Discovered in a Villa in the ruins of Pompeii |
Not sure if his intentions were as perfect as the result but the Museo is housed with 1,000s, literally 1,000s, of masterpieces dating from the period surrounding the building and ultimate death of the city of Pompeii - approximately 400BC to 79AD.
You can reference our earlier Pompeii blog for more specifics on 'how' many treasures did not disintegrate during the eruption.
The drive to Naples (or nipples as the boys liked to call it. And when I reference boys, I almost always include Calvin) was 111 kms from where we were staying. This distance can take anywhere from 1-3
hours in Italy, depending on the traffic and road construction. Italy’s road planning and construction is difficult to understand. We have been on four lane highways where we see a car every 10-15 minutes and we have been on two way streets connecting cities 100kms apart with cars lined up bumper to bumper the entire way. Our trek involved the latter and it took a full two hours to get to Naples. Now most 'bad' things and some 'good' things in Southern Italy are blamed on the Mafia - I'm not sayin' I know for sure, but I'm guessing the four lane highways to nowhere connect the 'connected' and the two way streets to major centers are not four lane highways due to some level of resistance to our friends in Sicily.
Most of the stuff was not bolted to the walls but hung freely for all to touch (which we didn't) or pocket (which we didn't). There were security guards everywhere but most could not make the run from one side of a room to another without an oxygen tank and almost all were focused on their crossword puzzles. Seriously, every security guard we saw was completing a crossword puzzle - perhaps they handed them out at the beginning of the day and there was some bonus associated with the most complete or correct. We did note that most security guards were one shave away from a Tony Soprano look alike. We spent a few hours wandering around this Museo admiring the work of artist's creations from over 2,000 years ago - Uffizi and the Louvre have nothing compared to this.
When it was time to leave the Museo, we had to tiptoe our way through a group of protestors. Not sure what they were protesting. There were 30+ Museo patrons gathered near the exit awaiting the removal of the protestors but the security guards never appeared (no surprise to us).
Hunger is a great motivator so Calvin picked up Devin and started to tip toe his way through the protestors Aidan, Noah and I followed to the heckling of the crowd which we didn't understand anyway but I did recognize a few swear words from my childhood playing with the Italian kids on the streets of Toronto.
We were hungry and were planning to trek to the world's first ever pizza restaurant for lunch. Yes, pizza started in Naples and the restaurant credited with starting it all is Antica Pizzeria del Michele. In June 1889, to honour the Queen consort of Italy, Margherita of Savoy, the Neapolitan chef Raffaele Esposito created the "Pizza Margherita," a pizza garnished with tomatoes, mozzarella cheese, and basil, to represent the colors of the Italian flag. He was the first to add cheese. The sequence through which flavored flatbreads of the ancient and medieval Mediterranean became the dish popularized in the 20th century is not fully understood.
We highly recommend this Museo but only after you have visited Pompeii so you can better appreciate where these works of arts resided prior to the Museo and how fortunate we are to be able to view them.
We did go to the "first Pizzeria” and once we realized we needed a number, we stood in line for about 40 minutes before being seated. A simple Margherita pizza (that was delicious by the way) at a modest restaurant at a modest price was a great ending to our day in Naples. If Pizza was not born here, it was perfected here.
It took us 30 minutes to navigate through 2 kms of streets to get to the highway. We made our way to the top of Mount Vesuvius for an incredible sunset. It was just us, a couple from Germany and the usual pack of stray dogs admiring a tremendous sunset (the dogs came up to us, sat at our feet and watched the sunset with us – most refined) and view of the valley below. In the east, a storm cloud built and we could see a lightning storm in the distance after the sun had set in the west. Another great ending to a crazy but wonderful day.

A whole pizza each?!?!?!!!
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Oh yeah - whole pizza each. Super thin, you can't even pick them up unless you roll the piece but you have to do it. Sooo good.
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