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'Ancient Rome was once the centre of a vast empire | 0:00:07 | 0:00:11 | |
'that stretched from Spain to Syria, | 0:00:11 | 0:00:13 | |
'dominating the Western world for over 700 years. | 0:00:13 | 0:00:17 | |
'In many ways, we still live under its shadow.' | 0:00:19 | 0:00:22 | |
Like it or not, the Romans are still all around us - | 0:00:24 | 0:00:27 | |
in our laws, in our architecture, in our roads. | 0:00:27 | 0:00:31 | |
And we keep on recreating them in film and fiction. | 0:00:31 | 0:00:35 | |
And every year, thousands of us trek here, to Rome, | 0:00:35 | 0:00:38 | |
to see the monuments up close. | 0:00:38 | 0:00:40 | |
'But hidden all over the modern city, in its walls, | 0:00:42 | 0:00:45 | |
'behind its facades, even under its streets, | 0:00:45 | 0:00:49 | |
'is something much harder to find but just as captivating - | 0:00:49 | 0:00:53 | |
'the forgotten voices of its ordinary people.' | 0:00:53 | 0:00:56 | |
Here's a great kid, holding his little pet dog. | 0:00:58 | 0:01:02 | |
And I guess it's his mum and dad on either side. | 0:01:02 | 0:01:05 | |
And up above, there's the tombstone | 0:01:05 | 0:01:08 | |
of "Curiatia Ammia." | 0:01:08 | 0:01:11 | |
And she was someone's best-beloved partner, "concubina amatissima." | 0:01:11 | 0:01:18 | |
'In this series, | 0:01:18 | 0:01:20 | |
'I'm getting the voices of these Romans speaking again, | 0:01:20 | 0:01:23 | |
'to piece together a more intriguing view of ancient Roman life.' | 0:01:23 | 0:01:28 | |
This wasn't just a mugging... | 0:01:28 | 0:01:30 | |
..this was mass murder! | 0:01:31 | 0:01:33 | |
'They'll reveal a world so different from our own, | 0:01:33 | 0:01:35 | |
'and yet eerily familiar.' | 0:01:35 | 0:01:37 | |
She liked to get a bit drenched in Bacchus. | 0:01:37 | 0:01:43 | |
So what he's saying is, she was a bit of a wild thing, | 0:01:43 | 0:01:46 | |
and she really liked a drink or two. | 0:01:46 | 0:01:48 | |
'We've already seen how the Empire turned Rome | 0:01:51 | 0:01:54 | |
'into the world's first global city, | 0:01:54 | 0:01:57 | |
'where everyone, everything was from somewhere else. | 0:01:57 | 0:02:00 | |
'Now I'm going down into the streets to explore its slums, | 0:02:02 | 0:02:06 | |
'its bathhouses and bars, | 0:02:06 | 0:02:10 | |
'where the crime, sex and humour in everyday Roman life | 0:02:10 | 0:02:14 | |
'shows us what it was really like | 0:02:14 | 0:02:16 | |
'to live in an ancient city of a million people.' | 0:02:16 | 0:02:19 | |
We think of ancient Rome as all white, marble columns, | 0:02:21 | 0:02:25 | |
and classical order. | 0:02:25 | 0:02:27 | |
But actually, it was a chaotic place, rambling and dirty. | 0:02:27 | 0:02:32 | |
It was a right mess. | 0:02:32 | 0:02:33 | |
It was as much a shanty town as it was Trafalgar Square or Washington DC. | 0:02:33 | 0:02:40 | |
Welcome to my Rome. | 0:02:40 | 0:02:42 | |
This is a fantastically detailed model of the ancient city of Rome. | 0:03:14 | 0:03:18 | |
It's got all the familiar things in it - | 0:03:18 | 0:03:21 | |
the Coliseum, the Imperial Palace, | 0:03:21 | 0:03:24 | |
the temples, the gleaming marble, the pleasure gardens. | 0:03:24 | 0:03:28 | |
But for my taste, it's all a bit grand. | 0:03:30 | 0:03:33 | |
And it's a bit misleading, | 0:03:33 | 0:03:35 | |
because it misses out so many important things | 0:03:35 | 0:03:38 | |
that I want to try and get back in. | 0:03:38 | 0:03:40 | |
The smell. The dirt. | 0:03:41 | 0:03:44 | |
The pubs. The slums. | 0:03:44 | 0:03:48 | |
And it doesn't answer the questions that we want to ask. | 0:03:48 | 0:03:52 | |
What was it like to be a kid in this city? | 0:03:52 | 0:03:54 | |
Where did you go to the lavatory? | 0:03:56 | 0:03:59 | |
What did you do if you got ill? | 0:03:59 | 0:04:02 | |
What was it like to be just an ordinary Roman? | 0:04:03 | 0:04:07 | |
'So how do we start to answer these questions? | 0:04:13 | 0:04:16 | |
'In fact, there's a lot more evidence than you might think, | 0:04:16 | 0:04:20 | |
'hidden away all over modern Rome.' | 0:04:20 | 0:04:23 | |
When you first come into a place like this, | 0:04:23 | 0:04:25 | |
what hits you in the eye is the rich Romans. | 0:04:25 | 0:04:28 | |
The great and the grand. | 0:04:28 | 0:04:30 | |
But look behind them, look at the wallpaper, as it were, | 0:04:30 | 0:04:34 | |
and you'll hear a babble of ordinary Roman voices | 0:04:34 | 0:04:39 | |
trying to be heard. | 0:04:39 | 0:04:41 | |
In fact, behind this emperor, here, | 0:04:41 | 0:04:45 | |
there's the tombstone of a little girl | 0:04:45 | 0:04:48 | |
who lived just two years, ten months and 23 days. | 0:04:48 | 0:04:53 | |
She's waving goodbye. | 0:04:54 | 0:04:57 | |
Most tombstones today record just the bare essentials. | 0:04:57 | 0:05:01 | |
But the Romans often told us a lot more about themselves. | 0:05:01 | 0:05:05 | |
They're asking anyone and everyone to read about their ordinary | 0:05:05 | 0:05:09 | |
and extraordinary lives from beyond the grave. | 0:05:09 | 0:05:12 | |
And what they give us aren't just the success stories, | 0:05:12 | 0:05:15 | |
but a unique vision of life at the bottom of the social heap too. | 0:05:15 | 0:05:20 | |
This guy certainly wants us to know about his troubles in life. | 0:05:21 | 0:05:25 | |
His name is Ankarenus Nothus. | 0:05:25 | 0:05:28 | |
He lived for 43 years | 0:05:28 | 0:05:30 | |
and he's the ex-slave of a woman, which is what that symbol means. | 0:05:30 | 0:05:35 | |
This is what he has to say about his life and what it's like being dead. | 0:05:35 | 0:05:41 | |
It happens to everybody, he says. My bones are now resting sweetly. | 0:05:41 | 0:05:47 | |
"Dulciter." | 0:05:47 | 0:05:49 | |
And I'm no longer worried that I might die of starvation. | 0:05:49 | 0:05:54 | |
"Esuriam." | 0:05:54 | 0:05:55 | |
And I don't any longer have those awful aching feet | 0:05:55 | 0:05:59 | |
and I'm not contracted to my rent payments. | 0:05:59 | 0:06:02 | |
"Pensionibus." | 0:06:02 | 0:06:04 | |
That's a quite technical phrase, | 0:06:04 | 0:06:06 | |
but it really means - I'm no longer in hock to the rent collector. | 0:06:06 | 0:06:09 | |
In fact, I'm enjoying board and lodging. "Hospitio. | 0:06:10 | 0:06:16 | |
"Gratis." | 0:06:16 | 0:06:18 | |
For free. For eternity. | 0:06:18 | 0:06:21 | |
"Aeterno." | 0:06:21 | 0:06:23 | |
The stone was put up by his wife and by his daughter | 0:06:23 | 0:06:27 | |
to her father, who she calls "indulgentissimus", | 0:06:27 | 0:06:31 | |
who's very indulgent. | 0:06:31 | 0:06:34 | |
He spoiled her something rotten. | 0:06:34 | 0:06:36 | |
There are three things that stand out. | 0:06:36 | 0:06:39 | |
How am I going to get my next meal? | 0:06:41 | 0:06:43 | |
What shall I do if I'm ill, and how shall I pay the rent? | 0:06:43 | 0:06:48 | |
And we know that the figure of the rent collector-cum-bailiff - | 0:06:48 | 0:06:54 | |
called extractor in Latin - | 0:06:54 | 0:06:57 | |
was one that terrified the Roman poor. | 0:06:57 | 0:07:00 | |
Ankarenus Nothus might have been a bit of a joker | 0:07:00 | 0:07:04 | |
and his family might have been trying to tug on our heartstrings, | 0:07:04 | 0:07:09 | |
but the important point is that these few lines sum up the plight. | 0:07:09 | 0:07:15 | |
The grim realities of life for so many ordinary Romans. | 0:07:15 | 0:07:19 | |
So, where might someone like Ankarenus Nothus have lived with his family? | 0:07:25 | 0:07:30 | |
It's pretty clear he didn't live in the marble villas | 0:07:30 | 0:07:33 | |
we think of when we think Ancient Rome. | 0:07:33 | 0:07:36 | |
One of the best places to get a glimpse of his world | 0:07:36 | 0:07:39 | |
actually still survives in the centre of town, | 0:07:39 | 0:07:42 | |
hidden in the shadow of the Vittorio Emanuele monument. | 0:07:42 | 0:07:46 | |
One of Rome's most famous modern landmarks. | 0:07:46 | 0:07:49 | |
This humble brick building doesn't look like much from the outside. | 0:07:49 | 0:07:54 | |
