Virtual Roman House

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • This is a 3D reconstruction of a typical upper class Roman home called a domus. The reconstruction, model and textures was created by Ancientvine. The animation and music created by Museum Victoria. This would be a typical roman domus of a "well to do" Roman family.
    This video is copyrighted by Museum Victoria and Ancientvine.com
    Thanks for viewing. If you would like to see more please feel free to visit my site ancientvine.com

Комментарии • 595

  • @davidnavarro4821
    @davidnavarro4821 3 года назад +97

    The architecture as well as the furniture seem incredibly modern!

    • @TheMiketyson9
      @TheMiketyson9 2 года назад +1

      Yes

    • @charlottejennings2611
      @charlottejennings2611 2 года назад +1

      I confirm

    • @charlottejennings2611
      @charlottejennings2611 2 года назад

      :)

    • @larsrons7937
      @larsrons7937 2 года назад +1

      I agree, it looked very modern. It looked much like my friends home in Brazil. But then again, when I visited their home I thought: "It looks very ancient." I guess this style just has become timeless. "This works."

    • @Gabriel-qr9dv
      @Gabriel-qr9dv 2 года назад +2

      @@larsrons7937 Latin america colonial homes used to be kind of like that, the houses were square shaped or rectangular or variations of square form, with the rooms of the house around a central open area, like an atrium with a fountain or something like that, big narrow but vertical windows around the house and inside to the atrium, that allowed the house to have a good ventilation and keep a cooler temperature, and the kitchens usually was at the back of the house or in the open in the back yard to keep the heat out

  • @delishme2
    @delishme2 6 лет назад +224

    I live in the tropics and this house would be perfect for the conditions bar a few modifications. I love the central atrium and the rain water collection

    • @RexGalilae
      @RexGalilae 5 лет назад +3

      Make sure the mosquitos don't get in

    • @AlexanderAzarov
      @AlexanderAzarov 5 лет назад +8

      I'd add raised lips to the rooftop opening, to catch rain blowing sideways and make it drop down, for example, instead of blowing around the inside of the room.

    • @cfrandre8319
      @cfrandre8319 4 года назад +2

      Selma Cat Ikr? It’s beautiful and so useful. I used to live in other tropics. Many parts of colonial So. America had houses built on this model-I worked in a house that was being preserved as a museum, and family members in Peru had ancestral homes in this style that were still in family and business use. The houses adapted to So. America used a chain-atria fashion, with the entry from the street leading into the more formal open-roofed garden, rooms ranged around the square, with large doors into a second open-roofed atrium with more rooms, often including a kitchen and a food prep area, storage rooms, and with a third atrium behind that, used for stables, working equipment, workers quarters, stock rooms, material storage, and so forth with a sturdy gate to the back access street or alley. The fountains and gardens in each atrium kept the house cool, provided all kinds of flowers, herbs and vegetables, a tranquil background to a busy house, collection points for water, a sluice-way to keep the working areas clean, and good healthy air flow. I still dream about the houses I knew, some still in their original format, others split into smaller units and no longer a coherent form, some still elegant, others running gently downhill...I remember a great-aunt sitting in shadows as the afternoon dimmed in a faded ballroom, reminiscing about the grand parties they had there when she was a girl, when the great room was freshly whitewashed, the portraits of the family rehung high on the walls, garlands of orchids, sweet smelling rushes on the stone floors. (The portraits were still there, some painted life-sized, kind of creepy)

    • @cfrandre8319
      @cfrandre8319 4 года назад +2

      Alexander Azarov There were, in some versions of this, tiled sluice-runs along the edge of the open roof that ran water down into cisterns at the corners of the garden.

    • @gatekeeping8528
      @gatekeeping8528 4 года назад

      You can find a lot of houses like this in the historical centers of latinamerican cities, in fact I lived in one of those and I din't like it. There are modern versions but the atrium is not in the center but in a corner, which I think makes it not longer an atrium

  • @elsakristina2689
    @elsakristina2689 5 лет назад +233

    For 2,000 years ago it looks very ahead of its time.

