Why are the Noses of Ancient Statues Broken?

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 546

  • @TetsuShima
    @TetsuShima 2 года назад +253

    Sadly, broken noses on statues could mean real problems at the time of identifying the represented figures. For example, there is a noseless bust of a thin man with abundant hair and a fierce look that, for years, was considered to represent the dictator Sulla, since there is another noseless bust that represents the dictator with the same physical characteristics. However, it was recently discovered that the first mentioned bust actually depicted General Scipio Africanus before said general became bald and fat. If, at least, one of these busts didn't have a broken nose, it is possible that this confusion would have never occurred.

  • @zoinomiko
    @zoinomiko 2 года назад +22

    I've been in Rome for the past month, and the only thing more mindblowing than how MUCH ancient statuary there is is the multitudes more there must have once been. So beautiful.

  • @TetsuShima
    @TetsuShima 2 года назад +213

    To be honest, we should be thankful that there are still many statues that (despite being damaged) can give us an idea of what great leaders physically looked like. In fact, it seems to me a miracle that statues of infamous leaders such as Caligula, Nero, Domitian or Caracalla still exist despite the "damnatio memoriae" that these tyrants suffered after their death. It's always good to see the bright side of things.

    • @m.e.345
      @m.e.345 2 года назад +13

      A bit off topic, but I think that anybody who visits the Basilica of St.Denis outside Paris must lament the destruction that occurred there during the French Revolution. Nevertheless, the remains there tell a story that is fantastically bizarre.. and true.

    • @rillloudmother
      @rillloudmother 2 года назад +3

      bow down before the one you serve, you're going to get what you deserve. -trent

    • @jamesmcinnis208
      @jamesmcinnis208 2 года назад

      "To be honest"

    • @RobertWilkinsonJKekMaloy
      @RobertWilkinsonJKekMaloy 2 года назад

      This is why watching those fucking tards topple statues just a couple years back made me feel so sad for the future, watching the defacing happen in real time.

    • @BigWheel.
      @BigWheel. Год назад +1

      People used to preserve even that which they hated because they wanted to remember. It's why nazis are such famous bad guys in media. There's an effort to keep them in the collective memories as evil so we don't follow their mistakes after forgetting how terrible they were.

  • @richm368
    @richm368 2 года назад +37

    Mind blown! I'd never heard the reasoning of them needing to breathe. That makes a lot of sense. My professors would mention the nose removal as a removal of power, which I suppose sorta fits.

  • @denofthefairy3798
    @denofthefairy3798 2 года назад +27

    As a student of art history your channel is pure joy. Thank You!

  • @RickLowrance
    @RickLowrance 2 года назад +45

    Awesome video. Statues of male subjects usually have another part broken. Probably for similar reasons. You have to hand it to the Vatican. Everything there, along with things generally at locations converted to churches, were preserved better than just about everywhere else. I've walked that corridor. I wish I had not been in such a hurry.

    • @robertgiles9124
      @robertgiles9124 2 года назад

      Vatican stole as much art as the Nazis.

    • @14thCenturyHare
      @14thCenturyHare 2 года назад

      The Vatican has destroyed more history and knowledge than they have ever saved or preserved. Christianity and religion has been the bane of ALL history and culture preservation.

    • @zoinomiko
      @zoinomiko 2 года назад +1

      Well the 'Unit' removal/covering was a deliberate Christian purity campaign (while preserving the value of the rest of the statue), so perhaps not quite like noses. And agreed on the Vatican - the museums are set up SO terribly that I hate them, despite how many amazing artworks they hold. But maybe an after-hours event would let you see the statuary and escape to tell the tale without having to go through the rest of the cattle drive to the exit....

  • @gaemlinsidoharthi
    @gaemlinsidoharthi 2 года назад +7

    “Before the Statues Fell”, sounds like the title of an awesome story.

  • @CopenhagenDreaming
    @CopenhagenDreaming 2 года назад +37

    Here in Copenhagen the Glyptotek museum has a small "nasothek" - a collection of restored noses that have since been removed from the original sculptures so the sculptures are displayed without modern interpretation of missing parts.(There are also a few ears and other bits.)
    It's a weird and wonderful little display that highlights varying approaches to art restoration over time.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasothek

    • @mylifeforthelord5535
      @mylifeforthelord5535 2 года назад +4

      I've got your nose

    • @Ogaitnas900
      @Ogaitnas900 2 года назад

      Thats really cool, thanks. It's specially funny to me because in my country "naso" means big nose ("look at the naso on that guy!") and library is "biblioteca", so nasoteca sounds great 🤭

  • @error5202
    @error5202 2 года назад +16

    “Did you feel that” -> “where did my house go” 😂

  • @nathanielscreativecollecti6392
    @nathanielscreativecollecti6392 2 года назад +85

    In a museum in Houston, there was a sarcophagus where every nose was broken but the rest was pristine and grand. I always wondered why that was.

