01:09 #10 Aqueduct of Segovia 02:17 #9 Tower of Hercules 03:26 #8 Pula Arena 04:48 #7 Library of Celsus - I was already there 05:47 #6 Diecletian's Palace 07:15 #5 Amphitheater of EL Djem 08:14 #4 Pont du Gard - I was already there 09:24 #3 Pantheon - I was already there 10:45 #2 Temples of Baalbek 11:42 #1 Colosseum - I was already there
All around the mediterranean…. Not all Europe. Romans empired stopped at the Rhine and Danube, which means that more than half of Europe is not concerned. It is mostly in latin Europe (romance speaking), Italy, Spain, France, as well as Greece and parts of the Balkans that roman inprint was strong in Europe.
I was fortunate enough to visit the Roman Aqueduct in Segovia. It is a huge masterpiece of Roman engineering. I was awestruck by its' size. It is a beautiful structure.
I am proud to have visited 8 out of these 10 masterpieces of Rome. Western civilization owes these geniuses having laid down the building blocks of what we now take for granted. Gratias tibi .
@@pietjebel3119 I initially felt simpathy towards your comment, then I remembered that (ignoring for a moment their most widely known achievements) the romans were already performing cataract surgeries long before the middle ages. Call them evil and imperialists if you want, but their genius and spirit are undeniable.
What is amazing is the Roman economy at the time would have been massive to be able to finance and construct projects like we see here , the skills and trades on hand to do these massive construction projects would have been impressive back then and equally impressive today .
I remember being a kid and learning about the Roman empire. It was normally taught the fall was due to dissension, attacks from other empires/nations etc. However what I am seeing more recently discussed, which is probably more accurate, is that environmental factors weakened the empire, then making it susceptible to invasion. i.e. drought and ensuing famine. A society cannot function without water. No crops, no food.
Love the production quality here! It's important to note that Roman Empire as the world knew it fell in 476-- I actually did a video on its last general, Stilicho, last month!
You know very well the Eastern Roman Empire not only continued it flourished to such an extent that the last great Latin speaking emperor Justinian, through sheer force of will and with the help of one of the greatest Roman general's in history Belisarius, Justinian re-conquered the whole Mediterranean basin. The city of Rome fell to the Christian Visigoths yet by then the political and economic power in the Roman world had long shifted to Constantinople. Rome fell. The Empire did not.
In the city of Aosta, in the extreme noth-west of Italy, you can walk in a real ancient roman colony ;-) But there are well conserved roman ruins in almost all the italian cities.
@@padre.martino.biblista Arena Di Verona is still an ancient roman building. It is still intacted and predates the Roman Colesseum. It is in better shape than the Roman Colesseum. It in use for concerts and sporting events such as volleyball. They also forgot about the temple and Roman amphitheater in Nimes, France.
You left out Hagia Sophia, the building located in the city use to be Roman empire capital, it's the first building with dome on the square base, first ever pendentive use in building, one of greatest architect archivement of the Roman.
Tam Nguyen Istanbul or Constantinople as it was known then was made the eastern capital of the Roman Empire. It was never the capital of the whole Roman Empire. And the Hagia Sophia is more identified now with the Christian Eastern Orthodox Church & the Ottoman Empire.
@@mpb3481 As the clip says the Roman Empire lasted till 1453, so obviously the architectural monuments waited to be seen should had cover even the Christian era. And a correction, when the Western part of the empire collapsed the eastern part or"Byzantium " was the only indeed Roman Empire and Constantinople the capital of the whole Roman Empire.....except if there is a rule that without France Britain Spain the Roman Empire is not a whole??? Which is why this term "byzantine" came along....the westerners never digested the fact that the Roman Empire lasted so long in the hands of the Greeks without them(west Europeans) having part to the continuation of the Roman tradition
@@vanmars5718 just because they used to be under the Roman empire doesn't mean they were. It was a greek empire as a matter of fact so not the Roman empire
@@mpb3481 actually the city was the capital of entire Roman empire just for little bit then the empire split, and became capital of the Eastern part till 1453, and no matter East or West they still called themselves the Roman.
