As Mount Vesuvius erupted 2,000 years ago, two doomed residents of Pompeii clutched each other in their final moments.
Trapped in an eternal embrace, they have come to be known as ‘The Two Maidens’.
However, new DNA analysis on the bodies suggests that the iconic pair might need a new name.
Researchers from the Max Planck Insтιтute found that at least one, if not both of the people were men.
David Reich, one of the authors of the new study, said: ‘A pair of individuals thought to be sisters, or mother and daughter, were found to include at least one genetic male.
‘These findings challenge traditional gender and familial ᴀssumptions.’
While the true nature of their relationship remains unclear, experts say they may have been gay lovers.
Mᴀssimo Osanna, superintendent of the Pompeii archaeological site, previously said: ‘The fact that they were lovers is a hypothesis that cannot be dismissed.’
As Mount Vesuvius erupted 2,000 years ago, two doomed residents of Pompeii clutched each other in their final moments. Trapped in an eternal embrace, they have come to be known as ‘The Two Maidens’
Researchers from the Max Planck Insтιтute found that at least one, if not both of the people were men
Pompeii was covered in ash when Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD, killing everyone in its path and burying the area.
The town was forgotten until its rediscovery in the 1700s when researchers found dozens of bodies that had been preserved from the soot and ash that covered the streets, buildings and people.
The victims’ soft tissue had decayed over the millennia, but their outlines remained intact and were recovered by filling the cavities with plaster – preserving their DNA.
When the bodies were first discovered, researchers looked at their positioning in relation to each other as well as the location which led to ᴀssumptions about their relationships to one another.
During the 1914 Pompeii excavations, nine individuals were discovered in a home’s garden, two of whom were found in an embrace.
At the time, archaeologists said there were three possibilities for their relationship: they were mother and daughter, two sisters or lovers.
However, the new study suggests that at least one of the pair was actually a man.
Writing in their study, published in Current Biology, the researchers said: ‘CT scanning of skeletal elements preserved within the casts led to an age estimate of 14–19 for individual 21 and a young adult age for individual 22.
During the 1914 Pompeii excavations, nine individuals were discovered in a home’s garden, two of whom were found in an embrace
‘The nuclear genetic analysis was successful only for individual 22 and revealed that he was male, excluding the possibility that the pair of victims were sisters or mother and daughter.’
While the nature of their relationship remains unclear, previous studies have suggested that they may have been gay lovers.
For example, experts point out their suggestive positioning, with one’s head resting on the other’s chest.
However, experts have previously said that their relationship can ‘never be verified.’
‘When this discovery was made, that they were not two young girls, some scholars suggested there could have been an emotional connection between the pair,’ said Professor Stefano Vanacore, who led a research team examining the pair back in 2017.
‘But we are talking about hypotheses that can never be verified.
‘What is certain is that the two parties were not relatives, neither brothers nor a father and son.’