The Colosseum As Never Been Seen Before - Gladiators Let The Games Begin

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  • Опубліковано 20 кві 2024
  • Dive into the breathtaking atmosphere of the ancient Colosseum, festively decorated for a spectacular event where gladiators once battled. These recordings offer a rare glimpse into the largest arena of the Roman Empire, as it appeared during the zenith of the Empire. Experience the majestic architecture and the electrifying atmosphere as we slowly explore the interior of the arena and reveal the view of the densely packed spectator stands. We discover a world where honor and the fighting spirit of gladiators were at the core of the Romans of that era. The Echoes of Elysium and the story of the true champions.
    Music: Nessun Dorma by Giacomo Puccini
    Project MOMENT
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 564

  • @FaberCourtial
    @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +79

    The music paints a picture of the "cultivated" killings in the Colosseum. Participation in the games at the Colosseum was considered a social event. We find the executions in the arena abhorrent, but how did the Romans see them? Fights and executions, aestheticized in reenactments of mythological scenes. Undoubtedly bizarre. This is exactly what the music aims to convey: Killing as a part of the Romans' event culture. An attempt to make the incomprehensible tangible for us today.

    • @Mikethemerciless11
      @Mikethemerciless11 Місяць тому +3

      Well, it wasn't just seen as sports and entertainment. This was a form of propaganda. The Games were showing off how great Rome and its government was. They were showing people what Rome does to its enemies, and showcasing animals never before seen by the typical Roman citizen's eyes. We forget they didn't really have zoos back then, and seeing a lion fight had to be awe-inspiring. And reenacting battles, both on land and on the sea, had to be amazing. All of this is showing off the wealth and might of Rome in a way that a person can see from the safety of the stands.
      But, at the same time, the Coliseum and other arenas played their role in Rome's conversion over to Christianity. Because Romans were a lot of things, but they weren't stupid. They knew that Christians being murdered was nothing short of an injustice, even if they wanted to believe the official line. It's one thing to have Vercingetorix killed for sport, a true enemy of Rome, but to have St. Ignatius, a peaceful man, killed by a lion, with a lot of other Christians singing hymns to their deaths, left a mark on Romans.

    • @DJpepmar
      @DJpepmar Місяць тому +8

      Love ur video but man poor poor music choice since opera music didn't exist until the 16th century and its music quite literally represented the catholic church at the time. I mean sure, ur vid ur choice but if I was a roman 2000 years ago I would be appalled by this anti-pegan nonsense. Look this one up: "Rome (HBO) OST - The Forum" historically accurate music from the time as we found written music like this, and lets be honest, way more powerful and pride-filled than this Opera nonsense.

    • @DJpepmar
      @DJpepmar Місяць тому

      Alternatively look up "SPQR soundtrack" by 'National Anthems of the world' its not an original track but its made using instruments used during the roman empire. very captivating as well, especially for a vid like this

    • @CoIdHeat
      @CoIdHeat Місяць тому +3

      There are actually quite some Roman authors who claim that they found the brutality of the „entertainment“ for the masses in the colosseum abhorrent so it might perfectly be that - while taking place in a very different and generally more brutal time - it was entertainment for the more simple minded persons of its era, while the more intellectual Romans thought it to be barbaric.
      We have this disparity also in our modern times when it comes to what is seen as a cultivated past time activity or interest and the fact that trash tv, wrestling and all that still has a huge amount of fans.

    • @moriko07
      @moriko07 18 днів тому

      @@CoIdHeat I confirm what you say :) At the beginning they also used elephants, but the population rebelled, it was heartbreaking to see them die, they took pity on their cries. From that moment on they were excluded.
      Furthermore, emperors who loved killing animals (we had some, alas) were not well received. :)
      As for slaves and gladiators... there was a whole section of very precise legal agreements, the fights were studied beforehand, only the most advanced and experienced gladiators could afford the luxury of deciding to act on their own initiative.
      Also, to the delight of women, we have evidence of female gladiators ^_^ there weren't many, but they were there.
      The film Gladiator is very beautiful, but there are some idiosyncrasies on a historical level, in our Rome it left everyone a little perplexed, but we really liked the wheat, the true protagonist of the whole film :D
      There are also videos in Italian where the film is analyzed and it is explained - based on the sources in our possession - who was supposed to be who and how the events in relation to the film actually happened - always according to historical sources and archaeological finds.

  • @aldosigmann419
    @aldosigmann419 29 днів тому +160

    I think a lot of people when they look on the ruins in awe don't even realize who gorgeous it must have really been when covered with all the amazing colored marble...