    • @KaelVidos20
      @KaelVidos20 4 года назад +24

      if the empire had not fallen now the emperor reigned over an intergalactic empire

    • @Ryanlexz
      @Ryanlexz 4 года назад +15

      Well even ancient Egypt was like this back then, crazy how society back then look so ahead of it time

    • @jehannemarie1163
      @jehannemarie1163 4 года назад +6

      Yes really advanced for that time

    • @AgentMorbid
      @AgentMorbid 4 года назад +14

      2000 years is quite a blip compared to how old humanity really is.
      There were civilizations much much older than the Romans and they were already pretty advanced, relatively speaking.

    • @ReadMyComments
      @ReadMyComments 4 года назад +2

      @@AgentMorbid Indeed. Rome copied a lot from other cultures

  • @tiffsaver
    @tiffsaver 4 года назад +43

    What is so amazing about this demo is how ancient Roman homes look so much like modern homes do!! In fact, it you simply replaced the writing tablet on the desk with a laptop, this could be any Mediterranean villa today...

  • @bombasticbushkin4985
    @bombasticbushkin4985 6 лет назад +171

    Beautiful. Simply beautiful. Something elegant, something simple and utilitarian. Very cozy but yet opulent in it's own way with so much artistic expression. A means of water collection, a "stove", an altar in the corner. And columns always a magnificent touch. I imagine lives of passion, meaning and much love. There's something truly awesome and majestic about Roman advancements and genius in architecture, engineering and civic planning. So grandiose, so ambitious.

    • @lawilder2059
      @lawilder2059 6 лет назад +6

      Yes and to live with beautiful things all around...artwork on walls...precious altar...love the stove top...rich color...care put into the preparation of good food...the Romans never did anything just a little bit...it was all out or nothing...whether it be for the good or for the worse

    • @roddo1955
      @roddo1955 5 лет назад +11

      You should watch Mary Beard's documentaries! She really brings Rome to life. The beauty you describe isn't history. Rome wasn't very different from modern times. Yes there is beauty and opulence and we romanticize it in our mind. But to most romans, Rome was a dirty, drab place where most lived in cramped appartments. Having said that, I love Greco-roman architecture! I can see it today with Neo Classical buildings. Washington D.C. is dotted with roman style buildings and statues.

    • @drewbryk
      @drewbryk 5 лет назад +4

      @@roddo1955 reading Alberto Angela's A Day In Rome. I think he'd have some things to say about the idea that Romans "never did anything half way." Roman apartments collapsed all the time.

    • @karenmcdonald4263
      @karenmcdonald4263 5 лет назад +6

      @@drewbryk
      What are you aming at...???
      Nice try at minimizing the absolute splendor and the glory of rome...what you speak of was obviously poor areas over the course of hundreds of years...silly man

    • @jehannemarie1163
      @jehannemarie1163 4 года назад +1

      And now Italians are still the best in creation in different things , architecture, fashion, arts, ...

  • @shagwellington
    @shagwellington 5 лет назад +66

    I want to live in a house like this. It's gorgeous. I want to be wealthy too. Love the colors and the design. Great video, thanks

  • @raoufellouze8360
    @raoufellouze8360 6 лет назад +195

    We find lot of these villas buried in my region. Tunisia was a very important roman province.

    • @fashion8751
      @fashion8751 4 года назад +4

      There's a Town in Tunisia with a very interesting amphitheatre: I think its name Is Thysdrus

    • @raoufellouze8360
      @raoufellouze8360 4 года назад +8

      @@fashion8751 that's the region I'm taikin' about. Roman name was thysdrus. Actually ir's Eljem. My farm is about 10 km south.

    • @ata-ayitehunlede5632
      @ata-ayitehunlede5632 4 года назад +2

      Yes. Leptis Magna, Home Town of Emperor Septimus Severus

    • @JsRazza
      @JsRazza 4 года назад

      Who asked you

    • @wildestdreams4012
      @wildestdreams4012 3 года назад +3

      @@JsRazza Nobody asked anything. Who asked you to send the comment? You did, that's right, so did he.

