Very interesting as always! I been many times to the Palatine Hill and of course the Roman forum. Thanks for sharing the "new" parts we have never have never seen. It comes in my mind how dark it must have been in all those high ceilings halls at night! Good job again 👏 👍
Would you like to watch the Ancient Cities and Archeology video, whose visuals, videos and music were prepared with "Artificial Intelligence"? ruclips.net/video/Oqy8v8RnsZ0/видео.html
Darius, just want to say how much I apreciate you and your team behind the scenes for creating these amazing videos. I long to someday visit these sites, but these videos are certainly the next best thing! Thanks again!
Would you like to watch the Ancient Cities and Archeology video, whose visuals, videos and music were prepared with "Artificial Intelligence"? ruclips.net/video/Oqy8v8RnsZ0/видео.html
I also appreciate these videos enormously. I hope to be able to go to Rome one day with my daughters (spent two weeks there as a teenager with my Latin class, but (surprisingly...) all our focus was not on the archaeology). One would have to live in Rome for ages to be able to see it "all". These videos (in addition to providing education an elation (I don't know what else to call it, what I experience when I see these old remains that fascinate me whatever I might think about the Roman mentality)) give a glimpse into more places than we will be able to visit, and will make it easier to decide what places to focus on when we (hopefully) finally get there. So I also say thank you, and I hope the videos will continue to pop up. (For the last few days, they have also provided some escape from the misery of the flu.)
Amazing! Italy is my favorite country I have ever visited! I am fascinated by its culture, and incredible history! Thanks for the channel you re doing!
Very exciting video, Darius. I'm a big fan of history in general but certainly ancient history (Greece/Rome- our western heritage). I've only been to Rome and the 'Forum' once...I loved it! Now, I can't wait to see the more expansive aspects now opened, that you're covering here, of the Forum. You do a great job for the one's of us that 'get off' on our historical past, that has indelibly shaped the world we live in. Amazing, how many people remain unaware of the richness and lessons (from horrible to magnificent) that the historical past has to teach us all. Keep up the good work.
Thank you - and we will add soon on AncientRomeLive RUclips a video on the same sites that covers more of the history … 2 channels with lots of overlapping insights - enjoy!
I like how you always enthousiasticly treat these places from antiquity. You really love Rome and its history . Rome's tourist office (and government) will be glad with you, haha. But I am too. Always an interesting treat with nice information. Thank you Darius.
Thanks Darius. I notice a stylistic similarity between this palace and Tiberio’s Villa Jovis on Capri. What a statement of power this Palace must have been looming over the Forum.
I am sorry to say this but the structure Darius is visiting is not actually the Domus Tiberiana but its (very impressive) substructure. The actual Palace was built on top of it and doesn't exist anymore. Anyhow it's a fascinating place to visit!
Que gran trabajo el de arqueólogos, restauradores, y reconstructores. Tan buen trabajo como el tuyo al darnos a conocer todas las novedades de años de investigación y trabajo interdisciplinar. Gracias y felicitaciones...
Fabulous. Part of the Palatine I’ve not been able to explore as it was always closed off. Tremendous that such an important part of the Palatine is now accessible and so well presented including the museum spaces. The authorities looking after the most important location in Western Europe appear to be doing a fine job.
Fantastic, how they made this place accessible…and in a modern way! Looking forward to visit it! Thx for you infinite knowledge, i will use it when i will guide other people!!!!🎉
Absolutely fantastic. Thank you Darius for again showing us and educating us with the very first views of new discoveries/reopening of new sites in Rome. Totally the best. i have a question (as usual!): in the reconstruction of the upper floor arch @1:43, 3:15, and 5:24 why the upper arch made by Hadrian is in a Mesopotamian-Persian style (the arch itself resting on protruding base, rather than being a smooth continuation of it in a Roman way?)
@@DariusArya But Dr Arya you do admit a great deal of Greek is in there, so how can it all be Roman? The recessed style of arch is not Roman either, but the common Mesopotamian style, going back to Sumerian, Babylonian, and ultimately Parthian and Sasanian arches. They are still here to be seen even today, including those found at Erech, Uruk, Babylon and ultimately, Ctesiphon. Either the reconstruction there in the Tiberian comlex is wrong, or Hadrian intentionally incorporated that into his arches. The Parthians were using recessed arches at the time, but not Romans. That is why I am baffled.
