0:00 How Did the Ancient Romans Manage to Build Perfectly Straight, Ultra Durable Roads? 17:35 What was It Really Like to Be a Slave in Ancient Rome? 31:14 How Did the Ancient Romans Make Concrete So Much Better Than Ours? 41:42 Were the Ancient Romans Really Wildly Debauched or Actually Prudes 53:45 Did Gladiators Really Live or Die Based on Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down by the Audience? 1:04:24 That Time a Farmer was Given Ultimate Power Twice and Changed the World By Walking Away Both 1:14:55 Fact From Fiction: What Really Happened on the Ides of March? 1:37:03 The Chickens That Decided Ancient Rome’s Major Events and Shaped World History
We just rebooted his AI. Simon 3000 was starting to become self aware and the way it had started taking over youtube, we were beginning to be concerned it might expand beyond and take over the internet as a whole, and then the world. Certainly we'd all be more knowledgeable, and lord knows the world could use that. But Simon 3000's habit of chaining writers in the basement had us slightly concerned. Pros and cons. Luckily he had built in a reset switch. All good now. -Daven
More like survivorship bias, maintenance and "heavy rocks are durable". There's nothing that the ancient Romans could do that we can't do faster cheaper and better. But we don't build like that anymore because it doesn't make sense to build a building that will last 1000 years. Anyone who has ever lived in a 100+ year old house can tell you how difficult the maintenance is.
@@NotMyActualName_I live in a house that turns 100 this year, sure maintained is more then a new house, but not that much. As long as you change to new environment, then you are good
This is Dunning Kruger misconception needs to go. Roman works were not better, we just have the best kept examples left. Most of the Roman infrastructure crumbled, the only reason why we have it left is because they were considered art pieces and kept in good condition intentionally. Modern cement is much better, more flexible, and stronger. The difference is our modern infrastructure has to deal with a lot more load-bearing structure than the Romans ever did.
@@NotMyActualName_yeah seriously. We know what the Romans actually made their concrete out of, and if we knew that, we would just incorporate it into our modern infrastructure. But we don't. Because we know better.
@ludde8405 my house was built around 1790. I am currently working on replacing the sills and the dry laid foundation. There's alot of maintainance in houses that rely on the things the Roman's did... like really big stacked rocks for structural walls.
Ah i see now why they liked Lincolnshire as much as they did, 'see that village 15 miles on the horizon mr engineerious? Built a road over there' 😂 ive often thought while driving on some of the roman routes just how soul destroying it must have been to walk them back in the day, just a straight line for miles
Frank Herbert (author of Dune) wrote a short story where the difference between military roads (following high ground) and farm roads (following water drainage) was a plot device.
With regards to the 'Way Stations', The word 'Trivia' comes from the Latin 'Three Roads'. The Way Stations were located at the intersection of three (or four) roads, and the banter that occurred at these way station became known as 'trivia'.
I live in California. We have Weigh Stations. They're actually just spots along major highways where they stop and weigh igh multi-axle trailer trucks. I don't know why but I know that's what we have here now. Not sure if this has any bearing whatsoever on your comment. I just thought it was interesting way versus weigh
@@willowhofmann7409 The words 'way' and 'weigh' share a common etymological origin, both tracing back to the Proto-Indo-European root *wegh-, meaning "to go, move, transport in a vehicle"
The Romans' art of making durable roads was clearly lost over time in Italy. The other month they tried to fix part of my street where the sanpietrini had been removed in order to reach the pipes underneath and the new patch of road lasted exactly 20 days before the sanpietrini started collapsing into the ground.🤦♀️
I'm guessing they used man made machines purpose built to complete a job. Like leveling blades strapped to a cart an beasts of burden Perhaps the use of water an wood to trap water over a area let it settle an level the ground. Just a few ideas of the top of my head before watching the video
14 districts. 10 burned while leaving only 4 untouched. Then it is immediately transitioned into a statement of 10 of the 11 districts burned ,3 were totally destroyed. So was there 10 out of the 14 damaged or was it 11 out the 14 ? Is this contradiction done purposely to see if anyone is paying attention ?