    • @whiteboymike3999
      @whiteboymike3999 2 года назад +3

      Could've been some kind of disease too. My grandpa lost his nose in his 50s lived well up passed 100s healthy. But he didn't have a nose. Maybe something like that happened? They'd loose their nose and then they'd remove it from the statue to match said guy

    • @14thCenturyHare
      @14thCenturyHare 2 года назад +9

      @@whiteboymike3999 Ahh, syphilis.

    • @CharGC123
      @CharGC123 2 года назад +11

      Religious zealots have caused unprecedented death and destruction in the name of their imaginary supernatural deity. I don't know which is more biased and divisive... religion or politics.

    • @jonstfrancis
      @jonstfrancis 2 года назад

      @@CharGC123 I know Protestants vandalised and destroyed massive amounts of art and even maps and so on in England. They burnt whole libraries along with destroying statues and works of art. I imagine the Christians did similar to Pagan works prior to that too. And on and on sadly. Political destructions goes along with censorship and is certainly a thing.

    • @INSANESUICIDE
      @INSANESUICIDE 2 года назад +10

      @@CharGC123 atheists are no different, communism which murdered the most in modern day of political movements is inherently anti religious, capitalism as a materialistic atheistic system which has also cost many lives directly and indirectly, what is your point?

  • @trexvalleygirl2770
    @trexvalleygirl2770 2 года назад +5

    I have your book, the audio version. It's so interesting. I love your storytelling because you make ancient history come alive. That's the best kind. Bravo! 👏 👏

  • @stephanielogan9161
    @stephanielogan9161 2 года назад +4

    I love the 3 dimensional aspect of ancient statues and busts. It really is akin to meeting famous (or merely important) people from the past.

  • @cerberus6654
    @cerberus6654 2 года назад +104

    Dr. G! Years ago I worked in an office tower downtown and there was a prestigious lawyers office on the floors below. I would often find myself waiting for an elevator with a tall man in his late forties who would get out at their main floor. Almost immediately I noticed that his nose and one of his ears had fine, hairline 'seams' where they joined the rest of his face. One day a big, burly female FedEx woman with a brush cut and multiple piercings shoved past him, jostling him hard... and his nose fell OFF completely. I swear, the first thing I thought of was... Roman bust. He picked up his appendage and looked at me and said, "Take it from me kid, getting frostbite on Mt. Everest is not what you want in life."

    • @malkomalkavian
      @malkomalkavian 2 года назад +30

      Every ancient golem has a cover story to hand :)

    • @toldinstone
      @toldinstone  2 года назад +26

      That's a great story

    • @jadler457
      @jadler457 2 года назад +1

      @@toldinstone why dont you tell the truth in this video?

    • @odietamo9376
      @odietamo9376 2 года назад +3

      @@jadler457 What are you getting at?

    • @odietamo9376
      @odietamo9376 2 года назад +6

      Good lord, what a story, and well told, too. That man’s fate almost happened to me. One day when I got home from school when I was sixteen it was my job to shovel the snow off the driveway. It was bitterly cold, below zero Fahrenheit, and I wasn’t careful enough, thinking I could finish the job quickly. When I got back inside I sat down and started reading a magazine. After a while my left ear started to hurt, suddenly and badly. I went into the bathroom to have a look and was horrified to see it was swollen up to at least twice its normal size. My father took me to the doctor the next morning. The doc said that I had frozen my ear and that if I had happened to touch it before it thawed out it would have broken off my head! The ear healed, but a part of it has had an area of rock hard cartilage ever since.

  • @brick6347
    @brick6347 2 года назад +12

    I just assumed Tycho Brahe had an extensive fanclub

  • @lastword8783
    @lastword8783 Год назад +5

    5:46 this did happen in India and central asia as well. Losing your nose was a sign of losing face. It was a sort of humiliation caused to make people doubt the power of the idol.

