Pompeii: Life Before Disaster | New Feature Documentary

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History Hit

History Hit

Ай бұрын

The story of Pompeii’s destruction is renowned across the world. In 79 AD, this prosperous Roman town was destroyed by a massive, volcanic eruption. Pompeii became frozen in time, only to be rediscovered c.1500 years later.
Vesuvius’ eruption has preserved Pompeii in its final moments. The wealth of archaeology that has been unearthed over the past few centuries here is extraordinary. From gladiator graffiti to political adverts. And amidst all of this archaeology, we even have the names of actual Pompeiians surviving. The stories of everyday people - men and women - who lived and worked all around the town some 2,000 years ago. Not emperors, empresses and generals. But bakers, barmen and prostitutes whose stories are usually lost to history.
Tristan Hughes explores the stories of some of these men and women who called Pompeii home. Wealthy villa owners such as the entrepreneurial businesswoman Julia Felix, who owned a luxurious estate near the amphitheatre and converted part of her property into a restaurant. The plucky bar owner Sextus Amarantus, who imported wines from as far away as Gaza to sell at his establishment. Or the famous freeborn gladiator Marcus Attilius, who defeated a great champion in his very first arena fight.
This documentary explores the lives of the people that made up Pompeii. With access to some of the site’s most extraordinary buildings and interviews with leading experts, it’s a story about everyday life before the eruption.
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#historyhit #romanhistory #pompeii

Пікірлер: 195
@stephanprommer347
@stephanprommer347 Ай бұрын
Absolutely fantastic stories that truly bring these people from Pompeii alive and make it much more palpable. Thank you History Hit for providing us with such amazing free content.
@maxschaffels2164
@maxschaffels2164 Ай бұрын
Could not second this more. So sick of AI generated images fronting deep quality content on (social) media!
@reaperx2657
@reaperx2657 Ай бұрын
So well done. Great job by Tristan and everyone else at History Hit.
@IamRyanLPs
@IamRyanLPs Ай бұрын
Visiting Pompeii 2 years ago will hopefully be stuck in my mind until I die. What an incredible place to visit and enjoy.
@Contessa6363
@Contessa6363 Ай бұрын
I visited in 1986! Fascinating
@missdiamar3897
@missdiamar3897 Ай бұрын
Amazing storytelling. We've just been to Pompeii yesterday and Herculanum today. This video has brought to life what we've seen in both cities. Than you!! To those that plan on visiting Pompeii - highly recommend going to Herculanum as well. Its excavated part is way smaller, but so much better preserved!! Pompeii gives you scale, Herculanum really makes you feel the city as it was in those days.
@slopermarco
@slopermarco 29 күн бұрын
I agree, Herculaneum deserves as much and perhaps more than Pompeii, if only because it is better preserved. The reason is that while Pompeii was buried by lapilli of burning lava, and therefore burned, Herculaneum was buried by a mud flow which preserved it over time, including the wooden parts.
@Mossyz.
@Mossyz. Ай бұрын
I am watching this in bed due to ill health ..I would love to visit this wonderful site there is so much more to learn about this area . Thank you for over an hour of History .
@lisaborsella5412
@lisaborsella5412 4 күн бұрын
Hope you are feeling better
@obiwan-in-a-pudding2909
@obiwan-in-a-pudding2909 Ай бұрын
Wow, that arial view, I didn't realize until now how big Pompeii is.
@jillwanlin9558
@jillwanlin9558 Ай бұрын
Thankyou HH for this very compelling documentary. I had no idea as to the size and scale of Pompeii. A beautiful place with such a tragic history.
@steveinthemountains8264
@steveinthemountains8264 Ай бұрын
Fascinating video, well presented.
@dandy193
@dandy193 17 сағат бұрын
I went to Pompeii last year. Me and my wife book a holiday in Amalfi and we took a taxi (not cheap) from Amalfi to Pompeii and back again, its a sight that blows you away. A place well worth the visit that for sure, especially if you're in Napoli, its but a stones throw. I have seen detractor giving the place some bad reviews but I promise if you go its one amazing place and you'll not be disappointed
@soilofk
@soilofk 8 күн бұрын
AMAZING doc!!! love the history of Pompeii
@javasrevenge7121
@javasrevenge7121 Ай бұрын
WOWsers, what a great upload. Thank you Team.