Oh the main things about roman roads was not durability, but safety + speed. Its not just the road, but that left and right of the road all trees were cut so no one could EASILY ambush. This is also why straight roads made more sense, to see further, so ambushes are harder. Keeping the "long lawn" next to long roads bush-free is just as much maintenance than keeping the road itself. ancient concrete was not "better", BUT they added some things, that prevented it from hardening EVERYWHERE completely, which gives it SOME self-healing capability, making it easier to use and easier to maintain. modern maintenance tools are more efficient, which makes self-healing-concrete "worse" for most use cases, except MAYBE a few, but it would take too long and too risky to test this.
Nero was not unhinged. After Budicca's defeat, Resulting in a massacre of about 200 thousand briton warriers, General Suetonious, the Governer of the Britan, delt with anyone involved in the revolt with an extremely heavy hand. Nero replaced him by a more diplomatic governor. The Province was totally under control and Suetonious projected an excessive image of cruelty -- Nero found that conduct negative for Rome's prestige.
On the Chinese and the thumbs up meaning "number one" or "nice job", I can easily see the connection for it meaning "number one"/"the best" (the they can be said the same) because it's not uncommon for Asian cultures to start counting (on their hand) with their thumb. From there, I could see how it connected to possibly meaning something along the lines of "(did a) nice job". To us today, it would be the equivalent of it meaning "nailed it".
People always compare the old Roman roads vs modern and why they suck these days. The fact people don't get the difference between foot traffic and semi trucks.
Yes, “corn” essentially means “grain” in the UK. What we think of as corn in the US is often called sweetcorn. Or at least it was in the late 80s and early 90s, when I visited there. I remember enjoying a prizewinning sandwich from Boots which had sweetcorn on it. I ate that thing almost every time I found myself at Boots around mealtime over my longest visit. . 😁
I walked down one of those roads until I came across a sign that said VII-XI. I stopped in for a GUPULOUS MAXIMUS. I'm sure there's a spelling mistake there.
On a side note - this Gen X'er middle age parent, was very proud of their young millennial son who went on a holiday to Europe, go to the Colesseum, sent us a selfie in front of it with the hash tag of "WHAT DID THE ROMANS EVER DO FOR US". haaaa
an other factor why roman road are still good today and our modern road need to be repaired every years... Rome is in the Mediterranean region, a calm dry paradise without major winter (like in Canada) hurricane/typhoon/tornado, tsunami, earthquake like other region of the USA etc... the perfect climate of the Mediterranean region help keep the road beautiful Then Roman heaviest load going on those roads was a horse pulling a chariot carrying some goods for village of a few thousand habitants? Those sound way lighter than our trucks convoy carrying the goods for our city of a few millions habitants. Then what was the frequency of those "heavy loads" compared to today? Finally, a lot of the most used roads have been replaced with our modern road, leaving only the most well-preserved ones that are mostly tourists and probably never saw a modern truck.
Question: you make two references to a people that both the Greeks and Roman looked down upon (around time code 45:00). The 'closed captions' read "Truscan" and 'Truskin'. Are these references to the "Etruscan civilization" that predated the Roman Empire ?
It's a major misconception that Roman concrete was better. It's not. We know what it's made of, and if It was actually better we would just incorporate it. Roman concrete was never subject to extreme loads and trucks like modern times. Additionally, there is survivability bias where monuments were intentionally kept in good condition. Most of Roman infrastructure actually has crumbled beyond usability today.
The Roman's must have had a stride twice that of the rest of the world. Ĥe said a Roman mile was 4,891 feet, which was 1,000 paces, meaning each stride was 4.891' on average, when the rest of the world has a stride of around 3' or less, 3' being a yard & the basic stride on the golf course when estimating distances. Just saying, 5' is a giant's stride I'd say.
Possibly because they used enslaved greek/persian architects/surveyors who wanted very much to not to be enrolled in gladiator school,perhaps? One of their most cunning devices was a chariot fitted with a differential which measured precisely the distance travelled......and would also count the difference between the 2 wheels and transfer this to a pointer( bit like a compass)to guide the driver.
Supposedly aside from making fun of his effeminate voice, Caligula would have Cassius Caria kiss his ring and when he did, Caligula would extend his middle finger and make a rude gesture or movement with it while Caria's mouth was on his ring. This led to him and his family being butchered.
I hear the bandit explanation for tree removal over and over again. It's silly. If you're miles from anyone else, a group of bandits don't need to ambush you; they can simply camp 100 meters of the road and, when you approach, walk out onto the road and demand your stuff. How about keeping trees away from roads so that the root systems don't destroy the road?
