Lost World Of Pompeii (Ancient Rome Documentary) | Timeline
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Since Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD, burying the city of Pompeii, it has been frozen in time. But now, more secrets behind the ancient Roman city are being revealed with the help of new technologies in Science Channel’s Lost World Of Pompeii Pompeii is a delicately conserved attraction that is under constant threat from the wears and tear of extensive tourism, the specter of landslides and the possibility of another devastating eruption from Mount Vesuvius.
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The Last Days of Pompeii 1984 _ 1/3
Gerry Sundquist as Clodius
Catriona MacColl as Julia
Visiting Mount Vesuvius in Naples, Italy
Join me on a trip to hike and tour the Italian Volcano of Mount Vesuvius outside of Naples, Italy. This top tourist destination in Italy is best known for having erupted in 79AD to cover the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum. Now, the ruins of these demolished ancient towns sit for visitors to tour and experience. There are many tours to Pompeii combined with tours to Mount Vesuvius available, most leave out of Rome, Naples or Sorento.
Visit my blog AMae.TV for more information on how we completed this tour of Mount Vesuvius by driving from Naples. Italy.
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The Private Lives of Pompeii (Ancient Rome Documentary) | Timeline
On August 27th 79AD, the Roman town of Pompeii was buried under a torrent of lava and ash when Vesuvius roared into life with a mighty eruption What survives of the town is an extraordinary.
Films For The Humanaties FFH 2094.
Stylish, fast-moving and filmic, The Riddle of Pompeii finally solves one of the world's biggest archaeological mysteries. In AD 79 the legendary volcano Vesuvius erupted in one of the deadliest.
Exploring what really happened at Herculaneum following the eruption of Vesuvius. Pompeii, the lost Roman city buried by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79AD, has long been a source of fascination.
Pompeii Tour - Let's start the visit!
Enjoy the unique opportunity to visit Pompeii at the best time of the day, while having an intimate experience at a slower pace!
Explore Pompeii with a semiprivate tour of maximum 8 people and enjoy the best of the ancient Roman city with our passionate English-speaking guides!
Your group will be intimate and your guide will be easy to interact with. Explore the highlights: the forum, the plastercasts, the theatres, the spas, the streets and the houses of 2000 years ago.
A stunning experience not to be missed!
Rome Private Tours - Inside Rome...The Past Tour offered by Tiber Limo in Rome, Italy
~ +39 06 6390108 ~ Tiber Limo Rome, Italy Travel
Founder of Tiber Limo, Andrea Santucci, discusses Tiber Limo's tour called, Inside Rome -- The Past. Do you have a hunger for history and short on time while in Rome to see everything? This is the Italian tour for you!
Choose the package that covers the destinations and amount of time that fits your vacation needs. Roman Coliseum, Roman Forum, Trevi Fountain, The Pantheon, The Roman Wall, The Spanish Steps, St. Maria Basilica, St. Angelo Castle. Learn more about this tour here:
Tiber Limousine Service
Largo Nino Franchellucci 61, 00155 Rome
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Roman Candle Ancient City Tour
ROMAN CANDLE TOURS
romancandletours.com
Roman Candle Tours offers English speaking, affordable semi private and private guided tours of Rome, Florence, the Vatican City and surrounding areas, each full of hidden treasures. We believe everyone is entitled to fun and engaging learning experiences which cover the highlights, then go deeper. Even if its not your first visit to Italy, we have something in store which you have never seen before!
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Heart of Rome Small Group Walking Tour | LivItaly Tours |
Offered every day at 10 am, this tour is designed to explore the wonders and learn about the beauty of Rome's centre. An itinerary walkable in almost 3 hrs, our local experts will entertain you on the history of such monuments as the Pantheon, teach you how to toss your coin in the Trevi Fountain and show you secrets of Sant'Ivo alla Sapienza. Among with many more interesting places and stories. Book this tour now on or email us at info@livitaly.com
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Pompei reconstruite
Pompei reconstruite
pour les sous titre !