    • @johnmcglynn4102
      @johnmcglynn4102 18 днів тому +9

      Absolutely. Unequaled in its time anywhere in the world. I sometimes think the Romans themselves must have been so in awe of the civilization they built that they themselves were taken away with it. I still am, 20 centuries later.

    • @bluesky7288
      @bluesky7288 14 днів тому

      Yes, a grand entrance to torture and murder!

    • @antoniofarinaccio541
      @antoniofarinaccio541 9 днів тому +1

      All that slendor to shed blod! Do we really realize its use? A spectacle on blood shed!

    • @eelcoblaauw6689
      @eelcoblaauw6689 2 дні тому +2

      @@antoniofarinaccio541 True. We tend to look favorably at the Romans because much of Western civilization is rooted in their culture and we are taken in by all the splendor and glory. So it's easy to forgot (or not even learn) that the games in the Colosseum were not just 'honourable' gladiator-to-gladiator duels, but quite often unspeakably cruel horrors that you couldn't imagine, not to mention all the rape and torture that went on in the catacombs.

  • @zico739
    @zico739 Місяць тому +275

    It’s crazy the mark the Flavians left on Roman history and aesthetics despite ruling for less than thirty years.

    • @Is_it_p
      @Is_it_p Місяць тому +53

      they brought the flava flave

    • @hektorsayenkov
      @hektorsayenkov Місяць тому

      They used the loot and pillage and slaves they took from Judaea so...........the second richest Roman Province by GDP.....

    • @TyronSmith-yo5tt
      @TyronSmith-yo5tt Місяць тому +13

      Constantine was also a Flavian. Josephus had his literary team write the new testament as literary entertainment for the Flavians.

    • @Soniti1324
      @Soniti1324 Місяць тому

      @@TyronSmith-yo5tt Let's have a look at the veracity of your assertions:
      Per everybody's favorite robot:
      The comment you've shared introduces two main ideas that mix elements of historical fact with more speculative theories.
      Firstly, the assertion that "Constantine was also a Flavian" is historically inaccurate. Constantine the Great, known for his pivotal role in the establishment of Christianity within the Roman Empire, was not a member of the Flavian dynasty. The Flavian dynasty, consisting of Vespasian and his sons Titus and Domitian, ruled from 69 AD to 96 AD. Constantine, on the other hand, ruled much later, from 306 AD to 337 AD, and belonged to the Constantinian dynasty. His major contributions to history include the Edict of Milan in 313 AD, which granted religious freedom throughout the empire, and his foundation of Constantinople.
      Secondly, the idea that "Josephus had his literary team write the New Testament as literary entertainment for the Flavians" is a theory proposed by Joseph Atwill in his book "Caesar’s Messiah." This theory is not widely accepted among scholars. Atwill posits that Flavius Josephus, a Jewish historian who was captured and later adopted into the Flavian family, was part of a Roman propaganda effort to create a version of Christianity that would pacify the rebellious Jewish populace. According to Atwill, the New Testament was written under the direction of the Flavians to serve this purpose, aligning the life of Jesus with the actions of Titus Flavius to suggest a divine endorsement of the Flavian rule.
      However, this theory is considered highly speculative and lacks substantial support from mainstream historical scholarship. The traditional academic view maintains that the New Testament texts were written by various authors in the first century, rooted in the life and teachings of Jesus and the experiences of his early followers, without direct influence from Roman political schemes.
      This explanation should clarify the historical inaccuracies and speculative nature of the comment you encountered. The Flavian dynasty was indeed significant, particularly in its contributions to Roman architecture and the consolidation of the Empire following the turmoil of the Year of the Four Emperors, but their direct connection to the foundational texts of Christianity as proposed by Atwill is not supported by the majority of historical evidence.

    • @rickwilliams967
      @rickwilliams967 Місяць тому

      Is it though?

  • @michaelsilveradventure5712
    @michaelsilveradventure5712 Місяць тому +98

    What’s even more impressive is this was once filled with water and had ships in order to reenact some famous sea battles… the plumbing for this is underneath the coliseum and is still there. Crazy.😮

    • @chad5537
      @chad5537 Місяць тому +17

      My latin teacher, who has a PhD. in Classical Studies, once said that the coliseum was never filled with water for naval battles. the account of the coliseum being filled with water for that purpose was made by a post-empire collapse historian who straight up lied

    • @michaelsilveradventure5712
      @michaelsilveradventure5712 Місяць тому +11

      @@chad5537 Except the plumbing underneath the coliseum proves otherwise, and if memory serves me, it was written about by an ancient author.

