House of Caecilius Iucundus in Pompeii (Pompeya)
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- Опубліковано 15 вер 2024
- La Domus de Caecilius Iucundus en Pompeya. Un equipo internacional de investigadores dirigido por arqueólogos de la Universidad de Lund ha reconstruido virtualmente en 3D la gran domus del banquero pompeyano Lucio Cecilio Iucundus. algargosarte.bl...
Quite impressive to see a detailed coloured reconstruction, instead of the dull stonework we're just normally shown.
If only we could go back for one day and see it in its glory. Great video.
This is likely the next best thing to doing that!
As a comon man, you would not have been allowed in! That is unless you worked for him or were a slave!
I’m speechless at the absolute beauty of this structure. It’s tragic how little is left. And we think we can produce beauty in our buildings today! We have much to learn.
Amazing research, visualization, and production quality. The narrator's pleasant, calm, and articulate voice fit well with the serene rooms of the house.
This is magnificent!!!! Ever since I was a child, I had a dream that I escaped Vesuvius on a raft at night that took me and survivors to a neighboring island.... we could see the great sparks spewing high into the air which was full of the smell of the eruption.... I've always wondered if this is 'ancestral memory'! My Father was obsessed with Eagles and Italy. He looked like Vito Corleone as an Old Man.... Ha! Even more strange is that I look like the blonde woman on the fresco.....
Visited there in 2012. Fascinating place. Much larger city than I ever expected. Great video and thank you for the human voice.
"old fashioned", yet looks modern by today's standards
Damn! The Romans had style!
The rich Romans could afford it. The rest lived in tenements, and the slaves in cubbyholes.
The Romans took Greek tech and a LOT of other Greek inventions along with Etruscan ones to create what you see.........Don't forget about the Eastern Roman Empire btw
& Slaves
You men the rich Romans had style. The wealthy most likely inherited their wealth and the wealthy hd all the money and the rest of the Roman population scrambled for a daily living! One could call it a good example of "trickle down theory" that woks very well for the few! Most Romans lived NOTHING like this!
They stole everything.
Absolutely fascinating. Thank you for the post.
BEAUTIFUL!!! That design NEVER goes out of style!!!!
Gracias. Que hermosa ilustración
What a beautiful film & stunning 3D rendering of this Roman house. A work of art in its own right. Italy must be very proud of what was in their culture architecturally.
Fantastic rendition. The artwork and garden is absolutely beautiful.
Spectacular reconstruction! It brought this home and inhabitants to vibrant life and, in doing so, offered new and heartbreaking perspectives on their last hours.
I painted a lot of the interior on a huge project being on an estate here. The house was modeled after this, and it was jaw dropping. Even had a temple on the other side of the long water feature outside and below the main house. The atrium and all of it, were so wonderfully livable. The Greeks nailed art, but the Romans could build and engineer.
A really great production and a vivid journey into the past. Thank you for sharing.
The Romans were builders. Really creative. Beautiful style. /// That Caecilius must have gotten lot of salt and oil back then. I love the way they decorated the walls. The Renaissance era did get some inspiration from the Roman Estilo. Thank you for the materiel.
Amazing what can be done on computer now. When I was in Pompeii many moons ago we had no idea that this concept would be actualized. There was a fresco that they wouldn't allow women to look at because of it's sexual content, but 30 odd years later, when my daughter went there, they allowed women to view it! Times have changed in that respect. Thanks for sharing...fascinating!
That exquisite garden is delightful 🌿
Fountains are beautiful and the gardens and flowers.they had a feeling for beauty
How did they ever keep warm on a cold night? The house is so open to the elements and drafty that it must have been very chilly on a cold night.
I love those coloured reconstructions. It is so amazing that we are able to see how people lived so long ago and what their houses looked like based on the ruins!
very well done, love history👍😊
Thanks you very much for this beautiful work guys!
English Google Trans.:
The Domus of Caecilius Lucundus in Pompeii. An international team of researchers led by archaeologists from the University of Lund has virtually reconstructed the great domus of the Pompeian banker Lucio Cecilio Lucundus in 3D.