Most visitors walk past it without even giving it a glance. | 0:07:54 | 0:07:58 | |
But once you know what it is, a very different Rome opens up | 0:07:58 | 0:08:02 | |
before your eyes. | 0:08:02 | 0:08:04 | |
This building was converted into a Christian church. | 0:08:04 | 0:08:07 | |
But originally, it was an ancient Roman high-rise apartment block. | 0:08:07 | 0:08:14 | |
The city was full of them. They were called, in Latin, insulae. | 0:08:14 | 0:08:19 | |
That means islands. | 0:08:19 | 0:08:21 | |
So, think away the churchy bits, and Ancient Rome lies underneath. | 0:08:22 | 0:08:28 | |
Right down there, you can still see the ancient street level, and facing | 0:08:29 | 0:08:35 | |
onto the street, there are a series of shops with wide entrances. | 0:08:35 | 0:08:40 | |
And above them, little mezzanine flats. | 0:08:40 | 0:08:43 | |
So these guys were literally living above the shop. | 0:08:43 | 0:08:47 | |
But up here, there were six, perhaps seven more floors. | 0:08:47 | 0:08:52 | |
More than survive today. But to get the real authentic Roman impression, | 0:08:52 | 0:08:58 | |
you have to remember that just a few feet that way, | 0:08:58 | 0:09:03 | |
there was another block like this. | 0:09:03 | 0:09:06 | |
So this wasn't so much a nice open road down there, | 0:09:06 | 0:09:09 | |
it was a narrow alley. | 0:09:09 | 0:09:11 | |
It must have felt like a canyon between two vast buildings. | 0:09:11 | 0:09:16 | |
The flats are usually locked up, | 0:09:19 | 0:09:21 | |
but I've got permission to have a look around with my colleague | 0:09:21 | 0:09:24 | |
Ed Bisphum, who's been here many times before. | 0:09:24 | 0:09:27 | |
-So we are at what's the first floor. -This is the first floor proper, yeah. | 0:09:27 | 0:09:33 | |
-And this, then, is the window. -This is the window. | 0:09:33 | 0:09:35 | |
So we are really burgling. We are breaking and entering here. | 0:09:35 | 0:09:38 | |
Right, OK. | 0:09:38 | 0:09:39 | |
Gosh. | 0:09:45 | 0:09:46 | |
The windows have since been blocked, but on the first floor, | 0:09:46 | 0:09:49 | |
there was once a spacious apartment where a reasonably | 0:09:49 | 0:09:52 | |
well off family might have lived with their children and slaves. | 0:09:52 | 0:09:56 | |
You wouldn't be pushed for space in here as a single family. | 0:09:56 | 0:09:59 | |
You've got probably four nicely barrel-vaulted rooms here. | 0:09:59 | 0:10:03 | |
But further up the building, light, space | 0:10:03 | 0:10:06 | |
and fresh air was in much shorter supply. | 0:10:06 | 0:10:10 | |
Up here, off each dark corridor, are four or five rooms just a few | 0:10:10 | 0:10:14 | |
metres square. | 0:10:14 | 0:10:15 | |
We don't know for sure how many people lived here, | 0:10:15 | 0:10:18 | |
but to get a million people into a city the size of Rome, | 0:10:18 | 0:10:21 | |
you had to pile them high and squash them in. | 0:10:21 | 0:10:24 | |
My guess is that these weren't single occupancy. | 0:10:24 | 0:10:27 | |
This looks a bit spacious, but that's because | 0:10:27 | 0:10:31 | |
the dividing walls have gone, so you've got to imagine a wall here... | 0:10:31 | 0:10:36 | |
Going right the way up to the vault, | 0:10:36 | 0:10:38 | |
with maybe a little light window in it. | 0:10:38 | 0:10:40 | |
The thing that always kind of shocks me | 0:10:40 | 0:10:44 | |
is the sense that we might have had six people "living" in here. | 0:10:44 | 0:10:49 | |
This is one step up... | 0:10:50 | 0:10:52 | |
One or two steps up, actually, from the real bottom of Roman society, isn't it? | 0:10:52 | 0:10:56 | |
Yeah, compared to sleeping in a tomb or under an aqueduct arch, | 0:10:56 | 0:11:00 | |
this is quite bijou. SHE LAUGHS | 0:11:00 | 0:11:02 | |
Here's another bijou apartment. This is really small. | 0:11:10 | 0:11:14 | |
We've got to get, well, | 0:11:14 | 0:11:16 | |
let's say we might have four or six people in here. | 0:11:16 | 0:11:19 | |
You know, one question is, how do they fit? | 0:11:19 | 0:11:21 | |
And I'm now going to see what it would be like. | 0:11:21 | 0:11:24 | |
How much space does one person take up trying to get to sleep on the floor? | 0:11:24 | 0:11:28 | |
Urgh! | 0:11:29 | 0:11:30 | |
-Not much space left. -No, no. | 0:11:32 | 0:11:33 | |
And who are the guys and the women who are living in these? | 0:11:35 | 0:11:40 | |
-What are they doing? -The guys are probably working on constructions. | 0:11:40 | 0:11:44 | |
When you think of a big thing like the baths of Caracalla. | 0:11:44 | 0:11:47 | |
The baths of Diocletian. | 0:11:47 | 0:11:49 | |
We're talking 6,000 to 10,000 people on a four-year building job, | 0:11:49 | 0:11:52 | |
and then there's porterage. | 0:11:52 | 0:11:54 | |
-Humping goods from the barges to the warehouse... -Yeah, sacks of grain, yeah. | 0:11:54 | 0:11:59 | |
Day labour. You get it when you can. | 0:11:59 | 0:12:02 | |
You've been working all day, humping stuff about. You get back here. | 0:12:02 | 0:12:06 | |
You're soaked in sweat. You stink. You don't have any spare clothes. | 0:12:06 | 0:12:10 | |
There's no running water. You can't have a bath. | 0:12:10 | 0:12:12 | |
There's three other smelly guys sleeping on the floor too. | 0:12:12 | 0:12:16 | |
Or there's your, your partner. Your female partner, and two kids. | 0:12:16 | 0:12:21 | |
-Yes. -I mean... | 0:12:21 | 0:12:24 | |
One thing is to think about these as sort of male dorm accommodation, | 0:12:24 | 0:12:28 | |
which I think a lot of them must be, but for some of them... | 0:12:28 | 0:12:31 | |
-You know, there are women having babies here. -Yes. -You know? And actually... | 0:12:31 | 0:12:34 | |
where I'm sitting, some woman probably gave birth. | 0:12:34 | 0:12:39 | |
-That's what's scary. -Yeah. | 0:12:39 | 0:12:42 | |
And that wasn't even the top of the block. | 0:12:43 | 0:12:46 | |
There were even more storeys above this one. | 0:12:46 | 0:12:49 | |
A basic rule was, the further you went up, the worse it got. | 0:12:49 | 0:12:53 | |
There were no luxury penthouses here. | 0:12:53 | 0:12:56 | |
This was social climbing backwards. | 0:12:56 | 0:12:59 | |
In their time, these tenements must have been the tallest | 0:13:00 | 0:13:04 | |
residential buildings on the planet. | 0:13:04 | 0:13:06 | |
But they were built poorly, cheaply and fast | 0:13:06 | 0:13:09 | |
and only a handful have survived to any height, so the fact is, | 0:13:09 | 0:13:13 | |
we no longer think of Ancient Rome like this. | 0:13:13 | 0:13:17 | |
But that is how we should see it. | 0:13:17 | 0:13:20 | |
Not just a city of marble, but a city of tower blocks, | 0:13:20 | 0:13:25 | |
and the ordinary people who lived in them. | 0:13:25 | 0:13:29 | |
Perhaps the best place to get a snapshot of the kind | 0:13:35 | 0:13:38 | |
of community you might have found in a Roman high-rise | 0:13:38 | 0:13:41 | |
is now hidden at the bottom of a garden in a Roman suburb. | 0:13:41 | 0:13:45 | |
In this extraordinary communal tomb lie the remains of every | 0:13:45 | 0:13:49 | |
walk of Roman life. | 0:13:49 | 0:13:51 | |
There's hundreds and hundreds of them here. | 0:13:51 | 0:13:56 | |
And greeting you when you come in is a little face, and it's a touching | 0:14:01 | 0:14:10 | |
story because it's Valeria Italis, who was the sweetheart of Hilarus. | 0:14:10 | 0:14:18 | |
I bet he made sure that he got his sweetheart into prime position. | 0:14:18 | 0:14:23 | |
This is a...just fantastic kind of career directory | 0:14:25 | 0:14:30 | |
of the ordinary Roman people. | 0:14:30 | 0:14:33 | |
This was probably quite a bruiser. | 0:14:33 | 0:14:35 | |
It's Sinnio, the bodyguard. | 0:14:35 | 0:14:37 | |
And, in the corner here... | 0:14:38 | 0:14:41 | |
..we've got the barber. Marcus Valerius, the barber. | 0:14:42 | 0:14:47 | |
And... | 0:14:48 | 0:14:50 | |
Ah... Hygia, the midwife. | 0:14:53 | 0:14:56 | |
And up there - and I am not going to risk a Roman ascent up there - | 0:14:58 | 0:15:03 | |
we have got a nice accountant. | 0:15:03 | 0:15:06 | |
All of Roman life is here. | 0:15:06 | 0:15:08 | |