    • @michaelsilveradventure5712
      @michaelsilveradventure5712 Місяць тому

      @@chad5537 So, I just did some checking (which you didn’t do but relied on the almighty badge of truth “PhD”) and Cassius Dio wrote about this and researchers lately have raised this legend from “unlikely” to “very likely.” The biggest indicator that the legend is true is the network of inlet and drainage channels in underneath the coliseum which have no purpose other than directing water.
      I like how people think that just because someone has the title PhD their information is infallible.

    • @JuliusCaesar888
      @JuliusCaesar888 Місяць тому +14

      You're lying. The aqueducts for the plumbing are still there and the Romans were masters of water management. They didn't fill it high - they just filled it enough for flat bottom boats to reenact certain battles. It was special, and it has been attested to in history - it isn't speculation, it's fact.

    • @dylanmorgan2752
      @dylanmorgan2752 29 днів тому +7

      @@chad5537 To claim that no naval battles were staged in the Colosseum is a fairly bold claim. PHD or no. Several sources speak of Naumachia taking place within ampitheatres and Domitian staging one in the Colosseum itself is mentioned. Since the arena would have to be drained very quickly so gladiators could fight after and since the arena itself was much smaller than the river basins traditionally used by Caesar and Augustus, there's frequent debate as to how spectacular or accurate the mock naval battles were and if in the Colosseum they merely used wooden props to mimic ships etc. But to say they didn't happen at all in direct contradiction of our only sources is a bit of a leap.

  • @wendellnewman5152
    @wendellnewman5152 Місяць тому +90

    Amazing rendering. Really helps one capture what it would have been like to be inside the Colosseum during active gladiator combat.

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +2

      Thank you very much! It will go on 😉

  • @lionelferrari1655
    @lionelferrari1655 Місяць тому +97

    Being in the middle of the arena must have been the most exhilarating and terrible place on earth

    • @michaelnurse9089
      @michaelnurse9089 Місяць тому +8

      Well, it depends what you are doing there. If you are just Christians waiting to be eaten by lions - not so much.

    • @jebes909090
      @jebes909090 Місяць тому +1

      @@michaelnurse9089 most stimulating, just not in a good way

    • @gunnsmoke357
      @gunnsmoke357 29 днів тому

      In their lineup of events, they would be killing Jesus followers.

    • @prigual2901
      @prigual2901 17 днів тому +1

      If you were a superstar gladiator, then a great place to be.

  • @eemage9476
    @eemage9476 Місяць тому +24

    This is one of those videos where my emotions run high. Everything in this video is great, delicate, well planned and extremely emotional. Thank you very much for offering us this gem.

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +1

      Thank you very much for your kind words. That is an incentive for us

    • @evilchaperone
      @evilchaperone 7 днів тому +1

      My experience exactly.

  • @DrMARDOC
    @DrMARDOC Місяць тому +80

    The greatest opera music
    In the greatest Roman monument…
    I wish this was longer- maybe an hour…. Or at least time enough to finish my plate of ravioli, bowl of Italian salad and bottle of Old Primotivo and Zabaglione dessert
    Seriously

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +7

      Thank you 🙏 Then we should really consider a long version 😀

    • @deanronson6331
      @deanronson6331 Місяць тому

      Old Primitive kinda fits.

    • @annanardo2358
      @annanardo2358 Місяць тому +1

      Nobody can out eat an italian, it's in there genes. They're born to be Wild at the dinner table. Like my italian family, they live to eat, dream about it, talk about it, constantly cooking. O.M.G. never a spare meatball in Italy

    • @aarondonald1611
      @aarondonald1611 Місяць тому +1

      @@FaberCourtial You know, if you did long versions that looped with some light italian music you would get a lot of views. People love those kinds of vids

    • @andreasn
      @andreasn 29 днів тому

      @@FaberCourtial It's really great! If you have the model and assets then would a VR option be possible?

  • @robertozeladarodriguez5321
    @robertozeladarodriguez5321 Місяць тому +112

    Incredible, the best representation of the coliseum.

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +1

      Thank you Roberto 🙏

    • @RichardSilvius
      @RichardSilvius Місяць тому +2

      This was impressive! Is the interior with the draping banners and the suspended interior ring structure based on research? Or artistic license? Never seen a portrayal that looked like that.

    • @greva2904
      @greva2904 Місяць тому +4

      @@RichardSilviusThose draped banners would have obstructed most people’s views, especially if it was windy. So I’d have thought they were unlikely to have really existed.

    • @purefoldnz3070
      @purefoldnz3070 Місяць тому +1

      Gladiator 2 is coming!

