Crucifixion: The Process and the Monstrous Logic Behind It

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  • Опубліковано 8 кві 2023
  • One of the Romans' most lasting legacies is the cross: a tool of unimaginable suffering that has become, for billions of people, a symbol of hope and faith.
    In this video, we take a closer look at how and why the Romans used crucifixion, plus a detailed examination of exactly what the process of a typical crucifixion entailed.
    We also attempt to answer the question as to whether crucifixion was a regrettable side-effect of Rome's civilizing mission, or an indication of a deeper, fundamental Roman brutality.
    Be advised that, given the nature of the subject matter, this video may not be suited for younger viewers or those of a more sensitive constitution. The video contains artistic depictions of crucifixion as well as medical illustrations of the harm done to a human body during the process.
    NOTE: In this video, we erroneously state that, after Caesar was kidnapped by a gang of pirates, he swore that he would have them all crucified, yet eventually settled to merely have their throats slit instead, sparing them from crucifixion. According to Suetonius, Caesar did have their throats slit, but then crucified their bodies as warning. Roman mercy
    Related Content:
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,9 тис.

  • @tribunateSPQR
    @tribunateSPQR  2 місяці тому +16

    Check out our video explaining how historians know Jesus existed: ua-cam.com/video/o5GdcSFiRq0/v-deo.html

    • @canadiankewldude
      @canadiankewldude 2 місяці тому

      Might I ask you when did the Romans begin and stop using Crucifixion?
      I've tried searching for this answer, I can't seem to find real answers.
      God Bless (If the answer is in this video I will retract this) Watching now.

    • @kevinastraw
      @kevinastraw 2 місяці тому

      The existence of a real Jesus, a rabbi (or the equivalent word "master") who would have preached Judaism not Christianity, is accepted - it is the gospellers' Christ which is a bunch of lies that falsely accused the Jewish elite of the murder of their mythic hero.

    • @lutkedog1
      @lutkedog1 2 місяці тому +2

      Zero Eyewitness of Jesus means it did not happen

    • @eldarrissman4172
      @eldarrissman4172 2 місяці тому +1

      Interesting video, a grizzly way to go. One question: As it is described, a person, weighing between 100 - 150 pound person would be hung on the top part of what looked like an 8 to 10 foot pole.
      That makes the cross very top heavy, which is prone to breakage and tipping over -- unless the pole was as wide as a modern telephone pole, and would need to have been put at least 4feet into the ground to prevent this tipping over.
      Add to the fact that rain, cold, and the executed " precious bodily fluids" would rot the wood in a short period of time
      The question is: did any literature describe how these horrible things were maintained?

    • @stevenweaver3386
      @stevenweaver3386 2 місяці тому +1

      They adopted crucifixion about 200 BC. It was outlawed in AD 341.

  • @perfesser944
    @perfesser944 Рік тому +2183

    No wonder the word "excruciating" has the same root as the cross itself.

    • @jeremyashford2115
      @jeremyashford2115 Рік тому +31

      Ummm...
      Excruciating would refer to removing someone from a cross, an almost impossible feat if they are nailed on. It would probably require ripping the nails through the flesh, destroying the wrist in the process., or a similar procedure but with the hole enlarged by a knife first. You might survive but highly unlikely.
      If you are being unleashed for removal you would feel tremendous pressures in your chest. That may be what the word refers to.

    • @mitchellpalmer252
      @mitchellpalmer252 Рік тому +48

      Ex meaning "out" (think exit) crux being cross, so translated is meaning "out of the Cross"

    • @lsixty30
      @lsixty30 Рік тому +75

      yeah so like he said, same root..

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan Рік тому +26

      @@lsixty30
      Out , or FROM the cross.
      What you get out of the cross or from the cross.
      Surely youre not suggesting that "excruciating" is somehow relief from crucifixion ?
      Excruciating is what you get out or from the cross.

    • @stultusvenator3233
      @stultusvenator3233 Рік тому +22

      Certainly, an excruciating religion.

  • @boatingforbeginners7949
    @boatingforbeginners7949 Рік тому +273

    As a mere 10 year old, messing around a building site, I trod on a 6 inch nail that went straight through the sole of my sneekers and straight through my foot and the pain was unbearable, the hardest thing was whether to decide to lift my foot up or not, but i did and went straight to hospital.. believe me.. you really don't want to go thru that !

    • @EllieMaes-Grandad
      @EllieMaes-Grandad 6 місяців тому +26

      Whilst an inch or two of toes are visible, the rest of the toe-bones go half-way up the foot, with appropriate nerve-endings there. Placing the nail mid-foot meant the whole body weight would rest on those sensitive nerves, inducing the cruxee to lift himself up by the arms to relieve pain, which in turn would induce pain elsewhere. An ultimately no-win situation.

    • @lindanorris2455
      @lindanorris2455 3 місяці тому +10

      my young sister walked around for (2) weeks with rusty nail in her foot heel, peetty awful all around!

    • @brianisaac1575
      @brianisaac1575 Місяць тому

      Six Inch Nails was the name of Trent Reznor's band when he was in High School.

    • @IsraelCountryCube
      @IsraelCountryCube 22 дні тому +1

      ​@@lindanorris2455why?

    • @IsraelCountryCube
      @IsraelCountryCube 22 дні тому

      ​@@EllieMaes-Grandadsadistically marketed created by the Roman empire..they delivered on their promise so God father used God son Jesus christs suffering so none could mock him for he truly suffered more than any mortal.

  • @CoRLex-jh5vx
    @CoRLex-jh5vx Рік тому +1722

    It's so wild that if it weren't for them crucifying the wrong guy one time, the Cross would probably only be known as the most lasting symbol of Rome.

    • @weemac4645
      @weemac4645 Рік тому +362

      I wonder if Jesus had been stoned to death, would todays christians wear a little bag of pebbles round their necks.

    • @CoRLex-jh5vx
      @CoRLex-jh5vx Рік тому +90

      @@weemac4645 hell, if its suspected that it was the blood loss that killed him, just have a tiny little whip necklace

    • @weemac4645
      @weemac4645 Рік тому +51

      @@CoRLex-jh5vx What will kill Jesus is a lack of belief,then we will have nothing round our necks.

    • @zoinkiezz
      @zoinkiezz Рік тому +53

      @@weemac4645 Take great care that you don't wake up and find it was there all the time and have it weigh you down, take up your own cross while it is still light enough to bear

    • @emmemaile5531
      @emmemaile5531 Рік тому +68

      Are you referring to Jesus Christ, that ridiculous superstitious fairy tale?

  • @wockstantinople
    @wockstantinople Рік тому +483

    This is the channel I've been wanting to find forever. The social history of rome seems to have been only gaining major attention in recent decades and it's incredibly important to us to understand in Western countries. The idea of Rome as this mythologised, prosperous, fair society, I think, has done massive amounts of damage. Our societies are so heavily inspired by Rome in a plethora ways, and by understanding the inescapable flaws of it helps us to understant why our modern world is so cruel and fucked up. Keep up the good work.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +48

      That’s more or less a perfect summary of our mission statement- really glad to know there is such interest in an unvarnished look at the Romans

    • @Nisfornarwhal1990
      @Nisfornarwhal1990 Рік тому +3

      I'm struggling to understand how you mean that our modern society is "so cruel and fucked up". Do you mean that domestically or in terms of war, or what? 🤔

    • @Nisfornarwhal1990
      @Nisfornarwhal1990 Рік тому +1

      *modern world

    • @MaciejuCz
      @MaciejuCz Рік тому +4

      Are you implying that the world was less cruel and fucked up in the past?

    • @mysteryman6918
      @mysteryman6918 Рік тому +4

      @@tribunateSPQRSpengler’s Decline of the West is probably the master class on how different Roman and Western civilization really are.

  • @thestevenjaywaymusic7775
    @thestevenjaywaymusic7775 Рік тому +930

    It still amazes me and shocks me that the human race is so cruel to each other.

    • @CanadianMonarchist
      @CanadianMonarchist Рік тому +83

      We are capable of both incredible cruelty and incredible kindness.

