What Was Normal Life Like In Ancient Rome? | Absolute History

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июл 2024
  • Rome would never have made it into the history books without the backing of its huge military apparatus. The life and the incredible luxury the ancient city of over a million inhabitants enjoyed was only made possible through the exploitation of its colonies, a course of action that never would have been possible without its troops.
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    #AbsoluteHistory

Комментарии • 518

  • @artandminisbyvilma8116
    @artandminisbyvilma8116 2 года назад +461

    "They were dark and noisy, but the tenants were still forced to pay exorbitant rents". Sounds like San Francisco!

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 года назад +27

      The most sad part of this video is hearing that the everyday life back then was amazingly a lot like the life in the big modern city. 4:50 . Have we not learned anything about how to organise society in a better way, apparently not.

    • @artandminisbyvilma8116
      @artandminisbyvilma8116 2 года назад +23

      @@reasonerenlightened2456 Yes, exactly. Human beings remain the same throughout the ages.

    • @egodominustuus9167
      @egodominustuus9167 2 года назад +18

      Even more so like New York because N.Y. has more people, less space and doesn't have the same restrictions on building heights as S.F., and thus packs its people in more tightly.

    • @devinglis3179
      @devinglis3179 2 года назад

      Sounds like a narrative downplaying the advance ancient world. Building cheap? Today we build cheap. Back then they build with brick and stone
      Those cracks they speak of? Were not why the buildings fell appart. Those buildings were destroyed

    • @PerspectiveEngineer
      @PerspectiveEngineer 2 года назад +5

      Say gay!

  • @melindaweasenforth4383
    @melindaweasenforth4383 2 года назад +259

    I've learned more about history from these channels than anything I learned from grade school, middle school,high school and even college. This is how the modern world should handle schools

    • @mikecushing7276
      @mikecushing7276 2 года назад +10

      I could not agree with you more

    • @sailormoon2937
      @sailormoon2937 2 года назад +11

      Sure why not, I mean, might as well push em out and plop them in front of a TV.

    • @DC-jk9ts
      @DC-jk9ts 2 года назад +9

      The very reason why I home educate my children.

    • @gregbors8364
      @gregbors8364 2 года назад +12

      If you’re American, that’s totally not a surprise

    • @Starae336
      @Starae336 2 года назад +4

      @@DC-jk9ts well la de da..

  • @yankeetherebel
    @yankeetherebel Год назад +39

    11:40 that's so amazing! I'm sure the archaeologists working there are used to it, but seeing so much physical pieces of thousands of years old history is amazing!

  • @SaysThisCat
    @SaysThisCat 2 года назад +72

    So the landlord special is as old as Rome. Excellent.

    • @keenannorris3309
      @keenannorris3309 10 месяцев назад +1

      Older. The Roman landlords had to learn it from somewhere.

  • @frereM
    @frereM 2 года назад +42

    The narrator, through attractive voice quality and careful emphasis, adds greatly to this presentation. Well done!

  • @megret1808
    @megret1808 2 года назад +25

    The word ‘bankrupt’ comes from this time. A ‘bancus’ was the table on which a vendor displayed his wares. ‘Ruptus’ was to break. If the vendor broke the law his table was broken

    • @marcobassini3576
      @marcobassini3576 2 года назад +13

      The word "bankrupt" comes from the Italian spoken in Tuscany in the middle age (which evolved from Latin). The term is BANCAROTTA. Banca is the desk upon which merchants kept their business. Rotta means broken. BANCAROTTA = broken desk = the business is over.
      The oldest bank in history was Monte dei Paschi di Siena. The business started with the money on a desk (BANCA, or PANCA) in the public market square in Siena (Tuscany), to be gathered from small savers and lended for an interest to those needing it (rich merchants, Kings, Nations).
      The term BANCA, "bank" in English, "banco" in Spanish, is still used today.

  • @tombruner9634
    @tombruner9634 2 года назад +77

    I actually understood some of the Latin! It's been half a century since I studied it. Miss Morgan would be proud.

    • @jurjenbos228
      @jurjenbos228 2 года назад +6

      So did I, but subtitles would be useful. I especially liked "in Colloseum Leonas expectat" when he was arrested.