@kittymarshmellow9703
@kittymarshmellow9703 Ай бұрын
Excited to watch, just starting!
@davidevans3227
@davidevans3227 Ай бұрын
thankyou, for sharing this 🙂 x
@Zombie-fb5zf
@Zombie-fb5zf Ай бұрын
Excellent Really enjoyed
@13JAMLAND
@13JAMLAND 24 күн бұрын
Really great documentary, thank you!
@vickywitton1008
@vickywitton1008 Ай бұрын
That was wonderful!
@MelEveritt
@MelEveritt 5 күн бұрын
Love watching Tristan on History Hit shows. Great content as usual and I get all of this information in outback Queensland, Australia. Ahhh, the magic of technology beats Encyclopaedia Britannica anyday.😅😊
@Chris-sf2lk
@Chris-sf2lk 12 күн бұрын
Beautiful documentary!
@primrosed2338
@primrosed2338 Ай бұрын
I visited in 2013. Since then they have uncovered more. I was caught in summer drench during my visit, it got dark so quickly, and seeing how quickly the weather changed and Mount Vesuvius in the distance really made everything quite impactful.
@bobm5500
@bobm5500 19 күн бұрын
One of the best docoes I have seen on Pompeii .
@mohammedsaysrashid3587
@mohammedsaysrashid3587 Ай бұрын
It was a wonderful historical coverage documentary about Ancient Pompey city.. documentary focused on important figures of that infamous Ancient city...thank you 🙏 ( history Hit) channel for sharing
@Sabatta
@Sabatta 18 күн бұрын
Blurring out frescos is wild!!
@jc2604
@jc2604 3 күн бұрын
It's pathetic.
@liammc546
@liammc546 17 күн бұрын
I never realised the scale of Pompeii. Fantastic hosting by Tristan.
@Rachaelann59
@Rachaelann59 20 күн бұрын
Gosh, I love History Hit! Never thought we would get quality channels again since 2015 rolled in.
@k.edwards3138
@k.edwards3138 Ай бұрын
This was such an interesting documentary. It does tickle me though how you can say someone f**ked here but can't show artwork showing boobs etc. KZbin being hypocritical at its finest 😂😂😂
@K8E666
@K8E666 Ай бұрын
It always makes me wonder how many more ancient cities are buried out there beneath the sands and seas just waiting to be discovered.. to be clear, I’m not talking about imaginary cities like Atlantis, but actual lost cities that have been lost to the earth’s ever changing landscape. There’s got to be hundreds or thousands of them…
@katherinecollins4685
@katherinecollins4685 18 күн бұрын
Very interesting
@rozi2089
@rozi2089 Ай бұрын
Very fascinating. Love learni g about Pompeii and hope i can visit one day.
@AntonTaylor72
@AntonTaylor72 Ай бұрын
Please don't use AI for thumbnails. It makes the show look so much cheaper and lazier than the content deserves. Edit: They changed it now. For the better.
@battery781
@battery781 Ай бұрын
Very true
@kellswitch
@kellswitch Ай бұрын
So the AI is only in the thumbnail? Not the video itself?
@obcl8569
@obcl8569 Ай бұрын
I second this wholeheartedly. Had to do a double & triple take to make sure it WAS from HHTV with that thumbnail.
@wakandaforever4291
@wakandaforever4291 Ай бұрын
I'm so sick of AI!!!
@annettedelorean706
@annettedelorean706 Ай бұрын
the humans looks so fake. one looks like an AI cara delevigne in a cheapo way.
@angietyndall7337
@angietyndall7337 Ай бұрын
I've never been to Pompeii, but I did see the aftermath in person years later of what Mount St. Helen's, WA., U.S.A did. It was shocking and amazing, but sad as well.
@JohnDrummondPhoto
@JohnDrummondPhoto Ай бұрын
I visited Rome last year and took a day trip to Pompeii. I'll never forget it. I only saw a portion of the town, as it's really large. I wish I'd visited Julia Felix's house.