    • @krono5el
      @krono5el Рік тому +26

      Well when you never figure out water sweetened with lead along with constantly drinking alcohol while inbreeding could negatively effect every fetus being made, it really can cause some hiccups for becoming human : P

    • @wrestlingconnoisseur
      @wrestlingconnoisseur Рік тому +29

      That's only because you're like billions of other people who hold out false hope that we represent the virtual pinnacle of civilization striving towards an inevitable utopia.

    • @lewisgiles8855
      @lewisgiles8855 Рік тому

      Not me, people are stupid af

    • @barbarossa1234
      @barbarossa1234 Рік тому +2

      Truth.

  • @tonyhagar9740
    @tonyhagar9740 Рік тому +1121

    One thing that is always missed in descriptions of this torture is that to decrease the pressure on the lungs in order to inhale, the sufferer had to raise the torso up with the legs. The effect of this was soon clear and excruciating: the muscles at the back of the thighs (the semitendinosus and the biceps femoris) would cramp. A fate almost too horrible to contemplate.

    • @donchristie420
      @donchristie420 Рік тому +46

      And if you were still breathing- legs broke, so as you said😵

    • @ahmetrefikeryilmaz4432
      @ahmetrefikeryilmaz4432 Рік тому

      I guess you can expect anything from someone that is stupid enough to believe that "a god" can ben crucified by people.
      Jesus did not die on the cross. Jesus was never crucified and he was no god.

    • @1unsung971
      @1unsung971 Рік тому +11

      Not forgetting Semimembranosus

    • @JMc-xi6ii
      @JMc-xi6ii Рік тому +84

      Great…..here’s me on my cross with half my back somewhere else & bloody cramp sets in. All I need now is a paper cut!

    • @tonyhagar9740
      @tonyhagar9740 Рік тому +6

      @@JMc-xi6ii Good one, Julie!

  • @huberthanks3007
    @huberthanks3007 Рік тому +624

    Very informative and helpful. I read years ago that if the Roman soldiers failed to crucity a condemned person properly (still alive when taken down) they stood the risk of themselves receiving the same brutal punishment. Thats quite an incentive to do the job right.

    • @jussikankinen9409
      @jussikankinen9409 Рік тому +13

      Thats why speared like jesus

    • @squirlmy
      @squirlmy Рік тому +43

      Jesus is an exceptional case in many respects, the whole point of crucification was to prolong the suffering for days, not just hours. I expect the Roman soldiers in the years afterwards who adopted Christianity, saw Jesus' executioners as actually as being merciful, and the Father being merciful by taking Him quickly. Which seems odd by today's standards. Imagine identifying with the the soldiers in the story as the "good guys". 😱

    • @pierzing.glint1sh76
      @pierzing.glint1sh76 Рік тому +8

      And the Harry Potter "unforgivable" torture curse "crucio!"

    • @johncollins1255
      @johncollins1255 Рік тому +5

      @@squirlmy I mean they make a very clear line between “good” Roman soldiers and “bad” Roman soldiers in catholic texts

    • @argustuft2394
      @argustuft2394 Рік тому +11

      Sounds like BS to me. They didn't take them down until they were dead. That was the point.

  • @Vox-Multis
    @Vox-Multis Рік тому +82

    14:32 - the barbaric cruelty of crucifixion aside, I was not prepared for Emperor Constantine's anime eyes.

  • @palsyr4307
    @palsyr4307 Рік тому +474

    Really puts things into perspective. I'm an Assyrian Christian, it's crazy this is the first time I'm hearing crucifixion happened in Assyria although it makes sense given the brutal past and the cross symbol was used by ancient Assyrians, who later became some of the earliest Christians (others becoming Jewish even earlier and Muslim later.)

    • @madsdahlc
      @madsdahlc Рік тому

      Yes the romans did not invent Crucifixion. It was used by Assyriens, then the persians and Phonecians of carthage. And romans went to war with Carthage during the the 3 punic wars. Thats where they would have seen it and learned about. The romans simply learned and mastered Crucifixion . They could a keep victim and make suffering worse. A century after Crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth . The romans used Crucifixion af entertainment in places like the Coloseum between gladiator and animals fights.

    • @madwellmusic8995
      @madwellmusic8995 Рік тому +35

      Assyrians were also known for impalement. That became widely popular among the Ottomans against Armenians as survviors described Ottoman soldiers capturing village elder, impairing them, dismember their arms and legs while alive, and then proceed to light them on fire. That was one of the worst accounts I've come across. The Armenian holocaust sure was a horrible event that reflected ancient times in a modern age.

    • @palsyr4307
      @palsyr4307 Рік тому +26

      @@madwellmusic8995 Yes indeed and my family who are Assyrians/Syriacs/Arameans(Aramaic speakers) were with our Armenian brothers and sisters (our churches are both very close too) when the Ottomans committed genocide against us, horrible stories I can't say on youtube. As for impalement, the Ottomans got some of that treatment too from Vlad Tepis (Dragula/Dracula) of Romania, truly dark times. But I'll say since the times of Jonah when Assyrians repented (we still celebrate this with a fast every year,) we haven't been a violent militarized people.

    • @sagesarabia5053
      @sagesarabia5053 Рік тому

      It’s the first time you’re hearing it because it’s not true!!!
      Are you really an Assyrian? Because you sound more like a brainwashed child.
      Assyrian tactics of “brutality” were no better or worse than any other empire of that time. It’s sad that Assyrian “brutality” is the highlight of most discussions when it comes to Assyrians. Even more sad that Assyrians like you just accept the bs spewed about your people without even questioning it.
      Allow me to educate you on some of your ancestors accomplishments.
      Here are 100 major accomplishments of the Assyrian Empire…
      Development of cuneiform writing
      Introduction of the concept of libraries and archives
      Construction of aqueducts and irrigation systems
      Development of a centralized government system
      Creation of a legal code
      Establishment of a postal system
      Development of a calendar
      Promotion of trade and commerce
      Construction of canals and dams
      Introduction of the use of coins for trade
      Development of an efficient tax system
      Creation of a uniform system of weights and measures
      Building of impressive palaces and temples
      Introduction of the use of glazed bricks in construction
      Pioneering the use of the arch in architecture
      Development of sculpture and bas-reliefs
      Introduction of the concept of royal gardens
      Advancement of metallurgy and metalworking techniques
      Creation of intricate jewelry and ornaments
      Establishment of an organized court system
      Development of astronomy and astrology
      Pioneering the use of the water clock for timekeeping
      Introduction of the sundial for timekeeping
      Development of medicine and pharmacology
      Creation of the first hospitals and medical schools
      Establishment of a system of public hygiene and sanitation
      Introduction of the use of soap for personal hygiene
      Development of textiles and weaving techniques
      Production of fine pottery and ceramics
      Pioneering the use of glass in manufacturing
      Advancement of shipbuilding and seafaring techniques
      Introduction of the concept of diplomacy
      Establishment of a system of ambassadors and diplomatic missions
      Development of agriculture and horticulture
      Introduction of the concept of crop rotation
      Advancement of animal husbandry and breeding techniques
      Creation of a system of land surveys and mapping
      Pioneering the use of the plow in agriculture
      Establishment of a system of road networks
      Development of the concept of urban planning
      Construction of impressive public works projects
      Introduction of the concept of civil engineering
      Pioneering the use of siege engines and battering rams in warfare
      Introduction of the use of chariots in warfare
      Development of the concept of military tactics and strategy
      Creation of a system of military training and discipline
      Establishment of a system of military ranks and promotions
      Pioneering the use of iron weapons and armor in warfare
      Advancement of horse breeding and cavalry tactics
      Introduction of the use of siege towers in warfare
      Development of the concept of siege warfare
      Construction of impressive fortifications and defensive walls
      Introduction of the use of catapults in warfare
      Establishment of a system of military intelligence and espionage
      Development of the concept of warfare propaganda
      Pioneering the use of naval warfare tactics and technology
      Introduction of the use of naval warships
      Establishment of a system of border control and security
      Creation of a system of hostage exchange for diplomacy
      Advancement of the art of horsemanship and equestrian sports
      Introduction of the concept of chariot racing
      Development of the sport of wrestling
      Pioneering the use of musical instruments and music notation
      Creation of epic poems and literature
      Establishment of a system of education and scholarship
      Introduction of the concept of philosophy and logic
      Development of the study of mathematics and geometry
      Pioneering the use of algebraic notation
      Establishment of a system of justice and punishment
      Creation of a system of apprenticeship and vocational training
      Introduction of the concept of art as a form of cultural expression
      Development of the art of calligraphy
      Pioneering the use of engraving and intaglio printing techniques
      Creation of the art of mosaic and tile work
      Establishment of a system of patronage for the arts
      Introduction of the concept of art restoration and conservation
      Development of the art of perfumery and fragrance making
      Pioneering the use of the distillation process for making alcohol and perfume
      Creation of a system of public entertainment, such as plays and concerts
      Establishment of a system of religious tolerance and coexistence
      Introduction of the concept of religious syncretism
      Development of the art of dance and choreography
      Pioneering the use of puppetry and marionettes in entertainment
      Creation of the first zoo and botanical gardens
      Establishment of a system of animal welfare and conservation
      Introduction of the concept of public sanitation and hygiene
      Development of the concept of environmental conservation and sustainability
      Pioneering the use of wind power and water power for energy
      Creation of the first steam engine and steam power technology
      Establishment of a system of public transportation, such as roads and bridges
      Introduction of the concept of mass transit, such as horse-drawn carriages and carts
      Development of the concept of public health and healthcare infrastructure
      Pioneering the use of anesthesia and surgical techniques
      Creation of the concept of mental healthcare and psychology
      Establishment of a system of social welfare and support for the poor and disabled
      Introduction of the concept of charity and philanthropy
      Development of the concept of social justice and equality
      Pioneering the use of democracy and participatory government
      Creation of the concept of constitutional law and political rights
      Establishment of the first empire in the world with a powerful bureaucracy and administrativ