Thank you for this video, Roman architecture always fascinates me. They were so advanced for there time and a lot of what they built was marvels of human engineering. Heck we would struggle to build some of the stuff they built today. (not necessarily because of difficulty due to our modern technology but because of cost, if we had to build it like they did then i doubt it would even get built today lol.) There buildings were almost all like art pieces and have held up remarkably well for what they have been through. That shot at 7:01 ish made me almost feel like I could look back in time and see a glimpse of ancient Rome right before me. That whole time period is fascinating to me.
thank you- you will doubtless like RUclips.com/@ancientromelive that I direct, as well as the articles on ancientromelive.org. Sign up for the newsletter for links to free lectures and live streams.
@@DariusArya I have actually already been watching the stuff on ancientromelive channel, however I did not know about the site. I will defiantly check that out.
Finally returning to Rome in February, after 10 years away. I've taken 2 of your Ancient Rome tours in 1995 and 2002. You're still amazing, thank you for these videos. One question, what is a Super Ticket and how do I get it in advance.
Certainly a spectacular site, and it is nice to have a preview. The videos would be better if the same generalizations weren't repeated, and there was more actual information. Just telling us that we can now visit it and experience it is fine, but how about some dates, or comments on construction or materials, information that puts it in context in time to other adjacent areas. And no person with a Ph.D should use the term, 'regular basis'.
What I don't understand is all the tourists who just casually stroll by Darius while he's standing there explaining everything inch of the structure in fascinating detail!! 😂
Thank you for these videos, can't wait for my next trip to Rome ❤ Would be really interested to hear from you a bit more about Roman food and the trade routes involved (sorry if you've already covered this). I heard that Roman coinage had been found as far away as the Kerala coast?
Advice. Leave lots of time to visit the forum and palatine hill. Also go pretty early because some things close earlier than the stated end time of the area. I was there last week and went at 2 and didn’t have enough time for all supersites
I can't wait to visit Italy again. Sad how the politics have gone but this isn't a channel for that so I'll just look forward to visiting all these amazing places you show us :) I'm glad more and more areas are opening to the public. We'll probably have to book a week in Rome this time! My girlfriend really wants to go to Florence again. Maybe we can do that as a weekend trip :)
I am curious about the square holes you see in the masonry in many of the ancient walls throughout Italy. Are these anchor points for a marble façade, or some kind of drainage portal maybe? I have seen stonework installed on modern high rise buildings that used heavy gauge wire to tie the blocks back to the steel structure. I know that a lot of marble was cannibalized for use on newer buildings. This place must have been spectacular in it's time.
Absolutely fascinating. I'd love to get my broken beautox (credited to Walter Matthau in "Ensign Pulver" with Burl Ives) to Rome and explore the history of western civilization and the history of Ancient Rome. But I don't have the money, and my arthritis is so bad that I do almost all of my galavanting on an electric scooter 🛵, sometimes with a walker. And like Mary Beard said in "Meet the Romans" episode 2, "where did you go to the lavatory?" Few things are worse than getting caught between places with no place to go, and apparently, none of the ancient Roman communal toilets are functioning. Oh, boy.
I visited the forum in 1987 and yeah, it wasn't open back then. I didn't even know it existed, we couldn't even get far into the forum if I remember correctly, and see the Colleseum from the outside. About the only thing we could sort of go into was the Vatican, and maybe the Parthenon. We only had a day, and ended up sleeping in an abandoned ATM booth outside the trainstation through the night until the train station opened in the morning. Not a fun experience in a city, trying to stay safe inside an ATM booth that no longer had an ATM in it. My 2 years of Latin and Roman History in high school were not particularly useful.
Thank you for this tour, Darius. Exciting and surprising. How much of this complex was excavated or still covered in 2014? Even from distance I don't remember seeing so many and big structures on this side of the Palatine Hill. I must go and see it. [Edit] Now my memory starts to work, I do remember some huge structures, which I probably forgot because they weren't that interesting when I didn't have access to explore them. Now I do. Thanks again.