FAQ: Difference Between Types of Shore Excursions
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This is a video explaining the difference between our three types of shore excursion. These are: Private, shared or semi-private and group. Please watch all the way through if you want to know the best option for your traveling needs! Also don't forget to rate and subscribe if you want to see more of what we offer.
by SmartCruiseTours.com, your local friend!
Why Choose City Wonders?
At City Wonders, we're dedicated to crafting the most engaging tour experiences in Europe’s most popular cities. We take great pride in our team of expert, local guides who offer our customers the chance to travel with an insider in each of our 10 tour locations across Italy, Spain, France and the UK. Find out more about us here:
Mediterranean Cruise Day 19, Athens Greece Acropolis
Mediterranean Cruise Day 19, Athens Greece Acropolis
Welcome to Athens Greece! Mom and I took the Acropolis and Athens city tour.
At the Acropolis mom couldn't go any farther then where the bus let us off. LOTS of steps. So I went on the tour on my own (with the tour group)
was quite a climb to get up to the top of the hill but it was great! awesome panoramic views and thousands of years of history.
Hope you love the video and photos.
We then got back on the bus and did a city tour hitting the highlights. Was a great and warm day.
Then back to the ship for our normal Nap, food and night time shows and entertainment.
Next Episode is Santorini, Greece .
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15. Rome and a Villa: Hadrian's Pantheon and Tivoli Retreat
Roman Architecture (HSAR 252)
Professor Kleiner features the architecture built in and around Rome during the reign of Hadrian. The lecture begins with the Temple of Venus and Roma, a Greek-style temple constructed near the Colosseum in Rome, which may have been designed by Hadrian himself. Professor Kleiner then turns to the Pantheon, a temple dedicated to all the gods that combines the marble porch and pediment of a traditional Greco-Roman temple with a vast concrete cylindrical drum, hemispherical dome, and central oculus. The porch serves to conceal the circular shape from view, but upon entering the structure the visitor is impressed by the massive interior space and theatrical play of light. The Pantheon represents the culmination of the Roman quest towards an architecture that shapes and dramatizes interior space. Professor Kleiner next discusses the Villa of Hadrian at Tivoli, a sprawling complex in which the emperor re-created buildings and works of art he observed during his empire-wide travels. The lecture concludes with a brief overview of the Mausoleum of Hadrian (the Castel Sant'Angelo), a round tomb that refers back to the Mausoleum of Augustus and served as the last resting place for Hadrian and the succeeding Antonine dynasty.
00:00 - Chapter 1. The Temple of Venus and Roma: A Greek Temple in Rome
15:14 - Chapter 2. The Pantheon: A Temple to All the Gods
29:57 - Chapter 3. The Pantheon and Its Impact on Later Architecture
47:48 - Chapter 4. Hadrians Villa at Tivoli: Travelogue and Retreat
56:21 - Chapter 5. Unique Designs at Hadrians Villa and the Castel Sant Angelo in Rome
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:
This course was recorded in Spring 2009.
Ferry from Croatia to Italy travel vlog from Dubrovnik to Bari
Come join us as we take an overnight ferry from Croatia to Italy departing from Dubrovnik and arriving in Bari in this travel vlog. Aside from our overnight ferry our journey which started in Budva, Montenegro included bus trips and a train ride to get to our final destination of Matera, Italy. It ended up being a long journey but surprisingly we felt refreshed especially by having a chance to sleep overnight on the ferry. If you're considering taking the ferry from Croatia to Italy or Italy to Croatia we'd highly recommend it.