    • @cyninbend
      @cyninbend 2 года назад +6

      Latin was the subject from elementary school I used the most throughout school and right thru the bar exam--learning that vocabulary proved useful for much of my life, even traveling and reading signs in foreign languages.

    • @GypsyGirl317
      @GypsyGirl317 2 года назад +5

      @@cyninbend same here with my nursing, and with many other uses throughout my life - Latin was effectively the most useful subject I took at school! 😊
      I am an avid gardener and it is very useful there too.

    • @DH007-w2d
      @DH007-w2d 2 года назад +3

      @@GypsyGirl317 bonjour chère collègue. Indeed Latin can be useful as many botanics words are meaningfull...

  • @LauraSoly
    @LauraSoly 2 года назад +122

    I thought the current consensus on gladiatorial combat was that it was rarely to the death, since gladiators were highly trained, specialized athletes whose skills took years to develop. Criminals and the like were put to death there, yes, but that was a different situation.

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood 2 года назад +19

      I was watching a documentary about the history of the gladiators, and after that first gladiator rebellion, the gladiators were paid professional athletes. Meaning they agreed to work - fight - for so many years, and then they got paid. This was worth it to them, because most farmers, and other poor had such crap lives that the life of a gladiator was cool. Like pro-footbal, they got lots of women, good food, a lot of training at something they probably liked anyway, and if they made it, they were rich. So they might live through an event but be so wounded, they died lator. There were actually hammer men, who, when wounded gladiators were caried in, smashed the gladiators in the head to kill them quickly. It wasn't worth nursing the guy if he couldn't fight afterwards, and there was the added advantage that now they didn't have to pay him. Look at how football players are treated after they retire - American football - they are ignored to death. Same with the gladiators.

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood 2 года назад +9

      @FlyingMonkies325 They got paid a lot, and we're given land. However,pay was different then, not like getting paid each week. They got paid at the end of their 7 year contract. They contracted to fight 7 years and get paid at the end. If they couldn't meet their end of the bargen by fighting, they could pay the amount of money the owner would have made on them, and go free, or train other gladiators. If they were too wounded to train other gladiators, they would go to jail for fraud, because they didn't fulfill their contract, and probably fight a lion. But they mostly died from their wounds, even if they weren't killed in combat, because no medical care was given, because if they died, no one had to pay them.

    • @JS-wp4gs
      @JS-wp4gs 2 года назад +12

      No, the people who claim it wasn't frequently to the death have no idea what they are talking about and failed to do even basic research. They fail to understand there were two main kinds of gladiators, the ones that would be properly trained, treated well and have considerable expense put into training and keeping in good condition. Those are the ones who were kept alive as often as possible. Then you had the bargain bin gladiators that were mostly poorly trained slaves with the bare minimum of expense put into that got the short end of the stick and frequently were put into matches that ended with their deaths. That was the point, to give audiences the bloody fights that would keep them coming back without sacrificing your quality fighters to do it

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 года назад +6

      The most sad part of this video is hearing that the everyday life back then was amazingly a lot like the life in the big modern city. 4:50 . Have we not learned anything about how to organise society in a better way, apparently not.

    • @brotherjongrey9375
      @brotherjongrey9375 2 года назад +8

      Don't listen to these comments. Everyone sounds like experts but NONE of them are. Just like the guy on the video. A ton of this is misinformation

  • @v1e1r1g1e1
    @v1e1r1g1e1 2 года назад +57

    Rome's history is written in blood? EVERY nation's history is written in blood.

    • @cindygr8ce
      @cindygr8ce 2 года назад

      Right I live in the US and our "now" is written in blood. Not that was are alone in that.

    • @kono5933
      @kono5933 Год назад +1

      Maybe not Poland

    • @lisbetsoda4874
      @lisbetsoda4874 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@kono5933ask the Jews about that.

  • @maxgreen8901
    @maxgreen8901 2 года назад +19

    Life wasn't so different back then, except without internet and information easily available to the masses.

    • @Earthbound369
      @Earthbound369 2 года назад +2

      And NO PLASTIC.

    • @leonardli7397
      @leonardli7397 2 года назад +5

      Imagine if Ancient Rome had TikTok 😆

    • @billa8083
      @billa8083 Год назад +5

      Modern medicine and not drinking your own poop water also comes to mind

    • @morten1
      @morten1 Год назад +2

      Oh life was VERY different back then

  • @LindaCasey
    @LindaCasey 2 года назад +60

    The more things change, the more things stay the same.