  • @jaelge
    @jaelge 4 года назад +90

    To be a wealthy Roman about the time of the Pax Romana could've been pretty sweet.

    • @brendancolfer9131
      @brendancolfer9131 4 месяца назад

      On the down side even the wealthy Romans only lived till 40ish

    • @Melhem97
      @Melhem97 4 месяца назад

      @@brendancolfer9131Still.

    • @Miggy19779
      @Miggy19779 4 месяца назад +9

      ​@@brendancolfer9131a common misconception, a lack of understanding of averages. Infant mortality dropped average age but if you survived into adulthood you had a good chance of living to your 60's and 70's

    • @DontThinkso-kb9tc
      @DontThinkso-kb9tc 21 день назад

      ​@@brendancolfer9131no. There's many many records of people living well past 40. Once you made it out of your childhood you were just as likely to live to 80 as you were today.

  • @letsgobrandon987
    @letsgobrandon987 3 года назад +24

    I visited Pompeii’s famous House of the Menander a few years ago and was blown away with how well preserved and sophisticated it was after almost 2,000 years. Looked just like this except even bigger. Just imagine what their palaces looked like. Amazing.

  • @stevethebarbarian99
    @stevethebarbarian99 10 лет назад +141

    Yeah, I'd love to live in there.

    • @kharirivers215
      @kharirivers215 8 лет назад +24

      It's amazing because there wouldn't be any electricity. Plus no doors. Oh and I can collect water in the impluvium.

    • @valostheroman
      @valostheroman 6 лет назад

      XYZ there are any doors what do you talk?

    • @rochelimit55555
      @rochelimit55555 6 лет назад

      You'll have splinters on your butt everytime you poo on that wooden board there 2:46

    • @Kybeline
      @Kybeline 6 лет назад

      @rochelimit - who told you such a thing?

    • @marcellabutay1090
      @marcellabutay1090 6 лет назад +3

      Me too but I'd get some sort of wifi, electricity, and a real water system in there

  • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
    @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 2 года назад +4

    Seems like a style that should have remained in vogue. The central walkthrough provides cross ventilation from end to end - keeping side rooms cooler and refreshed. Earthen walls should capture some of the humidity, particularly on the coasts. Keeping the sun at bay also allows side room to remain cool during daylight. These were thoughtfully designed buildings.

  • @Mithras444
    @Mithras444 5 месяцев назад +1

    I always click on these and am so glad you showed ALL of the house, most do NOT! Magnificant work, thank you!❤😊

  • @MaverickSeventySeven
    @MaverickSeventySeven Год назад +1

    No comparison to the glass and steel Sterile, Soulless Bland modern Architecture! Thank you for your Great presentation!

  • @lesliea7394
    @lesliea7394 9 месяцев назад +1

    Love this.....simple and beautiful.

  • @nicholasphelps3872
    @nicholasphelps3872 Год назад +1

    What beautiful red! I love red interiors! Ancient people still had great taste!

  • @timk6167
    @timk6167 3 года назад +7

    A very large Villa has just been found in yorkshire. It is actually dated from original building around 120ad and dated to mid 4c. Apparently it's huge and is thought to be a one of a kind in the whole Roman empire. Reason of building is so far unknown but could be religious. The Romans were amazing in there time for the structures they built !

  • @theoneguy8497
    @theoneguy8497 11 лет назад +37

    I love Roman architecture

  • @luckyotter623
    @luckyotter623 4 года назад +5

    This is fascinating, and isn't much different from upper class homes of today. They were very advanced for their time. I wonder how advanced we'd be if Rome did not fall and the middle ages never happened.

  • @leilametaxas722
    @leilametaxas722 4 года назад +2

    This roman house is AMAZ!NG !!!!!!!

  • @Zephyrus47
    @Zephyrus47 5 лет назад +2

    I was not expecting it to be this luxurious...

  • @karashea7823
    @karashea7823 Год назад +2

    It’s ANCIENT, yet it’s beauty and opulence makes it seem and feel quite contemporary to me!