@@mpb3481 Yes it was -under Constantine it was the capital of the whole Roman Empire -later the west was lost to Goths etc but reconquered (a lot of it) by Belisarius and others under Justinian -get your facts straight!
When you live in Split, and walk through the place every day on your way to work. I guess I'm so used to the scenery, sometimes I forget how beautiful it is.
One of thegreat ironies of the roman engineering is that they designed all these great monumental structures but thye never developed the wheel barrow.
As the clip says the Roman Empire lasted till 1453, even if until recently historians of the West always put the end in 410 when the Western part fell...today is very well restored to put the end at 1453 when the Roman eastern part fell... So monuments of the after 410 era waited to be seen, so many Roman "byzantine" monuments around the Mediterranean
I wonder why there seems to be momentum to say the empire was over in 410. I find it unlikely that the "Eastern" Roman Empire called themselves Byzantine, or Easter Roman empire. Most likely they just called themselves Roman Empire.
wow that's amazing, enjoyed the video, i really want to visit PANTHEON, i cannot wait when we can continue our travelling ) so many plans we have) i live in China now and we travel just in our province) if anybody wants to have a look at China today - welcome to our channel. Thank you for this video 😍
the pantheon is a truly awe-inspiring experience, the main structure has stood for 2000 years without major alterations, the design is elegant and grandeur
What about Trier Germany ? I spent 2 years outside Trier with the Army , 1984- 86 . Trier celebrated its 2000th birthday in 84 . Every time they knocked down a building there , they find Roman ruins and the state takes over and preserves that sight. The Port De Negro is still standing ( Main gate ) . There is also an Amphitheater two blocks from my girls home . I went back in 2017 to see my girlfriend from Butzweiler who now lives and was born in Trier. There is an old Roman mine outside Butzweiler that has its entrances barred. I wanted to move there and I have a Roman Centurions uniform at home ( Check my face book page ) . My son is named after Julius Caesar and my grandson's name is Roman. I have a 4000 1/72 scale plastic Roman Army ( a legion ) I have collected since I was young ( I'm going on 70 ). I am now painting 1/32 scale Romans for my grandson who is 15 months old and will inherit my Legion . I am a record producer and my production company Logo is " 10th Legion Equestris Productions " " Victus Romanus " & Make Rome Great again !
Hadrian’s Wall ??? 75miles long. See it from Space. It’s the best preserved Roman Frontier and still to the day the Frontier between England and Scotland.
@@winnifredforbes8712 Romans admire greece so they took a lot of things from ancient greece. For example the ancient Temple pantheon has greek name pantheon in greek means for all gods and roman agora was like greek agora. But as a greek i respect and adimre ancient Romans
you show a lot or arena..... and you dont show the most preserved arena in the world ?... Nimes and Arles in France have the most preserved roman Arena. 2000 years after their construction they are still used for spectacles
@@touropia thanks! looks like they have a nice little point break setup in view of the amphitheater. was thinking it would be rad to catch some waves and use a Roman amphitheater as a lineup marker. silly surfer thoughts haha
Il più grande e glorioso impero della storia; Roma ha conquistato, dominato, costruito e civilizzato; la grandezza, la potenza, la magnificenza e la gloria di ROMA EST AETERNA, ROMA INVICTA ET LUX MUNDI 💪💪💯
Their techniques being "borrowed" does not diminish their accomplishments. The fact that Roman culture endured above everything else is a testament to their brilliance.