But this isn't just a Roman job directory, it is a wonderful glimpse | 0:15:08 | 0:15:12 | |
into how the Romans lived, stacked up in death, not just in life. | 0:15:12 | 0:15:16 | |
Trying to understand ancient Rome is always a bit of a post-mortem. | 0:15:16 | 0:15:21 | |
I mean, they're dead, the Romans are dead. | 0:15:21 | 0:15:25 | |
But they can still speak to us. | 0:15:25 | 0:15:28 | |
Not just the rich and powerful, not just the great writers, | 0:15:28 | 0:15:32 | |
but the ordinary people, like those in this tomb. | 0:15:32 | 0:15:35 | |
They send us these little tweet-size messages telling us | 0:15:36 | 0:15:40 | |
who they were, what they did, and saying, "Remember me!" | 0:15:40 | 0:15:45 | |
It is one of my very favourite places in the city of Rome | 0:15:45 | 0:15:49 | |
because it gets us close to real people with real jobs, and real names. | 0:15:49 | 0:15:55 | |
Sinnio, the bodyguard. Hygia, the midwife. | 0:15:55 | 0:15:58 | |
We find them here in death, just like they did in life. | 0:16:02 | 0:16:05 | |
This is a kind of burial high-rise. | 0:16:05 | 0:16:07 | |
And also, I can't help thinking, somewhere behind this, | 0:16:09 | 0:16:13 | |
there might have been a landlord asking the dead for their rent. | 0:16:13 | 0:16:17 | |
Today, modern Rome isn't a world apart from the ancient one. | 0:16:25 | 0:16:28 | |
And seen from the air, it's still a city of rented apartment blocks in a grid of little islands. | 0:16:28 | 0:16:35 | |
But apart from that modern model, how else can | 0:16:35 | 0:16:38 | |
we get closer to the way the ancient city was actually laid out? | 0:16:38 | 0:16:43 | |
At the Museum of Roman Civilisation, packed up in boxes, | 0:16:47 | 0:16:51 | |
is a tantalising clue. | 0:16:51 | 0:16:53 | |
It's sadly not usually on display, but what's inside | 0:16:57 | 0:17:01 | |
are the remains of a precious Roman map, carved in stone - | 0:17:01 | 0:17:06 | |
a kind of marble A-Z that once showed | 0:17:06 | 0:17:09 | |
a complete ground plan of the city. | 0:17:09 | 0:17:12 | |
Over the last few hundred years, | 0:17:12 | 0:17:13 | |
about 1,000 fragments have been discovered - only ten percent of it. | 0:17:13 | 0:17:18 | |
But luckily, a few bits do still fit together. | 0:17:18 | 0:17:22 | |
It's not hard on any jigsaw puzzle to recognise the Colosseum. | 0:17:22 | 0:17:27 | |
And here, you can see circular lines of the seating of the Colosseum. | 0:17:29 | 0:17:33 | |
And above it is written what looks like, | 0:17:34 | 0:17:39 | |
although we've only got the very end of the word, | 0:17:39 | 0:17:42 | |
"amphitheatrum" the amphitheatre. | 0:17:42 | 0:17:44 | |
And that was what people called the Colosseum in the Roman world, | 0:17:44 | 0:17:48 | |
they didn't call it "Colosseum". | 0:17:48 | 0:17:49 | |
What strikes me as I look at it here, actually, | 0:17:49 | 0:17:52 | |
is how big this thing was. | 0:17:52 | 0:17:56 | |
The calculation is that it's at the scale of 1:240. | 0:17:56 | 0:18:01 | |
That fills a whole whacking wall with an image of the city of Rome. | 0:18:01 | 0:18:06 | |
But even more intriguing than those pieces of the grand Rome | 0:18:11 | 0:18:14 | |
are the fragments of the map which show in extraordinary detail | 0:18:14 | 0:18:18 | |
the streets, houses and apartment blocks where ordinary Romans | 0:18:18 | 0:18:22 | |
lived and worked. | 0:18:22 | 0:18:23 | |
And what they show is that Rome had not been laid out by city planners. | 0:18:23 | 0:18:28 | |
It had grown chaotically over time. | 0:18:28 | 0:18:31 | |
-It fits! -SHE LAUGHS | 0:18:31 | 0:18:33 | |
So what we've got here is a really mixed area. | 0:18:34 | 0:18:38 | |
We've got the rich houses, the rather large ones, quite posh | 0:18:38 | 0:18:43 | |
with little portico gardens at the back. | 0:18:43 | 0:18:46 | |
Even these large houses have got shops or workshops opening | 0:18:46 | 0:18:52 | |
directly onto the street in front. | 0:18:52 | 0:18:54 | |
And opposite those houses is what looks to me like | 0:18:54 | 0:18:58 | |
a kind of medium-rank high-rise building. | 0:18:58 | 0:19:02 | |
Over here is what looks, for all the world, like a warehouse. | 0:19:02 | 0:19:07 | |
This is a bit more of a mystery. It's got columns round about. | 0:19:07 | 0:19:13 | |
And these rather strange U-shaped things in the middle. | 0:19:15 | 0:19:19 | |
The current idea is that these are hedges, | 0:19:19 | 0:19:23 | |
so this is some sort of garden, | 0:19:23 | 0:19:26 | |
possibly private, possibly public, possibly religious, who knows. | 0:19:26 | 0:19:31 | |
What this reminds me | 0:19:31 | 0:19:32 | |
is that Rome is not zoned in the way that many modern cities are. | 0:19:32 | 0:19:38 | |
Rome was a place where the rich lived next to | 0:19:39 | 0:19:42 | |
the shops and to the workshops and to the bar, | 0:19:42 | 0:19:45 | |
and to the not-so-rich, and to the warehouse, and to the public garden. | 0:19:45 | 0:19:50 | |
The other thing is that the streets themselves are pretty narrow. | 0:19:50 | 0:19:55 | |
And this one, on the plan, looks like a main highway. | 0:19:55 | 0:19:59 | |
And in a way, it is. But if you look at its width, | 0:19:59 | 0:20:02 | |
it's only as wide as these little shops are deep. | 0:20:02 | 0:20:06 | |
And if you go round here, there is a tiny little passageway | 0:20:06 | 0:20:10 | |
that certainly, you wouldn't want to walk down late at night. | 0:20:10 | 0:20:15 | |
Rome is not like Paris. It isn't full of boulevards. | 0:20:15 | 0:20:19 | |
Rome was a rabbit warren. | 0:20:19 | 0:20:22 | |
It is frustrating in a way that so little of the map has survived, | 0:20:24 | 0:20:28 | |
but there are other ways to get a feel for the ancient streetscape, | 0:20:28 | 0:20:33 | |
like coming to a mediaeval street in the modern city. | 0:20:33 | 0:20:36 | |
Ancient Rome's roads were so narrow and its roofs | 0:20:36 | 0:20:40 | |
so perilously high that they were full of dangers, | 0:20:40 | 0:20:42 | |
like falling chamber pots. | 0:20:42 | 0:20:45 | |
And Roman writers jokingly recommended that | 0:20:45 | 0:20:47 | |
no Roman go out without writing a will. | 0:20:47 | 0:20:50 | |
We even know of one 13-year-old tourist, Papirius Proculus, | 0:20:50 | 0:20:55 | |
who was brained by a flying roof tile. | 0:20:55 | 0:20:58 | |
There are all kinds of things here that remind me of the Roman streetscape. | 0:20:58 | 0:21:06 | |
This little shop opening directly onto the street. | 0:21:06 | 0:21:10 | |
The lock-ups, how narrow it all is. | 0:21:10 | 0:21:15 | |
There is actually a story told by one Roman writer about how he could | 0:21:15 | 0:21:21 | |
shake hands with the guy living in the apartment across the road. | 0:21:21 | 0:21:26 | |
You couldn't quite do that here, unless you had really long arms, | 0:21:26 | 0:21:30 | |
but it's not far off. | 0:21:30 | 0:21:31 | |
I also wonder about the kind of street community you had here. | 0:21:32 | 0:21:38 | |
The funny thing about the story of the two guys who could shake hands is that they never did. | 0:21:38 | 0:21:46 | |
In fact, the writer says he never saw the guy on the other side of the street, | 0:21:46 | 0:21:52 | |
he never even heard him. | 0:21:52 | 0:21:53 | |
Which makes me think that amongst all this face-to-face proximity, | 0:21:53 | 0:21:59 | |
amongst the on-top-of-each-other living, | 0:21:59 | 0:22:01 | |
for some people, it must have been a pretty anonymous kind of city. | 0:22:01 | 0:22:05 | |
That Roman writer was a poet called Juvenal, | 0:22:13 | 0:22:16 | |
a satirist who lived in Rome around 100 AD. | 0:22:16 | 0:22:20 | |
So how might HIS domestic arrangements compare with ours today? | 0:22:20 | 0:22:24 | |
To help me find out, a very gracious Italian lady | 0:22:24 | 0:22:28 | |
living on the same street has let me poke around her apartment. | 0:22:28 | 0:22:32 | |
-Buongiorno! Come va? -Bene. Sono Mary... | 0:22:32 | 0:22:36 | |
'Looking at the modern setup can help us see | 0:22:36 | 0:22:38 | |
'what's distinctively different about the ancient one.' | 0:22:38 | 0:22:42 | |
