ROME (AP) - Workers renovating a rugby stadium have uncovered a vast
complex of tombs beneath Rome that mimic the houses, blocks and streets of
a real city, officials said Thursday as they unveiled a series of new
finds here.
Culture Ministry officials said that medieval pottery shards in the city
of the dead, or necropolis, show the area may have been inhabited by the
living during the Dark Ages after being used for centuries for burials
during the Roman period.
It is not yet clear who was buried in the ancient cemetery, but
archaeologists at the still partially excavated site believe at least some
of the dead were freed slaves of Greek origin.
“It’s a matter of a few weeks to discover what is down there,” said
archaeologist Marina Piranomonte. “But it’s something big; it looks like a
neighborhood.”
A separate dig in the north of the city has turned up the tomb of a
nobleman who led Rome’s legions in the second century A.D.
The mausoleum was covered in mud during a flood of the river Tiber, which
collapsed most of the monument but helped preserve exquisite decorations,
marble columns and inscriptions from plunderers and the ravages of time.
Writings at the site led experts to identify the tomb as belonging to
Marcus Nonius Macrinus, one of the closest aides and generals of the
Emperor Marcus Aurelius during his campaigns against Germanic tribes in
Northern Europe.
Other spectacular discoveries were also unveiled at the news conference at
the Culture Ministry.
Archaeologists restoring the imperial residences on the Palatine Hill, in
the heart of ancient Rome, believe they have discovered the underground
passageway in which the despotic Emperor Caligula was murdered by his own
guards.
The hill, which his honeycombed with ruins of palaces and villas, has also
yielded frescoes and black-and-white mosaics in the first century B.C.
home of a patrician, the ministry said in a statement.
Separately, experts working in Castel di Guido on the outskirts of Rome
have enlarged their dig at a previously known complex of country villas
owned by Rome’s rich and powerful, uncovering fountains, baths and a
cistern, the statement said.
Archaeologists will keep working at the digs to make them accessible to
visitors. Officials plan to build a museum next to Macrinus’ tomb, which
will also offer a virtual reconstruction of the site.

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