    • @SandyNiki
      @SandyNiki 2 года назад +6

      And no matter how far back you go it's always the same.

    • @ellstark372
      @ellstark372 2 года назад +6

      And THATS why we need to learn from history and not destroy it!

    • @MrLoobu
      @MrLoobu 2 года назад +1

      The more confused we get, the more oxymorons we come up with.

    • @lorilogan6785
      @lorilogan6785 2 года назад

      @@ellstark372 we don't destroy history they do. Same slaves different era.
      We are just really just repeating history but the 1% are the real killers of today

    • @joycetaylor8057
      @joycetaylor8057 2 года назад +4

      Ain't that just the truth...the rich get richer, the poor get poorer and everything is for sale

  • @jaelge
    @jaelge 2 года назад +10

    Eight minutes in he´s telling us how low quality the insulae (apartments) were built, with little concern for quality and tended to fall down, all while standing in one that has lasted two thousand years.

  • @svetlanaandrasova6086
    @svetlanaandrasova6086 Год назад +32

    If history in schools was taught like this kids would all have good grades and know a lot more

    • @tonybiddle6668
      @tonybiddle6668 Год назад

      Some hope! All we got was a list of kings and wars, nothing whatever on how people actually lived. boring, Boring, BORING! I remember nothing except that while our Civil War was in the 17th century, in Scotland they waited another century before they had theirs, and of them all at the reformation calvin was the most depraved and vicious. How could anyone expect to get through their whole life without this ESSENTIAL information?

    • @yvonneemmert904
      @yvonneemmert904 Год назад +1

      You have to pay extra college fees to know interesting things!!! All knowledge is locked up - very little ancient history is taught in public schools!!!

    • @saragrant9749
      @saragrant9749 Год назад +2

      Perhaps. The most important part is for PARENTS to instill an emphasis on learning in their children though- that’s the biggest issue.

    • @keenannorris3309
      @keenannorris3309 10 месяцев назад +2

      You want your local high school to produce historical content of the same quality as a TV show that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to produce? Uh, ok…..

    • @randybobandy9828
      @randybobandy9828 8 месяцев назад

      Wrong

  • @UndeadPanda
    @UndeadPanda 2 года назад +80

    Absolutely love these documentaries

  • @crystalcastillo7575
    @crystalcastillo7575 Год назад +10

    Its so funny to me how even back in these tenant buildings had the 'landlord special' where the "cracks in the walls were painted over, & not repaired.." , I guess we are not so different after all....

  • @tylerdrolc4652
    @tylerdrolc4652 Год назад +4

    35:00 it’s crazy to think that the surgeons house in Pompeii was excavated in 1926 which feels like a long time ago but when you look at that 97 years relative to thousands of years that come before 1926 in Rome it’s nothing!

  • @sciencestuffs8978
    @sciencestuffs8978 2 года назад +10

    Ancient Rome is giving me Night City vibes 😂

  • @mattmcintosh3939
    @mattmcintosh3939 2 года назад +55

    "None were so bloodthirsty than the Romans" except maybe all the other European tribes of people who practised ritual sacrifice and gladiatorial combat as part of their belief and justice systems, or the Carthegenians who sacrificed their own children. I think Romans were fairly tame compared to their contemporary counterparts.

    • @sigurdrobertsson2231
      @sigurdrobertsson2231 Год назад +4

      But the Roman's literally practiced ritual sacrifice and gladiatorial combat too...

    • @eddie142
      @eddie142 Год назад +6

      Rome did most of that as well. How were they tame?

    • @gerriekipkerrie6736
      @gerriekipkerrie6736 Год назад +3

      But for the time it was normal so i gues it was normal. Things like mma are pretty normal right now so you see glatiators where like that for them.

    • @eddie142
      @eddie142 Год назад +1

      @@akapasokopo They crucified dogs. Supplicia Canum

    • @gamingvibes_youtube
      @gamingvibes_youtube Год назад

      @@akapasokopo they absolutely did. Look up the Lupercalia festival

  • @c.jameshansis6907
    @c.jameshansis6907 2 года назад +26

    I was in Rome and Pompeii and it was mind blowing. I say a lot of the places I was at.
    GOOD show.