What a glorious house. Thank you for posting this video.
Thank you for showing us such a Beautiful virtual rooms. Well spoken and nice narrative. 🌹
Some of the most beautiful house/home architecture I ever saw. Simply amazing.
So smart,so beautiful,such craftmanship just blows me away
Thank you so much for all your hard work . I thoroughly enjoyed the tour. I felt as if I were there. For a few exquisite minutes I was a Roman lady wandering round her home. Please do some more. Thsnk you again.xx
These people were not so different from us, 2000 years ago.
Sorry for being a little bit troll but ... let's see, Van Haasteren? dutch maybe?... umm ... these romans are not different from us today but your ancestors aren't romans... your ancestors were forest nigga and you carry them in the genes yet. How does it make you feel that?
No they weren’t !
Except their mansions look a lot more aesthetically pleasing than the much of the current modern day mansions.
Yes, they were different. They had good taste. They build to last. This house belonged to a family that lived in it for over 200 years and would no doubt had lived in it longer were it not for the volcano eruption.
Except this dude's house had style, whereas mine does not.
It is too bad that there is no trace left of the second floor. I wish archaeologists would at least find some floor plans by architects of the time.
Don't they have that in Rome? a few multistory houses survived, although no posh villa I guess
These buildings were constructed over 2000 years ago, and most of those floor plans were written on parchment or paper. These clearly did not survive such a vast expanse of time...
Herculaneum was buried under a flow so was relatively intact and two story buildings survived in some cases, whereas Pompeii was under the drop zone for all the large rocks so suffered more damage. Pompeii was also then excavated by the Romans and most items of value removed.
This was really informative and very well done.
Everything about Pompeii fascinates
Vividly represent the ancient household with details, nice work.
I enjoyed the video. I will be traveling to Pompeii in October 2019 so thanks to this video I will be searching for this house. Amazing.
I’ve been there and the vibe is like no other, specially when you get to see the bodies.
“He who loves should live. He who knows not how to love, should die. And he who obstructs love, should die twice.”
Thank you it was evitently baldy translated.
With my little latin I realised there where no imperatives in that frase.
“He who loves shall be saved. He who knows not how to love, shall die. And he who does evil, shall be damned.”
Love is not Sex.
Put that in your twisted mind.
Right. Light up another one. 🚬
Very remarkable how you recreated with dimensional graphics their world. This is the first time, after watching many videos, that I have a sense of what a house in Pompey looked like and the beautiful architecture relating to nature and natural light, a brilliant idea. Despite other things I don't like about Roman conquest etc. it is still intriguing to see this so well written and narrated. Thank you for making this astounding journey in time possible.
Amazingly modern looking for a house from thousands of years ago.
I think its time to bring the roman style back, but i don't think may architects would consider it they are still obsessed with minimalism at the moment
And the house was 200 years old to begin with! It is really lovely
thank you very much! Soo interesting! And very well presented!
Thank you for posting this, it was very informative and entertaining.
Amazing! Deslumbrante! Excinting!
So beautiful. I can't wait for VR to experience this.
Thank you for a fine production. Today, so much of each interior is dark, without the lighter colored walls and floors to spread natural light.
Beautiful. And thank you for using AD instead of the PC .. CE.
Wonderful and absolutely fascinating
I wish I could live in that mansion/house right this moment with artists around me painting murals!!!!!!!
I’ve been here irl! You can tell it was really nice. Well from the beautiful cave canem mosaic and what the tour guide told us lol
Great job, well done
I love the minimalism, because with colorful motifs on the wall, the rooms don't feel spartan at all, but warm and luxurious. This is something I could do now, except I need a wee bit of storage for office equipment and a few clothes. They didn't own lots of clothing back them, so a chest would probably suffice for their individual needs. And they didn't need seasonal wardrobes like folks in Michigan. The kitchen area was a separate building I believe to contain smells, heat and I imagine for fire prevention.
Excellent presentation. Thanks.
Merci pour cette visite!
Just amazing. I appreciate the time and work that went into that.
Stunningly beautiful.
Beautiful. Incredible!
A very beautiful work, thanks!
