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When I was studying ancient Rome
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one of the most difficult things for me to understand is
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how all of these ancient ruins fit together,
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but luckily we have Dr. Bernard Frischer
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who has built an extraordinary video simulation
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that allows us to move through this space.
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The difficulty is always two-fold.
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First of all, that ancient cities are now in ruins
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so the one problem we have is
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how do you go from ruins to the way
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it did look in antiquity.
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Secondly, we only have random ruins,
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we don't have everything.
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So even if you can visualize what the Pantheon looks like
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or the Colosseum,
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they are a mile apart in the city .
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What was everything else? Most of it is missing.
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So the visualization is trying to put the whole city together
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And so let's take a look. Okay.
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It is just beautiful.
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We're now flying low over the city, over the Tibre.
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It's a good place to start because you know,
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the Tibre does divide Rome into two parts.
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And I see in the distance a very large temple.
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That's the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus.
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Jupiter, the best and the greatest,
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which was the main temple of the Roman state cult.
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And it's on top of the Capitoline Hill
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which because of this temple and some others,
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was considered the center of the state cult
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and the state religion.
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So what moment in Rome's history have you chosen?
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This is notionally the year 320 AD,
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the peak of Rome's urban development,
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certainly in terms of public architecture
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for the simple reason that
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the Emperor at this time was Constantine the Great
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and shortly after this year
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he moved the capital from Rome
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to his city of Constantinople.
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Ok so we're flying up the river
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and after the Capitoline Hill we see the Palatine Hill,
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another one of the seven canonical hills of Rome.
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And the Palatine is obvious to anybody who visits Rome.
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If you're in the forum,
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this is the great hill with the palaces.
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In fact, the word palace derives from the word Palatine.
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The Romans, as time went on in their history,
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said "where ever the emperor is, there the palace is,"
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or the paletine. So, the term palace got detached
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from this physical hill
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and came to just mean "a place where the ruler lives".
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And actually as we're flying past
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what is the Circus Maximus,
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I see the imperial palace, it is so large.
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It is literally enveloped the entire hillside.
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We have to remember this was not only
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where the emperor lived, and his family with him,
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but it was also the center of the government.
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any important relationship
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between this enormous circus and the palace?
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They are in fact connected
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and the Emperor was a great giver of the circus games
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and could easily come down to the Imperial box
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from the palace,
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or if he even wanted
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he could watch the circus races at the Palace.
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So we're not talking about Barnum & Bailey,
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we're talking about sporting events.
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We're mainly talking about chariot races.
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Think Ben Hur, the very famous chariot race scenes.
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And there were also animal hunts,
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there were parades, religious processions,
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and the triumphal processions.
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So let's go into the city proper. We know that
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Rome was this mercantile culture that has real markets.
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How much do we know about
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the daily lives of the inhabitants?
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We know a huge amount.
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We know about their hundreds of trades and professions,
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the different social classes.
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We know about their diet, we know about their longevity.
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The scholars have really reconstructed in great detail
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what everyday life was like.
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So one of the most impressive structures
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that I'm seeing is this aqueduct, this highway for water.
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Yeah, the Romans are famous for their aqueducts.
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They never could have had their big city
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of a million or even the 2 million that
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we're now seeing without the aqueducts
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that brought water in from
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20 or 30 miles away in the mountains.
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They kept this gravitational sytem working
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by getting the sources up into the mountains,
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bringing it down into the city
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and the valley which gave the force to the water.
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And they were able to somehow calculate
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a slope of even just 1 foot every 2000 feet,
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which is remarkable.
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We don't know how they could measure so accurately
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so that the water kept moving gently downhill
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but relentlessly downhill.
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There is this kind of ambition,
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this notion that man can control nature.
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It does not need to build a city where the water is already,
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but one can actually bend nature to man's will.
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The Romans were remarkable engineers.
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They used the water for drinking purposes,
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obviously cooking, and so on.
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But also a lot of these aqueducts
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ended at great fountains,
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but also in the great public baths.
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So this area seems to be sort of set apart from
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this denser, urban part of the city,
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and these are the baths of Trajan.
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Yes, these were not the first public baths,
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but they were the baths
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that gave the standard design for public baths.
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Block of bathing buildings
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in the middle of a kind of garden area,
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delimited by a wall.