@lynnedelacy2841
@lynnedelacy2841 Ай бұрын
Next time you go make sure you visit the museum in Naples where the portable finds from Pompeii are housed you could spend days there exploring the treasures
@JohnDrummondPhoto
@JohnDrummondPhoto Ай бұрын
@@lynnedelacy2841 that's very optimistic of you! I'm 70 and have so much of the world yet to see. It's unlikely I'll return to Italy any time soon. But you never know.
@davejohnson6738
@davejohnson6738 Ай бұрын
@@lynnedelacy2841we visited Naples few weeks ago, we were only able to do city tour, due to time constraints , I am planning to visit Pompeii in future.
@benjalucian1515
@benjalucian1515 Ай бұрын
Hopefully it will still be there. Campi Flegrei is acting up and may erupt.
@gregmacdonald7710
@gregmacdonald7710 Ай бұрын
Lucky you!👍💯
@1957loek
@1957loek 29 күн бұрын
Very interesting.
@4got102c
@4got102c 7 күн бұрын
I'd suspect Julia Felix (wealthy Pompeiian business woman) was attempting business contact building in Egypt & the middle East with her decor (her Nile dining room mural). Meaning her dinner guests may have likely been from the East (Egypt, the Middle East) and the familar Nile scene(s) on her walls were to make them feel at home, feel at ease.
@addie.86
@addie.86 Ай бұрын
me seeing this on my subscription list just as I'm currently reading the last book in The Wolf Den Trilogy 🥺🥺
@melodysadventure5466
@melodysadventure5466 Ай бұрын
My family was just talking about Peter Capaldi and Doctor Who!
@jonni2317
@jonni2317 Ай бұрын
"Modern Art!" just rewatched this episode, its such a wonderful one, full of wonderful easter eggs
@orlaithchops
@orlaithchops 26 күн бұрын
Amazing documentary and I’ve seen a great many on Pompeii. I visited April last year and Herculaneum, the most amazing experience of my life (with the exception of my children, because I have to say that 😂😂) ❤
@patriciakeogh5008
@patriciakeogh5008 Ай бұрын
I saw and heard Dawn French when they were sitting in the restaurant.
@cookingartguy2170
@cookingartguy2170 17 сағат бұрын
Well done. I've been to Pompeii. And that guy host is hot 🔥🔥🔥 Lol.
@bluemoon5411
@bluemoon5411 Ай бұрын
I loved this, but there are too many advertisements which is very annoying and distracting....
@davidevans3227
@davidevans3227 Ай бұрын
thankyou for saying it
@natalieeis9284
@natalieeis9284 Ай бұрын
I didn't see that many and suppose it depends when and which country you are watching from
@TravisBrady-wn8fr
@TravisBrady-wn8fr Ай бұрын
I tried to warn them of the impending doom. Their response: "Wine. Good."
@marciano98
@marciano98 Ай бұрын
Fantastic story! However some recent Discoveries point to some survivors of Pompeii
@user-ut9vp9ph4m
@user-ut9vp9ph4m Ай бұрын
Thank you for a very interesting film, was Pliny The Younger really that good looking? Wish I’d met him!
@cdfdesantis699
@cdfdesantis699 Ай бұрын
Literally a Classical Roman time capsule. BTW, Vesuvius isn't the only active volcano on the European mainland. The supervolcano, Campi Flegrei, Vesuvius' nextdoor neighbor & possible partner-in-crime, is active around the city & Bay of Naples region.
@FRAME5RS
@FRAME5RS Ай бұрын
In vino veritas = if a drunk says horrible things, know that its what they are thinking but not saying when sober.
@yannicknaets9621
@yannicknaets9621 Ай бұрын
I can’t believe they blurred the brothel fresco…!😮
@blackfoxstudioX
@blackfoxstudioX Ай бұрын
Due to demonetization...but for real these kind of things should be protected under educational content rules. This small part really ruins documentary for those who watch today and many many years in the future.
@jc2604
@jc2604 3 күн бұрын
Yes, how absurd and childish.