    • @tab8896
      @tab8896 7 месяцев назад

      I would love to go one day ❤

  • @spiritualservicesgodbless7641
    @spiritualservicesgodbless7641 Год назад

    Thank you for the video.

  • @ItsACrazyWorld
    @ItsACrazyWorld 2 года назад

    Thanks for the info!

  • @Basauri48970
    @Basauri48970 Год назад +26

    I love these documentaries but still have to comment on the thick German accents of the actors; I just burst out laughing when Drusus started shouting at Petronius in his best führer style. Having said that, fair play to them for having to learn their lines in Latin, unlike your typical American produced show where they all speak English. A small detail in the scheme of things but says a lot about the care that went into producing this.

  • @connorkanephotography5114
    @connorkanephotography5114 9 месяцев назад +3

    “Harsh punishment awaits anyone who cheats the emperor” sounds like the IRS

  • @real_hello_kitty
    @real_hello_kitty 2 года назад

    Thanks! Very interesting.

  • @TaeSunWoo
    @TaeSunWoo 2 года назад +6

    I needed this Roman content in my life

  • @mattiaselftorp5481
    @mattiaselftorp5481 Год назад +6

    52 000 dead gladiators during the 100 day openjng event at Colosseum! That’s almost one every minute, if they were going 10 hours/day. More like a massacre than any kind of sports event, and a massive effort just finding people to go into what must have been some kind of meat grinder, not to mention cleaning crews. Also saw the number 400 000 total dead gladiators at Colosseum ever, so 25% of those seem to have died during the opening event. IF the number stated in this video is true…

    • @keenannorris3309
      @keenannorris3309 10 месяцев назад +1

      That’s one-eighth, not one-fourth

  • @AustriaGermany
    @AustriaGermany 6 месяцев назад

    Great Video

  • @reginaromsey
    @reginaromsey 2 года назад +20

    Fascinating! Oil amphora smashed because they couldn’t be cleaned. As the Jewish law required wine to be put in new wine skins.
    If some Roman had figured a way to use the amphora shards he would have had a continuous supply!

  • @JS-wp4gs
    @JS-wp4gs 2 года назад +8

    'Contracts did not exist'
    lolwut? romans *invented* contracts. they were a massively important part of how the state and economy operated

  • @AnnaAnna-uc2ff
    @AnnaAnna-uc2ff 2 года назад +5

    Thank you.

  • @ironicallyvague1265
    @ironicallyvague1265 2 года назад +52

    I'm very surprised no one has ever tried to recreate a perfect modern replica of the Colosseum & held televised reenactments of the "shows"

    • @ashleelarsen7765
      @ashleelarsen7765 2 года назад +6

      Andy Dick is "camping" with 'live-streamers' I would imagine it's like that.

    • @mangle40
      @mangle40 2 года назад +21

      It’s called football. 🤣

    • @crabslayer6947
      @crabslayer6947 2 года назад +8

      would you go to such an event? not sure I'd want to see it. CGI violence is enough for me

    • @gangurobitch
      @gangurobitch 2 года назад +4

      That's because there's reality TV now instead.

    • @ironicallyvague1265
      @ironicallyvague1265 2 года назад +6

      @@gangurobitch Really?
      You don't think millions & millions of people would visit a replica every year & watch choreographed fake gladiator battles?
      The building would pay for itself in a few months & it would be more popular than Disneyland.
      & that's off of merchandising Toys alone

  • @suzz1776
    @suzz1776 2 года назад +32

    Crazy to ponder about how in a few thousand years the people living then will be searching through our garbage heaps and rubble looking for how our society works.

    • @liam2386
      @liam2386 2 года назад +5

      they will know... unlike the romans we document our current times immensely and our preservation techniques have improved vastly

    • @alicenoyes4074
      @alicenoyes4074 2 года назад +2

      what a wealth of information, if CD's and DVD's and computers can be played and used . fortunately, paper books are not going away any time soon.

    • @lucialuciferion6720
      @lucialuciferion6720 2 года назад

      They will see images of klaus shwab and assume everyone was reptilian.

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 года назад +2

      The most sad part of this video is hearing that the everyday life back then was amazingly a lot like the life in the big modern city. 4:50 . Have we not learned anything about how to organise society in a better way, apparently not.