    • @BringDHouseDown
      @BringDHouseDown Місяць тому

      @@greva2904 there was probably at least one you could hang from the roof though or maybe from the bottom row of the spectator seats? like the wall? or maybe from the wall of the emperor's seat, maybe the other side too where officials sit, there's other section of wall between the seats where you could place them

  • @VlerkeDamne
    @VlerkeDamne 28 днів тому +46

    On the contrary to most people, I wish we would completely rebuild it instead of leaving it to ruins.

    • @antoniofarinaccio541
      @antoniofarinaccio541 9 днів тому

      LOL, Ho are we to kill in the arena?

    • @frankpetrone
      @frankpetrone 8 днів тому +7

      Honestly with the time and effort it would take to rebuild it we could probably just build a replica while leaving the original intact

    • @chrisfaux3769
      @chrisfaux3769 6 днів тому +6

      I thought about this a lot lately. Imagine having concerts, opera and sport events in a completely renovated Colosseum as it was intended.

  • @stevehammel2939
    @stevehammel2939 Місяць тому +16

    Spared no expense with beautiful polychrome marbles and stone work...exhilarating to see!

  • @Magnus-m
    @Magnus-m Місяць тому +23

    The greatness and splendor are spectacular! ROMA ETERNA!! 🟣🟡🔴

  • @andresbrusco1779
    @andresbrusco1779 Місяць тому +46

    This presentation caught me by surprise and I ended up crying, remembering a time and a place I did not live in. Magnificent !!! :-))

    • @willbaker8505
      @willbaker8505 Місяць тому +1

      We will have it again in time

    • @danilasad
      @danilasad Місяць тому +2

      Tons of people we're killed there, a place disgraced with suffering and pain, people would go there to take pleasure seeing the others suffering, Yeah you have to cry indeed

    • @andresbrusco1779
      @andresbrusco1779 Місяць тому +2

      @@danilasad Sad but true. Another place. Another time. Another culture. Another customs. Another rules. Another society. Another beliefs. Another people.

    • @danilasad
      @danilasad Місяць тому

      @andresbrusco1779
      I couldn't agree more! and the bloody politics of bread and circus continues in the whole world as we speak. Have you ever been there?
      I will visit there eventually as well as Pompeii and Herculaneum, I've been studying Italian lately, but I'll just go when my Italian gets so good to the point where I can read La Divina Comedia with no problem😅

    • @andresbrusco1779
      @andresbrusco1779 Місяць тому +1

      @@danilasad Sadly I can't afford a trip right now. Is my eternal wish to visit Italy. My ancestors came from there and I consider a moral debt to go visit. Maybe sometime later next year. I envy you for your trips to those cities filled with history ... and "buon mangiare, eh! " (?) :-))

  • @bradleyroissetter6796
    @bradleyroissetter6796 Місяць тому +27

    The film gladiator got it pretty close to this representation. Amazing animation, must of taken ages, so much detail

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +10

      oh yes, we've been working on Rome since 2016

    • @kyleanuar9090
      @kyleanuar9090 Місяць тому +1

      Can't wait for the movie sequel to come out end of this year. Hopefully they don't screw up on the CGI.

    • @kyleanuar9090
      @kyleanuar9090 Місяць тому +1

      Can't wait for the movie sequel to come out end of this year. Hopefully they don't screw up on the CGI.

    • @bradleyroissetter6796
      @bradleyroissetter6796 Місяць тому +1

      Omg I had no idea. Just seen the trailer. Totally agree. I hope it lives up to number one and doesn't go the woke path too

    • @bradleyroissetter6796
      @bradleyroissetter6796 Місяць тому

      @@kyleanuar9090 unfortunately it looks like a fake fan made trailer 😕

  • @skyybluu3118
    @skyybluu3118 2 дні тому

    Peak Rome, absolutely magnificent!

  • @doberman1ism
    @doberman1ism 15 днів тому +2

    Magnificent! Thank you for this moving journey through Ancient Roma. Nessun Dorma and The Colosseum brought tears to my Italian eyes! 🇮🇹

    • @MartynLeopard
      @MartynLeopard 3 дні тому

      It makes me proud of sharing a cultural heritage with the Italians, thanks to Romans we have many things in common with the way of how we live our lives, love from Portugal to Italy and to our ancenstors the Romans, Roma Eterna!🇵🇹🤝🇮🇹

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  2 дні тому

      Thank you very much! A wonderful compliment 😉

  • @francescoscanu6957
    @francescoscanu6957 Місяць тому +4

    Commenting for the algorithm, more people need to see this

  • @RtB68
    @RtB68 Місяць тому +4

    It must have felt as if it would last forever.