It may seem a bit odd just barging into someone's house like this, | 0:22:49 | 0:22:53 | |
but I've got a simple point to make. | 0:22:53 | 0:22:56 | |
On the outside, | 0:22:57 | 0:22:59 | |
a place like this looks much like an ancient Roman apartment block. | 0:22:59 | 0:23:06 | |
But come inside and it reminds you of the differences. | 0:23:06 | 0:23:09 | |
Now, that's not just the washing machine, the microwave. | 0:23:09 | 0:23:12 | |
We know the Romans didn't have those. | 0:23:12 | 0:23:15 | |
But all the things that we take for granted as absolutely basic services here - | 0:23:15 | 0:23:20 | |
running water, a lavatory, heating. | 0:23:20 | 0:23:25 | |
Actually, some natural light. | 0:23:25 | 0:23:28 | |
Many of the people living on the upper floors of a Roman high-rise wouldn't even have those. | 0:23:28 | 0:23:35 | |
Now, the consequence of that is absolutely obvious. | 0:23:35 | 0:23:39 | |
You simply had to go out to get almost everything that we | 0:23:39 | 0:23:45 | |
take for granted as having at home. | 0:23:45 | 0:23:47 | |
You went out to eat, to wash, to get water, | 0:23:47 | 0:23:50 | |
and if you didn't throw it out of the window, to go to the lavatory. | 0:23:50 | 0:23:56 | |
Grazie. Grazie tante. | 0:23:58 | 0:24:00 | |
It's a way of life that has largely disappeared from modern cities in the West. | 0:24:05 | 0:24:10 | |
But in ancient Rome, life was lived outdoors. | 0:24:10 | 0:24:13 | |
Rooms in a high-rise were used mostly just for sleeping. | 0:24:13 | 0:24:16 | |
Your basic facilities were spread out over the city. | 0:24:16 | 0:24:21 | |
As one amazing archaeological site not far from Rome makes clear | 0:24:21 | 0:24:25 | |
for ordinary Romans, | 0:24:25 | 0:24:26 | |
what we now do in private could be a far more public affair. | 0:24:26 | 0:24:31 | |
I just love this place. | 0:24:32 | 0:24:35 | |
If you want to understand a culture, look to its lavatories. | 0:24:35 | 0:24:39 | |
It's not a bad motto. | 0:24:39 | 0:24:42 | |
And this is a Roman communal toilet. | 0:24:42 | 0:24:46 | |
According to one ancient guidebook that survives, | 0:24:46 | 0:24:49 | |
there are 144 public latrines in downtown Rome. | 0:24:49 | 0:24:54 | |
But of course, we don't know how many seats each had. | 0:24:54 | 0:24:57 | |
It's not exactly clear how this worked. What about this channel? | 0:25:02 | 0:25:07 | |
Did it have running water in it, | 0:25:07 | 0:25:09 | |
or was it just to catch the drips and the bad aims? | 0:25:09 | 0:25:12 | |
And what about this hole? Was that for men to pee through? | 0:25:12 | 0:25:15 | |
Or was that where you put the sponge to wipe your bottom? Perhaps both. | 0:25:18 | 0:25:23 | |
And do we think it was unisex? Who knows? | 0:25:23 | 0:25:27 | |
But the point's a simple one - this is how we have to imagine the ancient city. | 0:25:27 | 0:25:31 | |
Everyone shitting together. | 0:25:31 | 0:25:35 | |
Tunics up, togas up, trousers down, chatting as they went. | 0:25:35 | 0:25:42 | |
And it wasn't just going to the lav that was a social activity. | 0:25:42 | 0:25:47 | |
Often, there was no sanitation on the upper floors of a high-rise, | 0:25:47 | 0:25:50 | |
so most Romans went to the public baths to wash | 0:25:50 | 0:25:54 | |
and let it all hang out. | 0:25:54 | 0:25:56 | |
We don't often you get to hear what | 0:25:56 | 0:25:58 | |
the baths meant to ordinary people. | 0:25:58 | 0:26:01 | |
But this tombstone | 0:26:02 | 0:26:05 | |
of an ordinary guy | 0:26:05 | 0:26:07 | |
interestingly lists baths, | 0:26:07 | 0:26:10 | |
and associated activities, | 0:26:10 | 0:26:13 | |
as one of THE great pleasures of life. | 0:26:13 | 0:26:15 | |
And he says, Here I am, I'm in this tomb... | 0:26:17 | 0:26:19 | |
"Primus notissimus..." | 0:26:19 | 0:26:23 | |
..known to the world as Primus, or famous Primus. | 0:26:23 | 0:26:27 | |
Then he goes on to say, | 0:26:27 | 0:26:29 | |
I lived on Lucrine oysters... | 0:26:29 | 0:26:32 | |
It's the very best you could get. | 0:26:32 | 0:26:35 | |
..and I often drank Falernian wine. | 0:26:35 | 0:26:38 | |
That's like saying, "I often drank the really best claret." | 0:26:38 | 0:26:41 | |
He has a nice summing up. | 0:26:41 | 0:26:44 | |
"Balnea, | 0:26:44 | 0:26:46 | |
"vina, venus..." | 0:26:46 | 0:26:48 | |
Baths, wine and sex. | 0:26:48 | 0:26:51 | |
"..me cum senuere per annos." | 0:26:51 | 0:26:54 | |
They grew old with me, I enjoyed them - I suppose - | 0:26:54 | 0:26:57 | |
till I was old. | 0:26:57 | 0:26:59 | |
We find that combination - | 0:26:59 | 0:27:02 | |
baths, wine and sex - elsewhere. | 0:27:02 | 0:27:05 | |
There's another nice tombstone of a man called | 0:27:05 | 0:27:08 | |
Tiberius Claudius Secundus | 0:27:08 | 0:27:11 | |
and he appeals to the same threesome, | 0:27:11 | 0:27:14 | |
but in a slightly more worldly-wise way. | 0:27:14 | 0:27:17 | |
"Baths, wine and sex," he said, | 0:27:17 | 0:27:20 | |
"ruin your body!" | 0:27:20 | 0:27:22 | |
True! | 0:27:22 | 0:27:24 | |
But they're what makes life really worth living! | 0:27:24 | 0:27:27 | |
When you look at Rome's baths, | 0:27:33 | 0:27:34 | |
it's not hard to see why ordinary Romans were so keen on them. | 0:27:34 | 0:27:39 | |
Built by various emperors, | 0:27:39 | 0:27:40 | |
the most famous were the size of small towns | 0:27:40 | 0:27:44 | |
and their ruins still loom large in the Roman cityscape. | 0:27:44 | 0:27:47 | |
By far the best preserved is actually one of the smaller sort | 0:27:50 | 0:27:53 | |
in the town of Herculaneum, not far from Pompeii. | 0:27:53 | 0:27:57 | |
It's an extraordinary place, | 0:27:57 | 0:28:00 | |
the only one where you can walk through Roman baths, | 0:28:00 | 0:28:03 | |
pretty much as they were. | 0:28:03 | 0:28:05 | |
WATER DRIPS | 0:28:08 | 0:28:10 | |
More Turkish baths than local swimming pool, they were centres | 0:28:10 | 0:28:14 | |
of social life, where locals didn't just get a place to sweat and steam, | 0:28:14 | 0:28:18 | |
they also got stalls for food and drink | 0:28:18 | 0:28:21 | |
and booths for a massage, a shave, | 0:28:21 | 0:28:23 | |
or maybe even sex on the side. | 0:28:23 | 0:28:26 | |
Although it's hard to visualise today, | 0:28:26 | 0:28:29 | |
there are vivid descriptions of the baths as rough, noisy places, | 0:28:29 | 0:28:33 | |
full of grunting gym-goers, men getting their armpits plucked | 0:28:33 | 0:28:36 | |
and loitering thieves, where you were as likely | 0:28:36 | 0:28:39 | |
to get your coat nicked as catch the clap. | 0:28:39 | 0:28:42 | |
The baths weren't just about hygiene - | 0:28:43 | 0:28:46 | |
they were about pleasure and about community. | 0:28:46 | 0:28:49 | |
Even the rich, | 0:28:49 | 0:28:51 | |
who had their own private baths at home, | 0:28:51 | 0:28:54 | |
even the Emperor, | 0:28:54 | 0:28:55 | |
might occasionally put in a celebrity appearance | 0:28:55 | 0:28:59 | |
at the people's baths. | 0:28:59 | 0:29:01 | |
In some ways, | 0:29:01 | 0:29:03 | |
they were a great social leveller. | 0:29:03 | 0:29:06 | |
Imagine - everybody's here in the nude. | 0:29:06 | 0:29:10 | |
It's then that the poor man, | 0:29:10 | 0:29:13 | |
aged 20, with a great body, | 0:29:13 | 0:29:16 | |
can turn the tables on that | 0:29:16 | 0:29:19 | |
60-year-old Roman plutocrat, | 0:29:19 | 0:29:21 | |
with a paunch and a hernia! | 0:29:21 | 0:29:24 | |
But in other ways, | 0:29:24 | 0:29:26 | |
they tended to reinforce the social hierarchy. | 0:29:26 | 0:29:30 | |
The poor came along with no-one to carry their stuff | 0:29:30 | 0:29:33 | |
or rub them down. | 0:29:33 | 0:29:34 | |
The rich came with a whole retinue of staff, | 0:29:34 | 0:29:38 | |
elbowing the man's way through to the pool, | 0:29:38 | 0:29:41 | |
pushing the poor aside. | 0:29:41 | 0:29:43 | |
In fact, there's a lovely anecdote of the Emperor Hadrian, | 0:29:43 | 0:29:48 | |
who goes to the public baths one day | 0:29:48 | 0:29:51 | |
and sees a man rubbing himself down against the wall. | 0:29:51 | 0:29:56 | |
Hadrian says, "What's that guy doing?" | 0:29:56 | 0:30:00 | |