    • @egodominustuus9167
      @egodominustuus9167 2 года назад +8

      ​@FlyingMonkies325 Documentation was just as big a thing then as it is now - probably even bigger, given how much importance the Romans placed on their ancestral heritage. They already had immense libraries and kept meticulous records of things such as taxation (did you not watch the video?) It's just that majority of the material on which that documentation was kept, papyrus, doesn't hold up over the course of centuries or millennia.
      The same can be said for our current civilization. If it collapses, do you really think our paper and computer chips will hold up for hundreds or thousands of years against the elements.

  • @stevelauda5435
    @stevelauda5435 2 года назад

    SO very cool video

  • @real_hello_kitty
    @real_hello_kitty 2 года назад

    Thanks!

  • @janbarber7807
    @janbarber7807 2 года назад +2

    A spectacular doco!

  • @user-kj3lg5dc2z
    @user-kj3lg5dc2z 2 года назад

    Studying this for Latin and I have learned more than I did in history lessons

  • @greatunclestroller7179
    @greatunclestroller7179 2 года назад +141

    Short answer: better than the middle ages

    • @snowangell9100
      @snowangell9100 2 года назад +12

      I laughed harder than i should have at this. But ty

    • @desireedecerio7790
      @desireedecerio7790 2 года назад +4

      😂🤣😂🤣😂

    • @jacobmartinelli7496
      @jacobmartinelli7496 2 года назад +5

      slaves were slaves, though.

    • @sallymcherbi1996
      @sallymcherbi1996 2 года назад +3

      @@jacobmartinelli7496 well yeah, but still, generally speaking, better

    • @upartas7738
      @upartas7738 2 года назад

      @@sallymcherbi1996 it doesnt count if half the population are slaves and not considered people

  • @LittleJerry-kr8il
    @LittleJerry-kr8il 8 месяцев назад +1

    This is a good topic, today life is better than the life in history

  • @prestonphelps1649
    @prestonphelps1649 2 года назад

    well done

  • @cynthiawick216
    @cynthiawick216 2 года назад +47

    This video was not worth my time. There was little about the life of common people in Rome, although one of the archeologists working at another site sounded like he could’ve told us more, if allowed. The video jumped around in time and place and reiterated worn sayings about the Roman Empire as a whole. When one (archeologist?) toured a level of an apartment building 8 meters below the current surface, there was little to no explanation of which spaces were used for what, no site plan, & no evidence of which spaces were the purported (now empty) living quarters. There was a mention that poorer Romans did not have their own kitchens & so ate on the street, but then instead of explaining the various vendors of freshly cooked foods that were available to them, the narrator segued directly into saying that the criminals ate in the restaurants. There was also a storyline about some non-common people, including a tax-avoiding importer, a guard, and gladiators. I wanted to know about the ordinary people who lived in the apartment buildings, who weren’t criminals, poor or rich, who had to work (doing what?), do laundry, wash, etc. I didn’t get that.

    • @aka99
      @aka99 2 года назад +5

      Try the Videos created by the RUclips channel toldinstone

    • @cynthiawick216
      @cynthiawick216 2 года назад

      @@aka99 thx, I will

    • @cynthiawick216
      @cynthiawick216 2 года назад +1

      @FlyingMonkies325 perhaps the video should've said some of that

    • @cynthiawick216
      @cynthiawick216 2 года назад +1

      @FlyingMonkies325 I'm not doing research, just watching to learn

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 года назад +3

      The most sad part of this video is hearing that the everyday life back then was amazingly a lot like the life in the big modern city. 4:50 . Have we not learned anything about how to organise society in a better way, apparently not.

  • @kathyevans3251
    @kathyevans3251 2 года назад +6

    Beautifully done

  • @2_thumbs_up_baby
    @2_thumbs_up_baby 2 года назад +19

    Amazing historic city with so many buildings still standing. Well done doco

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 года назад +1

      The most sad part of this video is hearing that the everyday life back then was amazingly a lot like the life in the big modern city. 4:50 . Have we not learned anything about how to organise society in a better way, apparently not.

