I stumbled on Timgad in 1983 while hiking through Algeria. Then it was an abandoned place, only inhabited by some (beautiful) Roman status (one of Venus!) and a few skinny cows looking for something to eat. Will never forget the excitement of that day
Thank you for the video. I visited Timgad in 1975 and had long wondered if it survived Algeria's various troubles. I'm happy to say that it looks pretty much the same as it did 49 years ago.
Timgad's museum was robbed in 1995 and it was only reopened in 2018 after recovering most of the +950 artifacts. Glad to see tourists rediscovering it again.
For those interested in Roman structures, the novel "Vespasian: Tribune of Rome", written by Robert Fabbri, has a strikingly beautiful chapter in which the very different areas of the city of Rome are described in vivid detail from the point of view of a teenage Vespasian as he and his Family visits the city for the first time. It is so well written that it literally makes you feel like you are inside the ancient eternal city.
I'll look it up. Have yoy read Margaret George's Confessions of Young Nero, which is one of two Nero books? So good, they almost make one sympathize with him. Also, the same author's Memoirs of Cleopatra is fantastic.
As usual another fascinating video! Our host is one of the only creator who does NOT directly read his script directly from Wikipedia and seems genuinely interested in communicating information in a clear, concise and UNBIASED way. Thank you!!!
I remember from Robert Graves' novel "I, Claudius" that Augustus used to say that he came to a wooden Rome and transformed it in a marble Rome, or something similar. Please, excuse my por englush, it's not my first lenguaje.
Thank you for your awesome video and the presentation of the beautiful city of timgad I hope you enjoyed your trip and maybe you'll come back to Algeria to discover more about all the Roman sites we have the closest one to timgad is another beautiful city called Djemila about 170km away and it's very well preserved
Great video sir, you captured the essence of Roman architectural genius, and the secret to their ability to feel 'at home' anywhere chose to rule. Thank you!
Thank you so much for the video Dr. Ryan. Watching it today, I’m suddenly realizing how closely these houses resemble the Riads in Morocco you can still see today.
He mixes it up, that's for sure. My favourite was the plumber from Queens who paid a history doctor from Chicago to advertise on youtube for the whole world to see.
A fine presentation. I take it this was also for wives and such of the retired soldiers. I met an lady elementary teacher who had visited Rome on holiday and liked to tell every class how great the Romans were. I suppose she though she would be living in a villa with slaves waiting on her - rather than being one.
hi im from timgad and am so happy to see your video ❤ Unfortunately I did not know about your visit to Timgad, but I would have had a great time with you and taught you a lot about it.
Semplicemente straordinario e senza tempo, rispecchia tutta la grandezza, la potenza, la magnificenza e la GLORIA DI ROMA, ROMA INVICTA ET LUX MUNDI 💪💯
There's a renaissance city in Poland called Zamość which is laid out very similarly. Surrounded by walls, checkerboard streets, market square in the centre with public buildings and porticos around it (it's World Heritage Site, worth a visit). My question is, Poland obviously wasn't part of Rome, so did this style of building cities just sort of continue in Europe for centuries or was this a specifically renaissance nod to the past?
It isn't a rocket science that grid based cities with an "downtown" are efficient, other civilizations like the chinese or cultures from south america had the same idea. Like the reinvention of pyramids.
I think I see a river in the first photo. Maybe they took water with an aqueduct. Maybe they used wells. Maybe there was a river that is now dried out, like the Nile in Damietta and many more.
Though the 5 road stone highway (which no longer exists) they transported huge water tankers (that resemble modern day semi tanker trucks) that where pulled by 10 horses every day from the river and to the city
yes while I can't speak for water I am indeed an expert at the local economy of this particular military colony. At the rectangular courtyard with porticoes for merchants stalls they bought and sold magic the gathering cards with tremendous profit margins
What do you know about the excavation of Timgad? I would love to hear more about that as part of your site tours (also good luck at Dougga, I was there 20 years ago and loved it!)