  • @SwizzleStickMcGee
    @SwizzleStickMcGee 2 года назад +27

    According to African-American folklore, it's so we don't find out that all the European Kings were actually African Kangzzzz

    • @jp9403
      @jp9403 Год назад +4

      Sheeeit...

    • @natsusatsujinki8342
      @natsusatsujinki8342 Год назад

      Makes sense in a number of cases. Not saying all but I know what the European colonizers wrote in history books and His Story book.

    • @acaydia2982
      @acaydia2982 8 месяцев назад +2

      We Wuz Caucasians and shyt!

    • @ThePplsMan
      @ThePplsMan 2 месяца назад

      Black people be making up everything these days. Part of the black privilege. Give them facts and they’ll twist it some how.

  • @BobjrsGaming
    @BobjrsGaming 2 года назад +13

    Man I would love for you to do a course for Wondrium. I would totally watch a college-level long course on Roman-era history by you.

  • @Hannah_Em
    @Hannah_Em Год назад +2

    "The pope's favourite McDonald's" slayed me, I always love the little jokes like that which you put in the videos. The scale label on the earthquake intensity map, too, is a great example of why your channel is such a great one!

  • @longan12
    @longan12 2 года назад +6

    This is pure quality content, man. Keep it up!

  • @Grenadier311
    @Grenadier311 2 года назад +3

    This episode was extraordinarily well-written.

  • @invertlevel3533
    @invertlevel3533 2 года назад +2

    As usual, intersting and well served.
    Your book is fantastic to read.
    Thank you.

  • @allonzehe9135
    @allonzehe9135 2 года назад +4

    I thought the answer was just "the nose sticks out" but the more thorough answer was so much more interesting. Thanks for the video.

  • @ButtonsKing
    @ButtonsKing 2 года назад +4

    All medieval stone busts in St.Vitus Cathedral in Prague, Czechia have broken and later replaced noses. It is said it was done by enemy soldiers in 1648, during the 30-year war. When the bust of the Emperor Charles IV. of Luxembourg was compared with his preserved skull, it was shown, that the bust is his exact portrait - with the exception of the nose.

  • @mohammedkhan4990
    @mohammedkhan4990 Год назад +1

    Awesome presentation. As always!!!

  • @dyscotopia
    @dyscotopia 2 года назад +7

    This channel is so relaxing... It doesn't rely on stoking outrage or fear. Just asking interesting questions about our past I'd never thought to ask

  • @andreap8343
    @andreap8343 2 года назад +2

    Such an interesting topic. Thank you for this video, it's sad to see how much of humanity's great past has been lost, damaged or destroyed because of negligence or, even worse, sheer vandalism. Many statues in marbles arrived to our age, but we can't say the same about the written documents, papyrs and books from the Classic era.
    Thanks from Italy, ciao a tutti! 🇮🇹

  • @matthew_kohai3
    @matthew_kohai3 2 года назад +2

    Just found your channel and am binge-watching your glorious content. Thank you for producing thought-provoking videos!

    • @toldinstone
      @toldinstone  2 года назад +2

      I'm very glad you're enjoying my channel!

  • @joeshmoe8345
    @joeshmoe8345 2 года назад

    Your voice is so soothing big dog, I replay these to help me sleep. Thanks for sharing and bless you.
    My only wish is that the sponsored-by message was at the beginning or end. It’s kinda stylecramping to have it abruptly in the middle, in my opinion.

  • @HRM.H
    @HRM.H 2 года назад +3

    Thanks for videos like these.

  • @SobekLOTFC
    @SobekLOTFC 2 года назад +4

    great job, per usual, Garrett 👏
    whenever I think of these statues, I reflect upon the theurgical practice in antiquity of "animating statues."

  • @dersitzpinkler2027
    @dersitzpinkler2027 2 года назад +3

    Love the topic. And really excellent images in this one

  • @DavidOfWhitehills
    @DavidOfWhitehills 2 года назад +2

    This was definitely the first pick of all the nose-based video I've ever watched.

  • @BeneathAcacia
    @BeneathAcacia 2 года назад +3

    I WAS NOT ready for 1:38

  • @warrenpowers108
    @warrenpowers108 2 года назад +1

    Your videos are never quite long enough for me lol. Fantastic work as always

  • @psammiad
    @psammiad 2 года назад +6

    I always assumed they just fell face down and that's why the nose broke.