  • @bombasticbushkin4985
    @bombasticbushkin4985 4 года назад +1

    Beautifully done. Something wonderful about the architecture of Rome. This house looks very cozy. I try to imagine the lives and loves that have long left this Earth.

  • @fashion8751
    @fashion8751 4 года назад +1

    Splendida musica🎵🎼 e ottima ricostruzione degli ambienti👏❤️❤️❤️

  • @lillianbradley6964
    @lillianbradley6964 5 лет назад +2

    What a gorgeous way of life. They have basically the same things we do in a home. I wish I had a time machine.

  • @geraldorford
    @geraldorford 4 года назад +2

    Very much like a modern home but at the same time it's ancient, you get the feeling of timeless beauty.

  • @SarimFaruque
    @SarimFaruque 3 месяца назад +1

    Though I'm not a huge fan of the exterior designs of villas, I do find their interior design pretty captivating and lively.

  • @simonetta8762
    @simonetta8762 4 года назад +6

    Grazie, mi fa sognare - thank you, it makes me dream

  • @blancamiranda4153
    @blancamiranda4153 6 лет назад +41

    please do one on Egyptian home's rich an poor😊 thank you.

  • @isabellabonjour6951
    @isabellabonjour6951 4 года назад +2

    WOW! 1:32 So beautiful! Long time ago I visited a house with a patio very similar to this. All the house revolve around the patio, all the rooms, the kitchen, everything... I love the background music, too! Thanks for posting this 🌟😊

  • @elisabettaingrastone6405
    @elisabettaingrastone6405 4 года назад +1

    bello soprattutto per uno che deve studiare roma, bellissimo complimenti !!!!!!

  • @RikoJAmado
    @RikoJAmado 3 года назад +1

    This is the nicest rendering of an ancient Roman home I've seen. I like that you show the interior decorating complete with furnishings. I especially like the lady/girl's bedroom with the pink pillows and bed covers.

    • @TheMiketyson9
      @TheMiketyson9 2 года назад +1

      You have to remember only few would have enjoyed this kind of living most would have lived in cramped conditions hard working lives. Nevertheless for a few would have been grand splendour.

  • @CaminoTurtle
    @CaminoTurtle Год назад +1

    I think I'm going to use your 3D images as inspiration for my creative Sims building of a Roman villa. Thank you for all your hard work to create and share this.

  • @CeciliaPeng
    @CeciliaPeng 4 года назад +2

    Stylishly modern, radiating with the grandeur of Imperial Rome.

  • @TheAussieRod
    @TheAussieRod 6 лет назад +1

    This technology at service of humanity! Thank you. Great work!

  • @beckynelson6786
    @beckynelson6786 6 лет назад +1

    Lovely reconstruction!

  • @poisonpotato1
    @poisonpotato1 4 года назад +4

    It feels like you’re inside and outside at the same time

  • @pizmak6268
    @pizmak6268 4 года назад +1

    I will build house like this for myself! I would love living in domus like that. It is so beautiful and as elegant as practical.
    Great video. You make ancient ruins life again.

  • @kathryncooper4001
    @kathryncooper4001 4 года назад +7

    I lived in Brinidsi on the east coast of Italy, and I cannot imagine living there in a wide open house. The mosquito is the national bird, and it gets VERY cold there! The residents of this house must have spent their winters in North Africa.

    • @francescomartella144
      @francescomartella144 4 года назад +1

      North Africa was indeed an important part of the Roman empire

    • @user-ye6ty9ie8g
      @user-ye6ty9ie8g 4 года назад +1

      You don't know what cold is you little bitch

    • @eiccoaching8642
      @eiccoaching8642 4 года назад +1

      @@user-ye6ty9ie8g you are a mere zero, a place holder, a hole but not an A-hole. Just an o hole. Noisy, loud and open. Silly, unhappy zero. You know there is no real help for you. Poor zero. Better not to breed.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 4 года назад +1

      That more than likely would have been a summer residence of a wealthy town patricians. It would have been one of their estates.

