I am from Rome and had no idea how beautiful it was. I feel like crying comparing how it was then and how it is now... dirty and neglected. Thank you for your reconstruction... amazing!
Yes but don't forget that these replicas are totally idealized images and clinically correct reproductions -the reality of ancient Rome would have been very very different with probably about 80% of the city being made of grubby tenement buildings and squalid slums -these things in this video are only the grand public buildings in perfect states of conservation minus any deteriorations!Most of ancient Rome away from the public grandeur would have been as grubby as it is today(If indeed it is grubby -I haven't been there for over 30 years!)
It must have been so amazing, a true world wonder in its own catgeory, full of outstanding architecture and works of art - the destruction of this beautiful city was truly the most horrific act of vandalism in human history. How I wish for a time machine, if only to visit Rome of this era for one single day !
@Yesmer Uhmmm... and what kind of wonders did they build? 7000 years ago they were just a bunch of hunter-gatherers. Besides, Rome wasn't the first developed civilization of Italy.
For years and years I have wished I could see a video such as this. The Italians were able to design and build proportional elegance on an astonishing scale but without losing the simple touch. Not long ago I saw a similar video about the look and feel of the city of Pompeii before 79 A.D. The interiors of the homes looked more inviting, comfortable and harmonious than the homes of today. Amazing.
First rate. Rome was the first "modern" civilization. So elegant. They almost discovered steam power, which would have added a whole new dimension. Their architecture, developed from Greek, was marvelous.
Steam power? Was invented by Greeks, during Classical times, example: the Hydraulis steam organ (which would later be named Religious organ in Western Europe), in Syacuse during Classical times the Hydraulic Clock of Archimedes, also, during Roman times, but in the Greek then center of Alexandria, Hero made the aeolipile to generate movement from steam (his sphere turned at 1500 turns per minute), and also the static Hero's theatre. Also Hero designed automatic doors opening and closing for a temple and designs have been found but not know if it was constructed. And a primitive robot-automaton. The first known working automaton-robot though is again by Greeks in Eastern Roman empire in Byzantium because they inherited some of the knowledge that was built in Alexandria. Most parts of the far engine, the pulleys, valves, steam generated turnaround etc were invented in ancient Greece. If not for the Christian disruption the car would have probably come up, and the train-railway (there was rudimentary built "railway" like road to move ships to the other side through trunks in Corinth where there is the canal now, the Doikos), if things that is progressed at a positive pace, many centuries earlier.
innosanto You nailed it except for the blame on the Christians. I blame the corrupt leaders of Late Antiquity/Early Middle Ages. They didn’t pursue steam power because they depended on slave labor and monks continued literacy while the peasantry (99% descended from slaves/serfs/peasants/soldiers) didn’t have a chance to learn it from corrupt Monarchies and Church Leaders more concerned with politics than Theology.
I applause to the production team who worked so hard to make this video. I am an Art Historian who always admire the "modern sense' of Ancient Rome. To a certain extend, the Roman architectures are so much more aesthetically appealing then the nowadays ones. Regretfully, I was born 2000 years later, and thanks to this video, I can put myself back there to visualize as a Roman citizen (or a slave girl!😅),on the city lifestyle they were having. Love this video a lot, and thanks the production crews again!👍👍👍❤
Roma es espectacular, ayer, hoy y siempre. Ninguna otra puede competir con ella en historia y en belleza. Es mi ciudad preferida en el mundo. Sería maravilloso que reconstruyeran muchos de sus edificios y monumentos, para que el mundo vuelva a verlos con todo su esplendor. Gracias por este estupendo video. Un saludo desde Cuenca (España)
Reconstruirlos sería inútul y sin sentido, porque estarían fuera de su época. El mundo, el pensamiento y la conciencia de los que surgieron esos edificios simplemente no existen más. Lo que sí se puede hacer es proteger los rasgos de lo que fuimos, aprender de ellos a enfrentarnos a lo que somos. En la Roma antigua se destrozaba y reconstruía continuamente, la belleza y la eficiencia eran conceptos cíclicos de renovación y perfeccionamiento perpetuos, desmontando y volviendo a montar de otra forma, una y otra vez. La idea de conservación ni siquiera se le ocurría: la gracia y la majestuosidad existían de por si mismas, en el momento de su creación y aprovechamiento público o particular. Lo que vemos hoy en esas ruínas no es nada más que las últimas fotografías de una Roma que por un tanto así no le alcanzó el tiempo para cambiar de nuevo y convertirse en otra cosa: si el destino y la Historia la hubieran atrapallado aun sólo un siglo más tarde de lo que fue, ahora estaríamos viendo y adorando una ciudad muy diferente. Ésta es la primera lección que nos han dejado, quizás la más importante.