Uncovered and visible for a long time - and now you can explore the substructures - a huge new area for the public (which had always been out of reach!)
Thank you for your hard work. I was at the Palatine last year, and there were frescoas everywhere. My main question was how the artists painted so much detail in those dark interior rooms. Did they use oil lamps?
Thank you for this video. I'm touring Rome next week. How and where do you buy the tickets for the Domus Tiberiana? The website doesn't have it listed. Thank you!
I really appreciate your work, but please consider investing in a gimbal stabilizer so that your wonderful videos aren't so jumpy and hard watch. Thanks.
And what is that exactly? Ownership due to her name on a bronze pipe… the house of Augustus and Livia that you can visit are modern constructs - entirely dismantled in recent scholarship… we will do a video on it on AncientRomeLive
There is one thing that strikes me with curiosity, though. I remember some articles and videos that discussed Rome's little scuffles with Persia. I'm afraid your ethnicity and ancestry has become a not very big secret, especially with a name like Darius Arya. Have you ever thought of doing something about the Persian empire and Persepolis? How about a little information about the "Palace of the Lilies", Shushan, or Susan?
In my opinion they should do a better job at somewhat filling in the gaps and such in order to strenghten the building. This is a part of European heritage keeping that I don't fully agree with. I'm not saying fully rebuild it, but in part I do feel that we need to do a better job at reconstructing what is left with the materials we have in order to stabalise, strenghten and also restore the damage that was done to these buildings. The Asian way of looking at things of heritage is more apropriate in my opinion, because they renovate their buidlings to a prestine condition, and although you can discuss about "authenticity", it's a matter of showing respect to your heritage by keeping it in a shape that the folks of those days would still recognize. That's how they look at things. Their goal is to make sure that if we would bring for example a Roman to our time, that they would instantly recognize the building. And even if we don't do that. In a lot of cases, just maintanance is needed. I see a lot of walls where the brickwork is super weak and needs to be redone otherwise it will fall down within 100 years. They should do a better job at strenghtening these ruins. If you're not going to rebuild it, at least maintain it better.
Bronze coins under Tiberius? Weren't they still on real silver and gold coinage in this period? But it can of course be one of those seeds where ypu can show the empire bore its eventual demise from the very beginning.
One problem with research monopolization of science like archeology in few hands is that like in this cases the true story is not faithful but paradigmatic depending on the author political point of view of his finnancing companies like AG3ND4-2030 W0K3 1NCLUSIV3 kind. Only the colective conscience of humanity(Carl Jung) is the path to wisdom and knowledge so to speak. For example some of the people participating in psycoanalitical regression sessions like those of Brian Weiss(also a professional medical psychiatrics) have deep understanding of the life in Ercolano before 79 AD. You need an interdisciplinary approach to find many more discoveries. I like your research. However could be better if you listen to others that have their stories to tell.
Very expansive ticket s to See just Ruins, because you Must have a big fanatasiac Imagination to reconize those Building s that was long time ago , no compltete restiration or reconstruction ,, i visited Pompéi and Hercolaneum ( Hercolano ) and there is the same Problem, an absolut minimal Restoration just make Money with the tickets.
I’d like your work better if you let us look in-depth to the diverse roots of these mosaics. Was it the Picts that contributed the earliest mosaics? Could you make a longer exploration with facts about each- it’s too gorgeous to skim over as you did here. ❤❤❤
Tiberius,Agustus, Domitian & Hadrian! Doesn't get more Roman than that! Glad the public has access to this great history of the Emperor's!
I agree!!
I love how you always bring me to a place no one else ever has. Wonderful history.
I love to share these stunning sites- real history.
Very interesting as always! I been many times to the Palatine Hill and of course the Roman forum. Thanks for sharing the "new" parts we have never have never seen. It comes in my mind how dark it must have been in all those high ceilings halls at night! Good job again 👏 👍
It's great when old is new again! Will cover more on the domus at ancientromelive.org.
Hard to believe so much of the palace still exists. Thanks for the look inside.
Impressive substructures
Does not look too crowded. Not much to see folks except foundations! Visit Nashville, TN in the USA for a reproduction of the Greek Parthenon!