    • @SarahlabyrinthLHC
      @SarahlabyrinthLHC 2 года назад

      Just what I was thinking, how would you heat that large room with a great hole in the roof? Maybe they closed off all the other rooms and just heated those ones.

  • @WiseGuy5674
    @WiseGuy5674 4 года назад +6

    That’s Attia of the Julii’s house. I ate there once with Marc Antony and Caesar. I’ve been around.

  • @bobbiejeanne66
    @bobbiejeanne66 6 лет назад +12

    Very interesting, but it could be a much better presentation with the video "tour" slowed down a bit, and an informative narrative. It would be much more impressive.

  • @rdchirinos
    @rdchirinos Год назад +1

    Precioso documento. Se puede apreciar la belleza que imperaba en la construcción de las viviendas a diferencia de los griegos.

  • @lordpowell3788
    @lordpowell3788 3 года назад +1

    I like how there are no windows on the outside if you want to look at nature you go to the middle of the house and it shines in to the Courtyard that is surrounded by building. I like this in contrast to the modern style of having a building that looks outward to the nature nature I have no control of. Like if I look outside of my window right now to get some sunshine I see other peoples buildings I don't want to see other people so if you build it this way not only does it put a good strong sturdy wall on the outside of your house protecting you from other people but it allows a nice safe haven in the middle for you to enjoy the nature without people in it. I'm a big fan I've always wanted to build a Roman ville up mixed with a Japanese style looking house..

  • @MrEjidorie
    @MrEjidorie 7 лет назад +1

    I cannot believe that people lived in such a modern and comfortable house more than two thousand years ago.

    • @ABC_DEF
      @ABC_DEF 6 лет назад +3

      Living standards were not to rise to the same standard again until the 1600s. Human progress is not linear. It goes backwards as well as forwards.

    • @YSLRD
      @YSLRD 4 года назад

      Have you seen some of the antiquity stuff from China? Many skills were lost and re- invented.

  • @silviaamorearte411
    @silviaamorearte411 4 года назад +3

    Gratidão!!! Vídeo magnífico!!!

  • @player276
    @player276 3 года назад +2

    Dam, Romans were so advanced they even had time machines that enabled them to go to the Future and bring back Drawers and Wardrobes, something that wouldn't be invented for another 1000 years or so.

    • @haurg7418
      @haurg7418 Год назад

      They invented them, so yeah they had them back then...

  • @federicocastiglioni9105
    @federicocastiglioni9105 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the insightful video. If I may, I find that the use of glass windows is quite underrated. Many rich houses had indeed glass windows since the 1th century onward and Cicero himself says it. We know that the Romans improved glass and made it more popular and cheaper until the 5th century when even architecture, as any other science, quickly declined.

  • @Gull200202
    @Gull200202 3 года назад +2

    Очень красивая реконструкция.

  • @marcob4630
    @marcob4630 4 года назад +3

    At those times we lived in filthy huts! An incredible ancient civilisation

  • @marieelena
    @marieelena 6 лет назад +5

    I would love to find modern wallpaper that is a perfect copy of those walls!...thanks for the video,the music adds the right touch!

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 4 года назад +1

      Look for craft produced wall paper.

    • @johnroberts8233
      @johnroberts8233 4 года назад

      The interior decoration looks rather gaudy to my eyes.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 4 года назад

      @@johnroberts8233
      Not at all.

  • @vivvpprof
    @vivvpprof 5 лет назад +2

    I visited Tempio Capitolino today. Amazing how the temple developed over ages, with homes nearby, then came the Middle Ages and everything came to rack and ruin, covered in a 5 m thick layer of dust.

  • @rokaspaula7851
    @rokaspaula7851 4 года назад +1

    This house its my dream. I houpe i will build something looks like this villa in next future somewhere in Spain .

  • @mikebaginy8731
    @mikebaginy8731 4 года назад

    What a beautiful and interesting reconstruction! Thanks.

  • @odileaverhals398
    @odileaverhals398 4 года назад +1

    very nice video! it helped me a lot for my tests! ❤

  • @Brondi6000
    @Brondi6000 6 лет назад +1

    Beautiful video.Music too.
    Casa del Menandro.