    • @chendaforest
      @chendaforest Рік тому

      @@madwellmusic8995 I'm not sure any of that actually happened in the Armenian Genocide, although I don't doubt a genocide took place (something Turkey still denies and has imprisoned Turks who affirm it)

  • @dkvikingkd233
    @dkvikingkd233 Рік тому +219

    The human potential for inflicting suffering on others is astounding!

    • @jamesbarbour8400
      @jamesbarbour8400 Рік тому +8

      How true - only they're not called Emporers these days, but Politicians !

    • @weemac4645
      @weemac4645 Рік тому +3

      It's mostly about control.

    • @xipetotec8700
      @xipetotec8700 Рік тому +12

      DK viking KD
      True. And once Christianity became the official religion of Rome ( and eventually all of Europe ) it was the Christian's turn to wield the instruments of torture against the remaining pagans and Christian "heretics".
      The Holy Roman Emperor Charlemagne in 782 cut the heads off of 4,500 Saxons at the Massacre of Verden for refusing to convert to Christianity. Pagan shrines were torn down and it was the non Christian's who now had to fear religious persecution from the State.
      Of course mentioning the multiple Crusades and later the Inquisition goes without saying.
      And later, John Calvin, the hero to so many fans of the Protestant Reformation was complicit in the burning alive of Spanish theologian and medical Dr Michael Servetus in Geneva, Switzerland in 1553. His crime was that he did not adhere to the orthodoxy of trinitarian beliefs nor in infant baptism. Of course the only sensible thing to do was to burn him alive.
      PS, cutting off heads and burning people alive seems to have become a favorite method of ISIS in disposing of religious criminals as well.
      Judaism, Christianity and Islam share so much.

    • @spaceghost8995
      @spaceghost8995 Рік тому

      Your mythical god Yahweh tortures you for infinity. Yet you think he loves you !😂

    • @harrisaxer2651
      @harrisaxer2651 Рік тому +4

      It is not the potential that is astounding. It is the willingness to enforce and/or spectate it.

  • @doct0rnic
    @doct0rnic Рік тому +204

    It's shocking how cruel people were back then, not sure what's worse, crucifixion, the brazen bull or the slow slice, I consider those 3 to be the most brutal forms of execution

    • @malcontender6319
      @malcontender6319 Рік тому +30

      "Back then"

    • @soulknight5330
      @soulknight5330 Рік тому

      Just check what the Mexican cartel does to people that call them out, nothing has changed man

    • @johnherbert1431
      @johnherbert1431 Рік тому +14

      The oubliette is pretty bad too

    • @carbonara2144
      @carbonara2144 Рік тому +8

      Economy of the empire was very much based on inhumane exploitation of slaves. They were a high percentage of the population. Their total subjugation was necessary for the imperial system to work.
      It is true that some were freed after long service but that was usually for close servants of the family, not for physical laborers.

    • @thejohnbeck
      @thejohnbeck Рік тому +17

      Human nature is unchanged. The Judeo Christian idea that every human is made in the image of God has helped

  • @ultrad-rex1389
    @ultrad-rex1389 7 місяців тому +39

    Definitely among the most painful ways to die in history. The places of the body in which the nails were hammered through, the hands or wrists and the feet, caused minimal bleeding and maximum pain, as intended by the Romans. The major nerves of the hands were damaged by the nails. Imagine what it would have felt like to have those parts of your body pierced by metal nails when Roman soldiers hammered them down. It would have been intense pain for hours, especially when trying to speak or breathe. This method of execution was meant to humiliate the one convicted, and it was meant to hurt as much as possible by the person on the cross needing to use all of their strength to lift themselves up to breathe, which triggered their nerves and caused muscle cramps in their legs, torso, and arms. Absolutely horrible. I would never want to die in such an agonizing manner.

    • @stanlee-eq7lu
      @stanlee-eq7lu 2 місяці тому +2

      So true. Even pertaining to me; If I was ever given the death penalty, my choice would be a firing squad because death happens so fast, you really don't experience the pain. And to think in some Muslim countries they actually crucify Christians. They claim to love Jesus, but they don't. Even the Jesus they believe in is not the Jesus of the Bible. Not all Muslims are so extreme, but there's many in countries like the Sudan that fall into this category.

    • @helenaziegler6005
      @helenaziegler6005 2 місяці тому

      Yes, but I still think that being impaled or boiled alive are way worse than being crucified.

  • @jonathanwilliams1065
    @jonathanwilliams1065 Рік тому +105

    In ancient times the wrist was considered a part of the hand

    • @Ponen77
      @Ponen77 Рік тому +17

      yeah and in addition, in many languages the word for "hand" refers to the entire hand and arm.

    • @stultusvenator3233
      @stultusvenator3233 Рік тому

      I don't thing so.
      Do you have a citation?

    • @woodlefoof2
      @woodlefoof2 Рік тому +9

      I mean, probably a place to place thing. I know when I was learning massage the Russians considered the butt to be part of the torso, even though I consider it the leg.

    • @stultusvenator3233
      @stultusvenator3233 Рік тому +2

      @@shane4976
      Maybe it was, but was it in this context?
      Alama translated to "young woman" not virgin, and it gets way worse.
      Anglican theologian E. W. Bullinger, in The Companion Bible (which was completed and published in 1922,[16] nine years after his 1913 death), was emphatic in his belief that stauros never meant two pieces of timber placed across one another at any angle, "but always of one piece alone ... There is nothing [of the word stauros] in the Greek of the N.T. even to imply two pieces of timber." Bullinger wrote that in the catacombs of Rome Christ was never represented there as "hanging on a cross" and that the cross was a pagan symbol of life (the ankh) in Egyptian churches that was borrowed by the Christians.

    • @shane4976
      @shane4976 Рік тому +8

      ​@@stultusvenator3233 Firstly, we have at least 2 pieces of graffiti surviving from the first few centuries AD that depict a crucifixion, including the Alexamenos graffito from around the year 200 which is likely meant to be a mockery of Jesus specifically, and the graffito of Alkimilla from Puteoli, and both of them depict the crucified on a T shaped cross. So I think it's a reach to say Christians just looked at the ankh and said "Yeah, we'll make this random pagan symbol our main thing."
      The reason Christians in the early days did not usually depict Christ crucified at all (I've certainly never seen early art of him on anything other than a T-shaped cross) was because of the social stigma of crucifixion as a horrific and shameful death reserved for the lowest of the low.
      That aside, you asked for a source on if ancient peoples considered the wrist as part of the hand. I gave you a secular source defining the definition of "cheir" in Koine Greek in which it is defined as including the whole of the arm.