Correcto. Mantener todo en un estado "democratico" y mercantiista, no es bello. Para los que creen que reconstruir es inutil, prueben a usar el mismo traje todo el año, todos los años, a ver si les agrada. Se dejarian los originales en su lugar, pero se reconstruirán los faltantes. A la gente que se metio alli como ra tas, los trasladaria sin costo a unos edificios de departamentos lejos de esas bellezas, quizas tambien con una linea de Metro. Viste?
This video is absolutely fascinating I loved it this should be taught in schools that we should be able to preserve our heritage and our places with honor and gratitude thank you again
your work is the most beautiful reproduction/reconstruction of an ancient city... one of the best things, is that you provide the location... and layover "reconstruct" of different sites in the city. absolutely love this . thank you so very much.
A fantastic piece of work! If only the Emperors and the citizens of Rome could come back and tell us how accurate this reconstruction is!! Wonder if they had that many statues...amazing!
wow!! I'm amazed how you did all this reconstruction, its great, thank you so much for taking the time and do this for the rest of us, I was there last spring 2019 pretty old country, we love Rome and thinking coming back again.
Esistono da centinaia di secoli prima di Cristo, quando voi abitavate nelle capanne e mangiavate qualsiasi animale vi passasse davanti, oppure ancora non esistevate, informatevi prima di parlare, Dio santo!
E la ricostruzione più bella ed emozionante di Roma antica che abbia mai visto ... grazie... non oso immaginare cosa si potrà fare con la realtà aumentata...! Godo solo al pensiero . I miei più vividi complimenti. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
This time in history is fascinating. These buildings were often tightly packed, "streets" traversed by people and horses. It would be wonderful to restore Rome to it's glory in many ways. But it was a time of extravagant empire and luxury. The cost would be astronomical and essentially impossible. The architecture was magnificent and regal unmatched in scope to this day. If even a few buildings, statues, fountains and effects could be renewed that would be a fine achievement. Of course, the centerpiece Colosseum completely restored would top off a wonderful project.
This time in history is deeply fascinating. The Roman Empire is definitely on of my favorites topics in history. Their influence and impact are still very much felt and present today.
Rome, the splendid public buildings, temples, palaces of the rich.... But also the city of great poverty of many. Still, the animations are of rare beauty. Thank you so much for bringing it back to us.
This is the BEST video I've seen on ancient Rome as it was at the height of it's glory and what the ruins of the forum look like now. The barbarian tribes lived up to their names, fire ,plague, and time did the rest. To see what it looked like was a real treat!
Actually, it was later Italians themselves who demolished most of these big buildings, because they could re-use the precious materials for their own palaces and churches.
It's not even a year since I visited Rome but I already want to get back there just for spending loads of time in the Forum Romanum imagining how it once looked
Your work are better said art is absolutely captivating and should be taught in schools as a person who's walked in those paths that you're showing it's utterly breathtaking just knowing how it all used to really look thank you thank you so much for all your hard work that is going into this
This is incredible, it makes the sacking of Rome all the more saddening, when you see the splendour of such a beautiful city. It’s crazy to think of how the Romans lived when in Northern Europe we were just small tribes living in wooded houses. What was it that sparked the rapid cultural evolution of the Greeks and Romans.
Sencillamente maravilloso!!!! Amo Roma y su historia. Agradezco haber elegido la carrera de Letras que me ha dado la posibilidad a través de la materia Grecolatina conocer el maravilloso mundo antiguo donde nació la historia de la lengua latina madre de nuestro idioma.