And someone replies, "Oh, he's rubbing himself down on the wall | 0:30:01 | 0:30:05 | |
"because he doesn't have a slave to do it for him." | 0:30:05 | 0:30:08 | |
So the generous Emperor gives him a slave. | 0:30:08 | 0:30:12 | |
The next time Hadrian shows up at the baths, | 0:30:12 | 0:30:16 | |
there's 20 or so men rubbing themselves down against the wall, | 0:30:16 | 0:30:20 | |
all hoping for a little piece of imperial generosity. | 0:30:20 | 0:30:24 | |
But Hadrian's a canny old bird | 0:30:24 | 0:30:27 | |
and he says, | 0:30:27 | 0:30:28 | |
"Tell them to rub each other down!" | 0:30:28 | 0:30:31 | |
However exotic this world might now seem, | 0:30:35 | 0:30:39 | |
for me, spaces like the public baths and toilets | 0:30:39 | 0:30:42 | |
tell us a lot about how | 0:30:42 | 0:30:44 | |
Roman communal living created those voices | 0:30:44 | 0:30:48 | |
that feel so familiar today. | 0:30:48 | 0:30:51 | |
Sure, some of them have got serious messages, but they're also | 0:30:51 | 0:30:55 | |
wonderfully sardonic, | 0:30:55 | 0:30:57 | |
irreverent, and so recognisably urban. | 0:30:57 | 0:31:01 | |
There's a marvellous guy from Tivoli, Flavius Agricola, | 0:31:01 | 0:31:06 | |
and he's got some great advice on his tombstone. | 0:31:06 | 0:31:09 | |
"Put on your party hats, my friend, | 0:31:09 | 0:31:12 | |
"drink down that wine, | 0:31:12 | 0:31:14 | |
"and don't say no to sex with pretty girls, | 0:31:14 | 0:31:18 | |
"because you won't get a chance when you're dead." | 0:31:18 | 0:31:21 | |
That's what urban living, | 0:31:22 | 0:31:24 | |
cheek-by-jowl, bottom-by-bottom, is all about. | 0:31:24 | 0:31:28 | |
It makes you live faster, | 0:31:28 | 0:31:31 | |
talk faster and think a bit differently. | 0:31:31 | 0:31:34 | |
PEOPLE CHATTER | 0:31:34 | 0:31:37 | |
One of the big best places to glimpse the humour | 0:31:39 | 0:31:42 | |
and saltiness of this world | 0:31:42 | 0:31:45 | |
is the ancient Roman bar. | 0:31:45 | 0:31:47 | |
Much like any modern Italian city, | 0:31:47 | 0:31:49 | |
Rome was awash with hundreds of taverns and eating places, | 0:31:49 | 0:31:53 | |
ranging from seedy dens and strip joints to something | 0:31:53 | 0:31:56 | |
much more like the modern winebar or gastropub. | 0:31:56 | 0:31:59 | |
Today, these places are nice lifestyle extras, | 0:31:59 | 0:32:03 | |
but if you were living at the top of an ancient high-rise, the streets | 0:32:03 | 0:32:07 | |
were your living room, the baths your bathroom | 0:32:07 | 0:32:11 | |
and this was your kitchen. | 0:32:11 | 0:32:13 | |
So, who do you meet in a Roman bar? | 0:32:13 | 0:32:16 | |
Well, the poet Juvenal | 0:32:17 | 0:32:19 | |
conjures up a really disreputable crew who, he says, | 0:32:19 | 0:32:23 | |
hang out in Roman bars - thieves and cutthroats, | 0:32:23 | 0:32:27 | |
runaways, even the local coffin-maker, | 0:32:27 | 0:32:30 | |
because in Rome, it's the poor who are eating out, | 0:32:30 | 0:32:32 | |
the rich are dining at home. | 0:32:32 | 0:32:35 | |
We mustn't forget the landlord and landlady. | 0:32:35 | 0:32:38 | |
We get a little glimpse of them in an amazing tombstone | 0:32:38 | 0:32:42 | |
found just outside Rome, | 0:32:42 | 0:32:44 | |
put up to a pair of innkeepers, man and wife. | 0:32:44 | 0:32:48 | |
He's called Lucius Calidius Eroticus | 0:32:48 | 0:32:53 | |
and she's Fanniae Voluptas. | 0:32:53 | 0:32:57 | |
Now, these have just got to be trade names, | 0:32:57 | 0:33:00 | |
because Calidius Eroticus | 0:33:00 | 0:33:04 | |
means Mr Hot Sex | 0:33:04 | 0:33:06 | |
and Fanniae Voluptas... well, she's Madame Gorgeous, | 0:33:06 | 0:33:12 | |
so it's the bar of Hot Sex and Mrs Gorgeous! | 0:33:12 | 0:33:16 | |
Don't get the wrong idea about Fanniae, though, | 0:33:16 | 0:33:20 | |
because it doesn't mean that in Latin! | 0:33:20 | 0:33:22 | |
Quite a few ancient bars have actually survived, | 0:33:28 | 0:33:32 | |
but one in particular, in Pompeii, | 0:33:32 | 0:33:34 | |
captures the flavour of ancient bar life on its walls. | 0:33:34 | 0:33:37 | |
Here, at eye level, in its back saloon, | 0:33:39 | 0:33:41 | |
are wonderfully vivid images | 0:33:41 | 0:33:43 | |
of Romans eating and drinking, gambling and being served wine. | 0:33:43 | 0:33:47 | |
And here, one that's been sadly hacked away, | 0:33:47 | 0:33:52 | |
probably by some Victorian moralist, | 0:33:52 | 0:33:54 | |
because what it showed, | 0:33:54 | 0:33:56 | |
as we can tell from an early 19th-century picture of it, | 0:33:56 | 0:34:01 | |
is a couple of people - a bloke and woman - | 0:34:01 | 0:34:04 | |
having sex, | 0:34:04 | 0:34:06 | |
with wine glasses in their hand, | 0:34:06 | 0:34:09 | |
simultaneously, and balanced on a tightrope. | 0:34:09 | 0:34:13 | |
All that's left of it is the bloke's feet! | 0:34:13 | 0:34:17 | |
Whether life in the average Roman pub | 0:34:19 | 0:34:22 | |
was quite as raunchy as these pictures suggest, I don't know, | 0:34:22 | 0:34:27 | |
but there are plenty of graffiti round Pompeii, saying words | 0:34:27 | 0:34:31 | |
to the effect of, "I screwed the barmaid," | 0:34:31 | 0:34:34 | |
so it doesn't take much to guess | 0:34:34 | 0:34:36 | |
what happened after closing time. | 0:34:36 | 0:34:38 | |
And certainly, the Roman rich | 0:34:38 | 0:34:41 | |
were paranoid about pub culture. | 0:34:41 | 0:34:44 | |
It's here they thought that the people got above themselves, | 0:34:44 | 0:34:48 | |
planned riots, got awkward, | 0:34:48 | 0:34:51 | |
got very drunk, and they were hugely disdainful | 0:34:51 | 0:34:55 | |
of the kind of vulgarity of it all. | 0:34:55 | 0:34:57 | |
Of course, the rich have always said that kind of thing. | 0:34:57 | 0:35:01 | |
They gambled themselves silly, | 0:35:01 | 0:35:03 | |
but take a couple of poor travellers and give them a game of dice | 0:35:03 | 0:35:06 | |
and the rich are prophesying instant moral decline. | 0:35:06 | 0:35:11 | |
The best example of a bar that isn't bothered by any of this moralising | 0:35:15 | 0:35:19 | |
is in ancient Ostia, a harbour town not far from Rome. | 0:35:19 | 0:35:24 | |
Inside are a set of paintings that take us right into the world | 0:35:24 | 0:35:28 | |
of Roman anti-establishment bar humour. | 0:35:28 | 0:35:31 | |
The art historian John Clarke has come to explore it with me. | 0:35:31 | 0:35:36 | |
Come in here | 0:35:36 | 0:35:37 | |
and you see these men... | 0:35:37 | 0:35:40 | |
We've only got the tops of them | 0:35:40 | 0:35:42 | |
because later on, they got cut off and lost. | 0:35:42 | 0:35:45 | |
But they are sitting on a common latrine. | 0:35:45 | 0:35:48 | |
Here, the artist has given them speech lines | 0:35:48 | 0:35:52 | |
above each of their heads. | 0:35:52 | 0:35:54 | |
We have "mulione sedes" - | 0:35:54 | 0:35:56 | |
you're sitting on a mule driver. | 0:35:56 | 0:36:00 | |
A mule driver was a common saying for being constipated, | 0:36:00 | 0:36:03 | |
because mule drivers were very stubborn. | 0:36:03 | 0:36:06 | |
So this is a very stubborn evacuation procedure. | 0:36:06 | 0:36:09 | |
-So this guy has got constipation. -Right. That one is quite wonderful. | 0:36:10 | 0:36:14 | |
It's my favourite, actually. | 0:36:14 | 0:36:16 | |
"Amice fugit te proverbium - bene caca et irrima medicos?" | 0:36:16 | 0:36:18 | |
That's a bad word. | 0:36:22 | 0:36:23 | |
It would be something like this. | 0:36:23 | 0:36:26 | |
Buddy, don't you know the saying - | 0:36:26 | 0:36:28 | |
"shit well and bugger the doctors"? | 0:36:28 | 0:36:32 | |
In other words, you don't need them. | 0:36:32 | 0:36:34 | |
Higher up on the wall are images | 0:36:34 | 0:36:36 | |
of the great thinkers of ancient Greece - | 0:36:36 | 0:36:39 | |
the Seven Sages - only three of which are left. | 0:36:39 | 0:36:42 | |
Thales from Miletus. | 0:36:42 | 0:36:44 | |
Solon from Athens. | 0:36:44 | 0:36:45 | |
Chilon from Sparta. | 0:36:45 | 0:36:47 | |
Much loved by Roman teachers, | 0:36:47 | 0:36:49 | |
they were known for their high-minded catchphrases | 0:36:49 | 0:36:52 | |
