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Scottish tourist caught stealing stones from Pompeii site
Scottish tourist caught stealing stones from Pompeii site

The Herald Scotland

timea day ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Scottish tourist caught stealing stones from Pompeii site

The archaeological site said the incident occurred on Thursday evening during a guided night tour, one of the activities Pompeii offers to view the archaeological remains under artificial lighting. According to officials, a tour guide saw the man pick up stones from the pavement from one of the ancient city's streets near the Basilica and put them in his backpack. Security was immediately alerted, and the Carabinieri were notified. READ MORE: NHS worker who murdered his wife jailed for life Man jailed after £100k shed swindling scheme Man jailed over bid to import £5m of cocaine from Mexico to Scotland The man was located shortly thereafter outside the UNESCO World Heritage Site near the Villa dei Misteri EAV station, the site said. The artefacts were then recovered and returned to the archaeological site, officials added. Commenting, Gabriel Zuchtriegel, Director General of the archaeological park in Pompeii, said: "Congratulations and thanks to the attentive tour guide, to our excellent custodians and security staff, and to the Carabinieri for this collaborative effort to protect our heritage." Local Carabinieri commander Alessandro D'Auria also said that controls will be reinforced in the coming days due to the high influx of visitors during the summer. Pompeii is the only archaeological site in the world to provide a complete picture of the ancient Roman city and one of the most important and most visited cultural sites worldwide. After its discovery and excavation begun in 1748, later in 1997 the site was inscribed in UNESCO World Heritage List together with Herculaneum and Torre Annunziata (Oplontis). The main forum is flanked by a number of imposing public buildings, such as the Capitolium, the Basilica and temples and within the city there are also many public bath complexes, two theatres and an amphitheatre. Pompeii, alongside Herculaneum and villas near the Bay of Naples, were buried by the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in August 79 AD.

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