  • @russdewolf5554
    @russdewolf5554 2 года назад +1

    I just got back last night from a three week visit to Italy, including Rome and the Chiaramanti museum. Fantastic. The thing I found most striking was the ego, and often lack thereof, of the subjects whose statues were sculpted. Some clearly wanted to be "improved" in a 2000 year old version of Photoshop, but a remarkable percentage were seemingly happy to have likenesses that were not at all flattering in any way...
    Sad about the kook who damaged two sculptures from that very hall a couple weeks ago when his request to speak with the Pope was denied. This is why we can't have nice things.

  • @darksideoftoast
    @darksideoftoast 2 года назад +3

    Love your work. Thank you.

  • @allangardiner2515
    @allangardiner2515 2 года назад +1

    Beautiful descriptive prose.

  • @davidpitchford6510
    @davidpitchford6510 Год назад

    I am glad that Garrett noses this and has explained to us.

  • @TheDuc069
    @TheDuc069 2 года назад

    Just wonderful as always, Thank you so much. Loved the fact of the renaissance artists restored some noses, I always learn more.

  • @jimferry6539
    @jimferry6539 2 года назад +2

    Hey man thanks making this video l, I have been asking for ages for somebody to look into this. I actually spent abit of time looking into it myself.
    Here’s an interesting one that I found inadvertently which was a video in the British pathe, they interview a woman who identifies as a “chipper” her hobby was to chip noses and other stuff from historical monuments as a collector, that was in the 1940s/50s.

  • @seanm8030
    @seanm8030 2 года назад +3

    Why would one expect a statue to fall over on something other than the pointy bit at the end?

  • @odietamo9376
    @odietamo9376 2 года назад

    I really like your videos. They are well made, and undoubtedly they are a lot of work. I always learn things from them, so it is surprising and disappointing that this one has so many stupid comments, written by people who apparently think they are clever and witty and funny. . . but they aren’t.

  • @bobsnow4890
    @bobsnow4890 2 года назад +4

    TIL spirits inhabiting statues would rather die than be mouth-breathers.

  • @PomazeBog1389
    @PomazeBog1389 2 года назад +6

    The Ancient Roman "Scratch n Sniff" concrete tablets were definitely a risk.

  • @smellyfella5077
    @smellyfella5077 2 года назад +1

    As always; another great production!

    • @patstokes7040
      @patstokes7040 2 года назад +1

      Well if it isn't John Bell

    • @smellyfella5077
      @smellyfella5077 2 года назад

      @@patstokes7040...Hood...after the hyphen...Hood

  • @grapeape1199
    @grapeape1199 2 года назад

    You just answered so many questions thank you so much bro, keep up the good work!!!

  • @txjellybean3772
    @txjellybean3772 2 года назад +8

    But they could breathe through their mouth right? Also, I went to that Vatican museum and there were lots of mythological statue's as well.

    • @davidec.4021
      @davidec.4021 2 года назад +1

      Well the mouth was closed shut, so i suppose not… and yeah luckily we still have many statues (that got restored), otherwise there would be no Vatican museum

    • @kenikos744
      @kenikos744 2 года назад

      Christians believe that the soul is immortal. It makes no sense that they would believe destroying the nose of a statue affected the soul. In fact, it seems to me that believing that a statue can have a soul would be similar to idolatry. If Christians did destroy the noses of statues to make them unable to breath, those Christians had a warped understanding of their religion.

  • @robhead22
    @robhead22 2 года назад

    I really enjoyed this video. And, having found you, i instantly subscribed. Thank you!

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ 2 года назад +2

    Wonderful stuff!

  • @malkomalkavian
    @malkomalkavian 2 года назад +1

    Another lovely video. Thank you :)

  • @johnspizziri1919
    @johnspizziri1919 2 года назад +3

    Outstanding, Professor. Pray tell, how about your hypothesis on why the Great Sphinx has no nose. Same reason??

    • @cerberus6654
      @cerberus6654 2 года назад

      Apparently - or least the tradition is - that Napoleon's artillery shot it off.

    • @robertgiles9124
      @robertgiles9124 2 года назад

      Simple...Erosion. Age. Rain, Sand. Wind.

    • @toldinstone
      @toldinstone  2 года назад +4

      I've read that it was chiseled off by a zealous Sufi in the 14th century, but it was probably already damaged by then.