The ability of Rome to project itself across so much time and space is amazing. Funny how a small, obscure village in Italy or a cold, out of the way island in Northern Europe could grow into world empires
That “organic essence” of Roman city planning is a very interesting topic in urban history. That, and the fact that the Romans felt quite at ease building outside the walls. The Romans(in the broadest sense, of course) can be seen as the first peoples who saw the city and the country as one whole. Only Romans could be that arrogant, of course…This is best shown in the process of centuriation(or surveying basically), whereby surveyors planned not just the town in question, but the surrounding countryside for miles. They were very aware of the concept of empire, seeing land and sea as theirs just as much as any town or city. There is an interesting duality in Roman psyche where they think of the city as a perfect order growing around a ‘mundus’ and surrounded by the sacred ‘pomerium,’ but at the same time obscuring that perfection by incorporating the natural world into its urban geography. This is very unlike the Greeks, for example, who seemed to stick to their rigid grids no matter the circumstances. Piraeus is a perfect example. For them and many other prior cultures, the city was the world of man and the country that of myth and legend. For the Romans it was just an extension of the city. This concept, which was quite profound, was crucial for the eventual development from an empire built essentialy out of contracted city states, to a centralised state with common citizenship or the notion of borders, as we indeed see developing in late-Roman and Byzantine history. Of course it is a concept that endures to this day. Anyway, awesome video as always man!
Greatest book on Rome is Masters of Rome by McCullough. Brilliant beyond measure, she was awarded medals by city of Rome. Detailed and thorough she highlights the greatest century of humanity: 100 BC to Christ/ Augustus: Caesar, Marius, mithradates, Herod, Sulla, and Octavian.
Could you make w video explaining the origin of Roman architectual uniformity? For such a vast empire spanning three continents and incorporating hundreds of cultures the urban planning is remarkably identical across all major cities in all corners of the empire. Even by modern standards this rigid adherance to a set of rules is insane. What was the purpose of it? Was it simply a reflection of totalitarian top-down structure of the state? Or is there more to it?
I'm not the doc and this isn't a video, but I'd guess that at least part of the answer is military surveyors. The Legions built things everywhere they went with efficient military uniformity. I don't know if that explains the styles of particular buildings or not. But as in the case of the town in this video, it certainly explains the urban planning similarities and also uniformity in major projects like aquaducts and roads.
@@johnladuke6475 I guess this explains the layout but there is still a question about the style - how did Roman architecture become so universal that every artisan was making the exact same corinthian columns. We do see different materials and different local building techniques (opus afticanum) but these were covered with plaster and tried to imitate the common style. I also find it interesting that even in Britain they still built their houses as if it were a Mediterranian climate. It wasn't the military building the villas and theaters so how comes?
On the floor in front of most public bathrooms is a small water channel. I find it very interesting that at Timgad, there are slits in the floor instead. Do you know what those were for?
Another guy I follow Garth Harney was recently in Timgad. Great video. What happened to the population in late antiquity? Did they lose all sources of revenue and abandon the city?
Yes and that was the main motivation for most to join the army. It also was a major driver for expansion of the empire because once they had this huge standing army they had to have new lands to give the retired soldiers.
It’s crazy to think after all that time existing, being built by the Romans, the Roman’s would take it down. In their mind I would go to say they thought they would have time to rebuild.
It always makes me sad to hear the phrase "it was later dismantled for building material used for other buildings." This is the fate of so many incredible structures from the ancient world. I sometimes wish our medieval ancestors had the same care for archeology that we do today
Equally you could say that what they did was better, today many old buildings are turned into rubble & trucked to a landfill rather than anything being reused.
Can someone explain why the upper parts of the buildings are totally missing? I understand the reuse of material or producing quick-lime by heating it up to extreme temperatures but is there such an explanation where they used decaying material for the upper parts like adobe or wood?
Speaking of ancient churches, it is quite funny that in the first legals Christian temples there were no pews and Christians had to attend mass standing all the time. Just because Constantine gave them freedom of worship does not mean that they had the right to practice it comfortably. 😅
"And if you're really really good and love Jesus enough, you'll get to go to Heaven, where you may have a seat." But I guess that doesn't make any less sense than the rest of it.
@@AndyM_323YYYthe royal mausoleum of Mauritania in Tipaza was used as a training target for the french navy which left a huge hole that can be seen on what's left of it today.
It is pretty impressive to me how Romans kinda had almost a standard layout for towns. They had blocks of houses and streets of the same width running beside most of those blocks of houses alongside with raised stone blocks for pedestrians to walk over the street withouth stepping in anything that the horses might drop for example. It took probably until the 20th century until people started planning towns more methodically in the way that Romans planned them. Maybe Romans werent that great artists in a way but they for sure did a lot for cityplanning and for engineering in general.
