In Serbia and Romania, there are remains of the Danube bridge that was described in the video. it's was an impressive structure considering it was 1km long. Great video!!
@@LucaFanciullini Nah my friend, we are proud people. I will give to you to do some homework: Document yourself about: - Constantine Triumphal Arch - the monument si guarded by Dacian statues - Popolo Square in Rome - there are Dacian statues there - Galerius Triumphal Arch in Thesaloniki - that Arch is build 200 years later after Romans withdrow from Dacia _ Dacian statues in Florence. - And of course Trajan column - illustrates the battles between the Dacians and Romans. Why don`t we see the Roman statues in that place? Educate yourself about these. Thank you!
To me this is one of the coolest architectural achievements in Ancient Rome. Not necessarily the most impressive in terms of building feats, but the images adorning the column and the presence that it represents in its environment are incredible.
Fantastic. thanks for the informative explanation. My wife and I are sitting in front of the column now listening to your explanation while looking at the column. You brought this visit to the next level for us. 👍👍
Fantastic work - I am fortunate enough to be based in Rome at the moment and the Smart History series is the perfect guide for my regular visits into the city centre. Thank you !
I love this column! There's also a series of plaster casts of the scenes - imagine rows and rows of half-pipe forms. They also have something imposing about them
I studied abroad this past spring in Rome and sadly my semester was cut short due to COVID. Your videos on ancient Rome really help bring me back there and make it real again. Thank you!
Thank you for making this education freely available to help me and others who otherwise wouldn't have the time or the means to better appreciate some of this brilliance.
What an incredible channel!!! The images you show have such a high level of detail... that's really something rare to find on youtube. Thank you so much for the hard work😊
This is incredible! thank you so much for the video! It was surprising to see that Romans showed their mastery of engineering for the most parts and featured real soldiers with such great detail, unlike any dark ages manuscript with battles on top battles with faces looking exactly the same
Great video, great presentation as well. If someone could 'virtualy' unroll the column's scenes into one long picture, then slowly scroll it past the camera...Hey I would watch it. Enjoyed the video!
Awesome! How close are you allowed to get to the column, in particular the lettered inscription? I’m packing and trying to decide whether to bring my long lens.
Sometimes very close, and other times... Pack the lens it will help with the upper registers in any case. I am now carrying around about five pounds of kit including a 70-200mm. I think it's worth it.
@@smarthistory-art-history Thanks! That's a full-frame 200mm? I think my MFT 45-100mm (200 equivalent) should be fine. My 300mm (600mm equ.) is a few times larger and heavier.
yes, full frame. I do a lot of shooting in very dark churches, etc. so need all the light I can get. The 70-200 is the only zoom I use for that reason. Everything else is a heavy fast prime. I'd rather have a sore back than a soft photo.
It is incredible to me that the bas reliefs have survived in such a pristine state considering their age. How is this possible, given air pollution and acid rain?
The native Dacians + The Roman Empire colonists from the past = Romanian people from today our language is 85% Latin , BUT ! *are still 140 dacian words remained in use as legacy in our current language!* FOR EXAMPLE, some "dacian" words from current romanian language: Copil = Kid Brad = Xmas tree Branza = Cheese Barza = Stork Manz = Foal
The is another surviving Column of this type, that of Marcus Aurelius. But the carvings on that one are in a worse shape. Another one was in Istanbul, the Column of Arcadius, but it was destroyed in the XVIIIth century, though some drawings of it were made before destructions. Also in Istanbul was another column of Trajan type, covered in sculpture, the Column of Theodosius, destroyed in the decades after the Ottoman conquest. The Column of Antoninus Pius was in Rome, only the base survives, it was a column covered in carvings as well. Other important columns did not survived the middle ages, like the column of Justinian in Istanbul, although we have a crude drawing of Justinian's statue on top.
The column of Marco Aurelio is not in a worst shape but it only features a different style. Whereas the column of Antonino wasn’t carved but it had a smooth surface that resembled more an obelisk: the base is preserved now at the Vatican Museum, and some part of it were used to restore the Obelisk of Montecitorio (who is located in the square near the column of Marco Aurelio).
Well. I mean... you can't even get to the bae but you're looking up at the very first part where you can see the ships. --- can't walk around it, but if you're outside the forum you can get to the hill above this thing. They don't let you walk around to follow the story. So. 🤷♀️
So much has been built and removed in nearly two millennia. It could have been the result of so many things, perhaps the medieval buildings that once occupied this forum.
Being in one of those victory processions must've been surreal... I would've liked to see more about Saint Peter, but he does feel a bit like an interloper for these purposes. 😅
@CipiRipi00 I misunderstood the inscription. It described Trajan as "Caesar" and "Nerva's son". I believe Trajan must have been adopted by Nerva when Nerva selected Trajan as his successor. So Trajan was Nerva's son (by adoption).
