Rome Seeks Funds to Save Nero’s Domus Aurea

News June 19, 2014

SHARE:
Domus-Aurea-Conservation
(Howard Hudson, via Wikimedia Commons)

 

ROME, ITALY—Italy is seeking funds to restore the Domus Aurea, Nero’s “Golden House,” before it collapses. The palace, which has been closed to visitors for the past ten years, sits beneath a park whose mature trees have roots in the palace’s vaulted roof. Water from the heavy layer of soil seeps into the bricks and damages the frescoes. Archaeologists from Italy’s cultural heritage ministry have suggested removing the trees and tons of the soil, in order to construct a new, lighter garden designed to protect the ancient structure. “The state has very limited resources unfortunately. This is an opportunity for a big company to sponsor an extraordinary project, which will capture the world’s attention. It would be scandalous if no one comes forward,” Dario Franceschini, Italy’s minister for cultural heritage, told The Telegraph

 

  • Features May/June 2014

    Searching for the Comanche Empire

    In a deep gorge in New Mexico, archaeologists have discovered a unique site that tells the story of a nomadic confederacy's rise to power in the heart of North America

    Read Article
    (Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC/Art Resource, NY)
  • Letter from Philadelphia May/June 2014

    City Garden

    The unlikely preservation of thousands of years of history in a modern urban oasis

    Read Article
    (Courtesy URS Corporation, Photo: Kimberly Morrell)
  • Artifacts May/June 2014

    Roman Ritual Deposit

    Read Article
    (Archaeological Exploration of Sardis)
  • Digs & Discoveries May/June 2014

    A Brief Glimpse into Early Rome

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Dan Diffendale/Sant'Omobono Project)