Ancient Romans liked practical jokes. I can imagine announcer announcing some mythical wild beast to get crowd excited, and up comes a single rabbit chained to the platform.
I can see them putting some random animal no one has ever seen, i shut my pants if I was a Roman and saw a platypus. Those things are freaky, can’t trust em
I visited the coliseum as a young man. I did not understand what I was seeing. I was disappointed as I wanted to imagine battling gladiators. After watching this video, I would like to see it again.
WOW with the naval pirate like battles in the colosseum, quite astonishing and I never knew they did that, as in the naval fighting, astonishing and very cool.
The Colosseum is fantastic, one of the most famous icons in history. But to admire the undergrounds you have to visit the amphitheater of Pozzuoli (Puteoli in ancient Rome, when it was its port) because here they are practically new and it is still possible to admire all the mechanisms that were used for the management of beasts and gladiators. In addition, there are also almost all the columns and capitals that worshiped the matroneum in the upper ring.
Your channel is by far my favorite on UA-cam! I visited Italy & Greece in 2018 on a high school trip, and I wish I had watched your videos before I went! You have such an amazing way of immersing viewers in the topic, I can imagine myself standing back in Rome, Pompeii, Athens etc etc. Please be my Classics prof!!!!
I've never been able to understand how the flooded colosseum worked. How could that much water not flood the maze beneath the colosseum? And were the ships placed above ground before the water was? If not, how on Earth did they manoeuvre it onto the stage and not cause water to flood everything beneath?
When the Colosseum was first built, the Hypogeum was much simpler. After the passages we see today were completed, the naumachiae stopped. Some archaeologists think that the ships were launched from blocks under the arena, floating up as the water level rose.
When the coliseum was flooded, the maze beneath was almost certainly flooded as well. They stopped doing the water world stuff, and then came the complex underground chambers.
I came across your channel a few weeks ago but, I really enjoy your content and just wanted to say keep up the great work and hope you and anyone reading this is doing well!
Imagine waiting your turn to fight to the death and all the while you hear battles and roars of wild beasts and the crowd above you. Must’ve been terrifying and exhilirating at the same time.
@@1watchall “sounds from like almost as terrifying as being up top” is a grammatical nightmare. its not that i cant make sense of it, its that its terrible english. You are pathetic if you want to defend it as good english
Aw man, hurry up September. I want to read this book now, I feel like I'm getting spoilers for the juicy information... but also don't want to miss a video.
I had visited this place in Rome,Italy. I couldn't imagine how these slaves & wild animals could have had been to battle between them & humans. To say that I have been here is just a dream. My family comes from north of Rome, near Tuscany. This is just another homecoming for me. My ancestors come from part of this area. Seeing all the backstreet of these ancient buildings. Wow! When our state borders reopen up again most overseas visitors will travel to Australia and to New Zealand.
I've had difficulty getting down there even with a guide. Apparently they have an annual quota that they allow down there. In ancient times (like in the 1960's), anyone could just go down there anytime they wanted.
I work in entertainment production and have always loved getting lost in the back corridors of event venues, especially theaters which often have corridors and storage rooms underneath and elevating stages. But I don't think it would have been quite so fun at this venue.
4:47 - You wouldn't have been able to see the skylights from there because there'd be a ceiling about a foot over your head (that 2nd set of arches is a separate floor and it's that floor that would maybe have been exposed to the "skylights").
@@toldinstone Yeah, sry I know that one was a non-issue/didn't require actual "correction" but I just can't resist trying to add/contribute sometimes if I think I see an opportunity...
I was there in 1980 & nobody was allowed down there. I actually snuck in by climbing those 4m iron gates that fill most of the archways...hey,i was 17,gimme a break
I love how from some debris clogging the sewers archeologists could deduce what they ate and played in the colosseum. Other people might just think of it as dirt, but to scientists dirt can give hints to happenings millenia ago
How often was the colosseum used in antiquity? If it was sparingly, there was plenty of time to cleanup and air out. Remember the Roman sensibilities about cleanliness. From my education it was said they liked clean around them, which is counter to every description I have ever heard about Roman colosseum.
1 They weren't massive ships but smaller copies build for just being used in the Colosseum. 2 Rome had a lot of aquaducts for its water supply, it was just a matter of diverting one to the arena.
It is difficult to believe the Colosseum was built upon Niro's lake and palace grounds. That probably explains the existence of the source of water to flood the colosseum for naval shows? On the other hand, there was a large aqueduct serving Palatine Hill in the vicinity. Cannot imagine how many millions of gallons of water was necessary to maintain a "Lake" inside the Colosseum. The water level must have been just enough to float ships (Shallow) and also messy for workers below in the Hypogeum? Wow.
Hi Garrett. Love your videos. Your book is still showing up in the Apple book store as a pre-order, "Expected September 1, 2021". Any way to get that moved up?