@CipiRipi00 any chance you'd be willing to be my guide though Rome? Day 3 of palintine hill tomorrow and hoping I might actually see all of it. I must be one of the slowest people in there exploring and starting and pointing at everything. When Mary Beard mentioned it would take a week to get though the forum she wasn't kidding. Went up and down Via Sacra 4 times this morning seeing new stuff each time. It hate that I can't picture in my mind every building and get a hold of this place. .. . Also... along the roads with the big rocks.. are the occasional pieces if marble and travertine used as pavers actual pieces of building? and just... still no one will pick them up to put them in crates for later - they're just leaving pieces of buildings embedded in the road?
Because you're thinking they were built like obelisks..which kinda almost seem to be the same thing with their inscriptions all the way up and down their sides. (?) I'm with ya.
This channel needs more subscribers. Too bad many people are more interested in dumb shit like pranks and autotune music and stuff. What a moronic world.
Seems like from a design perspective the story should have been sculpted on the inside, then you could see it as you go up the stairs.,. Or maybe there werent stairs originally
@@danielracovitan9779 Anche i miei avi erano Daci,e parlavano un latino volgare ecco perché si capiva con Traiano,per la stessa radice della lingua latina volgare.
SI,ci sono voluti 6 anni perché Traiano potesse prendere 1/4 della Dacia ,giusto fino alla miniera d'oro e argento ,ROSIA MONTANA, da dove ha portato a Roma tutte le tonnellate d'oro e doppia quantità di argento.
Rome should rebuild these 'ruins' to their Full Glory once again, and it would make a great epcot type tourist center and draw more income to the city.
You might be interested in our short series of videos on the Roman Forum. We discuss how the ruin has accrued its own kind of value over time. Here is the first one: ua-cam.com/video/Q1hFeCS0Y3Y/v-deo.html
@@sebastianolmsted2867 Same goes for Greece, rebuild the ancient temples, or at least full scale replicas near the ancient ruins. Add in gift shops, a museum, educational videos, and an underground bumper cart ride through history... Contract Disney for building the rides. :-)
Yea, but nope. Europe's ancient ruins are not a cheesy US Disneyland attraction. But I guess someone from a country where a building 200-years old is "ancient artifact" cannot understand the importance of a 2000-years old building, and why one DOES NOT transform such thing into an idiotic Disneyland US-style attraction
In Serbia and Romania, there are remains of the Danube bridge that was described in the video. it's was an impressive structure considering it was 1km long.
Great video!!
Near the bridge over the Danube on the Romanian shore, there is still a plaque with the inscription "Tabula Traiana". Salute to you Serbian bro! :)
@@claudiu8426 Tabula Traiana e pe malul sârbesc
At CLADAVA ( clad/ build+ ava from dava'/ structure)
Won der ful. Hello from Romania
You mean Dacia?
@@LucaFanciullini Nah my friend, we are proud people. I will give to you to do some homework:
Document yourself about:
- Constantine Triumphal Arch - the monument si guarded by Dacian statues
- Popolo Square in Rome - there are Dacian statues there
- Galerius Triumphal Arch in Thesaloniki - that Arch is build 200 years later after Romans withdrow from Dacia
_ Dacian statues in Florence.
- And of course Trajan column - illustrates the battles between the Dacians and Romans.
Why don`t we see the Roman statues in that place?
Educate yourself about these. Thank you!
@@Orthodoge Esatto
@@claudiu8426 BRAVO ,BELLA DOMANDA,MA TUTTI MUTI ,NESSUNO PARLA🙆♀️🌺🖐🇷🇴
Literally standing at the column right now, your video is just perfect right now- thanks!
5:59 that’s a great picture with the seagull really captures the impressive height of the column
Thank you! I was very happy when I saw the gull in the viewfinder.
I came right to the comments for this! I thought the same.
To me this is one of the coolest architectural achievements in Ancient Rome. Not necessarily the most impressive in terms of building feats, but the images adorning the column and the presence that it represents in its environment are incredible.
Trajan's Column is a literal birth certificate of the Romanian people, written in stone
You guys just keep getting better!
This video is such a great upgrade from the one you had up previously. Thank you!
Was just there last week…incredible. There’s just nothing like Rome!!
Fantastic. thanks for the informative explanation. My wife and I are sitting in front of the column now listening to your explanation while looking at the column. You brought this visit to the next level for us. 👍👍
We'd like to be in Rome right now, enjoy!
Fantastic work - I am fortunate enough to be based in Rome at the moment and the Smart History series is the perfect guide for my regular visits into the city centre. Thank you !
Hello from Romania! Really good videos with really good content!
Been waiting a long time fore but finally its here.