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And we were talking earlier about the way
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in which the emperors would provide for
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the well- being of the city,
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and this is really a prime example.
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So now we are moving to some of the most
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well known monuments in ancient Rome.
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The Colosseum.
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But we're in a fairly late moment in Roman history.
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Before the Colosseum, wasn't there another palace here?
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There was.
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The Colosseum was built by the emperor of Vespasian,
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who became emperor in 69 AD.
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After the suicide of Nero, a very unpopular emperor.
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One of the reasons he was so unpopular was that
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after the great fire of 64 AD
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in which a lot of the city was destroyed,
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he took over 100 acres in the heart of the city
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and converted it from private property
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to his own personal use as a palace.
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The Golden House of Nero.
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And the Colosseum was actually a lake in that palace.
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And Vespasian,
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to show that he was a friend of the people,
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filled in that lake and built a Colosseum on top of it.
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The Colosseum was not originally called the Colosseum.
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No. That's a term that
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only goes back to the early middle ages.
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The Romans called it the Flavian Amphitheatre
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because the Vespasians' family name was Flavius,
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so Flavian.
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And it's an Amphitheatre, or kind of a double theatre,
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an oval in shape.
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The Romans certainly didn't call it Colosseum,
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but they did call this enormous statue the Colossus.
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It's a statue of the sun god.
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Now you have mentioned that this is the moment
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when Constantine rules Rome
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and has not yet moved the capital to the east.
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And it's interesting to look at his arch,
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the arch of Constantine,
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and realize that this is brand new.
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It's only a couple of years old,
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Constantine left Rome after he defeated Maxentius
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at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge.
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As far as we know,
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he never came back to Rome to actually see it.
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So we've just risen over the edge of the Colosseum
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and we're looking down.
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This is in a way, a mirror of Roman society.
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The best seats are the ones farthest down,
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closest to the arena,
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and that was reserved for the emperor,
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top office holders, priests, and so on.
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Then behind them were the senators.
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Behind them, the wealthy business men.
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And behind them, the free born, normal citizens.
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At the very top, sat women, slaves, and foreigners.
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So what were they coming to watch?
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As we can see now what's going on
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is the main thing that we associate with the Colosseum,
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the gladiatorial combats.
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Another thing that went on here that
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the Romans loved was hunts of wild animals.
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The third thing is the execution of criminals.
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Often in very colorful ways.
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Ways we would find very cruel.
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So let's make a left turn and move towards the forum.
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What is that enormous temple?
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It's the biggest temple of the state religion.
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It's the temple of Venus and Rome.
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It was built by the emperor Hadrian.
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It's actually interesting because
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it's two temples back-to-back.
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One part of it is dedicated to the worship
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of the goddess, Venus.
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That's the one facing the Coliseum.
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The other, to the goddess, Roma, that's facing the forum.
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And there seems to be a reason for that.
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Venus is looking at the Colosseum
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which is associated with fun and games.
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Otium, the Romans would say. Leisure.
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Whereas Roma is a more serious goddess.
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She's facing the forum which is the area of negotium,
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or business and work.
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Ok, so now we're moving over to the forum itself.
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And we'll stop first at the Basilica of Maxentius,
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the last of the great civic buildings
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built in Rome before Constantine moved the capital.
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This is a huge structure
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and the word Basilica is familiar to us.
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We often call churches "basilicas" now.
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For the Romans it was a civic building
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used mainly for courts,
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the Christians adopted the building forum
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because they worshipped inside,
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so they adopted this preexisting building forum
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and gave it a new content.
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So now we're moving into
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one of the most complicated parts of Rome,
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especially when you try to look at the ruins
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and understand how these buildings related to each other.
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I always say the forum is like the wall in Washington.
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It's a big open public space
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used for public events like parades and speeches.
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The buildings around that open space are also public
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and they are courthouses and temples.
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Then, on the forum plaza are,
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as in the case of the wall in Washington,
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monuments commemorating
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great men and important events.
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Adjacent to the forum,
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private property was increasingly bought up
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so that each emperor could build his own forum,
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the so called imperial fora of the emperors.
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We've made a full circle
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and we're now looking again at the Capitoline.
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We're flying over the Roman forum,
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we'll acutally come back to it.