  • @KingSlimjeezy
    @KingSlimjeezy 7 лет назад +1

    Given the environmental and cost impact of moden air conditioning I would not be suprised if we start using flowing water to help cool structures again. Plus its so cool (heh).
    When I lived in a brick townhome built in 1884 to help pffset cooling costs we attatched a seeper hose at the top of the perimeter of the exterior walls. In the heat of the day we simply turned the hose on and it worked wonders.
    In st. louis wasting water wasnt much concern, if anything it was conserving water as we were pulling water from the river and returning it to an underground water table (the house was built over a natural underground watershed, with numerous caves and the like.
    Very cool place, would like to go back

    • @YSLRD
      @YSLRD 4 года назад

      Were you aware that you were eroding your foundation zone and risking long term damage? Not to mention encouraging termites and carpenter ants. Air conditioning rocks. I'm fairly certain the inventor was inspired by God.

  • @gulagwarlord
    @gulagwarlord 4 года назад +17

    Damn, I would have rather lived like that than this 100x over.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 4 года назад

      You do not understand how easy todays world is.
      You can make it today without an army or being born into wealth. Nine out of every ten wealthy people are self made.

    • @gulagwarlord
      @gulagwarlord 4 года назад +1

      @@bighands69 I get it, I lived a primitive/rustic existence for a while...but that being said,, I would take those surroundings over utilitarian-urban dystopia any day of the week.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 4 года назад +1

      @@gulagwarlord
      You could build a house today like that if you really tried. Most people could.
      Only those in the most fortunate life could live like that in Roman empire.

  • @gabpogreb7692
    @gabpogreb7692 6 лет назад +2

    really well detailed and interesting

  • @alberto.iiimartinez2992
    @alberto.iiimartinez2992 3 года назад

    Beautiful. Home

  • @chrisdjernaes9658
    @chrisdjernaes9658 3 года назад +1

    Fantastic recreation. Looking forward to using virtual reality goggles for an immersive experience :-)

  • @dbrown9495
    @dbrown9495 3 года назад

    Simply stunning

  • @gnolan4281
    @gnolan4281 4 месяца назад

    Compare this smart and gracious style of that of the Dark Dges centuries later and the disparity is breathtaking.

  • @shareem1779
    @shareem1779 2 года назад +2

    When you realize that roman houses are better than today, even though they exist 2,000 years before us..

    • @Hardrian_Hardrada_Cicero
      @Hardrian_Hardrada_Cicero 2 года назад

      Minus insulation and glass windows, I can't imagine how freezing or hot it could've gotten during those times.

  • @bonanzaboomer
    @bonanzaboomer 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome, and also a great theme for an interactive video game: Let’s say you are a traveler from Lechia who got captured by the Romans and sold at a slave market to a wealthy Roman, master of this house. Now you are planning your escape back to Lechistan trying to map your way back, gathering supples and ways to transit thru the Roman Empire, and for survival in the woods avoiding wild animals and where to get food on the way without getting captured again.

    • @roddo1955
      @roddo1955 5 лет назад

      It would make for a great educational tool. In order to get back home, the player has to move up the societal ladder( level up) based on the social constructs of roman civilization. And you can basically make it as hard as you want. Along the way you perform tasks and there are mini-quizzes that teach the player actual history as they play. If you make choices that bring you closer to reaching your goal of going home, it can be a fairly quick but action packed adventure(find money, food, clothing, obtain language skills, find transportation, defeat enemies, etc, etc)If however, you choose to level up after having obtained the means to embark on the adventure home; you unlock new roman stages. Every step up the societal ladder will make the game only more complex with lara-croft-esque puzzles and the rewards get bigger and bigger and the journey home, easier and easier. However when you do go home: the game is over. You can choose to keep playing and leveling up.But the higher up you get, the more enemies you have to watch out for. The more you unlock, the more tasks you have to keep track on, to maintain your new status. You could lose it all and have to start from the bottom again., if you fail. The real kicker is that when you take the long, hard route and level up all the way to Ceasar: you get killed as soon as you take office and never get to go back home and going home is the main objective. To throw in a little philosophy in the mix for the player: Did you win as slave or did you fail as an emperor? Which would you prefer

    • @karenmcdonald4263
      @karenmcdonald4263 5 лет назад

      Are you kidding...??
      I wouldnt be going f....g
      anywhere...!!!!