Stefano Carbonera glad you enjoyed. Next time you decide to visit Greece again, I recommend to you to visit the beautiful island of Crete which has world-renowned beaches, magnificent archeological sites and charming towns.
i watched the video and i like it one hand but other hand i have been surprised since i had expected Hagia Sophia in Istanbu would be in first three but even there was not in the list. Did you missed or you assumed it is not a monument. Any way good work and thx
I'm afraid you gotta do this again adding: - the "villa romana del casale" in Piazza Armerina, Sicily - Pompeii and Ercolano - Ostia Antica /ancient Ostia, next to Rome :-P
Arena Verona, Italy Roman Walls Lugo, Spain Porta Nigra Trier, Germany Maison Carrée Nimes, France Curia Julia Rome, Italy Aula Palatina Trier, Germany Roman Theatre Orange, France Les Arenes amphitheater Arles, France Amphitheater Aspendos, Turkey Roman bridge Merida, Spain City + Septimius Severus Arch Leptis Magna, Libya City Heculaneum, Italy City Pompei, Italy ...
Mancano tanti siti stupendi solo a Roma : Ostia antica , villa Adriana , arco di Costantino , colonna di Traiano , colonna di Adriano , ara pacis , Foro Romano ecc .... Pompei , Anfiteatro di Verona ....ecc
@touropia: Great work! I would suggest to update your video with these two ancient Roman cities in North Africa: An ancient Roman city in Algeria, named Djemila th-cam.com/video/-Uu5rWY0yag/w-d-xo.html Another ancient Roman city in Libya, named Leptis Magna th-cam.com/video/EmF4GT-S-Yw/w-d-xo.html Cheers :)
Augustus took power as emperor in 27 BC, but that was not when Rome was founded. It was an "empire" after that, but this disregards the several hundred years of the Roman Republic before then, which founded Roman culture, engineering, expansion, and all the things we think of as Roman. The way it's stated in this video sounds like it began in 27 BC. Not true. It would have been more accurate to say that the Roman Republic transitioned to a dictatorship with an emperor, at 27 BC. And that's not even 100% accurate, as Caesar and Sulla were interim dictators before Augustus.
For centuries the Romans strode across the "known world" like a Colossus. Their empire is now long gone with only relics and ruins for tourists to gape at. So much for Roman "exceptionalism". You may draw your own conclusions...
All empires have feet of clay. It is what they contribute to human civilization that ultimately counts. To compare. Tamerlame empire and dynasty contributed more pain, genocide and destruction than any building program he and his kin left behind. Estimated by conservative and progressive historians to have killed one in five humans on earth at the time. Tamerlame and dynasty effected human civilization in such a pestilent way as to be forcefully forgotten by humanity due to the sheer trauma he inflicted. Now compare the legacy of Rome. ' What have the Romans ever done for us?'.
01:09 #10 Aqueduct of Segovia
02:17 #9 Tower of Hercules
03:26 #8 Pula Arena
04:48 #7 Library of Celsus - I was already there
05:47 #6 Diecletian's Palace
07:15 #5 Amphitheater of EL Djem
08:14 #4 Pont du Gard - I was already there
09:24 #3 Pantheon - I was already there
10:45 #2 Temples of Baalbek
11:42 #1 Colosseum - I was already there
Nimes bullring (France) Currently in use (bullfight) !!!! Plaza de toros of Nimes (France) Currently in use ( bullfightess)
Man Pont Du Gard Aqueduct is so huge, Roman engineering on colossal level never cease to amaze me.
It is only a small sample of the large number of well or partially well preserved monuments that exist in what was the ancient territory of the empire
I have seen many of these historical landmarks and I am excited to see more.
I went to Segovia, Spain and it was amazing seeing the aqueducts.
I live here, it's fantastic
A good friend of my grand mother's cousin drove by segovia a long time ago.
Nimes bullring (France) Currently in use (bullfight) !!!
Those Romans sure knew their aqueducts! All across Europe!
There is baalbak temple in Lebanon
All around the mediterranean…. Not all Europe. Romans empired stopped at the Rhine and Danube, which means that more than half of Europe is not concerned. It is mostly in latin Europe (romance speaking), Italy, Spain, France, as well as Greece and parts of the Balkans that roman inprint was strong in Europe.
I was fortunate enough to visit the Roman Aqueduct in Segovia. It is a huge masterpiece of Roman engineering. I was awestruck by its' size. It is a beautiful structure.