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We're flying over the Capitoline hill,
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we can see the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus,
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and we're going beyond, back to the river,
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where we find a big flat area of Rome
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called the Campus Martius,
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the field of Mars.
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It was called that because in the Roman republic
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when there was a citizen army,
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the army would meet here and train.
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Now, we've just moved over this lovely squared pond,
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and we're looking at the flank
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of an enormously important building, the Pantheon.
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The rotunda, the round part,
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we wouldn't really see in antiquity.
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We would see the part that has the eight columns
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across the front that looks like a traditional temple.
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We like to say that it was built as a building
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with a surprise on the inside.
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Because it does look like a regular
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Greek or Roman temple
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but when you get inside,
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that's when you notice that there's actually a rotunda.
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I just want to spend just a second
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marvelling at the scale of this structure.
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Look at those columns, they are enormous.
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The ability to get stones that large upright
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is just a phenomenal feat in itself.
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It's phenomenal and even more so when you consider that
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this is granite, and it's all from Egypt.
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So it was brought from very far away.
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This is a building that celebrates the Roman emperors.
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This building we know had statues of
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Julius Caesar and Augustus,
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so we think that this building was dedicated always
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to the worship of the emperors.
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So this space opens up just magically.
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It does, and the magic is really remarkable,
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I've taken many visitors there,
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and I've asked them
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if they've had the same experience that I've had.
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If you stop right on the threshold,
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and you hold your head straight, I always say,
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"what can you see?" And everybody always agrees.
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You can see the hole in the dome up at the top,
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we call it the eye.
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You can see the floor,
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and you can see the two sides left and right.
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That is to say that this is a grandiose space.
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But it's right at the limit of human vision,
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and for me it always defines what is the classical,
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which is always derived from the human form,
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its proportions and its limitations.
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And by building a building that exactly
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corresponds to the limits of our vision it ennobles us.
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It makes us feel as big and great
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as we can feel as humans.
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It doesn't reduce us. Had it been ten times bigger,
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we would have felt ourselves
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reduced to the size of an ant, or something.
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The building is obsessively concerned with circular form.
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But it is also concerned with squares.
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We look at the floor we actually see
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this play of squares and circles.
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And then of course there are the coffers
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that create this beautiful sense of rhythm.
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Absolutely. And notice we also there
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get the play of squares and circles,
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because these are square coffers that
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give us a semi circular dome.
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But what's interesting to me about it is
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first of all it's painted,
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when you go there today,
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the paint has been completely lost.
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In a dome of heaven motifs.
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So the ground of the dome is painted blue.
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The coffers are highlighted in yellow as if
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radiating the light of the sun,
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and in the middle were probably rosettes
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that are supposed to be suns or stars.
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And even in antiquity we know from a historian
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who wrote only a hundred years
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after the building was built.
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People wondered, how did they build the dome?
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How could they do that?
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They marvelled at it even in antiquity.
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The light is very interesting.
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If you look at the coffering, you can get the idea that
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you know the light from the eye is going to
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direct the sunbeams to different coffers
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at different times of day, on different days of the year.
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Recent scholarship suggests that
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this wasn't really a sundial,
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but there was a play of the passage of time
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and a play of light on space to indicate
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the passage of time during the year.
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There is though one alignment
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that seems to be very intentional
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and that is the sunlight coming through the eye
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at noon on April 21
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exactly illuminated the main door of the Pantheon.
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Remember Hadrian was the man
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responsible for the Pantheon in this phase.
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April 21 was the birthday festival of Rome,
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and Hadrian's very interested in the birthday festival,
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changed the name to the Romaea festival
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in honor of the goddess Roma.
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He seems to have aligned the building in such a way that
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there would be this dramatic effect at noon,
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and we can only imagine that
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there must of been some sort of birthday festival
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happening in the Pantheon that day.
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So let's move back down to the forum now.
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Some of the main roads going through the city
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met here in the forum,
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it's a place that the average Roman
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on an average day might well pass through.
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As the camera pulls back
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and we can really see the full extent of the city,
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you really understand how complex,
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how advanced this ancient world was.
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How many buildings were here, do we think?
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We have two censuses from the fourth century AD that
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suggest there were
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between eight and ten thousand buildings here.
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We think the population
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might have been between one and two million.
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The total surface area was about
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twenty-five square kilometers,
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so it was the biggest city in the Western world anyway
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until 19th Century London.