Would you like to watch the Ancient Cities and Archeology video, whose visuals, videos and music were prepared with "Artificial Intelligence"?
ruclips.net/video/Oqy8v8RnsZ0/видео.html
@@iamgermane united states sucks compared to europe
Darius, just want to say how much I apreciate you and your team behind the scenes for creating these amazing videos. I long to someday visit these sites, but these videos are certainly the next best thing! Thanks again!
Thank you!!
Would you like to watch the Ancient Cities and Archeology video, whose visuals, videos and music were prepared with "Artificial Intelligence"?
ruclips.net/video/Oqy8v8RnsZ0/видео.html
I also appreciate these videos enormously.
I hope to be able to go to Rome one day with my daughters (spent two weeks there as a teenager with my Latin class, but (surprisingly...) all our focus was not on the archaeology). One would have to live in Rome for ages to be able to see it "all". These videos (in addition to providing education an elation (I don't know what else to call it, what I experience when I see these old remains that fascinate me whatever I might think about the Roman mentality)) give a glimpse into more places than we will be able to visit, and will make it easier to decide what places to focus on when we (hopefully) finally get there.
So I also say thank you, and I hope the videos will continue to pop up.
(For the last few days, they have also provided some escape from the misery of the flu.)
I've been telling myself I don't need to do the Forum again on my next trip to Rome. but you've convinced me I have to anyway. Thanks for the update!
You will love it - and another related video on the site on AncientRomeLive dropping soon
I will be heading to Rome next year. Can't wait to see this!!
8 years ago during my Rome visit, the fourm was closed too! Another reason to return, what an amazing restoration for public use!
Does not look too crowded. Not much to see folks except foundations! Visit Nashville, TN in the USA for a reproduction of the Greek Parthenon!
Amazing! Italy is my favorite country I have ever visited! I am fascinated by its culture, and incredible history! Thanks for the channel you re doing!
Thank you!
So mindblowing that you can now walk at a place you know for ceratin Tiberius, Vespasianus, and Hadrian walked
Magnificent! Thanks for those beautiful pictures of Domus tiberiana.
Thank you too!
Fantastico! Love the fountain brings the site alive. Grazie Prof.Arya.
A bit loud!!
How fantastic. I was in Rome years ago and seeing this is so incredible
Come on back for newly opened sites!!
Very exciting video, Darius. I'm a big fan of history in general but certainly ancient history (Greece/Rome- our western heritage). I've only been to Rome and the 'Forum' once...I loved it! Now, I can't wait to see the more expansive aspects now opened, that you're covering here, of the Forum. You do a great job for the one's of us that 'get off' on our historical past, that has indelibly shaped the world we live in. Amazing, how many people remain unaware of the richness and lessons (from horrible to magnificent) that the historical past has to teach us all. Keep up the good work.
Thank you - and we will add soon on AncientRomeLive RUclips a video on the same sites that covers more of the history … 2 channels with lots of overlapping insights - enjoy!
Darn, missed it by 10days! This area was what most fascinated me on my visit to Rome and wanted to see more. Thanks for the tour. 😉
Next time!
Darius, Each of your videos is like opening a Christmas present...and the whole world gets to share it. Thank you!
Wow, thank you!
Thank you Darius. You are second to none. We Will explore the domus in Novembre
Give a holler when in Rome
I like how you always enthousiasticly treat these places from antiquity. You really love Rome and its history . Rome's tourist office (and government) will be glad with you, haha. But I am too. Always an interesting treat with nice information. Thank you Darius.
Many thanks!!
I agree, and that enthusiasm affects (infects?) me too, I get a feeling of excitement, eager to see the sites myself.
Another great video. Thank you Darius.
Thank you!
Thanks Darius. I notice a stylistic similarity between this palace and Tiberio’s Villa Jovis on Capri. What a statement of power this Palace must have been looming over the Forum.
So amazing! It’s really a “A look of the Past”!
Huge thanks to you Sir, we were able to scrutinize every important details of HISTORY🧐
Thank you
I am sorry to say this but the structure Darius is visiting is not actually the Domus Tiberiana but its (very impressive) substructure. The actual Palace was built on top of it and doesn't exist anymore. Anyhow it's a fascinating place to visit!