@mrmeowmeow710
@mrmeowmeow710 Ай бұрын
👍👍
@levij4
@levij4 28 күн бұрын
I really enjoyed this documentary! Towards the end I heard something that I've never heard before. The documentary says that the Romans dug down into the forum shortly after the disaster to recover Marble and limestone blocks out of the forum. I have been unable to find this information anywhere else on the web. Can someone provide sources for that claim? I would love to read more about that. Thank you!
@darlingmawo
@darlingmawo Ай бұрын
How fascinating this history is. Even though I'm in Zimbabwe, it felt like I was walking on the floors of the city. Too bad that it got lost through nature's vengeance.
@jenniferlyons4150
@jenniferlyons4150 Ай бұрын
The people are not forgotten. Their lives were not much different than ours. They were business people taking care of their families and building their business connections, although some were despicable, in my opinion.
@kb-tu2kf
@kb-tu2kf Ай бұрын
wine from Gaza in Pompei ! 17. 35
@danbethel3195
@danbethel3195 Ай бұрын
I am always amazed by how obtuse tour guides and archaeologists can be. Having amphorae from around the Mediterranean didn’t necessarily mean they had brought wine to Pompeii directly. With the abundance of vineyards in the area it’s more likely that the exotic wines had been delivered elsewhere than the containers used wherever until they were broken or worn out.
@paulohara8750
@paulohara8750 14 күн бұрын
well done documentary but i can not understand why you would blank out topless paintings but you are quite happy to say fucked?
@kriskat40
@kriskat40 Ай бұрын
Wouldn’t it make more since if the dining room didn’t look a lot like a bath? Water trickling down to it, mural depicting river culture and maybe last but not least a drain at the bottom of the “table”.
@agnieszkakowalska7564
@agnieszkakowalska7564 27 күн бұрын
A good film, source based, without sensational rambling. However blurring erotic frescos is irrational and damaging the understanding of everyday reality of the ancient culture and religion. Is that Puritan rigour of YT forces you to do that?!?
@PeachysMom
@PeachysMom 27 күн бұрын
Yes KZbin will suppress or demonetize the video if even cartoon people’s genitals show. It’s not so much Puritan on YT’s part, as it is “advertiser friendly.” It’s all about the $
@LowerTheBoom
@LowerTheBoom Ай бұрын
what should you do if you get caught in a volcanic eruption
@hori166
@hori166 23 күн бұрын
It's a conundrum that today men and boys still relish combat and bloodshed, but in a virtual world. That basic instinct to maim and admire has remained intact over the millennia. Even animal sport and gambling persist. Here, the only difference today would be the horror and revulsion experienced by a certain sector of the population.
@SongOfSongsOneTwelve
@SongOfSongsOneTwelve 3 күн бұрын
Those weren’t streets, they were waterways. You can tell because of the large stepping stones making pathways across the waterway.
@miastupid7911
@miastupid7911 15 күн бұрын
"Για ιδεστε τον αμαραντο σε τι βουνα φυτρωνει." line from Greek traditional song. Αμαραντος = amarantus = wild flowers = symbol of eternal love and connected to the myth of Helen and Paris.
@benjalucian1515
@benjalucian1515 Ай бұрын
I thought that the idea that the "barracks" next to the amphitheater in Pompeii had been debunked as gladiator housing. Due to the artwork under the arcade which they wouldn't have done for a bunch of gladiators.
@redouteshabby2024
@redouteshabby2024 29 күн бұрын
How did Pliny the Younger know what is uncle was doing in Stabiae to write about it in such detail? No cell phones, no way of his uncle relaying information to him.
@Contessa6363
@Contessa6363 Ай бұрын
For all those who are bagging the AI thumb Nails Get Over it! You are rude I LIKE THEM!!
@ksimpp
@ksimpp Күн бұрын
AI thumbnails are objectively awful and I definitely avoid clicking on any video with them
@BarbaraEllis-si2rs
@BarbaraEllis-si2rs 6 күн бұрын
Why are they blanking the sex scenes. This is the 21at century and we have seen it all before on other programmes of Pompeii?