  • @NeedsContent
    @NeedsContent Рік тому +410

    "Served the interest of the ruling class."
    Little has changed in 2000 years.

    • @Jacob-ge1py
      @Jacob-ge1py Рік тому +12

      At least Jeff Bezos doesn't nail people to wood

    • @hadrian318
      @hadrian318 Рік тому +8

      What are you 10 years old? The powerful get what they want, just like as in nature.

    • @NeedsContent
      @NeedsContent Рік тому +49

      @@hadrian318 Shouldn't humans seek to be more than mere animals? Just because things were a certain way before doesn't mean they should stay that way for ever. Look at all the progress humans have made in the last 500 generations. We should always strive to be better.

    • @crownprincesebastianjohano7069
      @crownprincesebastianjohano7069 Рік тому +10

      @@Jacob-ge1py So far!

    • @reidwhitton6248
      @reidwhitton6248 Рік тому

      Bezos works people like slaves for shitty wages.

  • @michaelpipetap8307
    @michaelpipetap8307 Рік тому +24

    According to Josephus who was present at the siege of Jerusalem, he saw three friends crucified. He asked Titus, the son of Vespasian, to free them. They were taken down, and one of them survived.

  • @SasquachPL
    @SasquachPL Рік тому +235

    Learning about how common this practice was, thinking about what it would symbolise in the consiousness of the population - has just led me to a sudden realisation about what the Christian symbol of the crucifix might have meant to them, how deep a chord it must've strummed in their hearts. It's message was probably a lot closer to the modern anarchist (A) than to the modern perception of the crucifix.
    Christians learn that it's all about Christ's metaphysical sacrifice for us and how it freed us from our sins. But, originally, it must have been very real and political, striking thoughts of rebellion and need for change into their minds.
    [just a thought; I am by no means a scholar of this topic and should not be taken too seriously:) ]

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +106

      Your instincts are correct- the decision to reclaim the cross as a triumphal symbol of hope in future resurrection (thus meaning that even Rome’s worst punishment had no real hold over them) was a conscious decision of the first Christians

    • @AverageAlien
      @AverageAlien Рік тому +7

      Yeah I get exactly what you mean

    • @SasquachPL
      @SasquachPL Рік тому +20

      @@tribunateSPQR Awesome. The more I learn about the history of Christianity and what it actually meant originally, the more respect I have for it as a philosophy. It was essentialy a massive anti-imperialist and progressive force for change and personal freedom; and most people (even Christians) get it sooo wrong it's just sad!
      Thanks for the video:)

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +10

      @@SasquachPL happy to be of some help in this regard. The origins of Christianity is a topic that we will return to since it is quite fascinating

    • @lagerhausjonny
      @lagerhausjonny Рік тому

      So if early christians were some sort of an uprising or protest movement opposing the Romans - how come they ended up getting a christian Caesar?

  • @frocat5163
    @frocat5163 Рік тому +122

    One of the historical records on crucifixion I've read indicated that nails were driven through the victim's palms not to affix the person to cross, but to increase the pain associated with the process. There's a bundle of nerves (pressure point) that runs right below the last knuckle of the thumb, and driving a nail through that point on the palm will simply increase the agony endured by the victim. It's also pretty well understood that the wrist isn't strong enough to support someone's weight if the person is suspended from a single, large spike through the wrist. One of the points that I didn't hear mentioned in this video is that once the transverse beam was affixed to the cross, the cross was stood up and then dropped into the hole that would hold it upright. This was done specifically to dislocate the victim's shoulders, increasing the pain as well as making it more difficult for them to inhale a full breath. If the person was only affixed to the cross by a nail through each wrist, that dropping motion would present a serious risk of doing significant damage to the victim's hands, potentially causing their upper bodies to come off the cross...which is something the Romans absolutely didn't want to happen.

    • @concernedcitizen780
      @concernedcitizen780 Рік тому +16

      They may have tied the upper arms to the cross. As someone was dying and going insane they would rip their hands and wrist out

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Рік тому +14

      It is nice that we imagine that people made so much effort about it. In reality, they bound him to a pole, a tree, or a cross and it did not matter to anyone how the person died. On the via appia 4000 rebellious slaves against Rome were crucified.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Рік тому +13

      Raising them up on the whole cross to dislocate the shoulders? First time I heard of that was Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ. Typically the main pole was fixed in place and the condemned carried the crossbar to the site, where the executioners would hoist him aloft and secured him to the cross (typically a T because that was easiest to assemble) and provided him a seat of shame to prolong the agony and maximize the humiliation as much as possible (Seneca, Moral Epistles 101.10-14).

    • @HRM.H
      @HRM.H Рік тому

      Lmao your comment😂

    • @shane1648
      @shane1648 Рік тому +1

      I don't think they used nails, typically the victim wasn't worth the cost of the nail, rope was alot easier and would have kept them alive in the sun longer than bleeding out. Also pretty sure they mostly used an X and not a t as a cross, the t was the symbol of CHRESTIANS long before Jesus came along, I think the X was far more common practice because it's easier to build and to stand up, again, the victim wasn't with the effort.

  • @ballhawk387
    @ballhawk387 Рік тому +49

    I've found the most painful injuries I've had to get numb before very long, after which no aggravation is nearly as bad as the first shock, prior to the endorphins kicking in. So I'd expect there were probably some literal die-hard rebels who took to taunting the Romans with "Is that all you got", "A life of slavery is worse than this", or some such. And probably met a quicker death, just to shut them up. Like the fellow (in the account I read) who was pressed with stones during the Salem with hunt era who just kept saying "more weight" even as his ribs were cracking until he died and could say no more. Which incident reportedly helped bring an end to the practice, his fortitude having won over the onlookers, many of whom came to realize the witch hunts were indeed a sham.

    • @aw04tn58
      @aw04tn58 Рік тому +1

      *Woman

    • @DustyHoney
      @DustyHoney Рік тому +1

      @@aw04tn58Which word of this do you think should be “woman”?????

    • @xxplasticxx4893
      @xxplasticxx4893 Рік тому

      @@DustyHoney the story in salem happened to a woman not a man

    • @ballhawk387
      @ballhawk387 Рік тому +1

      @@xxplasticxx4893 The account I read was of a man, or perhaps I'd mistaken their name for male. But would not be surprised if there were women who were likewise heroic.

    • @mr.frandy7692
      @mr.frandy7692 8 місяців тому

      And what exacty are your most painful injuries? In general, severe trauma tends to be less pain inducing when the shock and adrenaline first occurs. Seems like you have the opposite reaction to it compared to most humans. You can look that up if you don't believe me.

  • @TheRjb2010
    @TheRjb2010 Рік тому +189

    I would imagine that, just like today with the issue of capital punishment, there were probably a lot of Romans who were against crucifixion. Even Roman senators looked at it as too brutal, too disgusting, too inhumane.

    • @milt6208
      @milt6208 Рік тому +17

      Being hung, drawn and quartered doesn't sound so good as well.

    • @weemac4645
      @weemac4645 Рік тому +6

      @@milt6208 Either way, you can soon be comforted in God's loving embrace.

    • @mauriziosorelli9566
      @mauriziosorelli9566 Рік тому

      "supplicium more maiorum", old school

    • @frankspikes7858
      @frankspikes7858 Рік тому +4

      Which is worse? Crucifixion or the brazen bull?

    • @Flipflop437
      @Flipflop437 Рік тому +15

      It’s both disturbing and fascinating just how truly horrible humans, societies, and governments can be. I’m sure there are many things we do today that will be looked at as awful in 100+ years from now.

  • @scoutfinch47
    @scoutfinch47 4 місяці тому +21

    Now I'm watching this I cannot get the song 'Always, look on the bright side of life' out of my head.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  4 місяці тому +9

      Our entire channel is actually just viral marketing for Monty Python

  • @zargonfuture4046
    @zargonfuture4046 Рік тому +34

    Nicely done, enjoyed this historical narrative immensely.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much, we love hearing positive feedback like this!