Que gran trabajo el de arqueólogos, restauradores, y reconstructores. Tan buen trabajo como el tuyo al darnos a conocer todas las novedades de años de investigación y trabajo interdisciplinar. Gracias y felicitaciones...
Great video Darius. What amazing place. Thanks for share. Regards ;)
Thank you!
Fabulous. Part of the Palatine I’ve not been able to explore as it was always closed off. Tremendous that such an important part of the Palatine is now accessible and so well presented including the museum spaces. The authorities looking after the most important location in Western Europe appear to be doing a fine job.
Yea a great success story
Fantastic, how they made this place accessible…and in a modern way! Looking forward to visit it!
Thx for you infinite knowledge, i will use it when i will guide other people!!!!🎉
Thank you. Very kind!
Absolutely fantastic. Thank you Darius for again showing us and educating us with the very first views of new discoveries/reopening of new sites in Rome. Totally the best. i have a question (as usual!): in the reconstruction of the upper floor arch @1:43, 3:15, and 5:24 why the upper arch made by Hadrian is in a Mesopotamian-Persian style (the arch itself resting on protruding base, rather than being a smooth continuation of it in a Roman way?)
It’s all Roman, through and through… What we do witness on site has undergone extensive restoration work.
@@DariusArya But Dr Arya you do admit a great deal of Greek is in there, so how can it all be Roman? The recessed style of arch is not Roman either, but the common Mesopotamian style, going back to Sumerian, Babylonian, and ultimately Parthian and Sasanian arches. They are still here to be seen even today, including those found at Erech, Uruk, Babylon and ultimately, Ctesiphon. Either the reconstruction there in the Tiberian comlex is wrong, or Hadrian intentionally incorporated that into his arches. The Parthians were using recessed arches at the time, but not Romans. That is why I am baffled.
Great work Darius, facinating place. Your channel is the best. Will you do Hadrians Villa also?. Keep up the good work.
Yes, soon
So, awesome.
Amazing
Thank You!!!
Thank you for this video, Roman architecture always fascinates me. They were so advanced for there time and a lot of what they built was marvels of human engineering. Heck we would struggle to build some of the stuff they built today. (not necessarily because of difficulty due to our modern technology but because of cost, if we had to build it like they did then i doubt it would even get built today lol.) There buildings were almost all like art pieces and have held up remarkably well for what they have been through. That shot at 7:01 ish made me almost feel like I could look back in time and see a glimpse of ancient Rome right before me. That whole time period is fascinating to me.
thank you- you will doubtless like RUclips.com/@ancientromelive that I direct, as well as the articles on ancientromelive.org. Sign up for the newsletter for links to free lectures and live streams.
@@DariusArya I have actually already been watching the stuff on ancientromelive channel, however I did not know about the site. I will defiantly check that out.
Hello Darius , Thanks for the video as always you make learning fun and interesting . Great job
Thank you!
Finally returning to Rome in February, after 10 years away. I've taken 2 of your Ancient Rome tours in 1995 and 2002. You're still amazing, thank you for these videos. One question, what is a Super Ticket and how do I get it in advance.
Thank you!
Check out my UnlockedRome.com
For the super tickets go to Coopcultura as well as ParcoColosseo website
Certainly a spectacular site, and it is nice to have a preview. The videos would be better if the same generalizations weren't repeated, and there was more actual information. Just telling us that we can now visit it and experience it is fine, but how about some dates, or comments on construction or materials, information that puts it in context in time to other adjacent areas.
And no person with a Ph.D should use the term, 'regular basis'.
What I don't understand is all the tourists who just casually stroll by Darius while he's standing there explaining everything inch of the structure in fascinating detail!! 😂
Thank you for these videos, can't wait for my next trip to Rome ❤
Would be really interested to hear from you a bit more about Roman food and the trade routes involved (sorry if you've already covered this). I heard that Roman coinage had been found as far away as the Kerala coast?
Those are great topics. Def. will appear on ancientromelive.org
Advice. Leave lots of time to visit the forum and palatine hill. Also go pretty early because some things close earlier than the stated end time of the area. I was there last week and went at 2 and didn’t have enough time for all supersites
Blessings from Anaheim California USA 🇺🇸 let's go history ❤
Ciao!
