I must've watched all your videos. I'm preparing art history for the final tests here in Spain before university and they've helped a lot. I can't thank you enough!!
That's great to hear! Thank you so much for letting us know-it means a lot to us. If you wouldn't mind, please consider adding a few comments to this 2 question survey. It will help us as we seek funding for Smarthistory: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeLbPqW0PVhz7y_mz7ztTCx8a7RvHXX0oObKpzOIv9QeO1-hQ/viewform
That is a column of my people, Dacians. Now Romanian, due to the Romans. The Romans had a lot to learn from the Dacians and were the 2nd most civilized after the Romans. They had huge respect for the Dacians due to their skills and how much the Romans learned from them. They even built Dacian statues all over Rome, which are still standing there now. That's the reason i am called a Romanian and we have a Latin language, because of the Romans. But, there is a lot of history in the language subject because when the Romans entered Dacia they did not need a translator to understand them. The Romans were most impressed by they Dacians, and were the only people who were not called barbarians. Do you guys have any idea how much Dacia influenced Rome? Huge. But that history is hidded in the vatican, because the Romans wrote everything down about the Dacians, due to learning much from them.
@@viv1593 They should have shown a person or other object near it for perspective. There are replicas in the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in London and the Musée des Antiquités Nationales in Paris, and the National Museum of Romanian History in Bucharest.
Questions, Questions, Questions! Nice video! The only problem is that you left me with a ton of questions! Question 1: They said that you could go in it, but I didn't see a door or a landing.Did I miss it? Question 2: Is there anything inside the coloumb I.e. more carvings, writing, ect . Question 3:Why on Earth would they put a statue of a different person when that specific coloumb was meant for someone else! Why not make a reconstuction of Trajan? That's what I would do but of course there are spots of people that wouldn't do what I would do. Hope you can answer my questions!
oh wow.... apolodor of damascus didnt build a bridge out of ships.... in the first campaign the bridge used to cross the danube was out of ships, then, after 102, he bulild a permanent one
I must've watched all your videos. I'm preparing art history for the final tests here in Spain before university and they've helped a lot. I can't thank you enough!!
That's great to hear! Thank you so much for letting us know-it means a lot to us. If you wouldn't mind, please consider adding a few comments to this 2 question survey. It will help us as we seek funding for Smarthistory: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeLbPqW0PVhz7y_mz7ztTCx8a7RvHXX0oObKpzOIv9QeO1-hQ/viewform
Sure I'll do!
Before EBAU? I am too!!!! Greets from Spain, mate
Yes! Buena suerte! ;)
That is a column of my people, Dacians. Now Romanian, due to the Romans. The Romans had a lot to learn from the Dacians and were the 2nd most civilized after the Romans. They had huge respect for the Dacians due to their skills and how much the Romans learned from them. They even built Dacian statues all over Rome, which are still standing there now. That's the reason i am called a Romanian and we have a Latin language, because of the Romans. But, there is a lot of history in the language subject because when the Romans entered Dacia they did not need a translator to understand them. The Romans were most impressed by they Dacians, and were the only people who were not called barbarians. Do you guys have any idea how much Dacia influenced Rome? Huge. But that history is hidded in the vatican, because the Romans wrote everything down about the Dacians, due to learning much from them.
@@youngshatterhand810 dece spui lucrurile astea?
@@youngshatterhand810 inseamna ca tu ai probleme acolo unde locuesti. Furi ca majoritatea romanilor in Italia? De acea ti-e rusine?
The captions were very helpful
Ah, yes. A normal sized column with some cool relief sculpture carved in- “you can walk inside, there’s a staircase”- *what* how big is this thing
yeah, it's really cool. I would love to go inside and climb to the top lol.
@@viv1593 They should have shown a person or other object near it for perspective. There are replicas in the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in London and the Musée des Antiquités Nationales in Paris, and the National Museum of Romanian History in Bucharest.
I love the history of the Trajan font also, and many movie posters use that font
Thank you very much for this video!
Please do not forget The architect who designed that build and and others famouse buildings was Abu Ludor from Syria Damascus..
We do actually mention Apollodorus of Damascus.
❤🎉
Nice! this helped me in art history :)
Questions, Questions, Questions! Nice video! The only problem is that you left me with a ton of questions!
Question 1: They said that you could go in it, but I didn't see a door or a landing.Did I miss it?
Question 2: Is there anything inside the coloumb I.e. more carvings, writing, ect .
Question 3:Why on Earth would they put a statue of a different person when that specific coloumb was meant for someone else! Why not make a reconstuction of Trajan? That's what I would do but of course there are spots of people that wouldn't do what I would do.
Hope you can answer my questions!
The door is located in the base. I believe the interior is plain. The figure at the top was replaced because Rome had become Christian.
oh wow.... apolodor of damascus didnt build a bridge out of ships.... in the first campaign the bridge used to cross the danube was out of ships, then, after 102, he bulild a permanent one
Nice
I knew it!
ciao
why no cross nor jesus?
Ed Thoreum The column of Trajan has nothing to do with Christianity, so why would there be across or Jesus? :)
Because Trajan based the column on his military victories. Not Christianity?
There's a St. Peter statue on the top of the column.