  • @johnkeviljr9625
    @johnkeviljr9625 Місяць тому +17

    Wonderful! Simply wonderful! One thought - perhaps the flags did not drop as low as they are because of site lines. But what a great take on being "there".

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +2

      Thank you very much 🙏

    • @gregorymcdpachsa
      @gregorymcdpachsa Місяць тому

      Are all of the hanging fabrics flags or are they ruined suns shields?

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +1

      Banners marking areas and rows of seats.
      They could also be used to advertise upcoming matches

    • @Pouncer9000
      @Pouncer9000 Місяць тому

      @@FaberCourtial Ah.
      Bet you could pay to have ads free seats even then ..

  • @TarpeianRock
    @TarpeianRock Місяць тому +3

    Wow, just wow ! Like walking through the corridors yourself and the view of the arena itself is vividly immersive.

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому

      Thank you very much! That's exactly what it should be 😉

  • @EmperorCaligula_EC
    @EmperorCaligula_EC 21 день тому +1

    My eyes fill with tears of joy and sadness. Oh Roma, my beloved Roma!

  • @pcatful
    @pcatful 5 годин тому

    Fabulous environmental effects on this one. All the wonderful models, and we 've some this good before... but the rendering of the light and atmosphere, not to mention the animation and camera work, makes it super realistic. High art and fascinating connection to history!

  • @ardiankotori3149
    @ardiankotori3149 Місяць тому +2

    It takes your breath away. Why this thing wasn’t on the list of seven wonders of the ancient world is beyond me.

    • @AlessandroCorazzaCA
      @AlessandroCorazzaCA Місяць тому +4

      Because that list was compiled over 300 years before the Colosseum was built.

  • @joepaolinelli7696
    @joepaolinelli7696 25 днів тому +3

    Left me wanting more!

  • @nelqui7685
    @nelqui7685 Місяць тому +3

    As a civilization that had so much capacity for buildings and urbanization, it enjoyed watching human beings devoured by wild animals or slaughtered by gladiators. 😮

    • @MadridBarcelonaRota
      @MadridBarcelonaRota 29 днів тому +2

      Those developments were in the main designed to be supportive of militaristic objectives. Healthy populous enjoying rapid deployment of forces and material along with effective efficient trade routes. It was this very efficiency of organisation that kept Rome at the top of the heap. You would have confused them with your modernistic view equating mundane military necessity with social development.

    • @MartynLeopard
      @MartynLeopard 3 дні тому

      Yes we as humans are full of contradictions

  • @shainer13
    @shainer13 Місяць тому +11

    It would be awesome to time warp to the past and see the Roman coliseum back in its prime.

    • @anotheryoutubechannel4809
      @anotheryoutubechannel4809 Місяць тому

      we just did bro!

    • @bonjourtoi3894
      @bonjourtoi3894 29 днів тому

      Oh oui !!!!!!!!! Tout un édifice. Le plus beau, mais il y a tellement. Notre histoire humaine est grande.

    • @David-dl3vj
      @David-dl3vj 19 днів тому

      Yeah; Nice place to visit, would have been dicey to live there though?

  • @nakenmil
    @nakenmil Місяць тому +14

    It's sorta funny that giving an opera as music to a video on the Colosseum is almost as historically dissonant as giving it a jazz accompaniment.

    • @ArtificialMayo
      @ArtificialMayo Місяць тому +3

      Both are sources of italian pride, thus the connection

    •  Місяць тому +5

      @@ArtificialMayo "Pride" for the accomplishments of others is an easy thing.

    • @TriviRocks
      @TriviRocks Місяць тому +2

      I totally agree. I felt shocked at Pavarotti's version of Puccini... (though I love both)

    • @SP-ki5gn
      @SP-ki5gn 9 днів тому

      Well said.

  • @PauloGoldschmidt-cd1rd
    @PauloGoldschmidt-cd1rd Місяць тому +4

    O maior imperio dos tempos antigos, nunca havera outro. Viva Roma Eterna.

  • @HamSandwich277
    @HamSandwich277 18 годин тому

    Amazing!

  • @jaelge
    @jaelge 16 годин тому

    Beautiful work.

  • @beagler4234
    @beagler4234 21 день тому +2

    I bet the club level and sky box’s were amazing!

  • @morgan97475
    @morgan97475 Місяць тому +4

    Very frakin' cool!

  • @sjsj8459
    @sjsj8459 Місяць тому +1

    Amazing! Thank you!