Why would veterans of the Roman Army want to go across the sea to live in a desert? What would they do there? It's abandoned now probably because there is no water...
The full name was Colonia Marciana Ulpia Traiana Thamugadi. Colonia meant it's a Roman colony, a community of citizens planted on conquered land. The three following names were there to commemorate different members of the imperial house and Thamugadi comes from a Berber word for local topography. With a mouthful like that it's no surprise the name has shortened since.
It wouldve been actually so funny if this video was only 10 seconds long and he just says “with there hands” and then pauses for a few seconds and it ends
I stumbled on Timgad in 1983 while hiking through Algeria. Then it was an abandoned place, only inhabited by some (beautiful) Roman status (one of Venus!) and a few skinny cows looking for something to eat. Will never forget the excitement of that day
You mean “ statues”. Skinny cows get you excited? Okey Doke.
Had to have been amazing! All to yourself in a way.
So cool, those experiences are the best of life.
@@garyfrancis6193You’ve mastered the fine art of locating missing “e”s. Congratulations.
@@garyfrancis6193 you mean Dokie, you clown,
Thank you for the video. I visited Timgad in 1975 and had long wondered if it survived Algeria's various troubles. I'm happy to say that it looks pretty much the same as it did 49 years ago.
Pretty much destroyed right down to the ground?
Timgad's museum was robbed in 1995 and it was only reopened in 2018 after recovering most of the +950 artifacts. Glad to see tourists rediscovering it again.
For those interested in Roman structures, the novel "Vespasian: Tribune of Rome", written by Robert Fabbri, has a strikingly beautiful chapter in which the very different areas of the city of Rome are described in vivid detail from the point of view of a teenage Vespasian as he and his Family visits the city for the first time. It is so well written that it literally makes you feel like you are inside the ancient eternal city.
I'll look it up. Have yoy read Margaret George's Confessions of Young Nero, which is one of two Nero books? So good, they almost make one sympathize with him. Also, the same author's Memoirs of Cleopatra is fantastic.
Thank you for the recommendation
I read it after reading this recommendation, and it really brings the city to life as it was that I haven’t seen before, thank you
Thanx for the tip!
Are these books historically credible?
Dude!
This is so neat seeing how a city started and changed over time.
As usual another fascinating video! Our host is one of the only creator who does NOT directly read his script directly from Wikipedia and seems genuinely interested in communicating information in a clear, concise and UNBIASED way. Thank you!!!
Yeah, this a jewel of youtube channel.
This place is amazing. I had never heard of it until recently.
Pretty crazy to think Rome started as a small village of wooden cabins. Everything just got replaced by good old reliable marble.
I remember from Robert Graves' novel "I, Claudius" that Augustus used to say that he came to a wooden Rome and transformed it in a marble Rome, or something similar. Please, excuse my por englush, it's not my first lenguaje.
RUclips doesn't allow me to edit the previos comment, so
*poor
*language
And plaster…
I suppose if you go far enough back, any city started as wooden cabins or huts
@@theorixlux Not Vegas. It's been a tacky monstrosity of concrete and neon in the middle of the desert from day one.
Thank you for your awesome video and the presentation of the beautiful city of timgad I hope you enjoyed your trip and maybe you'll come back to Algeria to discover more about all the Roman sites we have the closest one to timgad is another beautiful city called Djemila about 170km away and it's very well preserved
Well, I was just thinking about roman empire. nice timing.
'Et tu', huh?
I wish there was a time when I wasn't thinking about the Romans😭😭
Cheez, I think about them constantly for some reason.
Imagine identifying with things you didn't accomplish 😂 good luck, mayo supremacists 😂
@@radiofreeacab Image being that obtuse to not recognize jokes about an internet meme from 6 months ago.
An unsung pleasure of Garrett's wonderful RUclips channels: the comments --
Interesting, well-written, and even laugh-out-loud !
“Unsung”? Taylor Swift never wrote a song about his videos? You may be right.
@@garyfrancis6193 All subjects are unsung until the Swift lady sings
Thank you for this information. Loved the combination of photographs and a street map.
Great video sir, you captured the essence of Roman architectural genius, and the secret to their ability to feel 'at home' anywhere chose to rule. Thank you!
Thank you so much for the video Dr. Ryan.
Watching it today, I’m suddenly realizing how closely these houses resemble the Riads in Morocco you can still see today.