  • @wolfnails666
    @wolfnails666 2 года назад +3

    0:06 Nice touch on the map about McDonald's 😂

  • @gerardjacquemier5137
    @gerardjacquemier5137 2 года назад +6

    excellent et très pertinent comme d'habitude!

    • @augustuscaesar8287
      @augustuscaesar8287 2 года назад

      Un homme de France regardant une vidéo sur cette chenal? Quelle surprise. Pour la plupart, l'Americains regarde cette chenal, comme moi-même, alors bienvenue.

  • @LauraS1
    @LauraS1 11 месяцев назад

    I always figured it was a weakness in the underlying material of the sculpture in many cases although I knew that others were deliberately defaced for one reason or the other.

  • @wilecoyote5757
    @wilecoyote5757 2 года назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @Joanna-il2ur
    @Joanna-il2ur 2 года назад +10

    I always assumed that this was Christian Romans in the late Empire being told to damage gods, and in defacing them, also damaged busts of emperors etc. too. There was a Christian belief that a priest had to be physically intact, so cut the nose off and they couldn’t serve. There was a Byzantine emperor whose enemies cut his nose off. The pope who crowned Charlemagne emperor had earlier that year had his nose cut off by his enemies, it it had magically grown back so he could be pope again.

    • @EresirThe1st
      @EresirThe1st 2 года назад

      It was. See Catherine Nixeys book the darkening age

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur 2 года назад

      @@EresirThe1st Indeed. Bought it in hardback when it came out. She has a new book out soon.

    • @zoinomiko
      @zoinomiko 2 года назад

      to be fair many Roman emperors were deified after their death and hence became Gods. ;)

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur 2 года назад

      @@zoinomiko Indeed, but quite a few weren’t. Notably Tiberius, Caligula, Nero, Commodus, etc. The famous equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius wasn’t attacked, supposedly because people thought it was Constantine (although Marcus had a bushy beard and Constantine was clean shaven). Being deified as an emperor wasn’t quite the same as being Jupiter or Poseidon though. For a start, you were voted into the heavenly realm by the Senate. Tiberius was proposed but didn’t get enough votes.

    • @zoinomiko
      @zoinomiko 2 года назад

      @@Joanna-il2ur Haha yes fair ;) Was it really a senate vote? How the heck did Hadrian get them to vote for his twink and mother-in-law?

  • @jmeyer3rn
    @jmeyer3rn 2 года назад +1

    Lookin for another brilliant book.

  • @steveconklin5011
    @steveconklin5011 2 года назад +2

    Another book please!

  • @BBQDad463
    @BBQDad463 2 года назад

    Thank you for this video. Rome has always fascinated me as has, truth to tell, all of the ancient world.

  • @dewmilk7266
    @dewmilk7266 2 года назад

    Oh!! You talked about this a bit in the ospod! That’s how I found you!!

  • @TetsuShima
    @TetsuShima 2 года назад +14

    6:08
    Barbarian 1#: "Could you please explain me again why we have to vandalize this statue naked?"
    Barbarian 2#: "SHUT UP!!! If we are going to destroy Rome, we will do it with the greatest and most artistic lack of dignity possible!"
    Barbarian1#: "You only want to see my butt, right?"
    Barbarian 2#: "Absolutely..."

    • @cerberus6654
      @cerberus6654 2 года назад +1

      I thought the same thing!

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 2 года назад

      Ironically, the Germanic barbarians were much more prudish about nudity. The Romans objected to large penises on statues, as they considered them to be "barbaric."

    • @cerberus6654
      @cerberus6654 2 года назад

      @@faithlesshound5621 Well, modern-day Germans - although still a bit barbaric at best - are certainly not prudish anymore. You go to any beach in the world these days and you'll see all the big-bellied Germans standing around stark naked to last you a lifetime.

    • @stefke5862
      @stefke5862 2 года назад

      @@faithlesshound5621 actually the Romans reported that those ‘barbaric’ tribes went to war naked in most cases

    • @histguy101
      @histguy101 2 года назад

      @@stefke5862 That painting is a Renaissance depiction of Odoacer. Odoacer was a general in the Roman army. He didn't lead naked troops. Likewise if I have that wrong and it's meant to be Alaric. At that point, the barbarians were all Romanized and Christianized.

  • @thesilversurfer7136
    @thesilversurfer7136 2 года назад +2

    Someone played a sick game of "I got your nose ".

  • @technoman9000
    @technoman9000 2 года назад +2

    I can't imaging burning a masterwork marble statue so you can grout some bricks... but you gotta do what you gotta do, I guess.