  • @wannabepolymath7535
    @wannabepolymath7535 4 года назад +1

    I wish could time travel back in this era

  • @misterraphael2578
    @misterraphael2578 3 года назад +1

    Good job ! Is it possible to get a better quality and names of the different rooms ? The would be awesome !

  • @Misses-Hippy
    @Misses-Hippy 3 года назад

    Very enjoyable. Thank you.

  • @martynb901
    @martynb901 7 месяцев назад +1

    I’d leave my modern home and move in tomorrow!

  • @metafis2490
    @metafis2490 7 лет назад +27

    Much of the Elder scrolls settings and architecture were based on this time period.

    • @NoneNone-dw1jo
      @NoneNone-dw1jo 6 лет назад +2

      I wish Bethesda made a game in this time period

    • @Ancientvine
      @Ancientvine  6 лет назад +6

      I've been thinking of making a game in this period using my artwork. What would you like to see in a game of this period?

    • @NoneNone-dw1jo
      @NoneNone-dw1jo 6 лет назад +3

      Ancientvine, I would like to see the Roman Empire during Septimus Severus or Trajan's reign. Also make it a RPG with choice and maybe you could fight parthians and kushiites as well as barbarians and Saharan natives. I would play that game.

    • @Ancientvine
      @Ancientvine  6 лет назад +3

      OK thanks for the input.

    • @NoneNone-dw1jo
      @NoneNone-dw1jo 4 года назад

      What' Ev no you can play as other ethnicities

  • @Fuvy
    @Fuvy 4 года назад +2

    10/10 would live there

  • @albandecayeux177
    @albandecayeux177 4 года назад

    Yes, that is a very beautiful house. We think we are 2000 years ago!

  • @loanlohier6518
    @loanlohier6518 5 лет назад

    waouh it is the beautiful and very cozy !!!!! the video is very super !!!!! very good!!!

  • @benskelly1217
    @benskelly1217 8 лет назад +7

    I'd known quite a bit about this villa, before I found this virtual tour....... For me, really "adds to the experience....!" (There's better ways of describing how I feel, too "scatterbrained.") Overall... thanks for uploading.!.
    :)

  • @akroasys100
    @akroasys100 3 года назад +1

    Wonderful

  • @badweetabix
    @badweetabix 8 лет назад +26

    Was it typical for rooms in Roman homes to be windowless? Even with all the oil lamps, I would think it would be kind of dark to fully appreciate the artwork and murals in each room.

    • @susomedin5770
      @susomedin5770 8 лет назад +27

      They are in the mediterranean.
      Excess of light everywhere.
      Even today the houses there have few windows trying to avoid the hot enviroment.
      The idea of open spaces inside, patios, have the same function

    • @bobbobato
      @bobbobato 7 лет назад +11

      Yup - in fact, they were painted so brightly in part because they had no windows. But don't forget that the rooms of this type were usually built around a central court, with light coming from the ceiling. Country homes often would have windows facing to the outside as well, but in the city buildings would be faced with shops unconnected to the main hose.

    • @TheAlGal8
      @TheAlGal8 7 лет назад +19

      the lack of windows were also for security reasons - the less openings in the house, less of chance for break in

    • @susomedin5770
      @susomedin5770 7 лет назад +3

      a_marie08
      Nosense, sorry

    • @TheAlGal8
      @TheAlGal8 7 лет назад +7

      k well the mediterranean may be warm, but it still experiences seasons. why do you think some homes have two dining rooms - one more exposed for the summer months and another more closed off and isolated for the winter.