I’m so happy you went on this trip. These kinds of videos have high rewatchability. Looking forward to the rest of your trip content
Absolutely incredible, new place in the to go list 👌 thank you!
Really happy for you Garrett that you had the opportunity to visit those incredibly well preserved roman cities in person, Carthage next ? :)
Looks beautiful there. Would love to visit someday
I really like videos like this. Thank you for traveling to these places and showing them to all of us who can't travel!
I know it's not the point, but @toldinstone always seems to have the most interesting sponsors.
He mixes it up, that's for sure. My favourite was the plumber from Queens who paid a history doctor from Chicago to advertise on youtube for the whole world to see.
A fine presentation. I take it this was also for wives and such of the retired soldiers. I met an lady elementary teacher who had visited Rome on holiday and liked to tell every class how great the Romans were. I suppose she though she would be living in a villa with slaves waiting on her - rather than being one.
hi
im from timgad and am so happy to see your video ❤
Unfortunately I did not know about your visit to Timgad, but I would have had a great time with you and taught you a lot about it.
Very well done, thanks for producing and publishing the video. Certainly has got me adjusting my todo list.
Love this video. Thank you! 🎉
I enjoy all of toldinstone videos
Thanks for another excellent video about a place I was unaware of.
I love your content Sir 💯
An extremely fascinating and informative video. Great job!
eyo my guy great video as always and congratulations to the 500k really deserved
Wow it must be very impressive to visit this site. Amazing!
Thanks a bunch for sharing this with us Big Dog!
I just listened to your appearance on forehead fables today at work (I'm late I know). Had a blast, great job lol.
Come for the soothing voice, stay for the facts. Thanks for an awesome channel!
Amazing to experience a site like that with no tourists. I hope you tried out that latrine for the true Roman experience, minus the sponge on a stick.
Semplicemente straordinario e senza tempo, rispecchia tutta la grandezza, la potenza, la magnificenza e la GLORIA DI ROMA, ROMA INVICTA ET LUX MUNDI 💪💯
Garrett you're the best!! Thanks for the shout out.
I loved this video and I would like to see more ancient urban planning videos.
Thoroughly enjoyed this; and found it educational too.
Jeez I wish I could have come on this trip, times wouldnt line up as I was traveling in Italy but hopefully one of the future trips!
Having Google Maps up while watching thsi was great
There's a renaissance city in Poland called Zamość which is laid out very similarly. Surrounded by walls, checkerboard streets, market square in the centre with public buildings and porticos around it (it's World Heritage Site, worth a visit). My question is, Poland obviously wasn't part of Rome, so did this style of building cities just sort of continue in Europe for centuries or was this a specifically renaissance nod to the past?
I would guess that the people who laid out that city had read Vitruvius, or were at least familiar with developments in Renaissance Italy
It isn't a rocket science that grid based cities with an "downtown" are efficient, other civilizations like the chinese or cultures from south america had the same idea. Like the reinvention of pyramids.
Amazing!
I hope you enjoyed your stay in my home country!
Credit to you - I didn’t click with the last thumbnail and I did for this one. You got me this time Stone…
What was the source of the town’s water supply? And the basis of its local economy?
I think I see a river in the first photo. Maybe they took water with an aqueduct. Maybe they used wells. Maybe there was a river that is now dried out, like the Nile in Damietta and many more.
Though the 5 road stone highway (which no longer exists) they transported huge water tankers (that resemble modern day semi tanker trucks) that where pulled by 10 horses every day from the river and to the city
yes while I can't speak for water I am indeed an expert at the local economy of this particular military colony. At the rectangular courtyard with porticoes for merchants stalls they bought and sold magic the gathering cards with tremendous profit margins
What do you know about the excavation of Timgad? I would love to hear more about that as part of your site tours (also good luck at Dougga, I was there 20 years ago and loved it!)
The ability of Rome to project itself across so much time and space is amazing. Funny how a small, obscure village in Italy or a cold, out of the way island in Northern Europe could grow into world empires
That “organic essence” of Roman city planning is a very interesting topic in urban history. That, and the fact that the Romans felt quite at ease building outside the walls.