  • @nadirzoccoletti97
    @nadirzoccoletti97 3 дні тому

    Una bellezza ineguagliabile mastodontica che fa' sognare 😍

  • @jeboccuzzi10
    @jeboccuzzi10 Місяць тому

    Fantastic video. Thanks for sharing

  • @ABC1701A
    @ABC1701A 29 днів тому +1

    Two thousand years later and still mankind can't built arenas/stadiums to even come close to the awe and beauty achieved by the Romans (I admit to some bias, Vespasian has long been my favourite emperor)
    Ave Caesar

    • @bonjourtoi3894
      @bonjourtoi3894 29 днів тому

      César n'a rien à faire ici. Vous devez parler de Titus.

  • @JuanIgnacioAzpiazu
    @JuanIgnacioAzpiazu Місяць тому +9

    1) What you do is awesome. Congratulations and thank you.
    2) This would still be awesome if it were all just a reasonable assumption with no research at all, which it is obviously not. But I am curious about a) the trussed tension ring for the shades, b) the standards hanging from the roof, c) (you must get a lot of this:) were all the statues actually all bronze? (were the larger ones not acrolitic, and the smaller ones (my guess) marble? and was the clothing etc. not painted?). Do you keep any record of the sources you based your recreations on? I am sure quite a few of us would be using that as a map for further reading.
    3) What you do is awesome. Congratulations and thank you.

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому +11

      Thank you very much 🙏
      In our considerations of the Colosseum's velarium, we largely rely on logical deductions about the architecture and insights from "Atlante di Roma" regarding the Colosseum as a whole. Straight wooden poles seemed unsuitable for various reasons-they would simply be too heavy and not effective as coverage. The sails would have to hang quite low and be heavy, which is just a speculation. This construction would allow sunlight to be directed into the arena while simultaneously shading the stands.
      We view the crossbeams as simple structural elements, similar to railings, mainly maintaining the distance between the sails. However, the main load remains on the tensioned cables that run in a ring. There are no records of the exact construction method, though.
      When we started the design in 2016, there were hardly any images of this type of construction. Now, however, it seems to be gaining popularity.
      The banners on the Colosseum are an interpretation. They mark the stands and entrances, which facilitates orientation. We also considered placing advertisements for additional events and gladiator matches on them to enhance the stadium's character.
      The external statues could indeed have been "cheap" statues that could be easily replaced depending on who was emperor at the time or which athletes were popular. And if drunken fans rioted again after their hero lost, they were quickly replaced.

    • @JuanIgnacioAzpiazu
      @JuanIgnacioAzpiazu Місяць тому +5

      Thanks very much for the reply.

  • @youtubeuser6067
    @youtubeuser6067 Місяць тому +3

    Amazing!!! Keep up the great work!!🙏👍

  • @MrMwolf69
    @MrMwolf69 12 днів тому

    Bravo! Bravo!

  • @stevenrey56
    @stevenrey56 Місяць тому +1

    Fantastic! I loved it!

  • @Ap-cm7mx
    @Ap-cm7mx Місяць тому

    Fantastic!!!

  • @francadebea6439
    @francadebea6439 День тому +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤grandiiiiiiiiiiiii

  • @aeliusdawn
    @aeliusdawn 12 днів тому

    I visited the Colosseum a few weeks ago and I immediately recognized this area 0:27, thank you for showing what it looked like then

  • @Podders1991
    @Podders1991 Місяць тому

    This really moved me. Thank you

  • @pellganesh3681
    @pellganesh3681 Місяць тому +2

    Really nice. The most impressive scene was looking out from the coliseum to the huge statue in the city.

    • @prigual2901
      @prigual2901 17 днів тому

      That is why it was nicknamed the Coliseum.

  • @brutus4013
    @brutus4013 Місяць тому +1

    Well done. Cheers 😎🥃

  • @mephistopheles4269
    @mephistopheles4269 Місяць тому

    Wonderful!

  • @johnconnery1939
    @johnconnery1939 Місяць тому +3

    Great job

  • @thorntonmellon
    @thorntonmellon 19 днів тому +3

    Is the scale of the interior correct?
    The Roman Colosseum's seating capacity is estimated to be between 50,000 and 85,000 spectators. Those hallways and staircases appear way too small for those numbers and the center looked much smaller than I imagined. There doesn't appear to be nearly enough seats as well.
    That being said I really enjoyed the video, it was very cool to see how spectacular it was. I can only imagine how mind blowing it was to experience that in those times.

    • @FirefoxisredExplorerisblueGoog
      @FirefoxisredExplorerisblueGoog 9 днів тому +1

      Looks too small to me as well, and I've been to the colosseum.