--The Stadium of Domitian is now Piazza Savona with the form of the stadium still. Mussolini carried through some reconstructions and cleaning of the Forum. Thank you so much for this excellent video!
I love Rome I visit every chance I get the history of the eternal city makes my hair stand on end, also Italian people are so classy mad drivers but classy.
Grazie x avere fatto questo lavoro magnifico di restauro dell'antica Roma, quella Vera, quella che ha dato la voglia di creare il futuro che senza quello non ci saremmo.. Oggi purtroppo ci restano solo le sue rovine come per ricordarci quello che eravamo e quello che non saremo mai più.. Reddite Ergo Quae Romae Sunt Romae.. Viva la Urbis Aeternam ! S.P.Q.R. in Fede
pensa che quasi alla fine del 1400 il Foro Romano era quasi integro,poi sono cominciate le ruberie.Nel 1499 fu demolita la piramide che stava all'inizio della futura Via della Conciliazione,per la costruzione di S.Pietro,era d'impiccio ai carri,e verso la metà del 1500 furono demolite altre 2 piramidi a (futura)Piazza del Popolo x l'erezione delle chiese gemelle.Quando fu eletto papa SistoV° nel 1585 voleva demolire il Colosseo x la costruzioe di una strada tra la basilica di S.Giovanni e S.Pietro ma morì nel 1590 e x nostra fortuna la cosa non ebbe seguito,altrimenti noi non l'avremmo mai visto
Awe inspiring magnificence, regal beauty, power and genius at a scale and breadth unmatched to this day. Even the Latin language had a royal, commanding bearing to it. A remarkable place in history. I do wish they could reconstruct some of this. Sensational! Urbem maximam umquam fecit mundum, et omnia saecula!
6:54. That slope roofed building right behind the three temples - that's the curia of Pompey's theater. That's where Julius Caesar got smoked. It's under the roadway now.
A reconstrução encima do que restou hoje mostra que grandes construtores os romanos eram! Um verdadeiro espetáculo, que se perdeu em grande parte com o tempo! Mas que felizmente podemos ter ideia do que foi um dia com vídeos como o seu! Chego a sentir saudades, em especial, das termas e daquelas grandes obras arborizadas e finamente decoradas com estátuas. Ave Cesar! Muito obrigada pelo vídeo. :)
AMAZING video. They could have kept things easy and simple, yet instead they constructed breathtaking buildings with stunning arches and columns and adorned the everything with intricate statutes. Phenomenal, and yet throughout this amazing video, as beautiful as it is, my thoughts are regretfully predominantly drawn, not to the incredible capabilities of the ancient Romans, but instead to an enormous distracting digital clock! KAN 3.20 UK
Not a clue about what Campo de' Fiori and Piazza Navona were like back then. Floored me to be honest. Come gli altri commenti Italiani, peccato che Roma non esiste oggi come era una volta sotto i Romani. Beautiful renderings. Complimenti.
Lovely video, except for the millisecond counter. It would have been even better if it 1) included dates for each monument whose reconstruction we see, 2) spent less time on the Colosseum, and 3) spent much more time on a much more historically and culturally significant monument: the temple of Jupiter on Capitoline Hill. We get a glimpse of it when we see the Circus Maximus, but it deserves a lot more attention!!! It was one of the oldest temples in the city, as well as the destination of triumphal processions.
It was beautiful. But let's not kid ourselves, it wasn't "perfect". Really, was an unplanned jumble of marble temples and government buildings and plazas as today's modern European cities. And you're not accounting for the animal shit piles, piss pots, vagrants, slave markets, stinky fish markets and other food markets, and vast amount of very poor people giving off a stench of incense and human and animal fecal matter you smell in some of the impoverished cities of today; minus incense... you usually don't smell mass incense containers burning as they would have through the ancient and medieval periods. Instead you get small breaks from the stink via people loaded with perfume and some modern deli and bakeries and cafe's wafting among the stinky barnyard and sometimes puncheon rotting garbage stink.