    • @jimbo43ohara51
      @jimbo43ohara51 Рік тому +1

      This was a brutal practice which remains a stain on humanity. Hard to understand how human beings can treat one another so brutally.

  • @not-soprivateplaylist1771
    @not-soprivateplaylist1771 Рік тому +80

    It's important to emphasize the fact that this was meant as a fear and terror tactic.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +28

      Yes, the executions were always carried out in public places and prolonged for as long as possible in order to instill fear into the hearts of subject populations. It's the height of barbarism

    • @not-soprivateplaylist1771
      @not-soprivateplaylist1771 Рік тому +3

      @@tribunateSPQR may Emperor Hadrian return to us.

    • @stultusvenator3233
      @stultusvenator3233 Рік тому +8

      The Cross still has that effect.

    • @not-soprivateplaylist1771
      @not-soprivateplaylist1771 Рік тому +10

      @@stultusvenator3233 I went to the Catholic church so I noticed the very realistic Jesus hanging on the wall, starved, weeping and bleeding. I only ask what effect it would have on impressionable youths. Christendom needs to rethink their core focuses. I believe that Jesus did not die for our sins but because of our sins. The people who are oppressed by the Romans end up working with them to condemn a Man simply for something he said. To me, that's the true tragedy.

    • @hadrian318
      @hadrian318 Рік тому +5

      I wonder how many fentanyl dealers we'd have if we nailed some up.

  • @nicholasricardo8443
    @nicholasricardo8443 Рік тому +81

    I know this channel is dedicated towards documenting the history of Rome and not specifically Christianity, but hearing of how much my Lord and God suffered on the cross fills me with misery and thanksgiving for His suffering.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  8 місяців тому +14

      We have content planned for the future that will document the beginnings of the Christian movement in the Roman world!

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 4 місяці тому +2

      Demonstrate that happened to an immortal being. Or are you admitting there was no God or a son of it

    • @immanuelbartsch4439
      @immanuelbartsch4439 3 місяці тому +9

      @@gowdsake7103fella what

    • @LegendaryGoetz
      @LegendaryGoetz 3 місяці тому +3

      @@gowdsake7103what are you even trying to dispute?

    • @Klown84
      @Klown84 3 місяці тому +5

      He was just a normal man mate. Get a reality check ffs

  • @leroyj3627
    @leroyj3627 Рік тому +6

    Thank you for this informative and fascinating slice of history!

  • @kelownatechkid
    @kelownatechkid Рік тому +18

    Glad to see this so soon after the previous video! Cheers

  • @michaeltroster9059
    @michaeltroster9059 Рік тому +170

    For a process that was so common in practice in the Roman Empire there is almost no archeological evidence remaining. There is one foot bone with a nail through it; that is all. Apparently some doubt that nails were driven through the hands or wrists. Driving nails through wrist would have severed arteries and would have caused the victim to bleed too quickly thereby denying the perverse enjoyment of the the perpetrators.

    • @mikef.1000
      @mikef.1000 Рік тому +67

      Archaeological evidence would be hard to find. The documentary evidence, however, is abundant.

    • @joebuck4496
      @joebuck4496 Рік тому +8

      I wonder if it was through the palms, yet also rope around the wrists

    • @franciscovanegas3409
      @franciscovanegas3409 Рік тому +22

      ​@@joebuck4496 maybe but I think it could be more common the usage of rope only and putting the arms of the victim in such a position that it would be as painful as possible but also cheap.

    • @koalabandit9166
      @koalabandit9166 Рік тому +8

      I would guess that the perpetrators most of the times didn't do it for their enjoyment, but because it was the law. The Roman world is often cruel, but it's not barbaric. Their laws are laws, not just martial lawlessness.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Рік тому +14

      A second foot bone with a nail in it was found near Cambridge England, as part of a whole skeleton. Two other skeletons were found, one in Italy and one in Egypt, each with a hole passing through the heel but no nail. The one in Italy indicated that they drove the nail through the heel with the outside of the ankle against the cross, demonstrating the Romans knew how to utterly humiliate the condemned. This is graphically depicted in the Pozzuoli Graffito, showing a nailed and penetrated male dubbed with the female name Alkimila.

  • @oolooo
    @oolooo Рік тому +6

    14:51 Pagan Roma was the most civilized among all Pagan societies but this was still extremely low .The Holy Light of His Cross and His most Precious Blood civilized my ancestors and our culture and made us more .

  • @Yet333
    @Yet333 Рік тому +7

    What a happy bouncy upbeat subject matter. Like most content on this channel.

  • @Ancient__Wisdom
    @Ancient__Wisdom Рік тому +123

    excellent video, really illuminating evaluation of a brutal practice that often gets lost in mythologizing

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +12

      Thanks! We aim to shed light on all aspects of Roman history, both the inspiring and the unsavory

  • @cinemaipswich4636
    @cinemaipswich4636 Рік тому +31

    "Vlad the Impale r" was very good at warding off troublesome neighbors, by having a head on a stick at the boundary of his realm. The Romans did the same.

    • @louisavondart9178
      @louisavondart9178 Рік тому

      No, he impaled the victims by having a pole shoved up their anus and exiting through the shoulder. If done properly, no major organs were damaged and the victim lived for days afterwards. Thousands of them. He called it his " Living forest ". He still ended up friendless and was caught and executed.

    • @scottydu81
      @scottydu81 Рік тому +2

      What blows my mind is that Dracula used hand guns in battle.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Рік тому +4

      Both Vlad and the Romans impaled the body too, so the victim would suffer in sheer agony for a long time. In fact, Vlad was notorious for this! But the Romans preferred crucifixion due to its utterly shaming effect (Seneca Minor, Dialogues 6.20.3 & Moral Epistles 101.10-14).

    • @cfbswami
      @cfbswami 2 місяці тому +1

      This is very effective at keeping kids outta my yard.

  • @lesevesel2898
    @lesevesel2898 Рік тому +2

    That was a gorgeous presentation. Thanks.

  • @mikef.1000
    @mikef.1000 Рік тому +13

    Much insight to be had here.
    However this documentary fails to explore the dimension of /shame/ in the ancient world, and the integral part that this was in the process of crucifixion. Yes, it was horrifying to the general populace; but more than that, it was /shameful/, and fully designed to obliterate any honour the person might have had.
    There is also the added dimension of the fact that having one's body hung on a scaffold was a near-universal sign of accursedness.
    The final sentence of this video, though, is excellent and well worth pondering: "In the end, the memory of one victim of crucifixion changed the moral arc of an entire empire." Well said.

  • @JMc-xi6ii
    @JMc-xi6ii Рік тому +60

    Here in good old Manchester, our delightful Romans subjected us enforced toe-stubbing, scroll cuts & very harsh looping of Britnius Spearus’ ‘Hit me baby one more time’. Dreadful days, I must say….

    • @garethlloyd4346
      @garethlloyd4346 Рік тому +1

      Happy days mate

    • @YerDa67
      @YerDa67 26 днів тому

      Glad Hadrian built that wall down the road, god knows how you guys managed across the border.

  • @peregrintokes2919
    @peregrintokes2919 Рік тому +15

    Been looking for an accurate description of a crucifiction amd this guy nailed it .

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +2

      Thanks for your post!

    • @simonruszczak5563
      @simonruszczak5563 Рік тому

      There was no Roman Empire.
      Dr Anatoly Fomenko, book "History: Fiction or Science?".

    • @TheGreenTaco999
      @TheGreenTaco999 Рік тому +1

      good pun

    • @emyrronain6983
      @emyrronain6983 Рік тому

      @@simonruszczak5563 yeah it was me who constructed 120km aqueduct of Valens

    • @stevielease7952
      @stevielease7952 5 місяців тому +1

      If you pardon the expression.

  • @pathirtle
    @pathirtle Рік тому +3

    Fascinating, informative, and well presented.