  • @carolmarr6607
    @carolmarr6607 2 года назад

    How wonderful

  • @marcellabutay1090
    @marcellabutay1090 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks I needed some sort of layout just for reference for something I am doing

  • @and1040
    @and1040 5 лет назад +2

    Beautifully! But ... Why clines in triclinium are not right? Where are carpets? Where doors? Carpets as skiff,s carpet in Hermitage. Doors as from Pompeii. Where is library?

  • @qworky902
    @qworky902 5 лет назад

    Stunning video. My thanks for the hard work.

  • @maurorei3402
    @maurorei3402 5 лет назад

    Increíble. Excelente video. Te traslada en el tiempo. 👍

  • @user-ru1ki
    @user-ru1ki 3 года назад

    Thank you for such a beautiful and creative video 🌷 And again, it seems that not much has changed since then.

  • @justinamarina3774
    @justinamarina3774 4 года назад +4

    Beautiful. I've noticed how some home designs are still the same as theirs.

  • @minionofgozer7414
    @minionofgozer7414 Месяц назад

    I imagine in 2000+ years, someone will make a virtual recreation of what one of our houses looks like 🤷‍♂️

  • @drus555
    @drus555 4 года назад +1

    If I could find someone to paint my living room like that
    I would

  • @trevorperrigo5270
    @trevorperrigo5270 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing, reminds me of the days of playing Morrowind as a young man.

  • @michelepiteo2196
    @michelepiteo2196 7 лет назад +25

    Very nice but you forgot to put in the elevator

    • @oltedders
      @oltedders 6 лет назад +2

      michele piteo
      It's a single storey.

    • @roddo1955
      @roddo1955 5 лет назад

      It's also a joke that went over your head😉

    • @td9250
      @td9250 5 лет назад +1

      @@roddo1955 wooooosh.

  • @veronicaevans8134
    @veronicaevans8134 4 года назад

    Always thought that the public rooms of a Roman home would be damed cold and drafty in winter.The private rooms would be snug with wood paneling and braziers.

  • @MarioSalimon
    @MarioSalimon 8 лет назад +18

    I'd really like to watch it in full HD.

  • @marjoriekloster8949
    @marjoriekloster8949 4 года назад +3

    Love the video and the music, however I wish it was a little bit brighter. I know that the real homes were dimly lit, but wish it was easier to see. Other than that, it's a beautiful and compelling glimpse into the past. Thank you for the hard work you put into this.⚘

  • @lolabella5574
    @lolabella5574 5 лет назад +5

    This is the model house the Spaniards adopted and brought to Latinamerica

  • @Happy_HIbiscus
    @Happy_HIbiscus 6 лет назад +3

    dude, this is cool

  • @aquariandragonhare8953
    @aquariandragonhare8953 4 года назад

    Lovely.

  • @suzieq0700365
    @suzieq0700365 6 лет назад +1

    So cool!!

  • @carolmarr6607
    @carolmarr6607 2 года назад

    This is a great villa of a wealthy Roman who must have enjoyed a very high standard of living.

  • @GaryYoung-eq1ph
    @GaryYoung-eq1ph 3 месяца назад

    Not the science and technology that we have, which never achieve the unparalleled beauty that they had.

  • @bleachguy64
    @bleachguy64 3 года назад +1

    Wow nice house but they really need to put a TV in one of the living rooms.

  • @crunchy_cat
    @crunchy_cat 6 лет назад

    Cool, I'm learning about Rome now so yeah.

  • @yau6666
    @yau6666 Год назад

    Hoc video mihi magis placet!

  • @Here4Years
    @Here4Years 7 лет назад +7

    Would a domus of this size have had its own bath or would the owners have traipsed off to the local baths instead?

    • @ABC_DEF
      @ABC_DEF 6 лет назад +5

      They would have had means of washing at home, but probably not a bath. A visit to the local baths would have been fun.

    • @belmarre
      @belmarre 5 лет назад +1

      2:47 letrine!!!!

  • @JD97711
    @JD97711 8 лет назад

    Yes, please post more. I would love if you would do some aerial views/footprints and perhaps how it tied into the household agriculture.

  • @shawntayharris4336
    @shawntayharris4336 8 лет назад +24

    Post more please