Digging through time발음듣기
Digging through time
We know that when the archeologists look for traces of ancient cultures, they dig down and we often read about how the ancient ground level was much lower.발음듣기
Every action that we take, everything that we do, everything that we purchase, we're gonna leave something behind, there's gonna be a trace.발음듣기
The Romans were ultimately very efficient so they said often times if there is destruction from a fire:"Let's level off those buildings, make the ground floor into the basement or simply level off the building and put all that rubble around, smooth it and we now have the foundations for the later structures."발음듣기
So, Romans didn't necessarily look at their cities after disasters: fires, floods, earthquakes, the way that we do.발음듣기
So, standing here in the Forum, we notice we go down into the Forum and we look up at the streets around us.발음듣기
So, we'd go down another 20 feet to get to the archaic layers and every monument that you see has a precedent.발음듣기
It replaces the one that's burnt down that was built by Julius Ceasar and completed by Augustus.발음듣기
It in turn replaced a second century B.C. Basilica It in turn replaced earlier republican houses.발음듣기
So, when you're looking for opportunities to go down further such as someone's put a cut in the floor that allows you then to go down to an earlier level and what they end up mostly satisfying themselves with for the Forum Piazza today.발음듣기
But there are many opportunities throughout the area in the Roman Forum where they can go down to earlier and earlier levels.발음듣기
So finding places to do that where you don't destroy what is existing now, that you could say?발음듣기
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