I love this column! There's also a series of plaster casts of the scenes - imagine rows and rows of half-pipe forms. They also have something imposing about them
I studied abroad this past spring in Rome and sadly my semester was cut short due to COVID. Your videos on ancient Rome really help bring me back there and make it real again. Thank you!
Thank you for making this education freely available to help me and others who otherwise wouldn't have the time or the means to better appreciate some of this brilliance.
Tutto grazie ale 165 tonnellate d'oro e doppia quantità di argento prese da Traiano dalla DACIA.
What an incredible channel!!! The images you show have such a high level of detail... that's really something rare to find on youtube. Thank you so much for the hard work😊
Thanks for your kind note. We work hard to offer high-quality photography; we think it makes a real difference.
It definitely does make a difference! It's amazing! And the diagrams and three-dimensional models help too
Thank you, Smarthistory❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
I simply love this channel
Beautiful! Oh I love this column.
Thank you so much for the information. Because of this i looked up Trajan's bridge across Danube. I was knocked out. wow. Excellent.
Pochi resti del ponte costruito da APOLLODORO DI DAMASCO.
Thank you so much SMH 🌹
I really likes this video, thanks for making it!
So beautiful. So interesting.
This is incredible! thank you so much for the video! It was surprising to see that Romans showed their mastery of engineering for the most parts and featured real soldiers with such great detail, unlike any dark ages manuscript with battles on top battles with faces looking exactly the same
How beautiful and perfectly detailed !
fantastic. Simply fantastic
My favorite channel on youtube!
Thank you, very well done
Noi suntem urmasii Romei!
I love this video. And Cord and Tish are doing the narration. I love their work with the Rose Bowl Parade. Great job!
Ha!
Thanks for the video!
Thank you! I love the fact sheet at the end, too.
Great video, great presentation as well. If someone could 'virtualy' unroll the column's scenes into one long picture, then slowly scroll it past the camera...Hey I would watch it. Enjoyed the video!
astonishing.. thanx
Awesome! How close are you allowed to get to the column, in particular the lettered inscription? I’m packing and trying to decide whether to bring my long lens.
Sometimes very close, and other times... Pack the lens it will help with the upper registers in any case. I am now carrying around about five pounds of kit including a 70-200mm. I think it's worth it.
@@smarthistory-art-history Thanks! That's a full-frame 200mm? I think my MFT 45-100mm (200 equivalent) should be fine. My 300mm (600mm equ.) is a few times larger and heavier.
yes, full frame. I do a lot of shooting in very dark churches, etc. so need all the light I can get. The 70-200 is the only zoom I use for that reason. Everything else is a heavy fast prime. I'd rather have a sore back than a soft photo.
Wonderful!
Can I buy a mini Trajan Column replica?
It is incredible to me that the bas reliefs have survived in such a pristine state considering their age. How is this possible, given air pollution and acid rain?
I would like to see it in it's original painted splendor along with Trajan statue returned to the top.
Non è una pittura è un bassorilievo
*GREAT MONUMENT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!*
This was so cool !
The native Dacians + The Roman Empire colonists from the past = Romanian people from today
our language is 85% Latin , BUT ! *are still 140 dacian words remained in use as legacy in our current language!* FOR EXAMPLE, some "dacian" words from current romanian language:
Copil = Kid
Brad = Xmas tree
Branza = Cheese
Barza = Stork
Manz = Foal
Great vid!
Tiberius Claudius Maximus tomb in Greece, decorated for taking the head of the King of the Dacian back to Trajan....
Trajan said bye, and Peter said hi.
The is another surviving Column of this type, that of Marcus Aurelius. But the carvings on that one are in a worse shape. Another one was in Istanbul, the Column of Arcadius, but it was destroyed in the XVIIIth century, though some drawings of it were made before destructions. Also in Istanbul was another column of Trajan type, covered in sculpture, the Column of Theodosius, destroyed in the decades after the Ottoman conquest. The Column of Antoninus Pius was in Rome, only the base survives, it was a column covered in carvings as well. Other important columns did not survived the middle ages, like the column of Justinian in Istanbul, although we have a crude drawing of Justinian's statue on top.
They are not only in worse shape, but in less fine in artistry, the relief's figures are more basic, brute
The column of Marco Aurelio is not in a worst shape but it only features a different style.
Whereas the column of Antonino wasn’t carved but it had a smooth surface that resembled more an obelisk: the base is preserved now at the Vatican Museum, and some part of it were used to restore the Obelisk of Montecitorio (who is located in the square near the column of Marco Aurelio).
Apollodorus of damascus, was a Nabbetan Arab.
Si,grande architetto
How was anyone supposed to be able to see any of the incredible detail on this column above heard height?
Well. I mean... you can't even get to the bae but you're looking up at the very first part where you can see the ships. --- can't walk around it, but if you're outside the forum you can get to the hill above this thing. They don't let you walk around to follow the story. So. 🤷♀️
Delightful! Maybe use a drone for seeing it all?