on how best to live, | 0:36:52 | 0:36:53 | |
yet here, even they are literally talking crap. | 0:36:53 | 0:36:57 | |
Here's the best of all, really... | 0:36:57 | 0:36:59 | |
"Vissire tacite Chilon docuit subdolus." | 0:36:59 | 0:37:03 | |
Clever Chilon taught people how to fart without making noise. | 0:37:03 | 0:37:08 | |
Silent farting was a speciality, apparently! | 0:37:08 | 0:37:12 | |
Chilon's the one who did say, you shouldn't... | 0:37:13 | 0:37:17 | |
His canonical saying is - you shouldn't desire the impossible. | 0:37:17 | 0:37:21 | |
Maybe it's possible to learn how to be a silent farter. Who knows! | 0:37:21 | 0:37:26 | |
We shouldn't get the impression from a place like this | 0:37:34 | 0:37:37 | |
that the only thing the ordinary Romans joked about | 0:37:37 | 0:37:41 | |
was their bowels and their constipation. | 0:37:41 | 0:37:44 | |
In fact, an amazing collection of Roman popular jokes still survives. | 0:37:44 | 0:37:51 | |
Almost 300 of them. The Roman joke book. | 0:37:51 | 0:37:54 | |
And that shows Romans joking about almost everything. | 0:37:54 | 0:37:59 | |
One of my favourites goes like this... | 0:37:59 | 0:38:01 | |
A man is walking along the street, he meets a friend and says, | 0:38:01 | 0:38:05 | |
"Oh, are you alive? I heard you were dead." | 0:38:05 | 0:38:09 | |
He replies, "Look, you can see I'm alive." | 0:38:09 | 0:38:12 | |
"Oh," said the other. | 0:38:13 | 0:38:15 | |
"The man who told me you were dead, is much more reliable than you are." | 0:38:15 | 0:38:19 | |
Silly joke, perhaps a slightly nasty joke, but for me, | 0:38:21 | 0:38:26 | |
it opens up one of the big problems of big-city living. | 0:38:26 | 0:38:31 | |
In a world without ID cards or passports, | 0:38:31 | 0:38:35 | |
who are you? | 0:38:35 | 0:38:36 | |
How do you know who you are? | 0:38:36 | 0:38:38 | |
How do you prove who you are? | 0:38:38 | 0:38:41 | |
That's a problem. | 0:38:41 | 0:38:42 | |
What jokes like these do | 0:38:49 | 0:38:51 | |
is take us into the minds of ordinary Romans, | 0:38:51 | 0:38:54 | |
but they also give us a different view | 0:38:54 | 0:38:56 | |
on how to picture the ancient city streets. | 0:38:56 | 0:38:59 | |
They really weren't filled with all the big guys, the toffs, | 0:38:59 | 0:39:04 | |
the togas, the politicians, they were flooded by its ordinary people. | 0:39:04 | 0:39:08 | |
This was the people's city. | 0:39:08 | 0:39:10 | |
You wouldn't have come across | 0:39:15 | 0:39:18 | |
many of the rich and powerful in the streets and squares of ancient Rome. | 0:39:18 | 0:39:22 | |
They'd much more likely have been hurried along in a sedan chair | 0:39:22 | 0:39:26 | |
carried by slaves, curtains drawn, a bit like a modern celeb | 0:39:26 | 0:39:30 | |
in a modern, chauffeur-driven blacked-out limo. | 0:39:30 | 0:39:33 | |
These kind of places were the people's places | 0:39:33 | 0:39:37 | |
for doing business, for grabbing a bite to eat, for fighting, | 0:39:37 | 0:39:41 | |
for flirting, for just hanging out. | 0:39:41 | 0:39:45 | |
And it could all get pretty packed, | 0:39:45 | 0:39:48 | |
as one tragic tombstone makes horribly clear. | 0:39:48 | 0:39:51 | |
It's put up to a woman called Ummidia | 0:39:51 | 0:39:55 | |
and to Ummidius Primigenius, a boy of 13 years old. | 0:39:55 | 0:39:57 | |
It's put up by Ummidius Anoptes, probably her partner. | 0:39:57 | 0:40:03 | |
He explains, "una dies" - one day, carried them both off. | 0:40:03 | 0:40:08 | |
They met the final day of their destiny together. | 0:40:08 | 0:40:13 | |
How did they die? | 0:40:13 | 0:40:15 | |
"Compressi examine turbae." | 0:40:15 | 0:40:18 | |
They were crushed by the swarm of a crowd. | 0:40:18 | 0:40:22 | |
Now, we don't know what was going on in Rome that day, | 0:40:22 | 0:40:26 | |
but it sure gives you a very clear idea | 0:40:26 | 0:40:29 | |
of just how crowded the city could get. | 0:40:29 | 0:40:32 | |
If this gives us a clue | 0:40:38 | 0:40:39 | |
on how to re-people the streets of ancient Rome, | 0:40:39 | 0:40:43 | |
what happens when you look at its most famous public space | 0:40:43 | 0:40:46 | |
through this lens? | 0:40:46 | 0:40:48 | |
That space is known as The Forum. | 0:40:48 | 0:40:51 | |
It's now a picturesque but sad wreck of what it once was, | 0:40:51 | 0:40:55 | |
and honestly, it's hard for almost anyone to make head or tail of. | 0:40:55 | 0:40:59 | |
This was once the location of some of the city's main law courts, | 0:40:59 | 0:41:03 | |
political meeting places and grandest temples. | 0:41:03 | 0:41:06 | |
Let's forget for a bit the forum of the great speech makers, | 0:41:07 | 0:41:12 | |
the politicians, the celebrity lawyers, | 0:41:12 | 0:41:16 | |
the friends, Romans, countrymen types. | 0:41:16 | 0:41:20 | |
Of course, all of that stuff happened here, | 0:41:20 | 0:41:22 | |
but my Forum isn't the Forum of those bigwigs in their white togas. | 0:41:22 | 0:41:28 | |
My Forum is the Forum of the poor people, the middling people, | 0:41:28 | 0:41:33 | |
the ordinary people in their tunics, even in their trousers. | 0:41:33 | 0:41:38 | |
In fact, one Roman comic writer | 0:41:38 | 0:41:40 | |
has left us a guide to the types of the Forum. | 0:41:40 | 0:41:44 | |
A satirical guide to who you might find where. | 0:41:44 | 0:41:48 | |
I'm off to follow him. | 0:41:48 | 0:41:50 | |
This writer was a man called Plautus, | 0:41:54 | 0:41:56 | |
the author of boy-meets-girl farces. | 0:41:56 | 0:41:59 | |
What he gives us isn't the official guide | 0:41:59 | 0:42:01 | |
to the Forum as the big guys might want us to see it, | 0:42:01 | 0:42:04 | |
but a down and dirty rough guide. | 0:42:04 | 0:42:08 | |
This doesn't look great now, but it used to be a big public hall. | 0:42:08 | 0:42:13 | |
What does Plautus say? | 0:42:13 | 0:42:16 | |
He says, | 0:42:16 | 0:42:17 | |
this is where you find the bargain hunters | 0:42:17 | 0:42:20 | |
and the clapped-out prostitutes. | 0:42:20 | 0:42:22 | |
Elsewhere, Plautus talks about the wideboys, | 0:42:26 | 0:42:29 | |
the sort you might have found playing for profit | 0:42:29 | 0:42:31 | |
at one of the gaming boards you can still see | 0:42:31 | 0:42:33 | |
scratched all over the steps of one of the main law courts. | 0:42:33 | 0:42:36 | |
This is the board and it's got loads of dips in it. | 0:42:38 | 0:42:43 | |
Actually, someone has spent a long time making those great pockets. | 0:42:43 | 0:42:48 | |
It's always hard to reconstruct the rules of these games. | 0:42:48 | 0:42:50 | |
It's like having a Monopoly board | 0:42:50 | 0:42:52 | |
and a house and a get-out-of-jail-free card | 0:42:52 | 0:42:54 | |
and trying to reconstruct what you're supposed to do. | 0:42:54 | 0:42:57 | |
I'm going to give this game a try. | 0:42:57 | 0:42:59 | |
First off, the marbles. | 0:43:02 | 0:43:04 | |
Losing my marbles. | 0:43:08 | 0:43:10 | |
Perhaps what you did was tiddlywinks. That's a possibility. | 0:43:10 | 0:43:13 | |
Oh, look at that. | 0:43:17 | 0:43:19 | |
My conclusion from this academic experiment, | 0:43:21 | 0:43:25 | |
is that this is a tiddlywink board. | 0:43:25 | 0:43:27 | |
What about the Forum's temples of the Roman gods? | 0:43:30 | 0:43:34 | |
What does Plautus have to say about those? | 0:43:34 | 0:43:37 | |
This is one place where all those different levels of life | 0:43:37 | 0:43:40 | |
in the Forum come very nicely together. | 0:43:40 | 0:43:43 | |
It's the temple of the God Castor. | 0:43:45 | 0:43:48 | |
Those three columns are one of the most iconic images | 0:43:48 | 0:43:51 | |
of the whole forum. | 0:43:51 | 0:43:54 | |
But round the corner, we find a really different kind of temple. | 0:43:54 | 0:43:57 | |
Underneath, built into the temple itself, | 0:43:57 | 0:44:01 | |
is a row of little shops. | 0:44:01 | 0:44:04 | |
You walk a bit further on and you look to the back of the temple, | 0:44:04 | 0:44:08 | |
go back to Plautus, what does he say? | 0:44:08 | 0:44:10 | |
Rent boys. | 0:44:12 | 0:44:13 | |
And we don't just have to rely on a comic writer for evidence | 0:44:17 | 0:44:20 | |