It would be nice to have just the virtual tour without switching to present day. Another type of media could perhaps show modern equivalents. A beautiful use of colour & rendering of water areas. Other interiors also fascinating. Could we have a tour of the forum with interior? There was a sounding board at one end. Can that be shown?
I am from Rome and had no idea how beautiful it was. I feel like crying comparing how it was then and how it is now... dirty and neglected. Thank you for your reconstruction... amazing!
Yes but don't forget that these replicas are totally idealized images and clinically correct reproductions -the reality of ancient Rome would have been very very different with probably about 80% of the city being made of grubby tenement buildings and squalid slums -these things in this video are only the grand public buildings in perfect states of conservation minus any deteriorations!Most of ancient Rome away from the public grandeur would have been as grubby as it is today(If indeed it is grubby -I haven't been there for over 30 years!)
Rome must be rebuilt, the Germans must pay for it!
It must have been so amazing, a true world wonder in its own catgeory, full of outstanding architecture and works of art - the destruction of this beautiful city was truly the most horrific act of vandalism in human history. How I wish for a time machine, if only to visit Rome of this era for one single day !
Ma tu piangi in ogni video in cui si parla di Roma scusami
Rome is great then as well as today. I love rome
It's already incredible for us, but imagine a Germanic, accustomed to seeing only forests and little villages, visiting Rome for the first time...
And they have destroyed this paradise.
@Yesmer Uhmmm... and what kind of wonders did they build? 7000 years ago they were just a bunch of hunter-gatherers.
Besides, Rome wasn't the first developed civilization of Italy.
@Yesmer Sure, let's not forget the Swifterbant empire
@Yesmer how tf is that by any means comparable to ROME, like how by any means. Lol.
I guess very well, Rome is history but in recent years it has been neglected a lot ...
who knows what our emperors would say about how it is reduced
Finally! This is the type of visual reconstructions I have always wanted to see!
This video should be a recommended view for any flight arriving or leaving Rome
I wish I could’ve watched this video before I went to Rome in 2017👌
So do I!!!!!!
Roma - the most beautiful place in the world! Got goosebumps! Great documentation, gives me a feeling like coming home.
Just been there and its calling me back!
come to atenes it was build before rome
:P
I love the Music to this!!
For years and years I have wished I could see a video such as this. The Italians were able to design and build proportional elegance on an astonishing scale but without losing the simple touch. Not long ago I saw a similar video about the look and feel of the city of Pompeii before 79 A.D. The interiors of the homes looked more inviting, comfortable and harmonious than the homes of today. Amazing.
Thank you so much for the team that spent an insane number of hours to create and share this treasured insight. Well-done. Well-done.
First rate. Rome was the first "modern" civilization. So elegant. They almost discovered steam power, which would have added a whole new dimension. Their architecture, developed from Greek, was marvelous.
Steam power? Was invented by Greeks, during Classical times, example: the Hydraulis steam organ (which would later be named Religious organ in Western Europe), in Syacuse during Classical times the Hydraulic Clock of Archimedes, also, during Roman times, but in the Greek then center of Alexandria, Hero made the aeolipile to generate movement from steam (his sphere turned at 1500 turns per minute), and also the static Hero's theatre. Also Hero designed automatic doors opening and closing for a temple and designs have been found but not know if it was constructed. And a primitive robot-automaton. The first known working automaton-robot though is again by Greeks in Eastern Roman empire in Byzantium because they inherited some of the knowledge that was built in Alexandria. Most parts of the far engine, the pulleys, valves, steam generated turnaround etc were invented in ancient Greece. If not for the Christian disruption the car would have probably come up, and the train-railway (there was rudimentary built "railway" like road to move ships to the other side through trunks in Corinth where there is the canal now, the Doikos), if things that is progressed at a positive pace, many centuries earlier.