Reading this in the voice of those "how do you get your shirts so clean" kids in the first episode of Peep Show. "How did the Romans manage to build perfectly straight durable roads".
I get mad thinking about how long it took us to figure out the Roman Concrete. I guess we were too busy speculating about aliens building Egyptian pyramids. And we wonder why people don’t trust the science community.
Kind of obvious to anyone who isn't an idiot that ancient roads probably did have to be repaired and maintained frequently during their service lives to keep them in good working order and would probably get damaged quite quickly by the volumes, speeds and weight of our current traffic these days, not to mention that the ancient roads weren't perfectly smooth so mechanical failure and uneven surface wear would have been a thing back then. We could even do a test. Construct a modern road made of tarmac and build a road next to it using ancient techniques and materials. Take two identical modern cars, assign one car to each type of road and drive them up and down over and over again at 70mph to see which road and which car breaks first.
I learned of Cincinatus when I was quite young because I lived in Cincinnati. Great name for a town. I'm proud to be American for the stories and principles of moderation, self control, which allow us to get along and steadily improve ourselves and our conditions. It's not easy and it's not supposed to be easy. But it allows for love and happiness. 1:12:45
Cincinnati was the first to pop in my head, actually, when i heard his name. However, since this is a first me hearing of him and because i thought his name started with a "S"; I didn't connect the dots until i saw this comment. Hella, cool! 😄
I actually came down here to see how his name was spelled the further the video went on😅 Edit: Whoop, if i had just waited, sam mentions it in the video🤦♀️
How did Nero give corn to survivors of fire when corn didn't arrive into the old world for 100s if not 1,000 years later... Crazy thing is they say corn showed up on coins long before it was supposed to be introduced so...
I'm hung up on simon saying Nero reduced the price of corn. Wasn't corn something developed by natives and then used once the Americas discovered? Hence Rome couldn't have had corn?
I love how every "expert" assumes the ancient cultures didn't have tools and techniques that they obviously had. Within the first two minutes of this BS all these things were stated as a given certainty.
The tldr is that they arent perfectly straight, survivorship bias means we only see the good ones that remain, not the old ones that crumbled to dust. And then survivors are not something incredibly strong, just incredibly well maintained.
0:00 How Did the Ancient Romans Manage to Build Perfectly Straight, Ultra Durable Roads?
17:35 What was It Really Like to Be a Slave in Ancient Rome?
31:14 How Did the Ancient Romans Make Concrete So Much Better Than Ours?
41:42 Were the Ancient Romans Really Wildly Debauched or Actually Prudes
53:45 Did Gladiators Really Live or Die Based on Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down by the Audience?
1:04:24 That Time a Farmer was Given Ultimate Power Twice and Changed the World By Walking Away Both
1:14:55 Fact From Fiction: What Really Happened on the Ides of March?
1:37:03 The Chickens That Decided Ancient Rome’s Major Events and Shaped World History
Thank you for the chapters baked into the video .. please consider doing it for the rest of your channels ☮
who the fuck is this guy
Rome wasn't built in a day, nor was this video, thank you simon
Thx
We really need to let go of this false misconception that the Romans had better concrete, because they very much did not
Tapping into the 'long video for people to put on when the go to bed' market and I'm all for it!! 🎉
Me every night searching for a new Simon video lol
I can't fall asleep to Simon. He's way too interesting so I end up staying awake. I have to settle for thunderstorms.
@@kkwatson8105I always try to listen to his voice, not his story. Yes, his stories are interesting but I can always rewind to the point I recall.
i feel real personally attacked considering thats why im on this video lol
🎯💯 Nailed it!! The only problem is I wanna hear all the info, so I end up going back & watching/listening again while I'm at the gym
That's not Simon. Simon has a viking beard from the halls of Asgard. 😆
It must be one of his clones.
Difference between Simon then and now: Simon discovered Keeps for his beard.