I just watched your “how did romans get their animals” and wondered and have always wondered.. “how did they organize under the Colosseum?” And “how did they keep the roof on with all that crazy stuff going on?”
If I could go back to any event in history I’d see the colosseum flooded for something, a recreation of a naval battle or of homers’ odyssey would be quite the spectacle. Seeing actual battles to the death would be even crazier
Dude, just sign up and go on to the next war. Volunteer for infantry rifleman. You will get to see all kinds of killing and shitt.....up close and personal.
Standing on a piece of history, how many eyes stared up at those ancient walls before their skulls gave way to a battle axe? Or their entrails skidded across the floor at the plunging of a steel blade? The most famous graveyard in the world.
We are used to things happening quickly but it must have taken a year or years to clear out the water from the passageways after flooding the arena. Then imagine the humidity and mold that formed down there afterwards. I hadn't considered the darkness either. It must have been like descending into hell to go down there.
If you did a video of the big and small, say the Colossus of Sol/Nero in life size, the the dimensions on coins and/or intaglio, and other comparisons that would be a different take. Also a video about how Romans of means used lavish art and decoration as a means to overwhelm the senses and intimidate, especially the life-size colored statues and busts of the deceased looking at every visitor. Spooksville lol
Garrett’s book will be available on Amazon, starting from September 1st 2021. You can even pre order it on the Amazon site, so that you secure the lowest price.
2:18 How on Earth did the sewers get clogged with ceramic plates, jugs, bottles etc.? They should have put up signs saying "Please do not throw your plates, jugs and bottles into the drain once you have finished eating and drinking, put them into the bins provided".
Ancient Romans liked practical jokes. I can imagine announcer announcing some mythical wild beast to get crowd excited, and up comes a single rabbit chained to the platform.
I can see them putting some random animal no one has ever seen, i shut my pants if I was a Roman and saw a platypus. Those things are freaky, can’t trust em
With nasty big pointed teeth.
I've heard such a thing happened once, the trap door opened to let out a chicken.
Doubt it
Better not risk another frontal assault, that rabbit's dynamite!
A naumachia must have been the most amazing thing to watch. Although I certainly wouldnt want a front row seat for that one
Splash zone seats cost extra.
Surprised no one has made a complete recreation of the Colosseum for a tourist attraction
So excited when I see a new toldinstone video
I visited the coliseum as a young man. I did not understand what I was seeing. I was disappointed as I wanted to imagine battling gladiators. After watching this video, I would like to see it again.
That drain trash is a gold mine.
WOW with the naval pirate like battles in the colosseum, quite astonishing and I never knew they did that, as in the naval fighting, astonishing and very cool.
It's bullshit. Never happened.
The Colosseum is fantastic, one of the most famous icons in history. But to admire the undergrounds you have to visit the amphitheater of Pozzuoli (Puteoli in ancient Rome, when it was its port) because here they are practically new and it is still possible to admire all the mechanisms that were used for the management of beasts and gladiators. In addition, there are also almost all the columns and capitals that worshiped the matroneum in the upper ring.
Such a great intro to what’s to come! I’m so excited to see all the footage you’ve gotten over the last couple years
Your channel is by far my favorite on UA-cam! I visited Italy & Greece in 2018 on a high school trip, and I wish I had watched your videos before I went! You have such an amazing way of immersing viewers in the topic, I can imagine myself standing back in Rome, Pompeii, Athens etc etc. Please be my Classics prof!!!!
I've never been able to understand how the flooded colosseum worked. How could that much water not flood the maze beneath the colosseum? And were the ships placed above ground before the water was? If not, how on Earth did they manoeuvre it onto the stage and not cause water to flood everything beneath?
When the Colosseum was first built, the Hypogeum was much simpler. After the passages we see today were completed, the naumachiae stopped. Some archaeologists think that the ships were launched from blocks under the arena, floating up as the water level rose.
@@toldinstone do we know how they got that much water into the Colosseum?
When the coliseum was flooded, the maze beneath was almost certainly flooded as well. They stopped doing the water world stuff, and then came the complex underground chambers.
@@Nwmguy A branch of the Claudian aqueduct was connected to the building.
I think they used a plastic liner.
I came across your channel a few weeks ago but, I really enjoy your content and just wanted to say keep up the great work and hope you and anyone reading this is doing well!
I love you professor !!! You are original !! Never give up this template of video making, it’s what makes you unique !
One small (nautical) detail:
Capstans or windlasses were rarely used to raise sails: that would have been done directly with halyards.
yeah capstans were used for the sheet and anchor handling maybe hoisting cargo
The colosseum is a monstrous place, when you are there the reality of the place & what it stands for hits you very hard.
