herculaneum in Ercolano, near Naples, with the Mount Vesuvius volcano in the background, on October 23, 2019. (Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Fox News Digital reached out to the Carabinieri for additional details.

Reuters contributed to this report.



Source link

Advertisements
Andrea Vacchiano

Recent Posts

Election night TV review: From Sky News’ guttural grunting to the BBC’s disjointed duo

For free real time breaking news alerts sent straight to your inbox sign up to…

17 mins ago

80% of Palaro delegates already in Cebu

APPROXIMATELY 80 percent of the delegates for Palarong Pambansa 2024 have arrived already, said Cebu…

25 mins ago

Samsung expects profits to soar with boost from AI

Samsung Electronics expects its profits for the three months to June 2024 to jump 15-fold…

31 mins ago

New Study Reveals Molecular Secret to Lifelong Memories

Researchers have identified a biological mechanism involving the molecule KIBRA that explains the long-term stability…

33 mins ago

Know About Highly Fatal Naegleria Fowleri Infection

Three children, including a 5-year-old, have succumbed to an infection from a rare brain-eating amoeba…

41 mins ago

Luka Doncic, Slovenia face Giannis, Greece in semis

Luka Doncic and Slovenia advance to the knockout phase of the Fiba OQT in Piraeus,…

48 mins ago

This website uses cookies.