The ruins of Pompeii are extraordinary, but without expert context, much of their meaning is easy to miss. This two-hour express tour is led by an expert archaeologist and designed for travellers short on time. Follow a carefully planned route through Pompeii’s most important streets, homes, and public spaces, learning how Romans lived, worked, and socialised before the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. With a group of maximum 15 other people, this tour moves at a comfortable pace and allows for meaningful interaction with your guide. Recently reopened areas and ongoing excavations are woven into the experience, offering a deeper understanding of Pompeii as a living archaeological site. The tour concludes with the powerful plaster casts of the victims of the Mount Vesuvius eruption nearly 2,000 years ago, a moving reminder of the human stories behind the ruins.
Meet your guide, a professional archaeologist and group of 15 people maximum, and enter Pompeii through Porta Marina, the city’s ancient gateway, where Romans once arrived from the coast. As you step back in time, your guide will set the scene for the visit, including details about the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD that took the lives of its citizens. You'll have a few moments to observe the plaster casts of the victims. They're a sobering and deeply human perspective on the eruption that preserved the city in time.
From there, your guide will take you along Pompeii’s main thoroughfare, and everyday life before the eruption comes into focus. Stops at a bakery, a fast-food counter, and an early marketplace reveal how residents bought food, ran businesses, and moved through the city on a daily basis. And the Roman theatre and bathhouse are windows into leisure and social life in ancient Pompeii for both the elite and everyday citizens.
Then, you'll arrive at the Forum, the heart of civic life, framed by temples and public buildings. Explore the Basilica and Temple of Apollo as as your guide shares how politics, religion, and commerce shaped Pompeian society. In the distance, Mount Vesuvius provides a dramatic backdrop, foreshadowing the city's greatest tragedy.
In addition the public spaces, you'll also peek into private life at Pompeii. Visit to the House of the Tragic Poet featuring the famous Cave Canem mosaic and discover details about domestic design and social status. Throughout the route, your guide also points out recently reopened areas and ongoing