Historical place, suitable for a visit. Very awesome.
I am proud to have visited 8 out of these 10 masterpieces of Rome. Western civilization owes these geniuses having laid down the building blocks of what we now take for granted. Gratias tibi .
Tell that to those geniusses on the universities trough out the western world with there trow away own history of old White men mentality
@@pietjebel3119 I initially felt simpathy towards your comment, then I remembered that (ignoring for a moment their most widely known achievements) the romans were already performing cataract surgeries long before the middle ages. Call them evil and imperialists if you want, but their genius and spirit are undeniable.
Just visited the parthenon, built on the order of marcus agrippa
@@johntynan8161 You mean the Pantheon dummy?
@@VergiliosSpatulas sorry grammer police 😮💨
What is amazing is the Roman economy at the time would have been massive to be able to finance and construct projects like we see here , the skills and trades on hand to do these massive construction projects would have been impressive back then and equally impressive today .
The skills and trades were impressive. Probably a combination of that, construction expense and slave labor to some degree has to be factored in.
I've seen most of it ,best architecture in the world
I remember being a kid and learning about the Roman empire. It was normally taught the fall was due to dissension, attacks from other empires/nations etc.
However what I am seeing more recently discussed, which is probably more accurate, is that environmental factors weakened the empire, then making it susceptible to invasion. i.e. drought and ensuing famine. A society cannot function without water. No crops, no food.
Love the production quality here! It's important to note that Roman Empire as the world knew it fell in 476-- I actually did a video on its last general, Stilicho, last month!
So the Eastern Roman Empire didn't exist or are we going to ignore that?
Bs
You know very well the Eastern Roman Empire not only continued it flourished to such an extent that the last great Latin speaking emperor Justinian, through sheer force of will and with the help of one of the greatest Roman general's in history Belisarius, Justinian re-conquered the whole Mediterranean basin.
The city of Rome fell to the Christian Visigoths yet by then the political and economic power in the Roman world had long shifted to Constantinople.
Rome fell. The Empire did not.
Thank you for sharing such a cool places!
In the city of Aosta, in the extreme noth-west of Italy, you can walk in a real ancient roman colony ;-)
But there are well conserved roman ruins in almost all the italian cities.
I missed: Jerash, Verona's arena and Pompei. Good video though and glad to see 8 of 10 from your list.
@@alessandromancuso7242 Doesn't matter, they're all in Italy (most in Rome), the video was about all ancient Roman Empire
@@padre.martino.biblista Arena Di Verona is still an ancient roman building. It is still intacted and predates the Roman Colesseum. It is in better shape than the Roman Colesseum. It in use for concerts and sporting events such as volleyball. They also forgot about the temple and Roman amphitheater in Nimes, France.
You left out Hagia Sophia, the building located in the city use to be Roman empire capital, it's the first building with dome on the square base, first ever pendentive use in building, one of greatest architect archivement of the Roman.
Tam Nguyen Istanbul or Constantinople as it was known then was made the eastern capital of the Roman Empire. It was never the capital of the whole Roman Empire. And the Hagia Sophia is more identified now with the Christian Eastern Orthodox Church & the Ottoman Empire.
@@mpb3481 As the clip says the Roman Empire lasted till 1453, so obviously the architectural monuments waited to be seen should had cover even the Christian era. And a correction, when the Western part of the empire collapsed the eastern part or"Byzantium " was the only indeed Roman Empire and Constantinople the capital of the whole Roman Empire.....except if there is a rule that without France Britain Spain the Roman Empire is not a whole??? Which is why this term "byzantine" came along....the westerners never digested the fact that the Roman Empire lasted so long in the hands of the Greeks without them(west Europeans) having part to the continuation of the Roman tradition
@@vanmars5718 just because they used to be under the Roman empire doesn't mean they were. It was a greek empire as a matter of fact so not the Roman empire
@@mpb3481 actually the city was the capital of entire Roman empire just for little bit then the empire split, and became capital of the Eastern part till 1453, and no matter East or West they still called themselves the Roman.