They used wireless energy. Ether
@@manuelemariani8188 yeah and the latest Toyota Corolla too....
innosanto
You nailed it except for the blame on the Christians. I blame the corrupt leaders of Late Antiquity/Early Middle Ages. They didn’t pursue steam power because they depended on slave labor and monks continued literacy while the peasantry (99% descended from slaves/serfs/peasants/soldiers) didn’t have a chance to learn it from corrupt Monarchies and Church Leaders more concerned with politics than Theology.
@Jerome O'Mara Tacitus wrote about jesus though.
Wow absolutely breathtaking beautiful ... love the music as well. Thanks for sharing.
I applause to the production team who worked so hard to make this video. I am an Art Historian who always admire the "modern sense' of Ancient Rome. To a certain extend, the Roman architectures are so much more aesthetically appealing then the nowadays ones. Regretfully, I was born 2000 years later, and thanks to this video, I can put myself back there to visualize as a Roman citizen (or a slave girl!😅),on the city lifestyle they were having. Love this video a lot, and thanks the production crews again!👍👍👍❤
Fantástico! Muitos parabéns . Eu poderia ficar mais 24 horas vendo essas maravilhas entre "then and now". Thank you!
Roma es espectacular, ayer, hoy y siempre. Ninguna otra puede competir con ella en historia y en belleza. Es mi ciudad preferida en el mundo.
Sería maravilloso que reconstruyeran muchos de sus edificios y monumentos, para que el mundo vuelva a verlos con todo su esplendor.
Gracias por este estupendo video. Un saludo desde Cuenca (España)
Reconstruirlos sería inútul y sin sentido, porque estarían fuera de su época. El mundo, el pensamiento y la conciencia de los que surgieron esos edificios simplemente no existen más. Lo que sí se puede hacer es proteger los rasgos de lo que fuimos, aprender de ellos a enfrentarnos a lo que somos. En la Roma antigua se destrozaba y reconstruía continuamente, la belleza y la eficiencia eran conceptos cíclicos de renovación y perfeccionamiento perpetuos, desmontando y volviendo a montar de otra forma, una y otra vez. La idea de conservación ni siquiera se le ocurría: la gracia y la majestuosidad existían de por si mismas, en el momento de su creación y aprovechamiento público o particular. Lo que vemos hoy en esas ruínas no es nada más que las últimas fotografías de una Roma que por un tanto así no le alcanzó el tiempo para cambiar de nuevo y convertirse en otra cosa: si el destino y la Historia la hubieran atrapallado aun sólo un siglo más tarde de lo que fue, ahora estaríamos viendo y adorando una ciudad muy diferente. Ésta es la primera lección que nos han dejado, quizás la más importante.
Correcto. Mantener todo en un estado "democratico" y mercantiista, no es bello. Para los que creen que reconstruir es inutil, prueben a usar el mismo traje todo el año, todos los años, a ver si les agrada.
Se dejarian los originales en su lugar, pero se reconstruirán los faltantes. A la gente que se metio alli como ra tas, los trasladaria sin costo a unos edificios de departamentos lejos de esas bellezas, quizas tambien con una linea de Metro. Viste?
@@Bobibion no te entendí nada, te podés expresar con claridad porfavor?
Que dijiste?
What majestic builders and planners they were - awesome job!
This video is absolutely fascinating I loved it this should be taught in schools that we should be able to preserve our heritage and our places with honor and gratitude thank you again
your work is the most beautiful reproduction/reconstruction of an ancient city... one of the best things, is that you provide the location... and layover "reconstruct" of different sites in the city. absolutely love this . thank you so very much.
Good stuff. Butt Roma Greco structures were colourful. They loved colours.
It’s true
thankyou for this mezmerizing video any effort you put into its production has been greatly appreciated
J'adore Rome. Sa culture...Je passerais ma vie a la parcourir..
Moi aussi.
A fantastic piece of work! If only the Emperors and the citizens of Rome could come back and tell us how accurate this reconstruction is!! Wonder if they had that many statues...amazing!
I am the descendents of Josephus Titus flavius so I remember that is the greatest empire that ever existed
Incredibly well done - thank you. Amazing and beautiful architecture.
wow!! I'm amazed how you did all this reconstruction, its great, thank you so much for taking the time and do this for the rest of us, I was there last spring 2019 pretty old country, we love Rome and thinking coming back again.