of ordinary life in the Forum. | 0:44:20 | 0:44:23 | |
Modern archaeology has succeeded in backing him up. | 0:44:23 | 0:44:26 | |
When a group of Scandinavian archaeologists excavated | 0:44:26 | 0:44:29 | |
one of the temple's shops, | 0:44:29 | 0:44:31 | |
they unearthed some extraordinary ordinary objects, | 0:44:31 | 0:44:35 | |
including evidence of what looks like a Roman dentists. | 0:44:35 | 0:44:39 | |
Siri, tell me about these teeth. | 0:44:39 | 0:44:41 | |
They are one of the most amazing archaeological discoveries | 0:44:43 | 0:44:47 | |
ever made. There's 86 of them. | 0:44:47 | 0:44:49 | |
Where exactly were they found? | 0:44:49 | 0:44:51 | |
They were found in the drain of one of the shops | 0:44:51 | 0:44:54 | |
in the podium of the Temple of Castor and Pollux | 0:44:54 | 0:44:57 | |
and they were probably meant to be flushed down into the Cloaca Maxima, | 0:44:57 | 0:45:01 | |
which runs by the side of the temple, but for some reason, they got stuck. | 0:45:01 | 0:45:05 | |
And they've all been actually extracted, haven't they? | 0:45:05 | 0:45:08 | |
Their roots are pretty much whole. | 0:45:08 | 0:45:11 | |
No anaesthetic, apart from a quick glass of wine. | 0:45:11 | 0:45:14 | |
They must have screamed during these operations. | 0:45:14 | 0:45:17 | |
-This is just somebody's agony. -Yes. | 0:45:17 | 0:45:20 | |
'And I didn't just find rotten Roman teeth.' | 0:45:20 | 0:45:23 | |
It was something like a beauty parlour, I think. | 0:45:23 | 0:45:26 | |
We have these fine glasses for oils | 0:45:26 | 0:45:30 | |
and creams, | 0:45:30 | 0:45:31 | |
and this is a drinking cup. | 0:45:31 | 0:45:33 | |
They could also gamble. | 0:45:33 | 0:45:36 | |
See these dice? | 0:45:36 | 0:45:37 | |
Yeah, these are very nice dice. | 0:45:37 | 0:45:39 | |
Perhaps you were playing dice while you were waiting. | 0:45:39 | 0:45:42 | |
-Instead of reading magazines, you were playing dice. -Yes, yes, indeed. | 0:45:42 | 0:45:46 | |
And this looks like a tongue depressor. | 0:45:46 | 0:45:50 | |
-Open wide! -Yes! | 0:45:52 | 0:45:55 | |
Putting all this stuff together, | 0:45:55 | 0:45:57 | |
it's a really wonderful glimpse of the other side of the Forum. | 0:45:57 | 0:46:02 | |
This says the people's place as much as it is the rich people's place. | 0:46:02 | 0:46:08 | |
-Yes. -And this is the kind of stuff that the people are doing there. | 0:46:08 | 0:46:13 | |
-They're playing dice and having their appalling teeth removed. -Yes. | 0:46:13 | 0:46:17 | |
Urgh! | 0:46:17 | 0:46:19 | |
The Roman Forum is a great example | 0:46:33 | 0:46:35 | |
of how our traditional images of Rome are so skewed. | 0:46:35 | 0:46:38 | |
Sure, Rome was a society where the rich dominated the poor, | 0:46:38 | 0:46:42 | |
but it was also an incredibly mixed place, | 0:46:42 | 0:46:45 | |
where even its most sacred spaces were shared. | 0:46:45 | 0:46:48 | |
But just occasionally, | 0:46:50 | 0:46:51 | |
we can see some aggressive attempts to divide the toffs from the poor. | 0:46:51 | 0:46:56 | |
Most people come here to look at this vast temple | 0:47:13 | 0:47:16 | |
put up by the Emperor Augustus. | 0:47:16 | 0:47:19 | |
Nobody pays much attention though to that massive wall behind it, | 0:47:19 | 0:47:23 | |
and in a way, that wall can tell us | 0:47:23 | 0:47:26 | |
more about life in ancient Rome than the marble can. | 0:47:26 | 0:47:30 | |
On the other side of it was an area known as the Subura. | 0:47:31 | 0:47:34 | |
Not exactly slums, but mention Subura to your average Roman | 0:47:34 | 0:47:39 | |
and they'd think crime, prostitution, | 0:47:39 | 0:47:41 | |
something pretty seedy. | 0:47:41 | 0:47:43 | |
This wall's an ideological barrier. | 0:47:43 | 0:47:47 | |
It's saying to anyone who lived in the Subura, | 0:47:47 | 0:47:51 | |
"This is posh territory, keep out!" | 0:47:51 | 0:47:54 | |
There's another story too. | 0:47:56 | 0:47:57 | |
The Subura was full of rickety, wooden, jerry-built, | 0:47:57 | 0:48:03 | |
high-rise blocks, constantly falling down. | 0:48:03 | 0:48:07 | |
It was a real fire trap. | 0:48:07 | 0:48:09 | |
Actually, this wall is a vast firewall. | 0:48:10 | 0:48:14 | |
'Unsurprisingly, the buildings of the Subura have largely disappeared | 0:48:15 | 0:48:19 | |
'but some of the voices from the tenements, | 0:48:19 | 0:48:21 | |
'from that dangerous side of the city, have survived. | 0:48:21 | 0:48:24 | |
'One was found in the foundations of a modern office block in | 0:48:24 | 0:48:28 | |
'a rather grey part of suburban Rome.' | 0:48:28 | 0:48:32 | |
This is the tombstone of a little girl called Doris. | 0:48:52 | 0:48:57 | |
She was "Infelicissima", terribly unlucky. | 0:48:57 | 0:49:01 | |
Why was she unlucky? | 0:49:01 | 0:49:04 | |
Because she died in a fire, a sudden fire of incredible violence. | 0:49:04 | 0:49:09 | |
She had only just had her seventh birthday. | 0:49:09 | 0:49:12 | |
She was seven years and 22 days. | 0:49:12 | 0:49:15 | |
This was put up to her by one of her friends or family, | 0:49:16 | 0:49:20 | |
a woman called Licinia Hedone. | 0:49:20 | 0:49:23 | |
She ends rather touchingly, | 0:49:23 | 0:49:26 | |
"May your bones rest quietly | 0:49:26 | 0:49:29 | |
"and may the earth lie lightly on you." | 0:49:29 | 0:49:33 | |
Doris can't have been the only kid to die this way. | 0:49:40 | 0:49:43 | |
Fires were so common that large parts of the city | 0:49:43 | 0:49:46 | |
burned to the ground on numerous occasions. | 0:49:46 | 0:49:49 | |
But the point is, it wasn't just easy to start a fire, | 0:49:49 | 0:49:54 | |
it was very hard to put one out once it had started. | 0:49:54 | 0:49:58 | |
And there was no efficient, effective public Fire Brigade | 0:49:58 | 0:50:03 | |
in the terms that we know. | 0:50:03 | 0:50:05 | |
There was, it's true, a kind of paramilitary organisation | 0:50:05 | 0:50:10 | |
of watchmen, "vigiles", who did keep an eye open | 0:50:10 | 0:50:14 | |
for fires starting, but they hadn't got much effective equipment | 0:50:14 | 0:50:18 | |
to deal with them if they did. | 0:50:18 | 0:50:20 | |
A few poles to pull building downs to make a fire break, | 0:50:20 | 0:50:24 | |
some pails of water and vinegar | 0:50:24 | 0:50:27 | |
and some blankets to try and stifle the flames. | 0:50:27 | 0:50:31 | |
Some of them were probably pretty brave, but others were corrupt | 0:50:32 | 0:50:35 | |
and on the make. | 0:50:35 | 0:50:38 | |
One story is that in the Great Fire of Rome, | 0:50:38 | 0:50:41 | |
under the Emperor Nero, | 0:50:41 | 0:50:43 | |
the watch, instead of trying to put the flames out, | 0:50:43 | 0:50:47 | |
they joined in looting the buildings that were already ablaze. | 0:50:47 | 0:50:51 | |
I wonder if anyone came to try and rescue Doris? | 0:50:51 | 0:50:54 | |
And that's the big difference with our modern cities. | 0:51:08 | 0:51:11 | |
When you look around them, | 0:51:11 | 0:51:13 | |
it's easy to see all the things we take for granted, | 0:51:13 | 0:51:16 | |
everything from litter bins | 0:51:16 | 0:51:18 | |
to friendly or unfriendly cops on the corner. | 0:51:18 | 0:51:21 | |
But in ancient Rome, there were none of these services. | 0:51:21 | 0:51:25 | |
There was hardly a fire brigade, there was no police force, | 0:51:25 | 0:51:28 | |
no prisons, and the only real security forces | 0:51:28 | 0:51:31 | |
were in the pay of the rich. | 0:51:31 | 0:51:33 | |
To flesh out the picture, I went out to meet Corey Brennan, | 0:51:33 | 0:51:37 | |
from the American Academy in Rome. | 0:51:37 | 0:51:39 | |
The issue for me is why they didn't provide services. | 0:51:40 | 0:51:44 | |
Did the poor want the services? | 0:51:44 | 0:51:46 | |
Oh, I'm sure they did. | 0:51:46 | 0:51:48 | |
Because when that guy, Egnatius Rufus, | 0:51:48 | 0:51:51 | |
in the reign of the Emperor Augustus, | 0:51:51 | 0:51:53 | |
starts his own fire brigade, the Emperor Augustus, | 0:51:53 | 0:51:56 | |
instead of saying, "Well done, Egnatius, congratulations, | 0:51:56 | 0:51:59 | |
