First DNA from Pompeii victims tells story of volcanic disaster
UC Classics Professor talks to Nature about how science is informing history
Nature turned to a University of Cincinnati Classics professor to explain how science is helping to inform the history of ancient Pompeii, which was buried under ash by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 A.D.
Researchers at the University of Florence in Italy obtained DNA from bone fragments of five people who died in the eruption. Researchers created plaster casts of the victims of Pompeii from voids in the ash left behind after people were entombed in the disaster.
The casts of the victims long have captured the imaginations of historians and the public in personalizing a disaster of epic proportions.
New DNA analysis of one cast revealed that an adult cradling a child in a dying embrace was not the child's mother, as historians believed, but a man who was unrelated to the child.
The study was published in the journal Current Biology.
Video: UC Classics Professor Steven Ellis discusses the Cincinnati Museum Center's Pompeii: the Exhibition, which ran from February to July this year.
Classics Professor Steven Ellis, who was not part of the latest study, led excavations at Pompeii for UC's College of Arts and Sciences. The first volume of his book “The Porta Stabia Neighborhood at Pompeii” published last year chronicles the findings of his international research team's work.
“What this study does is to remind us that there are indeed myths there to be debunked,” Ellis told Nature.
Ellis said DNA analysis is invaluable in helping us understand the cultures at Pompeii and where residents came from. The DNA analysis confirmed that Pompeii’s population was genetically diverse, featuring descendants of immigrants from the eastern Mediterranean, Nature said.
“We’ve known it from the jewelry that they’re wearing, the cults that they follow, the decorations that adorn the houses,” Ellis said. “But we didn’t really know it from the body casts themselves. Now we do, and that's quite important information.”
Featured image at top: An illustration created with AI depicts the eruption of Mount Vesuvius at Pompeii. Illustration/Visilli
UC Classics Professor Steven Ellis has published the first volume of "The Porta Stabia Neighborhood at Pompeii" chronicling his international research team's excavations and findings in the ancient Italian city. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
Related Stories
Ohio nurses weigh in on proposed federal loan rule
December 12, 2025
Spectrum News journalist Javari Burnett spoke with UC Dean Alicia Ribar and UC nursing students Megan Romero and Nevaeh Haskins about proposed new federal student loan rules. Romero and Haskins, both seniors, were filmed in the College of Nursing’s Simulation Lab.
Bearcat Mascot, Cheer Team and scholarships help celebrate Decision Day
December 12, 2025
Cincinnati media organization provided news coverage of Decision Day activities at the University of Cincinnati on Dec. 10, 2025. Surprise announcements of the 2026 Marian Spencer Scholarship recipient occurred during the day.
UC awarded nearly $1 million to help fight infant obesity spike
December 12, 2025
University of Cincinnati researcher Cathy Stough spoke with Spectrum News1 about a nearly $1 million National Institutes of Health grant awarded to UC to help prevent infant obesity through early nutrition support and family-based interventions.