I wish the buildings are still like that now but with modern technologies.
would be nice if modern rome even used modern technology many of those areas look pretty rundown
Esistono da centinaia di secoli prima di Cristo, quando voi abitavate nelle capanne e mangiavate qualsiasi animale vi passasse davanti, oppure ancora non esistevate, informatevi prima di parlare, Dio santo!
E la ricostruzione più bella ed emozionante di Roma antica che abbia mai visto ... grazie... non oso immaginare cosa si potrà fare con la realtà aumentata...! Godo solo al pensiero . I miei più vividi complimenti. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Just wow! Four years late in finding this artwork. Incredible!
Excellent work, congratulations !!! 👏👏👏
The time at the bottom is distracting but great insights!
This time in history is fascinating. These buildings were often tightly packed, "streets" traversed by people and horses. It would be wonderful to restore Rome to it's glory in many ways. But it was a time of extravagant empire and luxury. The cost would be astronomical and essentially impossible. The architecture was magnificent and regal unmatched in scope to this day. If even a few buildings, statues, fountains and effects could be renewed that would be a fine achievement. Of course, the centerpiece Colosseum completely restored would top off a wonderful project.
This time in history is deeply fascinating. The Roman Empire is definitely on of my favorites topics in history. Their influence and impact are still very much felt and present today.
Rome, the splendid public buildings, temples, palaces of the rich.... But also the city of great poverty of many. Still, the animations are of rare beauty. Thank you so much for bringing it back to us.
Guauuu, no tengo palabras, impresionante¡M.,Carmen ❤❤
Amazing! I've never realized Rome was that great
For long 500 years Rome ruled the World. She was the Master of the World. She was the Center of the Empire the Center of the World.
This is the BEST video I've seen on ancient Rome as it was at the height of it's glory and what the ruins of the forum look like now. The barbarian tribes lived up to their names, fire ,plague, and time did the rest. To see what it looked like was a real treat!
Actually, it was later Italians themselves who demolished most of these big buildings, because they could re-use the precious materials for their own palaces and churches.
Very nice, impressive and beautiful!!!
Marvelously well done to understand the exact locations of the former buildings. Just better replace the counter by the date of each change.
There will never be anything like it. The art and architecture was astounding!
It's not even a year since I visited Rome but I already want to get back there just for spending loads of time in the Forum Romanum imagining how it once looked
Agreed visit Ostia Antica
Amazing work.
egypt , rome , persia , were all more advanced and beautiful , than they are now
wonderful reconstruction enhanced by a wonderful music !
agree
Just been to Rome all my imaginations came to life thank you for the video 🙌 If only I could time travel back 2000 years ago
Your work are better said art is absolutely captivating and should be taught in schools as a person who's walked in those paths that you're showing it's utterly breathtaking just knowing how it all used to really look thank you thank you so much for all your hard work that is going into this
The beauty that was Rome, is of another day. Looking pretty good today, in my eyes. Fitting music which is rare nowadays.Excellent video. Thank you.
Beautiful. Very clever and very entertaining. Brought back great memories of Rome.
Thank you.Fantastik.
Amazing, stunning work.
This is incredible, it makes the sacking of Rome all the more saddening, when you see the splendour of such a beautiful city. It’s crazy to think of how the Romans lived when in Northern Europe we were just small tribes living in wooded houses. What was it that sparked the rapid cultural evolution of the Greeks and Romans.
Perfect production you guys should proud of it. This is unique.
Exquisite work! You transported me into the past! I can't wait to see tour new videos. Subscribed!
Sencillamente maravilloso!!!! Amo Roma y su historia. Agradezco haber elegido la carrera de Letras que me ha dado la posibilidad a través de la materia Grecolatina conocer el maravilloso mundo antiguo donde nació la historia de la lengua latina madre de nuestro idioma.
Outstanding ! Incredibly didactic and clear 3D overlays. I now understand. Thanks for sharing !
the best then/now presentation i've ever seen! really enjoyed it.