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  2 дні тому +2

      Thank you very much! The dimensions are correct. The floor plan is based on exact satellite data and derived from it, as are the proportions. However, different camera angles and focal lengths give distorted expansions, especially towards the edge of the picture. This can make the arena appear smaller.

    • @FirefoxisredExplorerisblueGoog
      @FirefoxisredExplorerisblueGoog 2 дні тому

      @@FaberCourtial I see, thank you for clarifying.

  • @UltorCXXVIII
    @UltorCXXVIII Місяць тому +1

    Breathtaking!

  • @dannyarcher6370
    @dannyarcher6370 Місяць тому +2

    Thanks for helping meet my quota for the day.

  • @darktyrannosaurus22
    @darktyrannosaurus22 Місяць тому

    A Spectacle of Blood and Honor!

  • @paulb1894
    @paulb1894 19 днів тому

    Awesome !!

  • @Snoophelia
    @Snoophelia 15 днів тому +1

    Pure magic! Thank you so much for sharing your amazing talent.

  • @e.f.3207
    @e.f.3207 Місяць тому +1

    FANTASTIC work! Great job, 👍 Thank you so much for the excellent view and detail, really fatastic work!

  • @dr.carlpatrasso3847
    @dr.carlpatrasso3847 Місяць тому +2

    Great recreation, thank you.

  • @DonkeyFilms
    @DonkeyFilms Місяць тому

    Amazing work absolutely stunning

  • @christina3521
    @christina3521 16 днів тому

    Thank you. Jaw dropping. Subscribed.

  • @TheMymovie
    @TheMymovie Місяць тому +1

    It was perfect.

  • @user-ft1xf8wk9m
    @user-ft1xf8wk9m Місяць тому +1

    THANKS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @outworld15
    @outworld15 9 днів тому

    Just...truly speechlessness-inducing recreation. Powerfully captivating musical choice. No reasonable critic to offer, just praise. Truly awe-inspiring

  • @artemisapaulina29
    @artemisapaulina29 Місяць тому

    Wow! Very impressive, spectacular! A real masterpiece.

  • @christopherpardell4418
    @christopherpardell4418 Місяць тому +1

    Interesting take on the canopy. Although the rigid structure circling the center would be too heavy and unnecessary. Just rope alone in tension from the radiating support lines would hold the oval shape and balance the opening. Having it drape in a catenary arc is interesting, although it would have to be shallow enough for the nosebleed seats to still see the far side of the arena. The hanging strips of cloth make little sense as they would block spectator views, although having retractable hanging drapes from the central oval ring might offer a greater ability to shade the lower seats in the north side of the stadium in winter months.

  • @amancalledkev
    @amancalledkev 29 днів тому +1

    Incredible! How on earth did they manage to produce such phenomenal and complex architectural works of art?

    • @LCA1985
      @LCA1985 День тому

      Cause they were humans after all. The same humans that put men on the moon and create nuclear power, the brains are the same even it was 2000 years ago is not that much in evolutionary time span.

  • @russellbateman3392
    @russellbateman3392 Місяць тому

    The vomitories are plush and spectacular, the hanging shades dyed so red! Caught up in the moment, I clapped. Vincero indeed!

  • @WAFFENAMT1
    @WAFFENAMT1 19 днів тому +1

    This exudes The Glory of Rome like no other...😊

  • @NG-ki5eo
    @NG-ki5eo Місяць тому

    Phenomenal, fabulous, exceptional…kudos!

  • @sonjaleesloth
    @sonjaleesloth 4 дні тому

    So beautiful yet so brutal. 🏟

  • @TheSimmpleTruth
    @TheSimmpleTruth 17 днів тому

    Magnificent!

  • @mikethespike7579
    @mikethespike7579 Місяць тому

    Wow! That was some amazing building. The ruins are at best just a shadow of what the Colosseum used to be like. It would be fantastic to see this footage in IMAX format. Also, compliments to whomever chose the music. It fits exactly to the grandeur of the pictures. Well done!

  • @BigPastaUnitedSimCo
    @BigPastaUnitedSimCo Місяць тому

    Amazing!1

  • @brookscowan90
    @brookscowan90 26 днів тому

    that was beautiful

  • @richardphysician5640
    @richardphysician5640 Місяць тому +1

    My uncle Battais worked on that. On my dad's side. Great, great great great great, well you get the idea.