  • @ray.shoesmith
    @ray.shoesmith Рік тому +39

    _Crucifixion?_
    Err, no freedom actually
    _What?_
    Yeah they said I hadn't done anything wrong and I could go and live on an island somewhere
    _Oh, I say, that's very nice. Well off you go then_
    Haha no, I'm just pulling your leg. It's crucifixion really
    _Oh yes, very good. Well.._
    Yes I know, out the door, line on the left, one cross each

  • @vf12497439
    @vf12497439 Рік тому +30

    I can’t imagine the pressure and pain in the shoulders and arms. Even if you could place weight on the nail through your feet to take pressure off your shoulders. The pain would be hell on earth. They tied his biceps to the cross? Your body weight would tear your rotator cuffs as your body attempts to detach from your arms. Jesus story or not, people suffered this way….. thousands of people.

    • @thejils1669
      @thejils1669 Рік тому +3

      Yes...the pain inflicted during crucifixion is NON-STOP, grade 15 out of 10 pain! Certainly not a pleasant way to go.

    • @Fat12219
      @Fat12219 23 дні тому

      😢😢

  • @annmarieknapp2480
    @annmarieknapp2480 Рік тому +5

    Great video. Not surprised that the crucifixion, predated the religion that uses the cross as its symbol.

  • @DanTheArtisan91
    @DanTheArtisan91 Рік тому +26

    Really well made video thank you it was great to watch also Spartacuses origins can be tracked back to my country of Bulgaria or as it was Thrace back then also next to Macedonia I like your reference with Alexander the Great I think he was much to inspire the Romanum Imperium as we know it.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed the video! Stay tuned as we have a series on Spartacus planned

  • @JayCeaupes
    @JayCeaupes Рік тому +57

    A familiar subject that is often just taken for granted, but this video really nailed it to a T.

  • @scottpilgrim4027
    @scottpilgrim4027 4 місяці тому +1

    Wow, great video and glimpse at crucifixion and the context of its time. Thank you.

  • @tomweickmann6414
    @tomweickmann6414 Рік тому +3

    Very good production. Thank You.
    You really nailed it.
    OOOOHHH!😛

  • @wadehwallace
    @wadehwallace Рік тому +14

    fantastic video!

  • @ronpickens2396
    @ronpickens2396 Рік тому +9

    It’s really sad to be given the gift of life and have it taken away by people who are power hungry with greed and there own insecurities.

  • @michaelmorris4515
    @michaelmorris4515 Рік тому +15

    You used the word "excruciating" to describe the pain without comment on the very etymology of that word "ex crucia" or "From the cross"

  • @DJ-ct6so
    @DJ-ct6so Рік тому +4

    Very articulate, well researched and informative imho. Hopefully I'll be able to sleep tonight !!

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed it, fortunately crucifixions have declined significantly since the first century

  • @zebo-the-fat
    @zebo-the-fat Рік тому +98

    One thing I never understood, the victim was made to carry their cross to the place of execution. Why did they not simply say "no!" They were already condemmed to the most painful death imaginable, what could the Romans threaten them with?

    • @RichWoods23
      @RichWoods23 Рік тому

      More pain, obviously, followed by the same excruciating death. Castrate them. Pull their fingernails out. Gouge an eye out. Every legion contained a group of trained torturers ready to deal with spies and traitors captured in the field, and to act as executioners. They were utterly methodical about it, so don't think they didn't have every contingency covered.

    • @stevendouglas6593
      @stevendouglas6593 Рік тому +41

      Probably they would be tortured for days or weeks if they refused. Better a relatively short death by crucifixion.

    • @envitech02
      @envitech02 Рік тому +68

      If the victim says no to carry his own cross, more flogging ensues, till the victim breaks down and agrees to carry.

    • @jamesclapp6832
      @jamesclapp6832 Рік тому +43

      I imagine many refused. They'd be crucified anyway, only without the mercy of a good leg breaking.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +103

      "Right. Off you go, then!"

  • @makelallbrijlall1027
    @makelallbrijlall1027 Рік тому +2

    Very good explanation, sir thank you

  • @Mulambdaline1
    @Mulambdaline1 3 місяці тому +2

    Great video and I loved the last line. That’s a powerful statement.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  3 місяці тому

      Thank you, very glad that you've enjoyed our content - we try to add a little editorial perspective so that the videos aren't just a recitation of facts.

  • @frankspikes7858
    @frankspikes7858 Рік тому +41

    I remember as a kid growing up in church and learning about salvation. My granny used to tell us kids when she got really upset with us. She was going to crucify us. I didn't know what that meant at first. But after some years i looked it up and found out what she was talking about.

    • @Peter-jo6yu
      @Peter-jo6yu Рік тому +11

      Lol that's brutal

    • @_Just_Another_Guy
      @_Just_Another_Guy Рік тому +9

      Your granny was really gonna hang you all out to dry.

    • @frankspikes7858
      @frankspikes7858 Рік тому

      I highly doubt that she would really actually crucify anyone. It was just one of her figures of speech. Especially when she got really mad. The Romans used crucifixion and various other methods of execution to control the population. Get rid of enemies of the state, and to punish criminals.

    • @seanbrown9048
      @seanbrown9048 Рік тому +1

      Mine was Nazarene and would whip us with a crabapple branch.

    • @jujumulligan43
      @jujumulligan43 Рік тому +9

      That is a very dark threat to say to a child.

  • @roseogrady8785
    @roseogrady8785 Рік тому +20

    Man's cruelty to Man...Sickening.

    • @hadrian318
      @hadrian318 Рік тому

      I wonder how many fentanyl dealers and gang bangers we'd have if in order to get to the dope spot, you had to walk by your former homies, nailed to a telephone pole.

    • @geoffmower8729
      @geoffmower8729 Рік тому +1

      Gods cruelty to man even more sickening!

    • @weemac4645
      @weemac4645 Рік тому

      Man is made in God's image,he must be a monster.

    • @Death88758
      @Death88758 Місяць тому +2

      ​@@weemac4645It was at first,now we imitate Satan

    • @Death88758
      @Death88758 Місяць тому

      ​@@geoffmower8729explain yourself

  • @robertafierro5592
    @robertafierro5592 Рік тому +3

    Fantastic Art and Photos !!

  • @ryanhealy8566
    @ryanhealy8566 2 місяці тому +1

    Well-referenced and interesting. Thanks for the video.

  • @felixfelix7447
    @felixfelix7447 3 місяці тому

    Fabulous to hear Paul talk... Thank you 😎

  • @j0nnyism
    @j0nnyism Рік тому +5

    It’s important to mention that no matter the crime no Roman citizen would suffer this fate

  • @williamharless4129
    @williamharless4129 Рік тому +9

    Human cruelty is a constant across the generations. Disgusting human nature to allow such evil.

  • @cmdrTremyss
    @cmdrTremyss Рік тому +11

    I'm familiar with crucifixion and many other execution methods, but the vivid detailing of this video made me almost faint. It's very well put together I must say. Also it wasn't my smartest decision to watch it at 3am. lol.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +4

      Glad you found it informative- I admit it was graphic but we didn’t want to gloss over one of the most unpleasant aspects of Roman law and order

    • @nancytestani1470
      @nancytestani1470 5 місяців тому +3

      @@tribunateSPQRglad you did not gloss it over. Rome is brutal, crucifixion was top brutality.

  • @aighti
    @aighti Рік тому +4

    This is great!!!! Subscribed

  • @rdreidmehrabi
    @rdreidmehrabi Рік тому +8

    Incredible - well done

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому

      Thank you, glad you enjoyed our little documentary!

    • @rdreidmehrabi
      @rdreidmehrabi Рік тому +1

      @@tribunateSPQR especially appreciate the amount of research that was invested into the topic. Really distinguishes this video in terms of quality.

  • @TroyGlaus-yv2yb
    @TroyGlaus-yv2yb 3 дні тому +1

    Very informative. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @adolfvancoller2610
    @adolfvancoller2610 Рік тому +1

    Brilliant video, well done!

  • @SeamusMcGillicuddy0
    @SeamusMcGillicuddy0 Рік тому +4

    Are there any photo’s of Kirk Douglas and Tony Curtis shown ?

  • @jonathanwilliams1065
    @jonathanwilliams1065 Рік тому +50

    It makes sense that something so cruel would come from Assyria

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +23

      They really pioneered a lot of the worst ways to inflict capital punishment.