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Ferry from Croatia to Italy travel vlog from Dubrovnik to Bari Video Transcript:
Alright guys good morning. Good morning. It is time for a very long long travel day ahead us. Yeah. Want to tell us what is the plan for today? Well, this is going to be our longest travel vlog we've ever created. We're going to be going to three countries. We're going to be taking the bus, then we're going to be taking an overnight ferry and then we're going to be taking another bus. So basically of yeah we're heading from first off we're heading from Budva, Montenegro to Dubrovnik, Croatia by bus. I think that is going to be about a three hour journey. Yeah. And then we're going to be waiting for a few hours and boarding an overnight ferry and that is going to be really cool. We've never done that before. We've never done an overnight ferry. No. Yeah, so we're going to be going from Dubrovnik, Croatia to Bari, Italy by ferry. Right. And it is overnight. It is going to be a ten hour journey. Yeah. And then once we arrive we're trying to reach Matera. Yes. Which actually I looked it up yesterday it is about an hour by bus. Okay. I had said 30 minutes. It is not 30 minutes. We haven't booked tickets for that so we'll be booking that bus ticket and kind of winging it. But yeah, we'll show you the whole journey and we'll talk about the prices and we'll show you what we eat along the way. So we're really looking forward to this. It is going to be a long vlog. So uh buckle up and let's get going. Let's go.
Well guys our food has arrived. We are eating at what is the name of this place? I always forget. This place is called Taboo and we ate here when we first arrived in Budva because it was too early to check in to our apartment. Yeah. So I got myself some kind of panini with prosciutto, tomato, cheese, lettuce, fries and Sam got himself pizza. Yeah, thin crust pizza. Yeah. So it looks good. How is it? The fries are good. I haven't tried the sandwich yet.
But it looks nice. Yeah, covered in sesame seeds. One thing I have to say is uh compared to Croatia and Bosnia the food that we had in Montenegro was a pretty big step down. Haha. In terms of like it just we didn't find that many restaurants that we loved. Yeah. I think our best meal was the one we had on that day trip (to Perast). Do you remember? Pasta. That is right. Perast. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. But this is like you know this place is I would say has okay food. Yeah. Um, good prices. It is like International food. Yeah. Stuff you could find anywhere. Pastas, pizzas, sandwiches but there is nothing like super local or traditional. Yeah but it is fine. We need a snack before we get on the bus. This works.
This is part of our Travel in Montenegro video series showcasing Montenegrin food, Montenegrin culture and Montenegrin cuisine.
This is part of our Travel in Croatia video series showcasing Croatian food, Croatian culture and Croatian cuisine.
This is part of our Travel in Italy video series showcasing Italian food, Italian culture and Italian cuisine.
This is part of our Travel in the Balkans video series showcasing Balkan food, Balkan culture and Balkan cuisine.
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Hadrian's Villa, Tivoli: A virtual tour
A virtual tour of Hadrian's Villa using a 3D digital model of the villa created under the direction of Dr. Bernard Frischer. The ruins of Hadrian's Villa, in the town of Tivoli, near Rome, is spread over an area of approximately 250 acres. Many of the structures were designed by the Emperor Hadrian who ruled from 117 until his death in 138 C.E. This virtual rendering is based on current archeological research and has been created in consultation with art historians, archaeologists, and museum curators with expertise in this area. Please note, a few features are necessarily assumptions based on the best available evidence. Speakers: Dr. Bernard Frischer and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Le calde notti di poppea Film completo in tedesco
Film completo in tedesco con Olinka Berova,Brad Harris e Femi Benussi
11. Notorious Nero and His Amazing Architectural Legacy
Roman Architecture (HSAR 252)
Professor Kleiner features the architecture of Augustus' successors, the Julio-Claudian emperors, whose dynasty lasted half a century (A.D. 14-68). She first presents Tiberius' magnificent Villa Jovis on the Island of Capri and an underground basilica in Rome used by members of a secret Neo-Pythagorean cult. She then turns to the eccentric architecture of Claudius, a return to masonry building techniques and a unique combination of finished and unfinished, or rusticated, elements. Finally, Professor Kleiner highlights the luxurious architecture of the infamous Nero, especially his Domus Aurea or Golden House and its octagonal room, one of the most important rooms in the history of Roman architecture. The construction of the Domus Aurea accelerates the shift in Roman building practice toward a dematerialized architecture that fully utilizes recent innovations in concrete technology and emphasizes interior space over solid form.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Tiberius and the Villa Jovis on Capri
16:58 - Chapter 2. Caligula and the Underground Basilica in Rome
29:23 - Chapter 3. Claudius and the Harbor at Portus
39:59 - Chapter 4. Claudius Porta Maggiore in Rome
47:33 - Chapter 5. Nero and the Domus Transitoria in Rome
01:01:24 - Chapter 6. The Golden House of Nero and the Octagonal Room
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:
This course was recorded in Spring 2009.