The Romans(in the broadest sense, of course) can be seen as the first peoples who saw the city and the country as one whole. Only Romans could be that arrogant, of course…This is best shown in the process of centuriation(or surveying basically), whereby surveyors planned not just the town in question, but the surrounding countryside for miles. They were very aware of the concept of empire, seeing land and sea as theirs just as much as any town or city. There is an interesting duality in Roman psyche where they think of the city as a perfect order growing around a ‘mundus’ and surrounded by the sacred ‘pomerium,’ but at the same time obscuring that perfection by incorporating the natural world into its urban geography. This is very unlike the Greeks, for example, who seemed to stick to their rigid grids no matter the circumstances. Piraeus is a perfect example. For them and many other prior cultures, the city was the world of man and the country that of myth and legend. For the Romans it was just an extension of the city. This concept, which was quite profound, was crucial for the eventual development from an empire built essentialy out of contracted city states, to a centralised state with common citizenship or the notion of borders, as we indeed see developing in late-Roman and Byzantine history. Of course it is a concept that endures to this day.
Anyway, awesome video as always man!
Greatest book on Rome is Masters of Rome by McCullough. Brilliant beyond measure, she was awarded medals by city of Rome. Detailed and thorough she highlights the greatest century of humanity: 100 BC to Christ/ Augustus: Caesar, Marius, mithradates, Herod, Sulla, and Octavian.
even in the past old ppl wanted to spend their last days in a sunny warm place close to beaches.
Could you make w video explaining the origin of Roman architectual uniformity? For such a vast empire spanning three continents and incorporating hundreds of cultures the urban planning is remarkably identical across all major cities in all corners of the empire. Even by modern standards this rigid adherance to a set of rules is insane. What was the purpose of it? Was it simply a reflection of totalitarian top-down structure of the state? Or is there more to it?
I'm not the doc and this isn't a video, but I'd guess that at least part of the answer is military surveyors. The Legions built things everywhere they went with efficient military uniformity. I don't know if that explains the styles of particular buildings or not. But as in the case of the town in this video, it certainly explains the urban planning similarities and also uniformity in major projects like aquaducts and roads.
@@johnladuke6475 I guess this explains the layout but there is still a question about the style - how did Roman architecture become so universal that every artisan was making the exact same corinthian columns. We do see different materials and different local building techniques (opus afticanum) but these were covered with plaster and tried to imitate the common style. I also find it interesting that even in Britain they still built their houses as if it were a Mediterranian climate. It wasn't the military building the villas and theaters so how comes?
On the floor in front of most public bathrooms is a small water channel. I find it very interesting that at Timgad, there are slits in the floor instead. Do you know what those were for?
When are you hosting your next tour? 🤔
I'm going to Turkey in October! There are still spaces open...
Another guy I follow Garth Harney was recently in Timgad. Great video. What happened to the population in late antiquity? Did they lose all sources of revenue and abandon the city?
It is a beautiful planet
neat
So do you think the paving stones of the main road were laid at an angle to make a smoother ride for the solid wheel wagons and such?
Please go to Volubilis (Walili) Morocco! Old roman, Carthaginian, and older architecture !
Im an experienced Roman city planner. I spent far to much time playing Caesar in the 90’s.
what would the veterans do for living? Be given a piece of land to farm?
Yes and that was the main motivation for most to join the army. It also was a major driver for expansion of the empire because once they had this huge standing army they had to have new lands to give the retired soldiers.
Wow, diadem’s do get down to building.
cameraman is told
It would be wonderful if we could be transported back in time to both see and experience the "living" city.
It’s crazy to think after all that time existing, being built by the Romans, the Roman’s would take it down. In their mind I would go to say they thought they would have time to rebuild.
I was thinking of using this video to make my way in Caesar III
We’re you the only person there? So lucky!
How big were their circular Saws?
It always makes me sad to hear the phrase "it was later dismantled for building material used for other buildings." This is the fate of so many incredible structures from the ancient world. I sometimes wish our medieval ancestors had the same care for archeology that we do today
Equally you could say that what they did was better, today many old buildings are turned into rubble & trucked to a landfill rather than anything being reused.
They had practical concerns. If a building was not actively in use it would be just a pile of unused resources.
Great Sponsor - I got my wedding ring from Thorum.
Kinda surprised because he managed to get a visa to Algeria knowing that it is the hardest visa to get, anyways amazing video
He's a historian, that's why it was easier for him I suppose.
Plz drop Thorium
Can someone explain why the upper parts of the buildings are totally missing? I understand the reuse of material or producing quick-lime by heating it up to extreme temperatures but is there such an explanation where they used decaying material for the upper parts like adobe or wood?
