Lecture 12 - The Colosseum and Contemporary Architecture in Rome, Roman Architecture

Rating
Visits 9 Visits
Ratings 0 Ratings
Duration: N/A
Source: ACADEMIC EARTH
Found: Nov 3, 2009

Powered by Truveo

Professor Kleiner features the tumultuous year of 68-69 when Rome had four competing emperors. Vespasian emerged the victor, founded the Flavian dynasty, and was succeeded by his sons, Titus and Domitian. The Flavians were especially adept at using architecture to shape public policy. Professor Kleiner demonstrates that Vespasian linked himself with the divine Claudius by completing the Claudianum and distanced himself from Nero by razing the Domus Aurea to the ground and filling in the palace’s artificial lake. In that location, Vespasian built the Flavian Amphitheater, nicknamed the Colosseum, thereby returning to the people land earlier stolen by Nero. Professor Kleiner discusses the technical and aesthetic features of the Colosseum at length, and surveys Vespasian's Forum Pacis and Titus' Temple to Divine Vespasian. The lecture concludes with the Baths of Titus, Rome's first preserved example of the so-called "imperial bath type" because of its grand scale, axiality, and symmetry.
Language: English
Category: Educational
Tags: Diana E E Kleiner, Yale, History, Roman Architecture
Country: United States


Please note that Find Internet TV does not host any videos or allow users to upload videos. The video is provided and hosted from a third party server. The source is noted to the right of the video and depending on the source, the author and copyright may be listed as well. The information provided here is aggregated from the source and provided by video search engines. Find Internet TV does not host and is not responsible for the content.

Powered by Truveo

  Related Videos


About     Advertise     Contact     Suggest a Site     Terms     Privacy Policy     Blog