DiscoverPower and people in ancient Rome - for iPod/iPhone
Power and people in ancient Rome - for iPod/iPhone
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Power and people in ancient Rome - for iPod/iPhone

Author: The Open University

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Description

The ancient Romans constructed some of the first ever purpose-built venues for mass-entertainment. How do these structures enhance the audience’s experience of the spectacle? This album looks at famous Roman buildings like the Colosseum, a venue designed to impress, where vast numbers of people congregated for gladiatorial combat, chariot-racing and theatrical shows. Structures such as the Circus Maximus and even the Baths were designed as striking symbols of civic pride, glorifying the power of the Emperors who built them. This material forms part of The Open University course A219 Exploring the classical world.
8 Episodes
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An audio introduction to this album.
The Colosseum of Rome

The Colosseum of Rome

2009-12-0101:05

The most impressive structure in ancient Rome
Roman amphitheatres

Roman amphitheatres

2009-12-0103:33

How Roman theatres evolved from informal spaces to formal monumentalised structures.
Glorifying Rome

Glorifying Rome

2009-12-0102:31

How ancient Roman entertainment venues symbolized the power and might of Rome’s ruling dynasties.
Audience

Audience

2009-12-0105:00

Entertaining and impressing large numbers of people in ancient Rome.
Spectacle

Spectacle

2009-12-0102:09

When only fragments remain how are we to get a sense of what the structure felt like to be inside?
Baths of Caracalla

Baths of Caracalla

2009-12-0105:06

In Rome, water was not only a necessity but used as a cultural symbol. The Baths were an important source of civic pride.
Baths of Ostia

Baths of Ostia

2009-12-0104:06

The chief port of Rome provides another insight into town life, and the number of Baths suggests the importance of bathing as a social activity.
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