Located just a few miles from Mount Vesuvius, Herculaneum was destroyed in October 79 after the massive volcano erupted, pouring out tons of ash and pyroclastic rock that also destroyed the much more famous city of Pompeii. However, while the more distant Pompeii was buried in ash by surprise, Herculaneum was evacuated ahead of time and the pyroclastic surge preserved large amounts of organic materials, such as wood and fibers used in construction.
Unfortunately, such carbonized materials have the appearance of charcoal, meaning that until recently, any hope of reading scrolls or other items preserved in the blast was distant at best.
Farritor’s program was mostly able to identify single letters, potential letters, or fragments of words, but it was able to spell out one entire word: πορϕυρας (porphyras), which is the Greek word for the color purple.
Several Greek letters identified in a charred papyrus scroll found at the Roman city of Herculaneum, which was buried by a volcanic eruption in 79 CE. The word πορϕυρας (purple) can be seen in the center line.
“When I saw the first image, I was shocked,” Federica Nicolardi, a papyrologist at the University of Naples in Italy and a member of the academic committee that reviewed Farritor’s findings, said in a news release.
“It was such a dream,” she said. Now, “I can actually see something from the inside of a scroll.”
The scroll is just one of hundreds found in the remains of Herculaneum, a seaside escape for the wealthy Romans of Neapolis, the ancient ancestor of modern-day Naples. Many of the scrolls are believed to be works by their original authors and unknown in the present day, where most of the texts that have survived since ancient times have been passed down through copies of copies. Some other partially identified scrolls contain works of philosophy by followers of the Greek philosopher Epicurus, who preached a life of moderation in order to tolerate a cruel world in which it was impossible to leave one’s mark.
Another is known to be by Philodemus, a little-known thinker to whom the scroll library might have belonged.