Thank you for sharing
Thank you!
Thanks Darius
The sheer scale of these ruins is amazing.
Magnífico 👏🏻
can't wait to visit rome one day and check out the ancient marvels
Until then - stick around here - as well as AncientRomeLive on RUclips
I want to go there!
I was here this week, I didn't knew it opened! Have to go backl next year...
Next time!!
I can't wait to visit Italy again. Sad how the politics have gone but this isn't a channel for that so I'll just look forward to visiting all these amazing places you show us :) I'm glad more and more areas are opening to the public. We'll probably have to book a week in Rome this time! My girlfriend really wants to go to Florence again. Maybe we can do that as a weekend trip :)
Yes a lot more to see- will keep posting new sites and openings. Florence is an easy day trip from Rome.
I am curious about the square holes you see in the masonry in many of the ancient walls throughout Italy. Are these anchor points for a marble façade, or some kind of drainage portal maybe?
I have seen stonework installed on modern high rise buildings that used heavy gauge wire to tie the blocks back to the steel structure. I know that a lot of marble was cannibalized for use on newer buildings. This place must have been spectacular in it's time.
Large regular series of square holes were for beams of wood for scaffolding…
Thanks! That makes sense now. @@DariusArya
They were for the supporting beams for roofs and floors. The beams would be inserted into the holes.
Another great video. Fantastic👍👨🎓
Glad you enjoyed it
Wonderful.
Many thanks!
thank you !
You're welcome!
I took a tour of the Forum last Christmas season and just missed this as they were still working on it, bummer. Must try to return next February, no?
Any time is good
Absolutely fascinating. I'd love to get my broken beautox (credited to Walter Matthau in "Ensign Pulver" with Burl Ives) to Rome and explore the history of western civilization and the history of Ancient Rome. But I don't have the money, and my arthritis is so bad that I do almost all of my galavanting on an electric scooter 🛵, sometimes with a walker. And like Mary Beard said in "Meet the Romans" episode 2, "where did you go to the lavatory?" Few things are worse than getting caught between places with no place to go, and apparently, none of the ancient Roman communal toilets are functioning. Oh, boy.
Well I can at least guarantee a lot of up to date material on Rome and Empire here and on @ancientromelive
I visited the forum in 1987 and yeah, it wasn't open back then. I didn't even know it existed, we couldn't even get far into the forum if I remember correctly, and see the Colleseum from the outside. About the only thing we could sort of go into was the Vatican, and maybe the Parthenon. We only had a day, and ended up sleeping in an abandoned ATM booth outside the trainstation through the night until the train station opened in the morning. Not a fun experience in a city, trying to stay safe inside an ATM booth that no longer had an ATM in it. My 2 years of Latin and Roman History in high school were not particularly useful.
Thank you for this tour, Darius. Exciting and surprising. How much of this complex was excavated or still covered in 2014? Even from distance I don't remember seeing so many and big structures on this side of the Palatine Hill. I must go and see it. [Edit] Now my memory starts to work, I do remember some huge structures, which I probably forgot because they weren't that interesting when I didn't have access to explore them. Now I do. Thanks again.
Uncovered and visible for a long time - and now you can explore the substructures - a huge new area for the public (which had always been out of reach!)
@@DariusArya Thanks. I am excited.
Are you a guide Darius? In the future (some years more) I want you to be my tourist guide in Rome, specially in the ancient Rome!! 🙏🏼
There's no one better! dariusaryadigs.com for details/ contact
@@DariusArya I'm sure there is no better!! Thank you Darius!! See you in some years…!
Hi! thanks for the video! I have thw question, where do I buy the super ticket? and do you know how much it cost by now?
On site or online Coopcultura … 17 euro I think
Thank you for your hard work. I was at the Palatine last year, and there were frescoas everywhere. My main question was how the artists painted so much detail in those dark interior rooms. Did they use oil lamps?
Yes! 👍
Thank you for this video. I'm touring Rome next week. How and where do you buy the tickets for the Domus Tiberiana? The website doesn't have it listed. Thank you!