Fabulous recreating this , what would have been and can be seen again , amazing .
What power and wealth to have done this
Great video , thank you
Phil
EXELENTE TRABAJO ¡¡¡¡¡¡ SALUDOS DESDE LEON GTO MEXICO ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡ ME GUSTA ¡¡¡
At 9:36 oh my. Fantastic!
Well done!!!! Amazing work!!!!! Greetings from Argentina
Please do away with the counter
No i like it. Its the animation frame rate
Would you rather have someone voice-over the minutes and seconds?...lol
@blackzed Yes indeed. We could turn the sound off, but can't get rid of the timer that spoils an otherwise great video.
Absolutely magnificent!!
Beautiful! Great work, thank you!
Thank you so much for sharing this video ... I always found it so confusing but with the before & after it all makes sense ... Thumbs up 👍
--The Stadium of Domitian is now Piazza Savona with the form of the stadium still. Mussolini carried through some reconstructions and cleaning of the Forum. Thank you so much for this excellent video!
Mussolini wrong move was to get sides with Hitler.
Navona* :)
@@Bobibion they both asked to stop the war, with several peace offers
@@manuelemariani8188 --Thank you ! Piazza Navona is Correct. Grazie.
@@FRAGIORGIO1 u re welcome. Navona..Which means literally "big Boat"
Genius work thank you for the experience and inspiration
Bravo, magnifique travail, c'était magnifique, merci de m"avoir fais marché dans le passé ;)
La meilleure reconstitution de Rome .fantastique travail.!
Video spettacolare. Peccato per quel cronometro che disturba non poco e di cui non si capisce l'utilità
si video spettacolare ma non si capisce come mai abbia messo quel c...zo di cronometro che no nserve a nulla poi
verissimo tutto comunque io vivo a Roma 😅😅😅😄 😄😄
বাল লেখছো তুমি, কিছুই বুঝা যায় না।
non c'è il Pantheon
I love Rome I visit every chance I get the history of the eternal city makes my hair stand on end, also Italian people are so classy mad drivers but classy.
le vostre ricostruzioni sono incredibili
Adoro Roma una città meravigliosa ogni volta che vado mi viene la pelle d'oca.
Si sente la storia ovunque.
Ti amo Italia
"'The heart of a mother is a deep abyss at the bottom of which you will always find forgiveness'
Honore de Balzac
so very beautiful...so much lost to time...never to be again...
Πολυ καλη δουλεια μπραβο!!!!
Phenomenal work. Thank you
Grazie x avere fatto questo lavoro magnifico di restauro dell'antica Roma, quella Vera, quella che ha dato la voglia di creare il futuro che senza quello non ci saremmo..
Oggi purtroppo ci restano solo le sue rovine come per ricordarci quello che eravamo e quello che non saremo mai più..
Reddite Ergo Quae Romae Sunt Romae..
Viva la Urbis Aeternam !
S.P.Q.R. in Fede
pensa che quasi alla fine del 1400 il Foro Romano era quasi integro,poi sono cominciate le ruberie.Nel 1499 fu demolita la piramide che stava all'inizio della futura Via della Conciliazione,per la costruzione di S.Pietro,era d'impiccio ai carri,e verso la metà del 1500 furono demolite altre 2 piramidi a (futura)Piazza del Popolo x l'erezione delle chiese gemelle.Quando fu eletto papa SistoV° nel 1585 voleva demolire il Colosseo x la costruzioe di una strada tra la basilica di S.Giovanni e S.Pietro ma morì nel 1590 e x nostra fortuna la cosa non ebbe seguito,altrimenti noi non l'avremmo mai visto
ti faccio notare che S.P.Q.R. è anche il simbolo di Reggio Emilia,la R sta per Reggianum,il resto rimane invariato
Awe inspiring magnificence, regal beauty, power and genius at a scale and breadth unmatched to this day. Even the Latin language had a royal, commanding bearing to it. A remarkable place in history. I do wish they could reconstruct some of this. Sensational! Urbem maximam umquam fecit mundum, et omnia saecula!
