2,000-Year-Old “Snack Bar” Discovered in Pompeii

Archaeologists recently unveiled an Egyptian vase inside what was once a fast-food kitchen in Pompeii.
In a Nov. 6 Facebook post, the Pompeii Archaeological Park said the ceramic situla, or vase, was found in the Thermopolium in Regio V, an ancient snack bar.

“The glazed vessel, usually found in the Vesuvian area as a prized decorative object in gardens or representative spaces, was evidently reused here as a kitchen container,” officials said.
“Ongoing restoration analysis may eventually reveal what it once held.”
The Thermopolium was destroyed with the rest of Pompeii when Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD.

Though the excavation took place in 2023, officials didn’t announce the find until this month.
Archaeologists also uncovered other fascinating details about the Thermopolium, including its service areas and a modest upstairs apartment where the shopkeepers once lived.
“In the ground-floor kitchen, cooking tools [such as] mortars and pans and numerous wine amphorae of Mediterranean origin were found still in place,” the translated post added.
“We see here a certain creativity in decorating both sacred and everyday spaces — that is, the household altar and the kitchen — using objects that reflect the permeability and mobility of tastes, styles and likely also religious ideas within the Roman Empire,” Zuchtriegel said.
“And we see this phenomenon not at an elite level, but in the backroom of a popina, a street food outlet of Pompeii — in other words, at a middle- or lower-class level of local society, which nonetheless played a key role in promoting Eastern cultural and religious forms, including Egyptian cults and, later, Christianity.”
Officials also described the situla as a “testament to the commercial and cultural exchanges that characterized Pompeii.”

In recent months, the Pompeii Archaeological Park has unveiled other fascinating archaeology-related developments.