    • @redjirachi1
      @redjirachi1 Рік тому +26

      @@tribunateSPQR I know right. All the memes about Assyria I hear is how cruel they were. And when you're cruel by 1st millennium BC standards you are cruel with a capital C

    • @claudioproteo3039
      @claudioproteo3039 Рік тому

      Like the Romans and later others (the Nazis and Japanese, for instance), the Assyrians used terror, shock and awe to subdue conquered populations

    • @stultusvenator3233
      @stultusvenator3233 Рік тому +1

      Should check the Inquisitions.

    • @stevendouglas6593
      @stevendouglas6593 Рік тому +2

      Whaaatt! Try looking at Europe during the Middle Ages.

  • @mn17771
    @mn17771 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for this informative video.

  • @hanajinks1044
    @hanajinks1044 Рік тому +1

    Interesting how you have 9k subs and yet 14k Likes on this vid. I don't think I've seen that before. Brilliantly detailed account and l enjoyed your responses to some of the Comments too.

  • @GoUtes92
    @GoUtes92 Рік тому +10

    This is hard to stomach but I appreciate the history.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +2

      I understand- it wasn’t fun to research and write but we wanted the story to be told as authentically as possible out of respect for the many victims of the barbarous practice

  • @CaptHollister
    @CaptHollister Рік тому +4

    "Next ! crucifixion ?"
    "Yes"
    "Good, out of the door, line on the left, one cross each. Next !"

  • @cpw2k217
    @cpw2k217 Рік тому +14

    To this day, Mans inhumanity to man knows no bounds.

    • @jamesclark6487
      @jamesclark6487 Рік тому

      If Mengle had performed "gender reassignment surgery" you'd never hear the end of it. The left praise themselves as they mutilate children, and the mentally unwell...
      Modern day inhumanity.

    • @garethlloyd4346
      @garethlloyd4346 Рік тому

      Manfred Mann's earth band man

  • @yodaz101
    @yodaz101 9 місяців тому +22

    Crucifixion is still done today.. witnessed it myself in Mid east..
    Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Africa...
    Yeah I've seen it all beheadings, stoning, amputation.... retired special forces 3 wars.

    • @rhodiusscrolls3080
      @rhodiusscrolls3080 2 місяці тому

      The people who declared their identity with Allah were often.crucified yet.Islam maintains that Issa never died in such way.

    • @sirpepeofhousekek6741
      @sirpepeofhousekek6741 2 місяці тому

      Which branch?

    • @vincentdisalvo-yv3ge
      @vincentdisalvo-yv3ge Місяць тому +1

      The crucifixions you mentioned in the Middle East were not like in antiquity. People in the these recent wars, mostly perpetuated by Isis were crucified and instantly killed on the cross as an example to others. They were not left to linger on the cross for days because they might have been saved by others.

  • @draugnaustaunikunhymnphoo6978
    @draugnaustaunikunhymnphoo6978 Рік тому +13

    I shall give my applauds for using BC/AD. Thank you.

  • @jeffreymontgomery4091
    @jeffreymontgomery4091 Рік тому +102

    Wow, that is quite disturbing! To think that they were slaves to begin with and ended life in such a barbaric way... Something I like to remember is that people of the past, especially the ancient past were not wimps. Just surviving birth and childhood was a miracle. When there are descriptions of these people's pain and suffering I believe it really was suffering. People of today in most 1st world countries including myself know not what true suffering is for the most part. We have been coddled since birth.... Certainly not everyone, but definitely myself... There has always been a pill for every ill and I have lived a relatively cushy life.... I don't think I would have lasted very long back in the day... Which makes history such as this video all the more interesting!

    • @chendaforest
      @chendaforest Рік тому +4

      Folk were tougher in them days...

    • @damonmelendez856
      @damonmelendez856 Рік тому

      But the blacks have suffered the most and continue to suffer under systemic oppression! /s

    • @weemac4645
      @weemac4645 Рік тому +5

      This must have been before we invented loving Gods that care about our wellbeing.

    • @danymalsound
      @danymalsound Рік тому +3

      On a similar note, you can't leave a child home alone unless they're 13 or older, I believe... I was letting myself in the house after school (and staying alone for hours) when I was 7 or 8. Our society is pathetic. I'm not tough as I'd like to be, either. Cheers

    • @davidohara7669
      @davidohara7669 Рік тому +3

      Well, the bible condoned slavery, so it must be moral.

  • @davidmurray9193
    @davidmurray9193 4 місяці тому

    Very refershing enjoyed this vid, and seems legit well done sir

  • @the.seagull.35
    @the.seagull.35 Рік тому +1

    The writing for this video is top notch.

  • @mafia_dave32
    @mafia_dave32 Рік тому +13

    We need to do this to our political class

  • @ExpatScoti
    @ExpatScoti Рік тому +22

    A consideration for things which seem to cause unimaginable suffering is dissociation. It's a defence mechanism in the brain allowing a person to detach from suffering. Pain can seem distant for the person suffering. It can help a person endure the torment.

    • @Mateus.007
      @Mateus.007 Рік тому +2

      Dissociation is a illusion, it only causes more pain in the end.

    • @stuckupcurlyguy
      @stuckupcurlyguy Рік тому +8

      ​@@Mateus.007 if you survive. It's a good defence mechanism if death seems inevitable (which is why it evolved in wildlife - to preserve the mind in case escape becomes possible)

    • @gorblin70
      @gorblin70 Рік тому +6

      @@Mateus.007 dude they’re being fucking crucified not being bullied or something like that, I’m sure dissociating from that kind of pain is a natural thing for the mind to do when going through something so painful.

    • @Mateus.007
      @Mateus.007 Рік тому +1

      @@gorblin70 I suffered greatly from dissociation. I don't think it reduces the physical pain. Only if you achieve total colapse, maybe, but that's more rare for a human.

    • @gorblin70
      @gorblin70 Рік тому +1

      @@Mateus.007 I’m sorry to hear that, what kind of physical pain were you going through?

  • @BiggusDickus2
    @BiggusDickus2 7 місяців тому +4

    The idea that human beings had the ability to inflict this amount of pain to another human being is mind blowing. The lack of morality is disturbing.

    • @Death88758
      @Death88758 Місяць тому

      Psychopaths still do it today

  • @stevenvaleriojr1177
    @stevenvaleriojr1177 Рік тому +7

    Pretty sure one of those wide shots of mass crucifixion is from Monty Python....

  • @Steven-gb1sr
    @Steven-gb1sr Рік тому +6

    Thank you Jesus

  • @kevelliott
    @kevelliott Рік тому +5

    BC and AD. Thank you.

  • @ESHANABROOK
    @ESHANABROOK Рік тому +9

    The cruelty of humans on humans is shocking and discouraging.

    • @weemac4645
      @weemac4645 Рік тому +1

      I blame God,he started it all.

    • @robertstrange1178
      @robertstrange1178 Рік тому +1

      @@weemac4645 God gave man free will, otherwise what would be the point of future fellowship with God? We'd all be a bunch of robots. Everybody has the capacity for evil, but not everybody caves in to it- people who accept Jesus are a new creation, able to resist evil and master their emotions by the power of God

    • @markfranz7313
      @markfranz7313 4 місяці тому

      @@weemac4645 Per bible - yes, per reality, well....

    • @Death88758
      @Death88758 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@weemac4645Satan you mean

    • @Death88758
      @Death88758 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@markfranz7313You can't even define reality haha,a person who dreams thinks that's it's real what he experiences,same with our earthly life,only a matter of time before we all face the white throne of Judgement

  • @zyxmyk
    @zyxmyk 2 місяці тому +1

    when Rome tried to invade Germania in something like 8 a.d. they received one of the most crushing defeats in their history. Three legions were annihilated in a place nicknamed "the black forest." after the battle, many Roman survivors were crucified to pine trees as sacrifices to Odin. I always thought the message in this was, "Let's see how YOU like it?'" Not much, apparently. a thousand years later the black forest gave rise to such stories as Little Red Riding Hood, The Big Bad Wold,and Hansel and Gretel.