@77cns
@77cns Ай бұрын
17:23 From Gaza! You don’t say
@deepthinkingopinion
@deepthinkingopinion 28 күн бұрын
Love the content but I do not understand why the images of nudes and depiction of sex acts on Pompeii's ancient murals are being censored. ??? this is a documentary, not a storybook for kids. Censorship has no place in art and history, especially in an informative program like this.
@PeachysMom
@PeachysMom 27 күн бұрын
The channel wants to earn money, and they aren’t doing sponsorships, like selling products, so the video has to be “advertiser friendly “ or else YT will suppress and demonetize the video. It’s all about the money.
@Emthe30something
@Emthe30something Ай бұрын
A full documentary on the KZbin channel is most appreciated. Enjoyed with one constructive criticism. The sex work section seemed to be reductive. I feel like the research has come farther than the final sentence summing it up as horrendous and moving on.
@user-ut7wz7mh2r
@user-ut7wz7mh2r Ай бұрын
It's paid r@pe. Nobody goes into sex work because they think it's a lucrative and good career. It's a last resort, sex worker women have higher rates of PTSD than soldiers returning from war. Ask any woman who is currently a sex worker if she would still do the job if she could get the same amount of money just as easily anywhere else, most would choose to leave. But sure, sing its virtues. Jackass. 😂
@senses70
@senses70 2 күн бұрын
A very nice documentary, but why masking the sex scenes and paintings? We’re not in the Victorian’s time anymore and there are many other great documentary out there showing it. We are not children and these were different times where sexuality wasn’t taboo as it seems to be here. Also, you don’t mention the facts that men could have sex with other women than their wives but also with other males, as long as they were of a lower rank and were not the “receiver”. The word homosexuality did not exist in antiquity. Sex was viewed as a normal part of life, and represented everywhere. Except for those poor women abused in the lupanars of course. However, I did learn more about Roman lives, so thank you for that.
@zuri2002
@zuri2002 Ай бұрын
The background music is too loud again. ☹️
@CurtisWebb-en5kh
@CurtisWebb-en5kh Ай бұрын
It does get warm there. Global warming has not made it any warmer yet.
@FRAME5RS
@FRAME5RS Ай бұрын
I lived there in the early 80s, actually near Pisa. It was hot, even hotter near Naples.
@barrypritchard1782
@barrypritchard1782 16 күн бұрын
I wonder how many Michelin stars it would’ve got
@SimonShearston
@SimonShearston Ай бұрын
Very interesting but audio on the location is very poor. Lots of clipping.
@98Zai
@98Zai Ай бұрын
I really like the presenter! He should have worn a beard though, but I guess it wouldn't be suitable for Rome in 79 :P
@nickyphoenix2470
@nickyphoenix2470 Ай бұрын
I see Maureen lipman 😂
@CornPopWazABadDude
@CornPopWazABadDude Ай бұрын
No way, there's a painting of me in ancient Pompeii!!! @2:23
@PjEason
@PjEason Ай бұрын
Pics or it didn’t happen 😂
@saradepetrini4886
@saradepetrini4886 Ай бұрын
Drink every time they mispronounce "campagnia" 🤦🏻‍♀️
@mikepxg6406
@mikepxg6406 Ай бұрын
Never understand why they wanted to lay on their side. Very uncomfortable and not practical to eat.
@blackfoxstudioX
@blackfoxstudioX Ай бұрын
"The reason for this lifestyle is to show wealth in front of the lower social groups. Lying down while eating was something that mostly the rich and powerful did to show that they were more important and that they should always be comfortable with whatever action they performed." "This trend, which began in the 7th century BC, was inherited from the Greek ancestors. It was often practiced during feasts or banquets, where a variety of food and drinks were served to those belonging to a higher social class, and their only reason to get up was to go to the restroom to make more space for food.” Source: Medium
@user-ut7wz7mh2r
@user-ut7wz7mh2r Ай бұрын
​@@blackfoxstudioXnot a great source to cite. Literally anyone can write for them.
@lemon_j22
@lemon_j22 Ай бұрын
Hot, I guess.
@ToxiCisty
@ToxiCisty Ай бұрын
Not yt ppl.
@PjEason
@PjEason Ай бұрын
Huh?
