Restoration begins on Pompeii's fragile ruins

In Florence, Uffizi ceiling fragment falls

2/6/2013
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ROME — Work has begun to shore up Pompeii's fragile ruins, following several collapses in the sprawling ancient Roman city.

The tourist attraction near Naples is chronically short of state funds. Helping pay for the latest restoration is more than $55 million in European Union funds, which an EU commissioner, Johannes Hahn, in Pompeii today, described as an important step toward rescuing the archaeological complex from modern-day ruin. In 2010, torrential rain caused the collapse of a wall in Pompeii, and a frescoed building where gladiators prepared for battle crumbled into a pile of dust.

In Florence, a piece of 16th-century frescoed ceiling in the Uffizi museum fell off today during work. No one was hit by the fragments, which gallery officials said would be put back in place.