    • @Gnomes4u
      @Gnomes4u 2 года назад

      Same cults in the shadows rule everything that's why

  • @mvinch101
    @mvinch101 2 года назад +3

    Splendid

  • @BELCAN57
    @BELCAN57 2 года назад +13

    When we were visiting the Flavian Amphitheater someone asked our guide why the Italian government didn't rebuild it. He said that to do so would cost the equivalent of a second world countries Gross Domestic Product.

    • @Romanenthusiast
      @Romanenthusiast Год назад

      That's true! Also as a Roman historian I think it's so important to keep it as it is. It's journey over the past 2 millennium is so important to the Amphitheatre's story. If they were to rebuild it, it would destroy it's history and therefore it's historical value.

  • @whoeveriam0iam14222
    @whoeveriam0iam14222 2 года назад +6

    Amazing quality video

  • @brandensloncik4403
    @brandensloncik4403 3 месяца назад

    We are doomed to repeat history over and over again forever

  • @mariaefelices6543
    @mariaefelices6543 2 года назад

    Ty ms cdf

  • @Shervin86
    @Shervin86 2 года назад +2

    Am I the only one who thinks the narrator is Linus Roache (King Ecbart in Vikings)... 😅🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @Mike-fj2ln
    @Mike-fj2ln 2 года назад +3

    Life wasn't easy in Rome, then or now.

  • @reanukeeves5638
    @reanukeeves5638 2 года назад +4

    Impressive how the actors speaking latin fluently

  • @yQaT735M
    @yQaT735M 3 месяца назад

    The first 3 minutes of this video is something else. Gladiators weren't killed off en masse like the narrator stated. They had lengthy careers, were celebrities, and didn't kill each other off as often as people keep mentioning.

  • @bradleypeters_dj
    @bradleypeters_dj 2 года назад +1

    Great documentary but Jesus Christ you don’t need to put an ad every 5 minutes. It’s actually a joke that the ads added 5 extra minutes to this

  • @Rck10xx
    @Rck10xx 5 месяцев назад

    7:44
    Renters:
    we are not so different after all.

  • @HermicraftAddict
    @HermicraftAddict 2 года назад +3

    Cheap, small buildings where people get charged tons of money to live in it. My, how things have changed.

  • @Mari-rz5sh
    @Mari-rz5sh 2 года назад +3

    Time to keep our lamps full and wait on the Bridegroom.
    Time to abide in our Heavenly Father that HE may abide in us.
    Time to share the gospel of the Kingdom of GOD & be a disciple of Jesus Christ.
    To be baptized by the Comforter the Holy Spirit..
    Time to wait on HIM.
    Time to trust, lean, seek HIS wisdom, understanding, knowledge.
    Time to love unconditionally, forgive, & repent of all our sins..

  • @jm9371
    @jm9371 Год назад +1

    Petronius reminds me of someone I know.. LOL.

  • @golgumbazguide...4113
    @golgumbazguide...4113 Год назад

    Explore Golgumbaz with Guide Jahangir

  • @yvonneemmert904
    @yvonneemmert904 Год назад +1

    How did Romans
    construct buildings
    wearing togas and sandals?

    • @K-mj9qc
      @K-mj9qc 8 месяцев назад

      Exactly, no wonder it wasn't built in a day.

  • @antipodesman2
    @antipodesman2 10 месяцев назад +1

    Did Romulus and Remus learn Latin from their wolf mother 😂

  • @patrickbarrett5650
    @patrickbarrett5650 2 года назад +3

    It would be far less distracting if you were to dub the voices of the experts. Hearing a foreign language does nothing to authenticate the experts knowledge. Fascinating content, just that one small irritant.

    • @shahdareabi5539
      @shahdareabi5539 2 года назад +1

      just read the subtitles

    • @patrickbarrett5650
      @patrickbarrett5650 2 года назад

      @@shahdareabi5539 Obviously, but it distracts from the visual effects. I like to see the detail on historical documentaries.

    • @spsink
      @spsink 2 года назад

      @@shahdareabi5539 some of us listen without access to the screen. This makes the lazy use of foreign voices without translation a disappointment to another wise good documentary.

  • @sirgeorge8522
    @sirgeorge8522 2 года назад +3

    I bet the international archaeological students had a good time in the evenings

  • @eldon1980
    @eldon1980 8 месяцев назад

    52,000 died during the 100 day inaugural festival for the colosseum?
    520 a day? Hardly

  • @prestonphelps1649
    @prestonphelps1649 2 года назад +1

    The German Professor made a mistake. He states contracts were only oral and not recorded in any manner, thus necessitating " witnesses ". Not true. Contracts were recorded.