@cbluebeard
@cbluebeard Ай бұрын
I cant watch censored history. Stop with the blurring, already!
@collectivesartori
@collectivesartori Ай бұрын
The blurred images of the amazing frescos is nineteenth century anglo prudishness at its finest. Totally pathetic.
@collectivesartori
@collectivesartori Ай бұрын
Sensationalist and revisionist, however the guest historians included in the documentary are universally good and well informed (unlike the presenter).
@EGSBiographies-om1wb
@EGSBiographies-om1wb Ай бұрын
141st
@metalmyke1
@metalmyke1 Ай бұрын
Could Sophie be wrong?
@LuangPraBong
@LuangPraBong Ай бұрын
Oh no it’s that same narrator that won’t stop moving his hands now all I can look at are his hands moving. Please make him stop.
@ashlyn5673
@ashlyn5673 Ай бұрын
23:53 umm excuse me what did we just say? Wild way to say that for a documentary unless I’m the problem
@Antinoustheartist
@Antinoustheartist Ай бұрын
OK when he was talking about the people you can have sex with for men he left out that men could have sex with other men
@deepthinkingopinion
@deepthinkingopinion 28 күн бұрын
well he called the life of prostitutes "horrendous", I think we can imagine the life of prostitutes not being enjoyable although Romans had a very different view of sexuality than we do today. Also, censored most depictions of nudity and sex from the murals. ??? The documentary was done trying to keep it overly sensitive and prude.
@Antinoustheartist
@Antinoustheartist 5 күн бұрын
@@deepthinkingopinion I’m confused what this has to do with my comment but OK I guess
@seancasey4221
@seancasey4221 2 күн бұрын
Of course it’s a woke focus on business owners. Zero evidence of venture capital
@samgorwill9666
@samgorwill9666 17 күн бұрын
its the volcanos way of saying 'Tiny humans you city is to close please vacate '
@natalieeis9284
@natalieeis9284 Ай бұрын
I always found Herculaneum more interesting
@PjEason
@PjEason Ай бұрын
Indeed far more superior
@collectivesartori
@collectivesartori Ай бұрын
Why does the presenter insist that Pliny the Elder was merely "determined to have a closer look" while omitting the basic fact that as commander of the Roman navy based at Misenum it was his duty and responsibility to order the ships under his command to both investigate the situation and rescue any survivors of the unfolding disaster. He wasn't just 'some bloke' with a fatal case of curiosity. If the presenter is relying on the representation of Pliny by Suetonius he should know better since that later author is famous for his gossip-laden, fanciful and contradictory representations of the characters of other famous Romans, in particular the Emperors. This so-called historical documentary is full of misleading representations, half-truths and basic omissions. Why?
@benjalucian1515
@benjalucian1515 Ай бұрын
He didn't know it was a disaster. It looked just like smoke from their vantage point. it was only when he got a message from a friend's wife, describing the danger that he got the whole navy ready to go to the rescue.
@collectivesartori
@collectivesartori Ай бұрын
@@benjalucian1515 Its the confusing and snide observations made by the presenter, characterising Pliny as a mere 'adventurer' that I objected to, not the idea that he was unsure about what he was dealing with when he ordered his squadron to leave Misenum for Stabia on that fateful day in 79. Just very lazy and disingenuous film making.
@benjalucian1515
@benjalucian1515 Ай бұрын
@@collectivesartori It's not the best documentary I've seen on the subject.
@collectivesartori
@collectivesartori Ай бұрын
@@benjalucian1515 very much agree. It was beautiful and there were some very good academic guests, but the grab for eyeballs and sensationalist sound bites is a massive turnoff unfortunately. The dumbing down of popular history is really depressing.,
@RowdyProwdy
@RowdyProwdy 29 күн бұрын
It’s actually has me angry in a way to be honest.
@williamvanessen1604
@williamvanessen1604 Ай бұрын
Please refrain from using AI thumbnails, it makes History Hit appear as lazy and unscholarly when it’s anything but!
@Sameasbefore88
@Sameasbefore88 Ай бұрын
Dumb comment
@98Zai
@98Zai Ай бұрын
History hit is just a company that buys old docus.
