Did the Roman Emperor Augustus Die in This Vesuvian Villa?

News May 1, 2024

Somma Vesuviana Villa
(© 2024 Institute for Advanced Global Studies, University of Tokyo)
SHARE:
Somma Vesuviana Villa

TOKYO, JAPAN—According to a Live Science report, researchers led by archaeologist Mariko Muramatsu of the University of Tokyo suggest that they have uncovered the place where Augustus, the first Roman emperor (reigned 27 B.C.A.D. 14), died. The villa, located on the northern slopes of Mount Vesuvius about five miles from the modern town of Nola, was destroyed by the volcanic eruption in A.D. 79. A second villa constructed at the site in the second century was destroyed by a fifth-century eruption. This later villa was discovered in 1929, and it was suggested at the time that the site, known as Somma Vesuviana, could be the first emperor’s family home. Muramatsu said that the location corresponds with records left by the Roman historians Tacitus, Suetonius, and Cassius Dio, who noted that Augustus died at his family’s villa near Nola. “We now have clear evidence that shows…the eruption of A.D. 79 destroyed a building under the villa that we already have,” she said. So far, the excavation has uncovered a large room that was used as a warehouse and parts of the private baths. Additional investigation of the site may uncover evidence to link the first-century structure to Augustus, Muramatsu concluded. For more on excavations of the villa, go to “Letter from Vesuvius: Digging on the Dark Side of the Volcano.”

  • Features May/June 2024

    Alexander the Great’s Untold Story

    Excavations in northern Greece are revealing the world that shaped the future king

    Read Article
    (Veronika Pfeiffer/Alamy)
  • Letter from the Catskills May/June 2024

    Ghost Towns of the Ashokan Reservoir

    An archaeologist investigates how construction of New York City’s largest reservoir a century ago uprooted thousands of rural residents

    Read Article
    (Courtesy the New York City Department of Environmental Protection)
  • Artifacts May/June 2024

    Medieval Iron Gauntlet

    Read Article
    Switzerland Medieval Gauntlet
    (Courtesy Canton of Zurich)
  • Digs & Discoveries May/June 2024

    Ancient Egyptian Caregivers

    Read Article
    (Metropolitan Museum of Art)