    • @cindygr8ce
      @cindygr8ce 2 года назад +1

      I'm sure there were plenty of oral ones but also recorded since the Romans recorded everything possible so he probably should have said both were correct. I mean FFS the Romans are where we get Soo much of what we have now. Even if the Romans stole it in the first place we didn't usually find that out until after we credited them.

  • @sisselhansen3915
    @sisselhansen3915 2 года назад

    Can you tell us something about Maximilian The Empirer??And Gobekli Tepe, in Turkey?

  • @debrajarnagin7101
    @debrajarnagin7101 2 года назад

    Wow a whole ship

  • @kelanmetzger3194
    @kelanmetzger3194 Год назад +1

    Rome is the best empire and one of the most interesting🤩🤩🤩🤩

  • @philipcallicoat5258
    @philipcallicoat5258 2 года назад +2

    "History consist of the lies everyone agrees with."
    Napoleon Bonaparte....

  • @Neddoest
    @Neddoest 2 года назад

    Does anyone know why the comments are off for the Absolute History video uploaded after this one? It’s about pubs in Ireland.

  • @orcvsivstitia7608
    @orcvsivstitia7608 6 месяцев назад

    Wait ... Jerry Rice wore 80 and the Roman Colosseum opened in the 80?

  • @janeknisely4383
    @janeknisely4383 2 года назад +7

    I just returned from Rome. They drive very small cars under crowded conditions with ultimate politeness. I did not see a single car with a dent.

    • @lisbetsoda4874
      @lisbetsoda4874 6 месяцев назад

      What are you talking about? There are barely any cars without a small ding here or there.

  • @alanfike
    @alanfike 2 года назад +4

    Assuming that the Romulus and Remus story is myth, why would anyone choose the story of a city's origin to be the result of fratricide? I'm trying to find the lesson or tradition in this fable.

    • @juliadagnall5816
      @juliadagnall5816 2 года назад +1

      Apparently the Romans themselves weren’t very sure. Most of the earliest writings that have survived to today referencing Romulus and Remus (like those by Cicero) are from the time of the Roman Republic which was a long, long way removed from the actual founding of the city and they were pretty darn uncomfortable with certain aspects of the story. Like, you know, fratricide and very convenient wolves. It really only makes sense when you consider that Rome spent a long time as an unremarkable town that attracted drifters and reprobates before it became anything close to a military superpower. By the time they were in a position to care about their origin mythology it was too late, they were stuck with it

    • @MrPesco
      @MrPesco Год назад +3

      Assuming that Eve's children is myth, why would anyone choose the story of humanity's origin to be the result of fratricide? I'm trying to find the lesson or tradition in this fable.

  • @cindygr8ce
    @cindygr8ce 2 года назад +1

    If you want to know how to make Garum watch tasting history with Max Miller he's the greatest well one of them

  • @chelebelle2223
    @chelebelle2223 2 года назад +1

    Life in the Big City, then and now.

  • @marymcintosh4406
    @marymcintosh4406 2 года назад

    You can’t tell me that was not Pauly Shore getting whipped by Patronius on the floor. The weasel in the grain😂

  • @ThomasBarsegian-co3du
    @ThomasBarsegian-co3du Месяц назад

    Rome's greatest invention (cement) and they were great with Stone and Marble...
    Which is aplenty in Italy..

  • @werrutkyupnext
    @werrutkyupnext 5 месяцев назад

    7:27 😹😹

  • @johnkovacs981
    @johnkovacs981 11 месяцев назад

    Where is story of Drusus and Petronius from? Movie, novel?

  • @foodtestingstrips
    @foodtestingstrips 2 года назад +1

    I feel tha title is misleading and the show drags on about unnecessary parts without conclusion. For example the discovery of the sunken ship was lacking on details. The story line cuts in and out of a fictional situation but without connection to the excavation.

  • @chicagofineart9546
    @chicagofineart9546 2 года назад

    Ox carts are that noisy at night? Why didn't they use pneumatic tires?