Please make compilations of your videos!!!
Better than today
Speaking of ancient churches, it is quite funny that in the first legals Christian temples there were no pews and Christians had to attend mass standing all the time. Just because Constantine gave them freedom of worship does not mean that they had the right to practice it comfortably. 😅
"If I can receive the Lord's inspiration standing up so can you dammit"
In orthodox churches you also stand up during mass, only old people sit on the chairs along the walls
"And if you're really really good and love Jesus enough, you'll get to go to Heaven, where you may have a seat."
But I guess that doesn't make any less sense than the rest of it.
Since it was based on the basilica design, not a religious building, it makes sense that there was no seating.
Question. So was all of these ruins buried under sand and then excavated semi recently, or have they sat at out in the open since roman times?
A lot of them were in the open and virtually intact until French colonists arrived in the 19th century and started robbing them for stone.
@@AndyM_323YYYthe royal mausoleum of Mauritania in Tipaza was used as a training target for the french navy which left a huge hole that can be seen on what's left of it today.
Now batting: #12, the shortstop, Tim Gad. Tim Gad now batting.
AAAAHAHAA he loved cricket
What a hit! 6 runs!!
Perhaps the greatest legacy of the Roman Empire is the abundant artificial quarries
It is pretty impressive to me how Romans kinda had almost a standard layout for towns. They had blocks of houses and streets of the same width running beside most of those blocks of houses alongside with raised stone blocks for pedestrians to walk over the street withouth stepping in anything that the horses might drop for example. It took probably until the 20th century until people started planning towns more methodically in the way that Romans planned them. Maybe Romans werent that great artists in a way but they for sure did a lot for cityplanning and for engineering in general.
Okay boys lets learn how the Romans built cities! Hell yes!
So Timgad was a kind of Del Boca Vista for Rome’s retirees!🤪
Better than what American soilders get, VA benefits.
How would you recommend that we get there? I have had this on my radar for about a month to go visit. Was it safe to visit Algeria?
8:12 urban sprawl!! 😮 Hahaha
Can you imagine the hilarity of sitting all around together in a latrine with your buddies after a huge meal and playing battleshits...
Cool
That Thorum sponsorship surprised me. And they don't just do rings!
I'm becoming genuinely attached to my "Meteorsaur" ring
Why would veterans of the Roman Army want to go across the sea to live in a desert? What would they do there? It's abandoned now probably because there is no water...
They fought barbarians and savages for 25 years just to have a house, they could deal with the weather and they drank wine.
Timgad is not in the desert. Northern Algeria is not a desert. You can even go skiing not too far from Timgad.
Northern Africa has areas with similar climate to California. Why would people live in a place like California?
@@FrankBurnham they were the barbarians
@@DzSagace Are you writing that with the Latin Alphabet?
Would love to see a 3D rendering taking a stab at what this could have looked like “back then!”
What did the Romans call the place? Timgad doesn't sound very "roman".
Toujge my butt
The full name was Colonia Marciana Ulpia Traiana Thamugadi.
Colonia meant it's a Roman colony, a community of citizens planted on conquered land. The three following names were there to commemorate different members of the imperial house and Thamugadi comes from a Berber word for local topography.
With a mouthful like that it's no surprise the name has shortened since.
Timgadium?🥹
Carthage lost the Punic Wars. They named it first.
@@FrankBurnham bollshit lol Its numiden name
Explore Golgumbaz Deccan india 🇮🇳
At 6:48...who is the auther wearing...Dior, Versace, Calvin Klein ????????
There are those who call it...Timgad?
What should they call it then ?
no ads ?
Im sure Pompeii is the best preserved,if you watch footage online its like they left it yesterday.
Who would be the decurions in a roman veteran colony? Senior members of the army?
Are there any names for the wealthy donors who constructed the market?
Is thera a video on the safety of ancient baths? Bacterias and other micro organisma must be a real issue?
Two words, Communal Sponge, not TP.
We lost relatives during the Vandal invasion of Timgad
This video may be a little bit too soon
At least you honor your ancestors
Who else is here to listen to information about the Romans?
At least 504 k people who are subscribed
I accidentally clicked a link I thought was a Rick Astley video.
Next the Roman city Dilligaf!
It wouldve been actually so funny if this video was only 10 seconds long and he just says “with there hands” and then pauses for a few seconds and it ends
Haha! Timgad was the first retirement community