Villas of Romanian Nobles Submerged Near Naples Turned into Museums

A dive guide shows tourists a mosaic from Villa a Protiro, in the submerged ancient Roman city of Baiae, Pozzuoli near Naples, Italy, Aug. 18, 2021. (AFP Photo)
A dive guide shows tourists a mosaic from Villa a Protiro, in the submerged ancient Roman city of Baiae, Pozzuoli near Naples, Italy, Aug. 18, 2021. (AFP Photo)
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Villas of Romanian Nobles Submerged Near Naples Turned into Museums

A dive guide shows tourists a mosaic from Villa a Protiro, in the submerged ancient Roman city of Baiae, Pozzuoli near Naples, Italy, Aug. 18, 2021. (AFP Photo)
A dive guide shows tourists a mosaic from Villa a Protiro, in the submerged ancient Roman city of Baiae, Pozzuoli near Naples, Italy, Aug. 18, 2021. (AFP Photo)

Fish dart across mosaic floors and into the ruined villas, where holidaying Romans once amused in the party town of Baiae. Now, it's an underwater archaeological park near Naples.

Statues which once decorated luxury abodes in this beachside resort are now playgrounds for crabs off the coast of Italy, where divers can explore ruins of palaces and domed bathhouses built for emperors.

Rome's nobility were first attracted in the 2nd century BC to the hot springs at Baiae, which sits on the coast within the Campi Flegrei - a super volcanic region in northwestern Naples. Seven emperors, including Augustus and Nero, had villas here, as did Julius Caesar and Mark Anthony. The poet Sextus Propertius (47-14 BC) described the town as a place of vice, which was "foe to virtuous creatures."

It was where "old men behave like young boys, and lots of young boys act like young girls," according to the Roman scholar Varro (116-27 BC).

But the porticos, marble columns, shrines and ornamental fish ponds had begun to sink due to bradyseism, the gradual rise and fall of land due to hydrothermal and seismic activity.

The whole area, including the neighboring commercial capital of Pozzuoli and military seat at Miseno, were submerged. Their ruins now lie between four and six meters underwater.

"It's difficult, especially for those coming for the first time, to imagine that you can find things you would never be able to see anywhere else in the world in just a few meters of water," Marcello Bertolaso, head of the Campi Flegrei diving center, which takes tourists around the site, told AFP.

"Divers love to see very special things, but what you can see in the park of Baiae is something unique," he noted. The 177-hectare underwater site has been a protected marine area since 2002, following decades in which antiques were found in fishermen's nets and looters had free rein. A careful sweep of sand near a low wall uncovers a stunning mosaic floor from a villa which belonged to Gaius Calpurnius Pisoni, known to have spent his days here conspiring against Emperor Nero.



Balkans Snowstorm Leaves Tens of Thousands of Homes without Power, Causes Traffic Chaos

An aerial view of parked trolley buses during heavy snowfall in Sarajevo, Bosnia, Tuesday, Dec. 24, 2024. (AP)
An aerial view of parked trolley buses during heavy snowfall in Sarajevo, Bosnia, Tuesday, Dec. 24, 2024. (AP)
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Balkans Snowstorm Leaves Tens of Thousands of Homes without Power, Causes Traffic Chaos

An aerial view of parked trolley buses during heavy snowfall in Sarajevo, Bosnia, Tuesday, Dec. 24, 2024. (AP)
An aerial view of parked trolley buses during heavy snowfall in Sarajevo, Bosnia, Tuesday, Dec. 24, 2024. (AP)

Tens of thousands of homes in Bosnia were without electricity on Tuesday after more heavy snow and winds that also brought traffic chaos in neighboring Croatia and Serbia.

In Slovenia, the resumption of a search for an injured Hungarian hiker missing in the Alps north of the capital Ljubljana since Sunday was temporarily suspended because of strong winds.

Rescuers on Monday reached his female companion and transferred her to safety, but they were unable to locate the man and couldn't use a helicopter because of strong winds.

Throughout the Balkans authorities issued travel warnings as snow drifts closed some major routes, including sections of motorways in Croatia.

Bosnia, Serbia and Croatia banned the movement of heavy vehicles and imposed limited traffic levels on affected roads.

Parts of Bosnia faced a total halt of railway traffic because of the snow.

Bosnia's state power company described the situation as “extremely hard” in some areas of the country. The weight of heavy, moist snow brought down distribution lines which are hard to access due to snow drifts, the company said in a statement.

Regional N1 television reported dozens of vehicles were stuck in the snow for 10 hours in western Bosnia overnight before they could continue. Authorities in the nearby town of Drvar declared an emergency while struggling to clear snow.

The town's municipal council president Jasna Pecanac told the Drvar radio that the town has been cut off. “Many of our residents are stuck in the snow,” she said. “The situation is very hard as the snow continues to fall.”