"thank you very much for helping the people of Rome," | 0:51:59 | 0:52:01 | |
-he basically had him executed. -Yes, precisely. | 0:52:01 | 0:52:04 | |
It goes to show the competition amongst the ruling class, | 0:52:06 | 0:52:09 | |
amongst elites, because each one of them knew if they stepped forward | 0:52:09 | 0:52:12 | |
and effectively provided these types of social services, | 0:52:12 | 0:52:15 | |
that were really needed, that people really wanted, | 0:52:15 | 0:52:19 | |
the type of political cachet | 0:52:19 | 0:52:21 | |
that they could build just from that act | 0:52:21 | 0:52:23 | |
really would make it unbeatable, | 0:52:23 | 0:52:25 | |
so they really worked to cancel each other out, and the people who suffered | 0:52:25 | 0:52:29 | |
were, in fact, the Romans themselves. | 0:52:29 | 0:52:32 | |
But the lack of social services weren't the only problems | 0:52:33 | 0:52:37 | |
on the city streets. | 0:52:37 | 0:52:38 | |
They might have been filled with real life, | 0:52:38 | 0:52:41 | |
but real life, as in any modern city, could be hard to control. | 0:52:41 | 0:52:46 | |
Violence was an ever-present danger, | 0:52:46 | 0:52:49 | |
as one nastily familiar story tells us. | 0:52:49 | 0:52:52 | |
I am about to reveal | 0:52:53 | 0:52:55 | |
a nasty bit of Roman street crime, | 0:52:55 | 0:52:58 | |
a kind of Roman cold case. | 0:52:58 | 0:53:01 | |
It needs a bit of cleaning up first, | 0:53:01 | 0:53:04 | |
it's very dusty. | 0:53:04 | 0:53:05 | |
It's a tombstone | 0:53:05 | 0:53:07 | |
and it's put up by a lady called | 0:53:07 | 0:53:10 | |
Otacilia Narcisa, | 0:53:10 | 0:53:14 | |
to her darling husband. | 0:53:14 | 0:53:18 | |
"Coniugi dulcissimo." | 0:53:18 | 0:53:21 | |
His name... | 0:53:21 | 0:53:23 | |
was Julius Timotheus | 0:53:23 | 0:53:27 | |
and he lived, she said, | 0:53:27 | 0:53:30 | |
P-M - plus or minus 28 years. | 0:53:30 | 0:53:34 | |
That means Otacilia wasn't entirely certain | 0:53:34 | 0:53:37 | |
how old the husband was. | 0:53:37 | 0:53:40 | |
And he had "his blameless life | 0:53:40 | 0:53:44 | |
"snatched away from him | 0:53:44 | 0:53:47 | |
"a latronibus - by robbers." | 0:53:47 | 0:53:52 | |
Not just him - | 0:53:53 | 0:53:55 | |
he was with his | 0:53:55 | 0:53:58 | |
seven alumni. | 0:53:58 | 0:54:01 | |
That can mean foster kids, dependants, | 0:54:01 | 0:54:04 | |
sometimes even pupils. | 0:54:04 | 0:54:07 | |
They were all killed too. | 0:54:07 | 0:54:09 | |
That's what it really means. | 0:54:09 | 0:54:11 | |
This wasn't just a mugging, | 0:54:11 | 0:54:14 | |
this was mass murder. | 0:54:14 | 0:54:16 | |
If the streets were never completely safe by day, then by night, | 0:54:21 | 0:54:26 | |
we know they were lawless places. | 0:54:26 | 0:54:28 | |
The poet Juvenal writes graphically of having | 0:54:28 | 0:54:32 | |
to pick his way home in the dark, dodging the violent gangs | 0:54:32 | 0:54:35 | |
and drunken bullies on the prowl for fights. | 0:54:35 | 0:54:38 | |
Preserved under the foundations of a church in central Rome | 0:54:40 | 0:54:43 | |
is one place that helps us get close to this atmosphere. | 0:54:43 | 0:54:47 | |
Here are the mean streets of a real Roman neighbourhood. | 0:54:47 | 0:54:51 | |
We're a few hundred metres from the Colosseum | 0:54:51 | 0:54:53 | |
and this is a back alley. | 0:54:53 | 0:54:55 | |
This feels like a Roman street. | 0:54:55 | 0:54:57 | |
It's because it IS a Roman street! | 0:54:57 | 0:55:01 | |
What you've got to do, | 0:55:03 | 0:55:05 | |
if you try and reconstruct this, | 0:55:05 | 0:55:07 | |
-you've got to think dirt. -A lot of it. -This is very clean. | 0:55:07 | 0:55:11 | |
-You've got to think smell... -A lot of it. | 0:55:11 | 0:55:15 | |
..but it's also... | 0:55:15 | 0:55:16 | |
it feels a bit scary. | 0:55:16 | 0:55:18 | |
It's a mugger's paradise, there's no doubt about it. | 0:55:18 | 0:55:22 | |
I mean, street crime's one thing but, you know, | 0:55:22 | 0:55:25 | |
apartment blocks directly on the street, | 0:55:25 | 0:55:29 | |
-it's a burglar's, a cat burglar's paradise. -Precisely. | 0:55:29 | 0:55:32 | |
When the Emperor Augustus really wanted people | 0:55:32 | 0:55:36 | |
to come to his games, | 0:55:36 | 0:55:37 | |
what he did was he distributed armed guards throughout the city, | 0:55:37 | 0:55:41 | |
because otherwise, people would be reluctant to leave their houses, | 0:55:41 | 0:55:44 | |
because it was known when there was a big game day, so to speak, | 0:55:44 | 0:55:47 | |
that's precisely... It's like New Year's Eve, | 0:55:47 | 0:55:50 | |
basically, that's the prime day to go robbing. | 0:55:50 | 0:55:54 | |
I mean, when there's a question of a serious breach of public order, | 0:55:54 | 0:55:57 | |
then the officials get interested. | 0:55:57 | 0:56:01 | |
So if the authorities had little interest in the day-to-day | 0:56:03 | 0:56:07 | |
welfare of their ordinary citizens, | 0:56:07 | 0:56:09 | |
what happened if you got murdered in streets like this? | 0:56:09 | 0:56:12 | |
How could your family pursue justice? | 0:56:12 | 0:56:14 | |
The Romans had the system of public courts | 0:56:14 | 0:56:17 | |
and the name is misleading because | 0:56:17 | 0:56:19 | |
what it was was courts that saw to | 0:56:19 | 0:56:22 | |
breaches of the social order. | 0:56:22 | 0:56:24 | |
So you get murder, but really, when there's a political... | 0:56:24 | 0:56:27 | |
-Upper-class murder. -Exactly. | 0:56:27 | 0:56:30 | |
They looked at conspiracy, setting fires. | 0:56:30 | 0:56:33 | |
In order to come in the purview of Roman law, you either have to go | 0:56:33 | 0:56:37 | |
after someone who's rich, well-connected and powerful, | 0:56:37 | 0:56:40 | |
or you have to be making a very big tear in the social fabric. | 0:56:40 | 0:56:44 | |
So if somebody murders my brother, | 0:56:44 | 0:56:48 | |
unless he's important, that's... | 0:56:48 | 0:56:50 | |
the only person who's going to do anything about it, really, is me. | 0:56:50 | 0:56:54 | |
Yes, the self-help. | 0:56:54 | 0:56:56 | |
Today, when we look at Rome's impressive marble monuments, | 0:57:00 | 0:57:04 | |
it's hard to imagine the dirty, dangerous, chaotic city | 0:57:04 | 0:57:08 | |
in which ordinary Romans lived their lives. | 0:57:08 | 0:57:11 | |
So little of it has survived above ground. | 0:57:11 | 0:57:13 | |
But if you know where to look, | 0:57:13 | 0:57:16 | |
it is still possible to get glimpses of their world - | 0:57:16 | 0:57:20 | |
the high-rise tenement blocks, | 0:57:20 | 0:57:22 | |
where tenants lived in fear of fires and the rent collector, | 0:57:22 | 0:57:26 | |
the grunts of gamblers and gym-goers in its bars and bathhouses, | 0:57:26 | 0:57:30 | |
and the hustle of life on its mean streets, | 0:57:30 | 0:57:34 | |
where there was no safety nets when things went wrong. | 0:57:34 | 0:57:37 | |
These streets must have been a tough place to live your life. | 0:57:37 | 0:57:41 | |
All the same, I can't help feeling that they had a spontaneity | 0:57:42 | 0:57:46 | |
and a fun about them that many of our streets have lost. | 0:57:46 | 0:57:50 | |
And just listen to those voices. | 0:57:50 | 0:57:53 | |
What they're saying is that despite all the dangers, | 0:57:53 | 0:57:57 | |
Rome was an exhilarating, | 0:57:57 | 0:57:59 | |
a life-affirming place to be. | 0:57:59 | 0:58:02 | |
And that's why it still speaks to us | 0:58:03 | 0:58:05 | |
after 2,000 years. | 0:58:05 | 0:58:08 | |
'Next week, I'll meet the Romans at home, | 0:58:09 | 0:58:11 | |
'where I'll discover some familiar objects of domestic family life...' | 0:58:11 | 0:58:16 | |
It's a really, really precious piece, because it's the only | 0:58:16 | 0:58:20 | |
cradle that survived from the Roman world. | 0:58:20 | 0:58:23 | |
'..and where I'll piece together a surprising view | 0:58:23 | 0:58:26 | |
'of Roman marriage, childhood, | 0:58:26 | 0:58:28 | |
'slavery and sex.' | 0:58:28 | 0:58:31 | |
This is a Roman menage-a-trois. | 0:58:31 | 0:58:35 | |
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd | 0:58:55 | 0:58:57 |