  • @diegorivas1991
    @diegorivas1991 6 місяців тому

    6:41 kinda ironic to use a still picture from The Life of Brian's scene when they were singing "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" in such a happy mood

  • @olsaaan
    @olsaaan Рік тому +11

    Can you do a video on Spartacus if there’s enough to talk about?

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +5

      Yes, I've wanted to do Spartacus for a while but have avoided it as we want to do it right since the topic is so fascinating. There will likely be an entire series on Spartacus and his uprising

    • @olsaaan
      @olsaaan Рік тому +2

      @@tribunateSPQR Great😄

  • @ubuntuber1619
    @ubuntuber1619 Рік тому +15

    my father took me to church and said if i dont do well in math they'll nail me to the plus sign..imma online math tutor now doing pretty well.

  • @Chris-hh1de
    @Chris-hh1de Місяць тому +2

    Very interesting. One certainly didn't mess with the Romans.

  • @AB-rx6no
    @AB-rx6no 3 місяці тому +2

    Great work.
    Merci beaucoup

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 Рік тому +5

    Often there was a seat supplied which further excruciated the crucified and humiliated in total shame. Being a spike or tapered peg attached to a strut, it was called a "piercing cross" Seneca described it this way, quoting Maceneas: "'You may nail me up and set for my seat the piercing cross.' Do you think it a trifle to press one's own wound and hang impaled on a gibbet?" (Moral Epistles 101.10-14) This is borne out in 3 visual depictions of crucifixion or a cross:
    Pozzuoli Graffito
    Vivat Crux Graffito
    Periere Gem (Bloodstone Gem at the British Museum)
    Additional sources:
    Virgil, Catalepton 2a.18
    Achilles Tatius 2.37.3
    Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho 40.1-3 and 91.1-2
    Irenaeus, Against Heresies 4.24.4
    Tertullian, Ad Nationes 1.12.3-4, An Answer to the Jews 10.7-8, & Against Marcion 3.18.3-4

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  Рік тому +1

      Thanks for the additional context and for sharing these excellent resources!

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Рік тому +1

      @@tribunateSPQR You're quite welcome! Academia is only beginning to acknowledge this (David Tombs, The Crucifixion of Jesus Christ: Torture, Sexual Abuse, and the Scandal of the Cross). Crazy how people can be so blind for so long!

    • @EllieMaes-Grandad
      @EllieMaes-Grandad 6 місяців тому

      Called a 'sedile' or 'cornu', with different purposes . . .

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 6 місяців тому

      ​​​​@@EllieMaes-Grandad Yes - two different names for the same item. Tertullian referred to the _sedile_ with the phrase, _illo sedilis excessu_ meaning "with that projecting/excessive seat". The word _excessu_ is the ablative of _excessus_ which means not only "projecting" but also "excessive for its purpose". (Lewis & Short, Elem. Lewis dictionaries) Hence the other term _cornu._

    • @kristibi7971
      @kristibi7971 5 місяців тому

      So, a smaller cross was inverted and included. Of course there must have been anal and genital torture.
      We don't talk about that.

  • @Iconoclasher
    @Iconoclasher Рік тому +4

    What's scary is this mentality still exists today. There are politicians and their followers that would do it to their opponents if they thought they could get away with it.
    Fortunately cooler heads still prevail.

  • @julierobertson148
    @julierobertson148 6 місяців тому +5

    Thanks for a very accurate scholarly and physiological depiction of crucifixion. Though it's described in detail in the biblical account of Jesus' execution, most people do not begin to appreciate the entire process the condemned suffered. That Jesus died so quickly when those beside him did not is remarkable.

    • @tribunateSPQR
      @tribunateSPQR  6 місяців тому

      Thanks for the kind words!

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 4 місяці тому

      Demonstrate he even existed

    • @philliprobinson7724
      @philliprobinson7724 3 місяці тому

      Hi Julie. Not so remarkable really, there are two possibilities. The sponge soaked in vinegar given to Jesus by his disciples possibly contained hemlock to hasten his death and minimize his suffering. Socrates' death was by hemlock, and it starts on the lower limbs first, so Jesus would lose all pain from his lower injuries for a while. Suicide was acceptable in extreme cases, the bible's Samson (Judges 16: 26-28) asks God for the strength to kill himself in an act of revenge against the Philistines. God is not against suicide missions according to the bible. Also, king Saul deliberately falls on his sword to end his life. (1Sam, 31:4). Many people quietly abhorred the cruelties of the age and did what they could to minimize suffering.
      The second possibility is repugnant but must be honestly considered. Sponges-on-sticks were common, they were used in public toilets to wipe dirty backsides. They were kept in jars of vinegar. One gospel account has the stick being offered by the Roman soldiers, not his disciples, and this is coherent with the soldiers taunting him with a foul drink to quench his thirst, which rough brutal soldiers on execution duty would enjoy as much as casting lots for his clothing while he was still alive.
      These two options are equally likely, and as the two differing accounts were chosen by Jerome for the bible, I must assume he knew he was presenting the event in a contradictory way. It's very confusing until you consider that deliberately creating confusion might be the motive. Cheers, P.R.

    • @mvv67564
      @mvv67564 2 місяці тому

      Our Lord was so horribly scourged, a normal person would have died from that alone. I think that is why He died before the other 2 - He was already wounded to the point of death when He was crucified.

    • @philliprobinson7724
      @philliprobinson7724 2 місяці тому

      Hi. Jesus did not

  • @lakecityransom
    @lakecityransom Рік тому +4

    A testament of how great humans are.

  • @Brian-----
    @Brian----- Рік тому +57

    This account shows just how audaciously subversive or brazen Christians were to turn the cross into a symbol of God or divine power hitherto reserved to the emperor, and then to use it as a conversion tool that eventually conquered Rome.

    • @adatewithkate
      @adatewithkate Рік тому +11

      YES! I had the same thought after watching this! I knew early Christians were revolutionary on a religious level, but I'd never really considered just how audacious they were in the face of the Romans. This channel has another video that goes into it further.

    • @IntheBlood67
      @IntheBlood67 Рік тому +2

      It's all been foretold in the Scriptures. Checkout the "Bronze Serpent" in the Old Testament!

    • @andyw3720
      @andyw3720 Рік тому +7

      @@IntheBlood67 lol, it’s so easy to make these predictions fit a scenario.

    • @franciscovanegas3409
      @franciscovanegas3409 Рік тому +1

      Yeah and they were also really brave

    • @giuseppemoscato8328
      @giuseppemoscato8328 Рік тому +2

      @@andyw3720
      At least, have you read the Old Testament and the comments from theologians to actually be aware of those predictions ?

  • @PlutoTheGod
    @PlutoTheGod Рік тому +3

    What a awful highway to go down, imagine the stench and horror of thousands of dying and rotting people and all the flies and maggots you’re literally just trotting on through for probably a mile

  • @biteme8905
    @biteme8905 Рік тому +1

    great video guys

  • @CIS101
    @CIS101 4 місяці тому

    Good video. I'm pretty sure some segments were narrated by the host of the UA-cam channel Told in Stone though I am not sure.

  • @kevinmcqueenie7420
    @kevinmcqueenie7420 Рік тому +6

    "Crucifixion?"
    "Yes."
    "Good, line on the left, one cross each, crucifixion?"
    "Ah, no freedom. They said I hadn't done anything so I could go free and live on an island somewhere"
    "Oh, that's jolly good, well off you go then"
    "Nah, I'm only pulling your leg, it's crucifixion really!"
    Always look on the bright side of being brutally tortured to death ;)

  • @jak3589
    @jak3589 Рік тому +6

    Good research. Crosses were not that high as depicted in pictures, they were at eye level so people could see up close the true horror of crucifixion. These people were barbaric.

  • @thesaints-7-andrew.
    @thesaints-7-andrew. Рік тому +1

    Watching from Greece.hi everybody.
    Very interesting video.

  • @porshprix4286
    @porshprix4286 Рік тому +1

    Interesting video

  • @1joshjosh1
    @1joshjosh1 Рік тому +4

    Always look on the bright side of life.
    🎶🎵🎵🎶