@@mpb3481 Yes it was -under Constantine it was the capital of the whole Roman Empire -later the west was lost to Goths etc but reconquered (a lot of it) by Belisarius and others under Justinian -get your facts straight!
When you live in Split, and walk through the place every day on your way to work. I guess I'm so used to the scenery, sometimes I forget how beautiful it is.
Great vid..thanks for posting
Romes greatest building and engineering monuments were its roads.
Beautiful video and great locations ! I subs your channel 👍👍👍👍👍
Massive respect to those people that came after roman empire and didn't destroy these monuments
Leptus Magna in Libya and some ruins in Sicily are quite something.
the ruins in sicily are not roman, they're greek
Nice one..post more like this..even one by one in good length is good to see..
Well done! Simple and clear. And then others are stirring something up, twisting, fucking hard. Good luck in the development of the channel 🤗
Great narration!
Interesting video. The only one I've seen in person is the Pont du Gard. Fabulous structure.
Did you swim under it?
No, Jerash, Jordan in this list? Way better than other items in this list
You forgot about Nimes, Arles and Orange in France
One of thegreat ironies of the roman engineering is that they designed all these great monumental structures but thye never developed the wheel barrow.
They had chariots though!
They knew how to build to last!
As the clip says the Roman Empire lasted till 1453, even if until recently historians of the West always put the end in 410 when the Western part fell...today is very well restored to put the end at 1453 when the Roman eastern part fell... So monuments of the after 410 era waited to be seen, so many Roman "byzantine" monuments around the Mediterranean
Most do 476 for the end of the west if I'm not mistaken
No
@@justinmorgan5282 right
I wonder why there seems to be momentum to say the empire was over in 410.
I find it unlikely that the "Eastern" Roman Empire called themselves Byzantine, or Easter Roman empire. Most likely they just called themselves Roman Empire.
👏👏
There are also: roman foro in rome, pompei, arena of verona, hadrian wall and Damasco
Beautiful Video and Great Locations ❤️ Keep your Wonderful Work Going 👍 Best Regards from Melbourne 😍
wow that's amazing, enjoyed the video, i really want to visit PANTHEON, i cannot wait when we can continue our travelling ) so many plans we have) i live in China now and we travel just in our province) if anybody wants to have a look at China today - welcome to our channel. Thank you for this video 😍
the pantheon is a truly awe-inspiring experience, the main structure has stood for 2000 years without major alterations, the design is elegant and grandeur
Its so sad so many of these buildings have been destroyed and ransaked over the centuries.
Roman bathhouse in Bath England should of been on the list
Geez. Almost all of the Segovia aqueduct is made of stone and doesn't feature "brickwork".
What about Trier Germany ? I spent 2 years outside Trier with the Army , 1984- 86 . Trier celebrated its 2000th birthday in 84 . Every time they knocked down a building there , they find Roman ruins and the state takes over and preserves that sight. The Port De Negro is still standing ( Main gate ) . There is also an Amphitheater two blocks from my girls home . I went back in 2017 to see my girlfriend from Butzweiler who now lives and was born in Trier. There is an old Roman mine outside Butzweiler that has its entrances barred. I wanted to move there and I have a Roman Centurions uniform at home ( Check my face book page ) . My son is named after Julius Caesar and my grandson's name is Roman. I have a 4000 1/72 scale plastic Roman Army ( a legion ) I have collected since I was young ( I'm going on 70 ). I am now painting 1/32 scale Romans for my grandson who is 15 months old and will inherit my Legion . I am a record producer and my production company Logo is " 10th Legion Equestris Productions " " Victus Romanus " & Make Rome Great again !
Nimes bullring (France) Currently in use (bullfight), "plaza de toros" Nimes
Hadrian’s Wall ??? 75miles long. See it from Space. It’s the best preserved Roman Frontier and still to the day the Frontier between England and Scotland.
The other elephant in the room. Justinian Hagai Sophia.