  • @Someonesaidthis
    @Someonesaidthis Місяць тому

    That looks beautiful

  • @vladafelitsyna
    @vladafelitsyna 27 днів тому

    Appreciate your work

  • @bowen4878
    @bowen4878 20 днів тому +1

    Never seen before in a thousand years

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  20 днів тому +1

      thanks a lot

    • @bowen4878
      @bowen4878 20 днів тому

      @@FaberCourtial you’re welcome

    • @prigual2901
      @prigual2901 17 днів тому

      A bit more, I wonder who started to stripped the Amphitheater from its marbles and statues, the Vandals, the Romans of the VIIth century?

  • @lothean2099
    @lothean2099 День тому

    Just like modern stadiums. Those damn banners obscure the view for those of us who can only afford to sit at the top.

  • @Anamillio
    @Anamillio Місяць тому

    such a great recreation

  • @ChrisRubeo
    @ChrisRubeo Місяць тому

    The rendering is absolutely phenomenal. Can you talk a bit about how you re-searched all the details? And, for the sake of the future UA-cam, I would suggest you put some of that info in the descriptions. Wonderful work.

  • @aaronjaben7913
    @aaronjaben7913 Місяць тому

    amazing then, and also the virtual reconstruction

  • @MrViktorolon
    @MrViktorolon Місяць тому +2

    I was just thinking about Rome, what a coincidence.

  • @valdezlopez
    @valdezlopez Місяць тому +3

    WTF. Amazing!

  • @BcFuTw9jt
    @BcFuTw9jt 15 днів тому +1

    This needs contrasted with other locations at the same time frame, just to exemplify the grandeur.

  • @erobertfie
    @erobertfie Місяць тому

    Magnificent.

  • @duxae1617
    @duxae1617 День тому

    I'm not crying, you're crying.

  • @FiendishFlesh
    @FiendishFlesh 12 днів тому

    I could cry not to be able to see the masterpiece in all its glory anymore. Sometimes, the rolling wheel of time is quite a motherf&%$er. Semper fidelis Imperum Romanum!

  • @pbohearn
    @pbohearn 22 дні тому

    It leaves me in awe of the grandeur of ancient Rome

  • @morenofranco9235
    @morenofranco9235 26 днів тому

    What a wonderful interpretation of Roman living.

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  20 днів тому

      thanks a lot 🙏

    • @David-dl3vj
      @David-dl3vj 19 днів тому

      Civilization hasn't changed a lot. Ahhh but their architecture in stone and philosophy is a different matter?

  • @sleepyjo9340
    @sleepyjo9340 14 днів тому

    I find it crazy how not only did Romans forget its purpose. Some family used it as a castle also.

  • @MartynLeopard
    @MartynLeopard 3 дні тому +2

    It makes me proud of sharing a cultural heritage with the Italians, thanks to Romans we have many things in common with the way of how we live our lives, love from Portugal to Italy and to our ancenstors the Romans, Roma Eterna!🇵🇹🤝🇮🇹

  • @Mr.56Goldtop
    @Mr.56Goldtop 16 днів тому

    Keith Richards said, Yep, that's pretty close to the way it looked when he saw it.

  • @curiousmonster8221
    @curiousmonster8221 Місяць тому +1

    Beautiful - but I always think of the colosseum as a death pit.

  • @danluisvi
    @danluisvi 14 днів тому

    Papelitos arrojados al aire en el coliseo es lo más loco que vi en mi vida.

  • @chizzlemo3094
    @chizzlemo3094 Місяць тому

    Wow.

  • @viorelpiscanu9425
    @viorelpiscanu9425 Місяць тому +3

    Sic transit gloria mundi 😊

  • @legendarywalker5859
    @legendarywalker5859 14 днів тому

    The reconstruction of the colossus looks plausible; it does not rest on a column, this can be seen even on Roman coins

  • @bonjourtoi3894
    @bonjourtoi3894 29 днів тому

    Ça devait être de toute beauté, sans les combats.

  • @domenicamassaro8221
    @domenicamassaro8221 Місяць тому

    An artificially dried lake. Removible tents to protect the audience from sun or rain. Elevators. Amazing.

  • @raymondrocco8607
    @raymondrocco8607 14 днів тому

    I heard that, even as the Colosseum was being constructed, Rome was already declining up until the Empire actually fell .

  • @Nonamearisto
    @Nonamearisto Місяць тому +3

    Most beautiful blood sport death arena of all time.

    • @FaberCourtial
      @FaberCourtial  Місяць тому

      Beauty and brutality in bizarre unity

    • @jamesroseby3823
      @jamesroseby3823 Місяць тому

      Maybe if it was converted to an open-air church it would have been save from ruin. What a magnificent sight it was. Outstanding work in showing it in its former glory. 👍👌