@Contessa6363
@Contessa6363 Ай бұрын
​@@Sameasbefore88 Why don't you stop being a hypercritical Narcissist huh???😮😮😮
@Marah493
@Marah493 8 күн бұрын
I believe that Vesuvius was payback for 70 ad…. Destruction of the temple, by Titus.
@lisaborsella5412
@lisaborsella5412 4 күн бұрын
An excellent documentary here. Thank you
@elwolf8536
@elwolf8536 Ай бұрын
I think modern historicle revision is historians trying to meke themselves more relivant also why whould you plaster a guy who looks like he has a hangover all over what whold of bedn a nice thumbnail? Why change dates ? Why contest the gender of skeletons ect
@bread_dawg
@bread_dawg Ай бұрын
Please stop using AI art. It really cheapens the image of what you're putting out which is otherwise really good
@JohannesVanDerStuyvebode
@JohannesVanDerStuyvebode Ай бұрын
There is something sad about female archaeologists/historian singling out female historic figures to somehow prove a point that women are special.. Acting like they were key figures or leaders of their age while we all know men were prominent leaders in every culture. It feels almost like they try to mirror some aspects of people they do not know onto themselves which becomes evident. A lot of "I'd like to think" and "we do not know for sure but" does not tell me anything and how many catering establishment nowadays are run by a single person? Exactly, none.
@collectivesartori
@collectivesartori Ай бұрын
Using history always to divide, never to unite. It is the underlying premise of this retelling of history. Revise, revise, revise.
@benjalucian1515
@benjalucian1515 Ай бұрын
Well, like most societies no matter how draconian, not everyone is a bastard. Roman women were supposed to be controlled by their fathers, then their husbands and if widowed their sons. Were their menfolk ALL strict task masters? Well no. Like modern days, some men were lazy, some indulgent, some knew their wives/daughters were quite capable. LIke the mosaic of the baker and his wife. SHE is holding the tablet and pen. Showing SHE was educated, literate and she did the books for their business instead of being kept pregnant and barefoot in the kitchen. Did women have lovers? Yeah, they did. Did their menfolk care? You bet. Did ALL of them care? Well, no. Especially if the woman was not under direct control and was discreet, yes, they had lovers. If high born, they were above what gossip the riff raf in the street talked about. It's a lot more complicated than what you think.
@jrsanders1212
@jrsanders1212 Ай бұрын
Mostly Roman until it exploded. How is this a question?
@collectivesartori
@collectivesartori Ай бұрын
The presenter represents women as oppressed in this so called documentary on early imperial Rome. While women and men certainly were not equal, the extent of the revisionism on display in this so-called documentary perverts the known historical record about the experience of women in Roman society, in order (presumably) to push a contemporary agenda of some kind. Disappointing and dissembling.
@benjalucian1515
@benjalucian1515 Ай бұрын
Trouble is, we don't have any writings from women from the time period.
@johnthekeane
@johnthekeane Ай бұрын
Is this for babies? Stop attaching intent and feelings without evidence.
@4362mont
@4362mont Ай бұрын
😂
@anibal134
@anibal134 Ай бұрын
why use AI to recreate Plinius the younger and elder? AI is shit
@amysantee
@amysantee Ай бұрын
Good documentary but next time please use “enslaved people” rather than slaves. “Slaves” removes the humanity and exploitative nature of these people who were owned -enslaved- by other people.
@benjalucian1515
@benjalucian1515 Ай бұрын
Who else can be a 'slave' but a person?
@fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602
@fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602 Ай бұрын
The real tragedy of some becomes the way of life for others tens, hundreds and even thousands of years later. Yes, history and archeology is important. No, it cannot be more important than the present time, especially when both become distractions that prevent people from seeing that the Gaza tragedy is not just news. Are those innocent children and women murdered, mistreated, tortured, raped and starved by the Nazi Zionist troops of Israel closer to us than the inhabitants of Pompeii? Are we human enough to be less outraged by the genocide that the volcano caused in Pompeii than by the genocide of Palestinians committed by Israelis with the help of Americans and Europeans?
@Crumbdumpster27
@Crumbdumpster27 Ай бұрын
Nobody is saying that.
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