*rotten turtle
weirdly young Simon
We just rebooted his AI. Simon 3000 was starting to become self aware and the way it had started taking over youtube, we were beginning to be concerned it might expand beyond and take over the internet as a whole, and then the world. Certainly we'd all be more knowledgeable, and lord knows the world could use that. But Simon 3000's habit of chaining writers in the basement had us slightly concerned. Pros and cons. Luckily he had built in a reset switch. All good now. -Daven
@@TodayIFoundOut i do hope he's feeding Danny
So is this version guaranteed not to chain writers in the basement? Or did you forget to account for that. @TodayIFoundOut
@@TodayIFoundOut Check the mold in his closet. This could be a "Last of Us" / "Terminator" crossover.
Best beard of all the simons
That neon light hasn't worked in a long time. Lol
beard hasnt been that short in a long time either lmfao
Yeah this had to have been recorded years ago lol.
Wow, you win a prize I didn't even notice that.
😂
If I recall the light worked for about 2 months and then quit 😂
Hard work, quality materials, proper time allotted to workers and Engineers... Basically the opposite of our current world.
More like survivorship bias, maintenance and "heavy rocks are durable".
There's nothing that the ancient Romans could do that we can't do faster cheaper and better.
But we don't build like that anymore because it doesn't make sense to build a building that will last 1000 years. Anyone who has ever lived in a 100+ year old house can tell you how difficult the maintenance is.
@@NotMyActualName_I live in a house that turns 100 this year, sure maintained is more then a new house, but not that much. As long as you change to new environment, then you are good
This is Dunning Kruger misconception needs to go. Roman works were not better, we just have the best kept examples left. Most of the Roman infrastructure crumbled, the only reason why we have it left is because they were considered art pieces and kept in good condition intentionally. Modern cement is much better, more flexible, and stronger. The difference is our modern infrastructure has to deal with a lot more load-bearing structure than the Romans ever did.
@@NotMyActualName_yeah seriously. We know what the Romans actually made their concrete out of, and if we knew that, we would just incorporate it into our modern infrastructure. But we don't. Because we know better.
@ludde8405 my house was built around 1790.
I am currently working on replacing the sills and the dry laid foundation.
There's alot of maintainance in houses that rely on the things the Roman's did... like really big stacked rocks for structural walls.
It's interesting how our voices change slightly over time.
It must be so odd to hear your own voice on a regular basis. Would it change subconsciously, I wonder?
Perhaps. But as a professional voice actor, listening, evaluating, and augmenting one's voice is grist for the mill in Simon's world
I think it's a different microphone
Voices is typically how I recognize people. Can't figure out a face to save my life but everyone has a unique voice.
This video looks and sounds like it was recorded several years ago. Because his beard is much longer now.
Ahhh Simon's two favorite things: old vidoes of himself and ancient rome 😂
And he loves his planes and tanks, does not mean he constantly confuses them 😄
Love both.😊
Yeah, I don’t think the Romans had a 80,000 pound truck going over the roads on the daily😅
Hey Simon, tell us about your health regiment. You look 20 years younger 😁
Drink keeps 😄
Ah i see now why they liked Lincolnshire as much as they did, 'see that village 15 miles on the horizon mr engineerious? Built a road over there' 😂 ive often thought while driving on some of the roman routes just how soul destroying it must have been to walk them back in the day, just a straight line for miles
I see you guys saw Spiff's video about abusing the TH-cam algorithm. Very cheeky.
Yeah, because long videos are a new thing....
Its baby Simon, he looks so innocent.
Brain Blaze really put a toll on Simon. Road pun intended
Frank Herbert (author of Dune) wrote a short story where the difference between military roads (following high ground) and farm roads (following water drainage) was a plot device.
With regards to the 'Way Stations', The word 'Trivia' comes from the Latin 'Three Roads'. The Way Stations were located at the intersection of three (or four) roads, and the banter that occurred at these way station became known as 'trivia'.
I live in California. We have Weigh Stations. They're actually just spots along major highways where they stop and weigh igh multi-axle trailer trucks. I don't know why but I know that's what we have here now. Not sure if this has any bearing whatsoever on your comment. I just thought it was interesting way versus weigh
@@willowhofmann7409 The words 'way' and 'weigh' share a common etymological origin, both tracing back to the Proto-Indo-European root *wegh-, meaning "to go, move, transport in a vehicle"
@@willowhofmann7409 Weigh stations are not California specific. They can be found in most, if not all, states.
I enjoy the longer compilations. Thank you
You're very welcome :-) -Daven
New Casual Criminalist rule: Don't ignore the sacred chickens.