Italians are forever the best, style & fashion.
Gracias ! Excellent work... tells so much more than any book could.
What a beautiful house
Thank you posting as love looking back in time ✌❤
Really Exquisite and now we know what our home might have look like if we had been a rich person in Pompeii.. much more relatable when we see this.
And I'm glad you mentioned couch twice.. these ridiculous Mandela effect people are claiming that the word couch never existed in the Bible before and that it's there now and that couches never existed in the days of the Bible.
I highly recommend " I, Claudius". He describes events as they happened taking the reader back in time.
Interesante vídeo, Ojalá estuviese traducido al español.
It's amazing, ancient peoples had far more attractive homes than anything we have today. I'll never understand why colour and richness somehow, has become an evil thing, and why actual, rooms have somehow, become so, very, wrong, as it adds so much more, character, warmth, charm and richness to any place, then and NOW, as well.
My Retro/Vintage Best. Out.
It's not open plan but it's still bloody nice. They should build a replica of the place somewhere.
Wow! The same guy I read about in my Latin 1 class in high school.
Caecilius in horto est.
Caecilius divisus est in partes tres. ..et cetera
Me too !
It's amazing how 360p was invented over 2,000 years ago, and is still used today.... Absolutely amazing!
they had a good style
Beautiful and exquisite but this a very low stuttering video where can I watch a fluid and better resolution ? Thank you for your work, this is one of the better works on Roman villa virtual reconstruction accuracy.
Looks beatiful and eloquent. Why dont we make buildings like this anymore?
How was this structure heated during the winter months and how did they close off all the exposed openings?
Thank you. beautifully spoken and presented
How about writing the description in English or give the ability to hit translation - on the other hand ancient people really had great design style❤️❤️
It fascinates me that his home was filled with light, but no windows. It seems to be a typical thing to have openings for light and air from the ceiling (as with the great oculus from the temple in Rome) without regard to dust, dirt, or insects. The concept of the home seems devoid of glass for windows panes. Beauty and function are at the hallmark of this home. The question remains how the fumes and smoke from ovens, lamps..etc escaped, and the home kept clean?
Very interesting, very beautiful also they live very well,thank you for the video. 👍
For all the middle age no building was such beautiful, I visited some castles they wasn't so complicated like this house, they was beautiful but not like this!
Thank you, that was very informative. A good job, well done.
What a fine production. Thank you.
What an incredible piece of insight!
Incredible! Thank you Algargos!
Thanks so much for the virtual tour. Very informative and well researched. Enjoyed it!
Magnifique, dommage que la vidéo ne soit pas disponible en haute résolution.
Incredible way this was accomplished. But sometimes I get a slightly uncomfortable feeling that they may have had a bit more smarts and style than us!
Marvellous work!! you display the Imperial Roman style of the time as it was: both elegant and austere unlike the Hellenistic style, so lavish and luxurious.
Ipse hanc villam vīdī, sed intrāre nōn poteram. Atrium illum valdē altus est!
I also was there to see this villa, and I could not get in. I wish that the upper stories could be extrapolated. We must know some of the logic of upper stories from Herculaneum, Ostia and the Villa of Nero's wife.
I envy your being able to write in Latin. I could understand more than I thought I could, having studied Latin many years ago. CAN YOU SPEAK LATIN well enough to call yourself a fluent speaker? :)
Beautifully done, thank you!
How they were heating this house? Or there was not heating at all?
Thank you. Beautiful home.
If only they knew what was about to happen... such a tragedy
I enjoyed watching the recreation but I had a heavy heart at the same time
Belo trabalho. Brasil
Thank you! Wonderful!
Amazing!
Atrium with altar & pool thanking God for tranquility shutting out the hustle & bustle outside. And when leaving an altar reminding of purpose.
BELLISSIMO!
Wow, thanks so much for this. It's amazing how 'deco' it looks. To think that these Pompeiians had recently been thru an earthquake -- poor fools! Course they say it was horribly decadent.
An excellent presentation!
Thank You. Mega interesting!
Thank you
I wouldn't mind living here. Is there wi-fi?