  • @mishapurser4439
    @mishapurser4439 2 года назад +1

    A very old game of 'Got Your Nose!'

  • @malkomalkavian
    @malkomalkavian 2 года назад

    Wondrium have the awesome Roman technology series of lectures. Just great

  • @thegatorhator6822
    @thegatorhator6822 Год назад

    Probably because they protrude away from the face and I'd imagine the way you have to chip away the stone would make things that stood out away from lower layers more susceptible to cracking?

  • @MogulSuccess
    @MogulSuccess 2 года назад +1

    thank you!

  • @Chicken-Emperor
    @Chicken-Emperor 2 года назад +5

    The absolute most appropriate use of the word "vandalism".

  • @Pop1nsk1
    @Pop1nsk1 2 года назад

    that "welcome" at the beginning reminded me of logging in to AOL 😆

  • @MilledSteel
    @MilledSteel 2 года назад +1

    Great video, a very interesting subject

  • @ALEJANDROARANDARICKERT
    @ALEJANDROARANDARICKERT Год назад

    great video as usual . congrats. What is that bust carved in different stones at the left corner below at 0:27? Who was the sitter?

  • @janerkenbrack3373
    @janerkenbrack3373 2 года назад +1

    I wondered (humorously) once if the original artist smashed the nose off in some ritual following the dedication of the statue.

  • @ZakeriasRowlandJones
    @ZakeriasRowlandJones 2 года назад

    I'd love for you to do on on the real height of Maximinus based on contemporary evidence etc. I think that'd be a real interesting one (if the evidence is there).

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 2 года назад +1

    Great Video!

  • @FlexibleFlyer50
    @FlexibleFlyer50 Год назад +1

    Many years ago I visited Rome. Our city tour guide (who just happened to look like a clone of the actor Caesar Romero) kept telling us, "Rome was destroyed more by the hands of man than by the hands of time!" Isn't it ironic that the Catholics did their best to destroy vestiges of ancient Rome, and now the art and statuary that's left are in the Vatican museum? And how about the Roman art work that's hidden away in the Vatican museums and archives?

  • @Nickle314
    @Nickle314 2 года назад

    Added to my list of places to visit.

    • @Nickle314
      @Nickle314 2 года назад

      Also interesting is that I have a cast of one of the statues you show, on my desk in front of me.

  • @larrylambert1220
    @larrylambert1220 2 года назад +3

    They were broken off because nobody had noses back then.

  • @annwilliams6438
    @annwilliams6438 2 года назад +2

    Thanks

  • @doppelwaffen
    @doppelwaffen Год назад +2

    Restoring noses actually isn't that easy. I have a Roman marbel bust which once belonged to an old Italian sculptor. He decided to restore the nose but felt he could't get it right and finally took the chisel and destroyed the nose again.

  • @HereticalKitsune
    @HereticalKitsune 2 года назад +1

    Such a sad topic... So many wonders lost to looting and superstition :(

  • @henridooley4512
    @henridooley4512 2 года назад +2

    While Christians had a bad feeling about statues as idols, they did come to peace with them later. Most of the destruction of statues happened during the various sackings of Rome and other barbarian attacks elsewhere in Europe. Barbarians were unlikely to cart away statues, but enjoyed damaging them to insult the culture they were attacking. Later, the Protestant Revolution caused great damage to Catholic images and churches, so if you point out the Church as destructors of Beauty, they got it back in spades in the 16th Century and beyond.

  • @HolyKhaaaaan
    @HolyKhaaaaan 2 года назад +8

    You know what would really make statues come alive? Hearing a voice actor read something they wrote when you're right in front of the statue.
    Wouldn't it be cool to hear somebody portraying Caesar or Nero or Lucretia say something that they actually said, even if translated, when you are right in front of what they looked like?

    • @Takeru9292
      @Takeru9292 Год назад

      Yes, in classical Latin lol

    • @kelvyquayo
      @kelvyquayo Год назад +1

      Soon enough AI will be able to do it flawlessly

  • @ji3an129
    @ji3an129 2 года назад +1

    We have many ancient Roman monuments in my country Tunisia, and I want to know the symbols of treasures and how to obtain them

  • @lunarmodule6419
    @lunarmodule6419 2 года назад +1

    Interesting thank you

  • @AJB72826
    @AJB72826 2 года назад

    great video as always Garrett!
    do you know which busts that tourist destroyed the other day?