Roma per me sei sempre maestosa ❤❤❤❤
6:54. That slope roofed building right behind the three temples - that's the curia of Pompey's theater. That's where Julius Caesar got smoked. It's under the roadway now.
Spectacular video. Thanks for sharing.
A reconstrução encima do que restou hoje mostra que grandes construtores os romanos eram! Um verdadeiro espetáculo, que se perdeu em grande parte com o tempo! Mas que felizmente podemos ter ideia do que foi um dia com vídeos como o seu! Chego a sentir saudades, em especial, das termas e daquelas grandes obras arborizadas e finamente decoradas com estátuas. Ave Cesar! Muito obrigada pelo vídeo. :)
Amaizing, name of the songs please?? Great video
AMAZING video.
They could have kept things easy and simple, yet instead they constructed breathtaking buildings with stunning arches and columns and adorned the everything with intricate statutes.
Phenomenal, and yet throughout this amazing video, as beautiful as it is, my thoughts are regretfully predominantly drawn, not to the incredible capabilities of the ancient Romans, but instead to an enormous distracting digital clock!
KAN 3.20 UK
......this virtual reconstruction is truly amazing, thank you.
Exquisito vídeo. Gran trabajo
Absolutely amazing thank you so much. Even the music is perfect. If I had a time machine I would go back to ancient Rome
Not a clue about what Campo de' Fiori and Piazza Navona were like back then. Floored me to be honest. Come gli altri commenti Italiani, peccato che Roma non esiste oggi come era una volta sotto i Romani. Beautiful renderings. Complimenti.
I LOVED this! EXCEPT for the time clock ticking in the center of the screen :(
That counter, almost full screen, brilliant idea! Bravo!
The counter is extremely distracting placed smack in the middle. Takes away from the magic. If it has to be there, put it in a corner!
Very well done 🌹
My great grandmother probably was a singer in Roma two thousand years ago I love The old Antique Roma then now
Lol what
Maybe a lupae
@@uk4296 ahah, I think most of people can't get it, we still know that word here in Rome.
Amaro Averna 😁
P.S Rome is the center of history what a beautiful and powerful city is!!
This was amazing. Thank you!!🙌🏼👏
Shame to have lost so much. Put the world into the dark ages. So much tech and skill just gone for so long.
I like it very much. Well done
It would be nicer to live in a world you created than the ruins we are consigned to.
Lovely video, except for the millisecond counter. It would have been even better if it 1) included dates for each monument whose reconstruction we see, 2) spent less time on the Colosseum, and 3) spent much more time on a much more historically and culturally significant monument: the temple of Jupiter on Capitoline Hill. We get a glimpse of it when we see the Circus Maximus, but it deserves a lot more attention!!! It was one of the oldest temples in the city, as well as the destination of triumphal processions.
On my favorites list.
Great special effects...😊
This video is great! Fantastic!
So much beauty back then...Do you have a video like this for Capua...I sure would love to see it then and now
Only human can destroy the perfection he created
It was beautiful. But let's not kid ourselves, it wasn't "perfect". Really, was an unplanned jumble of marble temples and government buildings and plazas as today's modern European cities. And you're not accounting for the animal shit piles, piss pots, vagrants, slave markets, stinky fish markets and other food markets, and vast amount of very poor people giving off a stench of incense and human and animal fecal matter you smell in some of the impoverished cities of today; minus incense... you usually don't smell mass incense containers burning as they would have through the ancient and medieval periods. Instead you get small breaks from the stink via people loaded with perfume and some modern deli and bakeries and cafe's wafting among the stinky barnyard and sometimes puncheon rotting garbage stink.
It is amazing how men are able to create certain beauties and with the same ease destroying them.
@Yesmer He said MEN not Roman. Pls read before commenting.
Great job. I am very impressed.
But this timer.....!
It would be nice to have just the virtual tour without switching to present day. Another type of media could perhaps show modern equivalents. A beautiful use of colour & rendering of water areas. Other interiors also fascinating. Could we have a tour of the forum with interior? There was a sounding board at one end. Can that be shown?