  • @drdavidtee
    @drdavidtee 2 года назад +1

    he makes a lot of claims but provides NO evidence to back them up

  • @jennilocke
    @jennilocke 2 месяца назад

    Tiny living space in a city where rent is far too high? Sounds eerily familiar, doesn't it?

  • @KhaoticDeterminism
    @KhaoticDeterminism Год назад

    mean girls x ♾️
    legit game of thrones.

  • @simonf8902
    @simonf8902 2 года назад +2

    Amphoras ??? Surely you mean amphorae.

  • @JuanAguilar-ly7di
    @JuanAguilar-ly7di 11 месяцев назад +1

    I don't get it. He says The Colosseum was inaugurated in 80AD and festivities ran for 100 days. During the festival 52,000 gladiators died. It seems like a overinflated number. If we multiply 100 days by 24 hours and get 144,000 minutes. You divide that by 52,000 and you get 2.7 minutes. It means if they fought 24/7 for 100 days, every 2.7 minutes 1 gladiator had to die. It seems fishy. I mean 24 hours of non-stop fight and festival?

    • @lisbetsoda4874
      @lisbetsoda4874 6 месяцев назад

      It is possible that 20 were fighting at the same time - and there would be only one winner. I think that happened as well.

  • @floshi6519
    @floshi6519 Год назад

    *When Rome was conquering Europe your people lighted fire with stones.*

  • @wm.h.9123
    @wm.h.9123 Год назад

    PLEASE tell me there isn’t going to be an ad every 5 f***in minutes

  • @forgottenknowledge8917
    @forgottenknowledge8917 2 года назад

    So how did they build those buildings with horse and buggy?

  • @lynnflynn5591
    @lynnflynn5591 2 года назад +1

    The narrator sounds like the actor, Ronald Coleman.

  • @TedBronson1918
    @TedBronson1918 Год назад +1

    Aw hell... I wanted to see Petronius become the lunchtime entertainment before the fights started up again. You choose the worst time to end your show, like so many others.

  • @MzuMzu-nx1em
    @MzuMzu-nx1em 2 года назад

    What about lazialus?

  • @nils920
    @nils920 2 года назад

    "These Romans are crazy!"
    Obelix

  • @Baskerville22
    @Baskerville22 2 года назад +6

    Those lead water-pipes must have affected the health of those wealthy enough to have them delivering water to their houses.

    • @cyninbend
      @cyninbend 2 года назад

      The fall of the Roman Empire had a lot to do with lead poisoning--just as we fall now and learn that huge numbers of American cities have pipes like Flint, Michigan, poisoning their people, damaging their brains, lowering their IQs. Creating more Trump voters.

    • @keenannorris3309
      @keenannorris3309 10 месяцев назад

      It probably contributed to the aggression and violence so prevalent amongst the elites back then.

  • @doyleself6849
    @doyleself6849 2 года назад

    History I like it. Get lost in pursuit of it. You forget how we are going forward. Keep that in mind. Thanks. As long as you remember the old days never existed.

  • @carloshenriquebins5113
    @carloshenriquebins5113 2 года назад

    Ancient romans used to say that Rome was the light of the world.It wasn't the light but the darkness

    • @eddie142
      @eddie142 Год назад

      It was neither. Most of Europe and Northern Africa was brutal and expansionist.

  • @Ddub1083
    @Ddub1083 2 года назад +1

    lol absolute history is now disabling comments when people are upset that their video titles are not representative of the video. again, be better.

  • @charlesxix
    @charlesxix 2 года назад

    It was good first time round but not for 2nd or 3rd.

  • @flynspaceball6445
    @flynspaceball6445 7 месяцев назад

    Is it only in modern days, people began to learn about history? Did people in the past try to learn history as well?

  • @PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim
    @PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim 2 года назад +1

    35:26"The rich got richer and the poor got poorer".
    Just like in Tory UK and America then.

  • @smeedatelierwijtvliet576
    @smeedatelierwijtvliet576 Год назад

    When a child got pas the age of 12 they could reach 60 without that much issues. 40:25.
    Boys reaching the age of 12 were celebrated, a ceremony of the removal of the bulla. An amulet thought to protect children.

  • @user-qq3hj6pl8o
    @user-qq3hj6pl8o Год назад +1

    guys you made a mistake in this video you kept calling philadelphia “ancient rome” whatever that means 🙄🙄