What is the upside down "V" cut into the marble over the door?
So much has been built and removed in nearly two millennia. It could have been the result of so many things, perhaps the medieval buildings that once occupied this forum.
Being in one of those victory processions must've been surreal... I would've liked to see more about Saint Peter, but he does feel a bit like an interloper for these purposes. 😅
Have you two done the column of marcus aurelius?
We tried once but the Corso was so loud, I don't think we got very far. We'd have to try early on a Sunday morning.
Thanks so much, just in time for my exam :) xxxxx
Should just go.
My Romanian homies would love this
So Nerva's son was a Caesar under Trajan?
@CipiRipi00 I misunderstood the inscription. It described Trajan as "Caesar" and "Nerva's son". I believe Trajan must have been adopted by Nerva when Nerva selected Trajan as his successor. So Trajan was Nerva's son (by adoption).
@CipiRipi00 any chance you'd be willing to be my guide though Rome? Day 3 of palintine hill tomorrow and hoping I might actually see all of it. I must be one of the slowest people in there exploring and starting and pointing at everything. When Mary Beard mentioned it would take a week to get though the forum she wasn't kidding. Went up and down Via Sacra 4 times this morning seeing new stuff each time. It hate that I can't picture in my mind every building and get a hold of this place. .. . Also... along the roads with the big rocks.. are the occasional pieces if marble and travertine used as pavers actual pieces of building? and just... still no one will pick them up to put them in crates for later - they're just leaving pieces of buildings embedded in the road?
@@tacocruiser4238 Sembra che Traiano era di origine TRACO,e che arrivato in DACIA ,abbia detto:Sono tornato a casa.
@CipiRipi00 Traiano veniva dalla Spagna,poi con il tempo è diventato Imperatore.
Is this column a monolith?
As we note in the video, there are 19 drums.
Romania's birth certificate , carved in stone
Get that statue off the top and put up Trajan. He deserves to sit atop his own column.
Si,è stata cambiata
Roma-nia 💪🏻
SEMMI KÖZE A MAI RUMÉLIÁHOZ...
@@katalinjuhasz641 today's Italy has nothing to do with Rome as well
@@katalinjuhasz641 Sigur esti ungur,se vede din raspunsul pe care il dai.
@@mariusstefan7214 Esatto
@@katalinjuhasz641 part of today hungary belonged to dacia ; so half of tof=day hungary belongs to Romania
Why did I think that the pillar was one complete piece and they just lifted it all at once? 😂
Because you're thinking they were built like obelisks..which kinda almost seem to be the same thing with their inscriptions all the way up and down their sides. (?) I'm with ya.
This channel needs more subscribers. Too bad many people are more interested in dumb shit like pranks and autotune music and stuff. What a moronic world.
The worship of the Kardashians is strong among the spoiled and lazily stupid.
Seems like from a design perspective the story should have been sculpted on the inside, then you could see it as you go up the stairs.,. Or maybe there werent stairs originally
The stairs are original but it is dark inside and the relief was meant to be seen in the public space of the forum.
Smarthistory maybe but its hard to see
Agreed.
so cool guys so cool
Great documentary.. I was told that the sculptors were Greeks..
👍🏼
TRAIAN IMP. 🇹🇩 it's a wide river.
Hail smarthistory
Some of my relations were Dacians.
no, they were not; they were maybe Romanians ; they spoke Romanian, not Dacian
@@danielracovitan9779 Anche i miei avi erano Daci,e parlavano un latino volgare ecco perché si capiva con Traiano,per la stessa radice della lingua latina volgare.
SI,ci sono voluti 6 anni perché Traiano potesse prendere 1/4 della Dacia ,giusto fino alla miniera d'oro e argento ,ROSIA MONTANA, da dove ha portato a Roma tutte le tonnellate d'oro e doppia quantità di argento.
Rome should rebuild these 'ruins' to their Full Glory once again, and it would make a great epcot type tourist center and draw more income to the city.
You might be interested in our short series of videos on the Roman Forum. We discuss how the ruin has accrued its own kind of value over time. Here is the first one: ua-cam.com/video/Q1hFeCS0Y3Y/v-deo.html
The last thing we need more of in Rome is tourists
@@sebastianolmsted2867 Same goes for Greece, rebuild the ancient temples, or at least full scale replicas near the ancient ruins. Add in gift shops, a museum, educational videos, and an underground bumper cart ride through history...
Contract Disney for building the rides. :-)
Yea, but nope. Europe's ancient ruins are not a cheesy US Disneyland attraction. But I guess someone from a country where a building 200-years old is "ancient artifact" cannot understand the importance of a 2000-years old building, and why one DOES NOT transform such thing into an idiotic Disneyland US-style attraction
@@sebastianolmsted2867 you need many many more. Rome should be seen by the world.