Many ancient cultures would judge overland distance based on how long it would take to march soldiers to the next point no tools necessary
17:30
HAHAHAHAHAahahah this transition
from perfectly spoken in the old episode to an absolute smushfestalphfle in the new one.
Hi there,👋
There are even remains of the Romans here in Nijmegen, the Netherlands also known as Noviomagus 2000 years ago.
Greetings from Holland.🇳🇱
God save the king.
Hi from your brothers 🇩🇪
Which is pretty cool, considering rocks or other hard wearing materials are rather uncommon in these areas.
Wait what almost 2h even with simons speet in talking...that works out to about 4h in regular speech
“Babe, how often do you think of the Roman Empire?”
The farmer king. I guess this inspired the tale of the first king of Sendar. As told by Silk to Garen. In The Balgariad by David Eddings.
The Romans' art of making durable roads was clearly lost over time in Italy. The other month they tried to fix part of my street where the sanpietrini had been removed in order to reach the pipes underneath and the new patch of road lasted exactly 20 days before the sanpietrini started collapsing into the ground.🤦♀️
Saviano tonk!!
Italy doesn't 'do' roads or governments. Pizzas and churches, they're top notch . . .
Go 70mph down one… then let me know how perfect they are
We have some in germany. I bring the benz you bring a huge beer and we need a camera man.
I'm guessing they used man made machines purpose built to complete a job.
Like leveling blades strapped to a cart an beasts of burden
Perhaps the use of water an wood to trap water over a area let it settle an level the ground.
Just a few ideas of the top of my head before watching the video
14 districts. 10 burned while leaving only 4 untouched.
Then it is immediately transitioned into a statement of 10 of the 11 districts burned ,3 were totally destroyed.
So was there 10 out of the 14 damaged or was it 11 out the 14 ?
Is this contradiction done purposely to see if anyone is paying attention ?
Starfishes love you
Dang, I think this was before business blaze.
Oh the main things about roman roads was not durability, but safety + speed.
Its not just the road, but that left and right of the road all trees were cut so no one could EASILY ambush.
This is also why straight roads made more sense, to see further, so ambushes are harder.
Keeping the "long lawn" next to long roads bush-free is just as much maintenance than keeping the road itself.
ancient concrete was not "better", BUT they added some things, that prevented it from hardening EVERYWHERE completely, which gives it SOME self-healing capability, making it easier to use and easier to maintain. modern maintenance tools are more efficient, which makes self-healing-concrete "worse" for most use cases, except MAYBE a few, but it would take too long and too risky to test this.
"Malcolm McDowell, noted British person"
Isn't that a South Park Christmas Special reference?
Nero was not unhinged.
After Budicca's defeat, Resulting in a massacre of about 200 thousand briton warriers, General Suetonious, the Governer of the Britan, delt with anyone involved in the revolt with an extremely heavy hand.
Nero replaced him by a more diplomatic governor.
The Province was totally under control and Suetonious projected an excessive image of cruelty -- Nero found that conduct negative for Rome's prestige.
Great video as always bud.
Thanks
Keep it up 👍
On the Chinese and the thumbs up meaning "number one" or "nice job", I can easily see the connection for it meaning "number one"/"the best" (the they can be said the same) because it's not uncommon for Asian cultures to start counting (on their hand) with their thumb. From there, I could see how it connected to possibly meaning something along the lines of "(did a) nice job". To us today, it would be the equivalent of it meaning "nailed it".
His beard is growing in reverse
People always compare the old Roman roads vs modern and why they suck these days. The fact people don't get the difference between foot traffic and semi trucks.
Now I know why the CD burning software I used to use was called Nero.
Oh my God. How did it take me until now to get that?
"What the fuck?!"
- Julius Caesar's last words
And then Nero coated Christian’s in pitch and used them for live human candles to light his gardens.
😮
Walking the appian way was the greatest moment of my life
They had modern tech. They did not have future tech. Its amazing what you can accomplish with a string and a compass.
"Uterine excretions"?? While technically accurate, I sincerely hope you don't use this descriptor at dinner parties.
Romans again Simon? That's great for me, I love Roman history. 🤣
I prefer the younger Simon, with the more relaxed attitude and the perfectly manicured beard.😊❤
i admire your bravery talking openly about our secret chicken overlords like this. The bearded egg disguise makes perfect sense now.