It's long but not all that impressive to see and not particularly well-preserved compared to the monuments in this video
Make the same video for greece 🇬🇷
ΒΑΣΙΛΑΚΑΚΗΣ-ΤΣΑΓΚΑΡΑΚΗΣ ΟΕ Yeah! Rumour has it the Romans stole all their ideas. Mathematics, architecture, etc.
@@winnifredforbes8712 Romans admire greece so they took a lot of things from ancient greece. For example the ancient Temple pantheon has greek name pantheon in greek means for all gods and roman agora was like greek agora. But as a greek i respect and adimre ancient Romans
ΒΑΣΙΛΑΚΑΚΗΣ-ΤΣΑΓΚΑΡΑΚΗΣ ΟΕ Thank you for that. They were both very advanced countries.
Συμφωνω απολυτα μαζι σου.Για μετα οτιδηποτε εχουν κανει οι ρωμαιοι ευθυνετε στους αρχαιους ελληνες αλλα τους θαυμαζω εξισου.
@@mariazacharatouu7987 εννοείται αυτό και οι δύο ήταν σπουδαίοι πολιτισμοι
you show a lot or arena..... and you dont show the most preserved arena in the world ?...
Nimes and Arles in France have the most preserved roman Arena. 2000 years after their construction they are still used for spectacles
What's the name of the builduing the hills at 0:47? Thx guys
That's the Temple of Garni in Armenia
He was roman people very intelligent 👌👌👌👌
I wonder how you missed The Roman Τheater of Bosra or the Roman Theater of Palmyra in Syria!
Pretty nice video; just think Patheon should be nr1. I would love to see Baalbek.
anyone know the location of the stadium shown from the air in the intro @ 00:16 ?
Good question...for sure one of this list :-P
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_amphitheatres
(hope someone can help us)
That's Side in Turkey
@@touropia thanks! looks like they have a nice little point break setup in view of the amphitheater. was thinking it would be rad to catch some waves and use a Roman amphitheater as a lineup marker. silly surfer thoughts haha
0:47 where is that located? Even if it's not Roman, I'm kinda intrigued in knowing where it is
Il più grande e glorioso impero della storia; Roma ha conquistato, dominato, costruito e civilizzato; la grandezza, la potenza, la magnificenza e la gloria di ROMA EST AETERNA, ROMA INVICTA ET LUX MUNDI 💪💪💯
Have been to all but 2, 9, and 10. Guess it is time to plan a trip to Spain and Lebanon
So I guess you have already visited Nîmes ?
The Romans were great engineers & builders. Given earthquakes & traffic it's amazing anything still stands. However their artistry was borrowed.
Their techniques being "borrowed" does not diminish their accomplishments. The fact that Roman culture endured above everything else is a testament to their brilliance.
Roman empire is the Greatest Empire in Human history
The glory that was Rome
Good to know that Baalbek was named after emperor Me The Great (MTG)
Beautiful
Very good ^^
Please do a video for Ancient Greek monuments
Stefano Carbonera glad you enjoyed. Next time you decide to visit Greece again, I recommend to you to visit the beautiful island of Crete which has world-renowned beaches, magnificent archeological sites and charming towns.
very beautiful
i watched the video and i like it one hand but other hand i have been surprised since i had expected Hagia Sophia in Istanbu would be in first three but even there was not in the list. Did you missed or you assumed it is not a monument. Any way good work and thx
I'm afraid you gotta do this again adding:
- the "villa romana del casale" in Piazza Armerina, Sicily
- Pompeii and Ercolano
- Ostia Antica /ancient Ostia, next to Rome
:-P
My favourite country is Romania.I want to go Romania for visit.Romanians people is very beautiful and Honest.
seen all those places make me think of assasin creed 😅
what about Orange in France ? and the antic theater
Arena Verona, Italy
Roman Walls Lugo, Spain
Porta Nigra Trier, Germany
Maison Carrée Nimes, France
Curia Julia Rome, Italy
Aula Palatina Trier, Germany
Roman Theatre Orange, France
Les Arenes amphitheater Arles, France
Amphitheater Aspendos, Turkey
Roman bridge Merida, Spain
City + Septimius Severus Arch Leptis Magna, Libya
City Heculaneum, Italy
City Pompei, Italy
...
maison carrée was one that should have been mentioned
bien hecho
Explore Golgumbaz with Guide Jahangir, South India 🇮🇳
I wish I was born in Europe instead of USA cause Europe is more beautiful to me no offense
I heard that Jerash city in Jordan is the best preserved Roman city.