Thanks for another fascinating video
Something about Ancient Rome that has just always left me fascinated! Thank you for this amazing content ☝🏼
Imagine waiting your turn to fight to the death and all the while you hear battles and roars of wild beasts and the crowd above you. Must’ve been terrifying and exhilirating at the same time.
Fantastic!!! We’ve been twice and love it.
nice video. been there but like u said this was always closed off. nice job getting access so early
As always, very interesting and just enough info to ignite one’s curiosity and thirst to find out more.
I stumbled upon this channel by coincidence and I must say that I'm not disappointed! Very good content, keep 'em coming
An eternal testament to the dark side of humanity.
The hypogeum sounds from like almost as terrifying as being up top.
good english
@@seniorvenusdigital3904 Thanks! Side note: take my advice kids, get your full 8 hours of sleep.
@@seniorvenusdigital3904 was it too hard for Your little brain to interpret what He meant? Fuck that’s sad
@@1watchall “sounds from like almost as terrifying as being up top” is a grammatical nightmare. its not that i cant make sense of it, its that its terrible english. You are pathetic if you want to defend it as good english
@@liksar Someone mistyped two words …is there something else that we’re triggered by??
Great footage, thanks for sharing
Been on the underground tour myself. Thought-provoking.
I can imagine the Hypogeum very well with this video.
We have bought the book! Preordered for 1st September.
Thanks! It's fascinating to see "behind the scenes" of the ancient Colosseum.
Just found your channel and I'm very glad. It's like you know the questions I'm wondering before I do!
Excellent info! This is very enlightening I have wanted this info for awhile
I think the mini naval battles are the coolest part of the coliseum
Watching your rome Playlist to prepare for my holiday in nov
ENUNCIATION GREATLY improved. Thank you, I heard every word. Great site! Posting a link.
Very cool video… can’t wait to get this book
Been there but the underground wasn’t open. Awesome that it is now
Rewatching videos and liking them since I forgot first time around. Maybe I can help some of you remember
They did for real that which we watch today at the cinema
Man this is just super cool stuff, love your videos.
Aw man, hurry up September. I want to read this book now, I feel like I'm getting spoilers for the juicy information... but also don't want to miss a video.
Woo new video
I’m impressed by the virtually nonexistent dislikes for this channels videos!
Another great video
Awesome Awesome!
I had visited this place in Rome,Italy. I couldn't imagine how these slaves & wild animals could have had been to battle between them & humans. To say that I have been here is just a dream. My family comes from north of Rome, near Tuscany. This is just another homecoming for me. My ancestors come from part of this area. Seeing all the backstreet of these ancient buildings. Wow! When our state borders reopen up again most overseas visitors will travel to Australia and to New Zealand.
I've had difficulty getting down there even with a guide. Apparently they have an annual quota that they allow down there. In ancient times (like in the 1960's), anyone could just go down there anytime they wanted.
60'a is ancient? Lmao
I was born in ancient times? …neato!!!
Your channel is such a gem on UA-cam, keep up the good work!👏😎
Very fascinating! Although the killing of lions is pretty heartbreaking 😥.
Conclusion: They were crazy. Great video.
Great video. Thanks for the tour.
Nice you came visit Naples, my city
I work in entertainment production and have always loved getting lost in the back corridors of event venues, especially theaters which often have corridors and storage rooms underneath and elevating stages. But I don't think it would have been quite so fun at this venue.
Good stuff again as always 👌
Wow 5%...great deal
Bro, your channel is incredible. Pre-ordered the book, can't wait!
4:47 - You wouldn't have been able to see the skylights from there because there'd be a ceiling about a foot over your head (that 2nd set of arches is a separate floor and it's that floor that would maybe have been exposed to the "skylights").
Yes, I should have mentioned that. The upper floor was probably equally dark, since those "skylights" were just trapdoors like the Colosseum's.
@@toldinstone Yeah, sry I know that one was a non-issue/didn't require actual "correction" but I just can't resist trying to add/contribute sometimes if I think I see an opportunity...
Great video, good sponsor, keep it up! :)
They should fix it and host the next Super Bowl in there . It would be a hell of an experience
I would love to see that
Excellent
I was there in 1980 & nobody was allowed down there. I actually snuck in by climbing those 4m iron gates that fill most of the archways...hey,i was 17,gimme a break
Brand new subscriber! Thank you for the history.
very nice video. Like the colosseum and rome
The Hypogeum was, if you think about what it actually was, one of the most terrifying places to experience ever!
I love how from some debris clogging the sewers archeologists could deduce what they ate and played in the colosseum. Other people might just think of it as dirt, but to scientists dirt can give hints to happenings millenia ago
You're going to destroy the History Channel with work like this, my friend.
Nice Story...
Incredible just how much weight an arch can support
Secundus.
And to think I spent €7 on an audio guide when I could have just watched this!