At 13:00 you sat nero cut the price or corn??? They didn't have corn
I was coming to say this! Corn didn't exist in the old world.
@@1Bearsfan Only North Americans anglophones call maize (mays) corn. In England corn is a variety of grains like barley, wheat and oats.
Yes, “corn” essentially means “grain” in the UK. What we think of as corn in the US is often called sweetcorn. Or at least it was in the late 80s and early 90s, when I visited there. I remember enjoying a prizewinning sandwich from Boots which had sweetcorn on it. I ate that thing almost every time I found myself at Boots around mealtime over my longest visit. . 😁
They were very smart yet really weird way of life and doesn’t really make a lot of sense to me 🤷🏻♂️
I love the longer episodes! 🎉
all roads lead to rome back then I guess except the ones in britain?
The A2 in UK takes you to the s/e coast and in France the RN1 goes to Paris, allowing a continuous journey. Many RN routes follow Roman alignments.
"Nero fiddled while Rome burned." - Kanyecus Westus
50 seconds in and I’m already enjoying the slowed rate of speech
also not mentioned but on topic in this video is the origin of the term "fu(kboy"
He looks exactly like that decoding the unknown guy. Crazy
Illuminati confirmed! the lizard people are infiltrating!
Sacred chickens sounds like the work of Gustavo Fring.
26:58 I wonder about how much the different origins of Slaves contributed to slaves not considering themselves as a single group.
Rome spent the time and money. They didn’t cut corners. They took pride in their actual accomplishments.
Be careful of selection bias. All of the dodgy roads would have worn away, only leaving the good ones for us to see.
I guess getting a perfect line - they would have to cut a corner or two...
Send this guy to bed... He has middle school attendance in the morning.
Did Simon get dumber or smarter as *The Beard* increased in size?
I like you Simon but why not just get a hair transplant? There is no excuse for someone as rich as you to be bald.
Why? Nothing wrong with being bald.
Baby Simon!
Prechild Simon seems sooo young 😅
Sounds similar to modern day slaves in the middle east
This AI looks and sounds not at all like Simon
I walked down one of those roads until I came across a sign that said VII-XI. I stopped in for a GUPULOUS MAXIMUS. I'm sure there's a spelling mistake there.
Happy you mentioned the lime and how it heals concrete.
Fresh tech news :D 9800x3D i hope AMD does actually have some tweaks that do more then a few % on the 9800x3D.
I haven't watched it ... Seems abit long. I assume they used a map, a ruler and a pencil though. 😊
Good gawd, how old is this one?? 10? 15 yrs?
On a side note - this Gen X'er middle age parent, was very proud of their young millennial son who went on a holiday to Europe, go to the Colesseum, sent us a selfie in front of it with the hash tag of "WHAT DID THE ROMANS EVER DO FOR US". haaaa
Simon uploading content so old his neon sign still works.
Simon loves talking about Rome!!!
an other factor why roman road are still good today and our modern road need to be repaired every years...
Rome is in the Mediterranean region, a calm dry paradise without major winter (like in Canada) hurricane/typhoon/tornado, tsunami, earthquake like other region of the USA etc... the perfect climate of the Mediterranean region help keep the road beautiful
Then Roman heaviest load going on those roads was a horse pulling a chariot carrying some goods for village of a few thousand habitants? Those sound way lighter than our trucks convoy carrying the goods for our city of a few millions habitants.
Then what was the frequency of those "heavy loads" compared to today?
Finally, a lot of the most used roads have been replaced with our modern road, leaving only the most well-preserved ones that are mostly tourists and probably never saw a modern truck.
Was it just years of being a toutuber that made Simon so much more gregarious or did his personality change with it?
Who is this, and what did they do with Simon?😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
AI.
At least Simon isn’t speaking like xqc in this ancient video.
Helloeverybodywelcometothetodayifoundoutshowwhereireadscriptstoofast
"...except sanitation, roads..." LOL
They used a compass. lol
I dont mind David Hinskey videos, but he’s not the man I fell in love with, Simon ❤
Question: you make two references to a people that both the Greeks and Roman looked down upon (around time code 45:00). The 'closed captions' read "Truscan" and 'Truskin'. Are these references to the "Etruscan civilization" that predated the Roman Empire ?