Agreed, so beautiful
Actually baalbek is no 1
^ Actually Pompeii and Herculaneum are the world’s best preserved roman cities.
I have seen the Pont du Gard was very good
My dad...still could do this in 1950s to 2000's 👍
please upload the videos of south korea , belgium , holland, mexico . cuba and canada
Alcántara Bridge (Spain)
I do not think is right...In Spain the most spectacular romain structure is theatre of Mérida ( is the romain theatre in n’est condition)
Sangat bagus untuk di tonton from indonesi🇮🇩
Mancano tanti siti stupendi solo a Roma : Ostia antica , villa Adriana , arco di Costantino , colonna di Traiano , colonna di Adriano , ara pacis , Foro Romano ecc .... Pompei , Anfiteatro di Verona ....ecc
Check out Porta Palatina in Turin
Croatia? Do you mean Illiria? 😂
No she meant Croatia
Dioclesiano palace
Pont du Gard
The Pantheon
Are the best
plaza toros de Nimes (France) Nimes bullring (France) Currently in use (bullfight)
Where is Pompeii,Palmyra?
Napoli
When u visit baalbek you will explore the greatnes of this empire
I only have seen the pula arena
By now I have also been to the Pont du Gard.
U haven't seen indian kailash temple
Talking Rome. Not anything else.
Hadrian's Wall.. ?
pleace new videos 2020
What? No Caerleon amphitheatre/Caerwent or Hadrian's Wall?
@touropia: Great work!
I would suggest to update your video with these two ancient Roman cities in North Africa:
An ancient Roman city in Algeria, named Djemila th-cam.com/video/-Uu5rWY0yag/w-d-xo.html
Another ancient Roman city in Libya, named Leptis Magna th-cam.com/video/EmF4GT-S-Yw/w-d-xo.html
Cheers :)
How does a building made out of stone get destroyed by a fire.
Fire, if hot enough, can crack stone. Then it crumbles away.
Augustus took power as emperor in 27 BC, but that was not when Rome was founded. It was an "empire" after that, but this disregards the several hundred years of the Roman Republic before then, which founded Roman culture, engineering, expansion, and all the things we think of as Roman. The way it's stated in this video sounds like it began in 27 BC. Not true. It would have been more accurate to say that the Roman Republic transitioned to a dictatorship with an emperor, at 27 BC. And that's not even 100% accurate, as Caesar and Sulla were interim dictators before Augustus.
Isn't number 4 in westworld season 3?
Nothing against this rating... But Piazza Armerina?
rome was founded long before 27bce
My name is roman from India. Who is romans
Baalbeck is the most underrated.
Who else has to watch this for there homework
ME
I am Spartacus.
🌿 • S • P • Q • R • 🗡
For centuries the Romans strode across the "known world" like a Colossus. Their empire is now long gone with only relics and ruins for tourists to gape at. So much for Roman "exceptionalism". You may draw your own conclusions...
All empires have feet of clay.
It is what they contribute to human civilization that ultimately counts.
To compare. Tamerlame empire and dynasty contributed more pain, genocide and destruction than any building program he and his kin left behind.
Estimated by conservative and progressive historians to have killed one in five humans on earth at the time.
Tamerlame and dynasty effected human civilization in such a pestilent way as to be forcefully forgotten by humanity due to the sheer trauma he inflicted.
Now compare the legacy of Rome. ' What have the Romans ever done for us?'.
È solo scemo !
@@jdheryos4910 a senate form of government, aqueducts, and modern stadiums
*WHAT?