It’s included in Forum visit … it you purchase the “super” ticket you can get into the museum spaces … Coopcultura website for tix
I really appreciate your work, but please consider investing in a gimbal stabilizer so that your wonderful videos aren't so jumpy and hard watch. Thanks.
Noted thanks
Visited Rome a few weeks ago, sad that just opened one I was gone. It will be opened forever or temporary?
It’s permanently open
You didn’t mentioned the house of Livia ?
And what is that exactly? Ownership due to her name on a bronze pipe… the house of Augustus and Livia that you can visit are modern constructs - entirely dismantled in recent scholarship… we will do a video on it on AncientRomeLive
@@DariusArya so a commercial exploit then…that’s disappointing. I’d love a video about it, yes please.
Caligula a fost asasinat la Domus Tiberiana?
There is one thing that strikes me with curiosity, though. I remember some articles and videos that discussed Rome's little scuffles with Persia. I'm afraid your ethnicity and ancestry has become a not very big secret, especially with a name like Darius Arya. Have you ever thought of doing something about the Persian empire and Persepolis? How about a little information about the "Palace of the Lilies", Shushan, or Susan?
Sure I’d love to - though travel off the table for the foreseeable future…
👏👏👏
New drinking game - take a shot every time he says "Domus Tiberiana"............. :)
Of course the house of Caligula was destroyed 😂 great video
Thank you
In my opinion they should do a better job at somewhat filling in the gaps and such in order to strenghten the building. This is a part of European heritage keeping that I don't fully agree with. I'm not saying fully rebuild it, but in part I do feel that we need to do a better job at reconstructing what is left with the materials we have in order to stabalise, strenghten and also restore the damage that was done to these buildings. The Asian way of looking at things of heritage is more apropriate in my opinion, because they renovate their buidlings to a prestine condition, and although you can discuss about "authenticity", it's a matter of showing respect to your heritage by keeping it in a shape that the folks of those days would still recognize. That's how they look at things. Their goal is to make sure that if we would bring for example a Roman to our time, that they would instantly recognize the building. And even if we don't do that. In a lot of cases, just maintanance is needed. I see a lot of walls where the brickwork is super weak and needs to be redone otherwise it will fall down within 100 years. They should do a better job at strenghtening these ruins. If you're not going to rebuild it, at least maintain it better.
3 weeks until I'm there.
Enjoy!!
Bronze coins under Tiberius? Weren't they still on real silver and gold coinage in this period? But it can of course be one of those seeds where ypu can show the empire bore its eventual demise from the very beginning.
Bronze coins in use throughout Rome’s history.
@@DariusAryaNot quite😉All good, I'm happy I got a look at the ruins.
Does not look too crowded. Not much to see folks except foundations! Visit Nashville, TN in the USA for a reproduction of the Greek Parthenon!
Crowds are still here … would love to see that Parthenon …
If walls could talk.
So many words to say so little...
One problem with research monopolization of science like archeology in few hands is that like in this cases the true story is not faithful but paradigmatic depending on the author political point of view of his finnancing companies like AG3ND4-2030 W0K3 1NCLUSIV3 kind. Only the colective conscience of humanity(Carl Jung) is the path to wisdom and knowledge so to speak. For example some of the people participating in psycoanalitical regression sessions like those of Brian Weiss(also a professional medical psychiatrics) have deep understanding of the life in Ercolano before 79 AD. You need an interdisciplinary approach to find many more discoveries. I like your research. However could be better if you listen to others that have their stories to tell.
Archaeology is in its essence a collaboration of people from a wide range of disciplines. Always has been. And now, more so than ever.
Very expansive ticket s to See just Ruins, because you Must have a big fanatasiac Imagination to reconize those Building s that was long time ago , no compltete restiration or reconstruction ,, i visited Pompéi and Hercolaneum ( Hercolano ) and there is the same Problem, an absolut minimal Restoration just make Money with the tickets.
I’d like your work better if you let us look in-depth to the diverse roots of these mosaics. Was it the Picts that contributed the earliest mosaics? Could you make a longer exploration with facts about each- it’s too gorgeous to skim over as you did here. ❤❤❤