Italian Family Holiday - Naples & Sorrento
Join Rosie Millard and family on their Italian Family Holiday. Travelling with the Family Adventure Company. During this Italian family holiday around the bay of Naples ( the family enjoys two great Mediterranean cities Naples
and Sorrento, history and sailing in the beautful bay of Naples.
16. The Roman Way of Life and Death at Ostia, the Port of Rome
Roman Architecture (HSAR 252)
Professor Kleiner focuses on Ostia, the port of Rome, characterized by its multi-storied residential buildings and its widespread use of brick-faced concrete. She begins with the city's public face--the Forum, Capitolium, Theater, and Piazzale delle Corporazioni. The Piazzale, set behind the Theater, was the location of various shipping companies with black-and-white mosaics advertising their business. Professor Kleiner examines the Baths of Neptune and the Insula of Diana, a brick apartment building with four floors that housed a number of Ostia's working families. The Insula of Diana and other similar structures, including warehouses like the Horrea Epagathiana, demonstrate a fundamental feature of second-century Ostia: the appreciation of the aesthetic qualities of brick facing. Since the time of Nero, brick was customarily covered with stucco and paint, but these Ostian buildings are faced with exposed brick, the color, texture, and design of which make it attractive in its own right. The lecture ends with a survey of several single family dwellings in Ostia, including the fourth-century House of Cupid and Psyche, notable for the pastel-colored marble revetment on its walls and floors and for a charming statue of the legendary lovers.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Ostia: Romes First Colony
12:37 - Chapter 2. Civic Architecture in Ostia
23:32 - Chapter 3. Transacting Business at the Piazzale delle Corporazioni
36:57 - Chapter 4. Residential Architecture at Ostia: The Insulae
49:43 - Chapter 5. The Warehouses of Ostia
56:19 - Chapter 6. Painted Decoration and Mosaic Floors
01:04:33 - Chapter 7. Re-emergence of the Domus at Ostia and Tombs at Isola Sacra
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:
This course was recorded in Spring 2009.
13. The Prince and the Palace: Human Made Divine on the Palatine Hill
Roman Architecture (HSAR 252)
Professor Kleiner investigates the major architectural commissions of the emperor Domitian, the last Flavian emperor. She begins with the Arch of Titus, erected after Titus' death by his brother Domitian on land previously occupied by Nero's Domus Transitoria. The Arch celebrated Titus' greatest accomplishment--the Flavian victory in the Jewish Wars--and may have served as Titus' tomb. Professor Kleiner also discusses the Stadium of Domitian, the shape of which is preserved in Rome's Piazza Navona. Her major focus is the vast Imperial Palace on the Palatine Hill designed by the architect Rabirius and featuring Domitian as dominus et deus (lord and god). Constructed from brick-faced concrete and revetted with multicolored imported marbles, this structure was divided into public and private wings, and was so magnificent that it served as the urban residence of all subsequent Roman emperors. The lecture concludes with the so-called Forum Transitorium, a narrow forum begun by Domitian and finished by his successor Nerva, which features a temple to Domitian's patron goddess Minerva and a series of decorative columnar bays that create a lively in-and-out undulation that heralds the beginning of a baroque phase in Roman architecture.
00:00 - Chapter 1. The Jewish Wars, the Flavian Dynasty, and the Arch of Titus
14:18 - Chapter 2. The Arch of Titus: Triumph and Tomb
23:25 - Chapter 3. Domitians Succession and Stadium (The Piazza Navona)
33:11 - Chapter 4. Domitian as Dominus et Deus in the Palatine Palace
46:14 - Chapter 5. Rabirius Architectural Innovations
01:02:06 - Chapter 6. The Forum Transitorium and Incipient Baroque Architecture
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:
This course was recorded in Spring 2009.