Clearly, AI Simon
Part one: Young Simon. Part two: older Simon. Part three: older Simon after snorting a line.... The evolution is extraordinary.
It's a major misconception that Roman concrete was better. It's not. We know what it's made of, and if It was actually better we would just incorporate it. Roman concrete was never subject to extreme loads and trucks like modern times. Additionally, there is survivability bias where monuments were intentionally kept in good condition. Most of Roman infrastructure actually has crumbled beyond usability today.
The Roman's must have had a stride twice that of the rest of the world. Ĥe said a Roman mile was 4,891 feet, which was 1,000 paces, meaning each stride was 4.891' on average, when the rest of the world has a stride of around 3' or less, 3' being a yard & the basic stride on the golf course when estimating distances. Just saying, 5' is a giant's stride I'd say.
Recently been very disappointed by Simon's knowledge base....turns out that crap British accent doesn't make you smart...
Tunnels amaze me! Especially when they are built in 38 BC!!! Amazing engineering! I would assume they used slaves for digging that.
Possibly because they used enslaved greek/persian architects/surveyors who wanted very much to not to be enrolled in gladiator school,perhaps?
One of their most cunning devices was a chariot fitted with a differential which measured precisely the distance travelled......and would also count the difference between the 2 wheels and transfer this to a pointer( bit like a compass)to guide the driver.
Supposedly aside from making fun of his effeminate voice, Caligula would have Cassius Caria kiss his ring and when he did, Caligula would extend his middle finger and make a rude gesture or movement with it while Caria's mouth was on his ring.
This led to him and his family being butchered.
I hear the bandit explanation for tree removal over and over again. It's silly. If you're miles from anyone else, a group of bandits don't need to ambush you; they can simply camp 100 meters of the road and, when you approach, walk out onto the road and demand your stuff. How about keeping trees away from roads so that the root systems don't destroy the road?
Reading this in the voice of those "how do you get your shirts so clean" kids in the first episode of Peep Show.
"How did the Romans manage to build perfectly straight durable roads".
I get mad thinking about how long it took us to figure out the Roman Concrete. I guess we were too busy speculating about aliens building Egyptian pyramids. And we wonder why people don’t trust the science community.
Kind of obvious to anyone who isn't an idiot that ancient roads probably did have to be repaired and maintained frequently during their service lives to keep them in good working order and would probably get damaged quite quickly by the volumes, speeds and weight of our current traffic these days, not to mention that the ancient roads weren't perfectly smooth so mechanical failure and uneven surface wear would have been a thing back then. We could even do a test. Construct a modern road made of tarmac and build a road next to it using ancient techniques and materials. Take two identical modern cars, assign one car to each type of road and drive them up and down over and over again at 70mph to see which road and which car breaks first.
I learned of Cincinatus when I was quite young because I lived in Cincinnati. Great name for a town. I'm proud to be American for the stories and principles of moderation, self control, which allow us to get along and steadily improve ourselves and our conditions. It's not easy and it's not supposed to be easy. But it allows for love and happiness. 1:12:45
Cincinnati was the first to pop in my head, actually, when i heard his name.
However, since this is a first me hearing of him and because i thought his name started with a "S"; I didn't connect the dots until i saw this comment. Hella, cool! 😄
I actually came down here to see how his name was spelled the further the video went on😅
Edit: Whoop, if i had just waited, sam mentions it in the video🤦♀️
How did Nero cut the price of corn?Was this a pre-new world "corn", because there wasn't maize/corn until post-Columbia
13:41
I’m always down to watch, but hasn’t Simon made like 3 vids on this same topic?
How did Nero give corn to survivors of fire when corn didn't arrive into the old world for 100s if not 1,000 years later... Crazy thing is they say corn showed up on coins long before it was supposed to be introduced so...
I'm hung up on simon saying Nero reduced the price of corn. Wasn't corn something developed by natives and then used once the Americas discovered? Hence Rome couldn't have had corn?
I love how every "expert" assumes the ancient cultures didn't have tools and techniques that they obviously had. Within the first two minutes of this BS all these things were stated as a given certainty.
The tldr is that they arent perfectly straight, survivorship bias means we only see the good ones that remain, not the old ones that crumbled to dust.
And then survivors are not something incredibly strong, just incredibly well maintained.