I've heard there are plans to reconstruct the flooring over the hypogeaum.
It's been accessible so much earlier. We did a couple of tours in 2009/10 that also included the third level
You should do a video "The Roman iceberg" (all the things we know above, the things we neglect about Roman history below)
Love to buy your book, but when will it be available in Europe? Currently I only have the option for the kindle and not the paperback
I have pre-ordered it from Amazon UK. It is released in September.
The release date will vary slightly from country to country, but the book should be available in early or mid-September almost everywhere.
@@toldinstone I hope it is translated into more languages besides Latin!
How often was the colosseum used in antiquity? If it was sparingly, there was plenty of time to cleanup and air out. Remember the Roman sensibilities about cleanliness. From my education it was said they liked clean around them, which is counter to every description I have ever heard about Roman colosseum.
Fascinating 🖖🏼
Actually they did the naval battles in the now torn down Circus Maximus which was built for chariot racing.
2 questions How did they get the ship's into the colosseum? And how did they flood the colosseum?
1 They weren't massive ships but smaller copies build for just being used in the Colosseum.
2 Rome had a lot of aquaducts for its water supply, it was just a matter of diverting one to the arena.
It is difficult to believe the Colosseum was built upon Niro's lake and palace grounds. That probably explains the existence of the source of water to flood the colosseum for naval shows? On the other hand, there was a large aqueduct serving Palatine Hill in the vicinity. Cannot imagine how many millions of gallons of water was necessary to maintain a "Lake" inside the Colosseum. The water level must have been just enough to float ships (Shallow) and also messy for workers below in the Hypogeum? Wow.
Hi Garrett. Love your videos. Your book is still showing up in the Apple book store as a pre-order, "Expected September 1, 2021". Any way to get that moved up?
A few book stores might get (and display) their shipments the week before, but otherwise September 1 is set as the launch date.
I just watched your “how did romans get their animals” and wondered and have always wondered.. “how did they organize under the Colosseum?” And “how did they keep the roof on with all that crazy stuff going on?”
they got animals from different countries through trade routes. They probably Had them transferred to Rome on ships.
The picture you show is of the Circus Maximus.
If I could go back to any event in history I’d see the colosseum flooded for something, a recreation of a naval battle or of homers’ odyssey would be quite the spectacle. Seeing actual battles to the death would be even crazier
Dude, just sign up and go on to the next war. Volunteer for infantry rifleman. You will get to see all kinds of killing and shitt.....up close and personal.
"crazier" / horrific
Is there a reason why the colosseum isn’t being rebuilt? I feel like seeing it look like what is used to be would be an amazing site to see.
Y’a got me I’ll order yer book 😘
1:38 "A now machia"
What word is that? I can't google it, please help me
Naumachia
Standing on a piece of history, how many eyes stared up at those ancient walls before their skulls gave way to a battle axe? Or their entrails skidded across the floor at the plunging of a steel blade? The most famous graveyard in the world.
you can go to the Puzzuoli arena , it is in better shape
We are used to things happening quickly but it must have taken a year or years to clear out the water from the passageways after flooding the arena. Then imagine the humidity and mold that formed down there afterwards. I hadn't considered the darkness either. It must have been like descending into hell to go down there.
If you did a video of the big and small, say the Colossus of Sol/Nero in life size, the the dimensions on coins and/or intaglio, and other comparisons that would be a different take. Also a video about how Romans of means used lavish art and decoration as a means to overwhelm the senses and intimidate, especially the life-size colored statues and busts of the deceased looking at every visitor. Spooksville lol
watching someone fight a lion with just a sword and shield is so crazy, i wonder how the fights usually played out, did humans win more than lions?
Where is your book available? Everywhere I've looked says it won't be released until September, or even November in some places.
Garrett’s book will be available on Amazon, starting from September 1st 2021. You can even pre order it on the Amazon site, so that you secure the lowest price.
🙏Gratias tibi!
If you ever get the correct reply, it will of course be TE·GRATISSIMVM
Been there, on AC2
You're a badass.
How did the Romans got al the exotic animals for the games?
They came from their Provinces, which ranged from BRITANNIA in the North to MESOPOTAMIA in the East and AEGYPTVS in the South.
I have a video on that topic:
ua-cam.com/video/w0I2VKFe7yI/v-deo.html
2:18 How on Earth did the sewers get clogged with ceramic plates, jugs, bottles etc.? They should have put up signs saying "Please do not throw your plates, jugs and bottles into the drain once you have finished eating and drinking, put them into the bins provided".
We forget the misery and human suffering people went through inside those dark dungeons...
You might forget. I dont....
@@thomasrobinette3227 Can't forget if if one doesn't care 🤣👍
@@royroy3 huh?
Forget the Romans. Bruce and Chuck put this Coliseum on the map.
Hello, I was in the battle of Teutobuorg