    • @odietamo9376
      @odietamo9376 2 года назад

      Damaged, not destroyed. Vatican museum officials said they can be repaired.

  • @brianedwards7142
    @brianedwards7142 2 года назад

    I read of a Chinese saying that a statue should be sufficiently strong that it could withstand being gently rolled down a hill.

  • @anthonysaunders345
    @anthonysaunders345 2 года назад

    I especially dislike what earthquakes have done to ancient architecture. Hey, that hallway pictured at the end, aren't those statues at risk of earthquakes, too?

  • @birgaripadam7112
    @birgaripadam7112 2 года назад

    5:50 between "did you feel that" and "where did my house gone" which one are you from

  • @aaronbennack714
    @aaronbennack714 2 года назад +1

    You should pin the comment by @Chuck Hutch. I've long suspected that the carving process itself had something to do with it

  • @elvenkind6072
    @elvenkind6072 2 года назад +4

    I read in an Asterix comic, that the reason for the missing nose of the Sphinx is that Obelix climbed on it.

  • @KajiCarson
    @KajiCarson 2 года назад +1

    Could anyone be so kind as to identify the painting to the far right at 6:10? It's astonishing.

    • @pizmak6268
      @pizmak6268 2 года назад +5

      It looks like something painted by Hubert Robert. He is famous from depicting crumbled ancient monuments.

    • @chasbodaniels1744
      @chasbodaniels1744 2 года назад

      It is indeed astonishing!

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur 2 года назад

      I don’t immediately remember the artists name, but I recall that he was French and the picture dates to the 19th century. I used it once and compared it with when they pulled down the statue of Saddam in Baghdad.

    • @kaileehamilton836
      @kaileehamilton836 2 года назад +2

      @@pizmak6268 Yes you are correct it is called Roman Ruins and is by Hubert Robert

  • @isunshin999
    @isunshin999 2 года назад +3

    Were most of these statues originally painted? (Thinking of ancient Greek sculptures and architecture)

    • @pc239
      @pc239 2 года назад

      Yes.

    • @cerberus6654
      @cerberus6654 2 года назад

      @@pc239 Not the bronze ones.

  • @JaelaOrdo
    @JaelaOrdo 2 года назад +145

    My favorite explanation I’ve heard for this is from afrocentrists who claim the noses of various statues and monuments like the sphinx were deliberately broken by white people to cover up evidence that all the great figures of history were black. First heard it about 10 years ago and it still makes me laugh to this day.

    • @loktstar-kongotronix
      @loktstar-kongotronix 2 года назад +4

      Yeah so you guys didn't like to stare strait at your masters faces....😎😎😎

    • @loktstar-kongotronix
      @loktstar-kongotronix 2 года назад +1

      Is there a Rainbow outside your Window....?🤣🤣🤣

    • @MrAsh1989
      @MrAsh1989 2 года назад

      @@loktstar-kongotronix weirdo

    • @ClickClack_Bam
      @ClickClack_Bam 2 года назад +57

      We wuz kangz n sheitt.

    • @joelsmith3473
      @joelsmith3473 2 года назад +3

      Expected it to be called out in the video, even, because it's mainly the context I hear this question leadingly asked.

  • @Lucius1958
    @Lucius1958 2 года назад

    *"Oh, Cyrus!"*
    *"My friend!"*
    *"What has happened to your nose!?"*
    *"I've just returned from Rome..."*
    -- Firesign Theatre 🤣

  • @wigarrison2835
    @wigarrison2835 2 года назад

    Native American Indian effigy heads are often like that'.. but, and or also.. They come with big giant wonk noses too..

  • @MarioHernandez-yt4mz
    @MarioHernandez-yt4mz 2 года назад

    As usual, a great video. By the way, when I visited the Vatican I did go to that McDonald's!

  • @joshuabessire9169
    @joshuabessire9169 2 года назад +1

    Napolean visited and wanted to practice with his tiny cannon.

  • @zacharyhenderson2902
    @zacharyhenderson2902 2 года назад

    Noses are relatively small, overhanging structures that don't naturally hold well in stone.

  • @donnafraenkel7852
    @donnafraenkel7852 2 года назад

    Spirits inhabit even pictures, and I have seen it happen
    I'm sure the breaking stops them from taking that form because it's incomplete
    The nose could also be symbolic,knows is gone.... hence