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Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
Hi folks!
I'm not an expert of roman history, but right now I'm watching the 2nd season of "Rome" and there a some questions I have about this show. Right now I wont remember all, so there are more to come.
1. Why is Cato the only one not weaaring the typical senator toga?
2. Was it at these days inapropriate for a women of the upper class to participate an an orgy? (Octavia S2e05)
3. What kind of weapon is that? https://img196.imageshack.us/img196/...hellebarde.png
thx so far
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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3. What kind of weapon is that?
From what I can see, it's definitely a type of halberd.
Apart from some inaccuracies (and too much sex), the series is good IMO, and far more historically correct than any other commercial stuff about the Roman world I've seen so far.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
ziegenpeter
Hi folks!
2. Was it at these days inapropriate for a women of the upper class to participate an an orgy? (Octavia S2e05)
OF course it was, and it was inappropriate for women of lower classes as well
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
As for #3, those are some very Medieval-looking halberds right there...
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
Skullheadhq
OF course it was, and it was inappropriate for women of lower classes as well
Ok, orgies were only for men and slave women?
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Originally Posted by
athanaric
From what I can see, it's definitely a type of halberd.
Authentic or fantasy? It plays in bithynia. But that looks rather late medieval.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
ziegenpeter
Authentic or fantasy? It plays in bithynia. But that looks rather late medieval.
Like Watchman said, halberds like these are Medieval. I somehow doubt they were around at that time. I've never read or heard about halberds being used in Mikra Asia or other parts of the Hellenic/Roman world. Maybe the Chinese used some time of halberd at that time (the distinctively shaped halberds from around the Warring States period comes to my mind*), but those would have looked different. Good eye though, I didn't notice that myself when watching the series.
*
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
The Chinese had their peculiar "dagger-axes" and light halberds, but those looked *very* different - the latter were basically spears with an usually crescent-shaped separate blade affixed to the shaft below the tip, for example.
Actually AFAIK the whole idea of combining the axe-blade, spear-tip and reverse-side hook/spike en bloc didn't occur to weaponsmiths before the later part of High Middle Ages or thereabouts, plus I understand it was slightly structurally tricky. AFAIK knights had been fitting spearheads atop their battleaxes for quite a while before that (to improve the versatility of the weapon), but that's obviously rather different.
TL;DR - somebody in the props departement made a wee bit of a screw-up.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
Watchman
The Chinese had their peculiar "dagger-axes" and light halberds, but those looked *very* different - the latter were basically spears with an usually crescent-shaped separate blade affixed to the shaft below the tip, for example.
Yup, edited my post to show some of the Chinese ones.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
Watchman
TL;DR - somebody in the props departement made a wee bit of a screw-up.
Meh, they probably got a whole load of props used in some past film for a pence, due to the lack of demand for them. Same stories happen all the time. You would not believe how many times those Starship Troopers armour suits were re-used.
Speakign of inaccuracies, by the end of the series, Octavian's troops are wearing a peculiar bronze-looking variant of Lorica Segmentata, which was not even invented until much later, not to mention the date at which it became widespread.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
ziegenpeter
1. Why is Cato the only one not weaaring the typical senator toga?
If I remember correctly, one of the ancient authors/sources mentions that Cato often wore black, I think as a method of "mourning" the current status quo of the Roman state. Not surprising for someone who was (at least apparently) so dedicated to the republican ideals, given the amount of corruption that occurred in his day.
Anyone remember which author it was?
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
Aemilius Paulus
Meh, they probably got a whole load of props used in some past film for a pence, due to the lack of demand for them. Same stories happen all the time. You would not believe how many ties those Starship Troopers armour suits were re-used.
Eh, I daresay the "smart guns" of Aliens take the cake in that regard. The wonders you can do by taking some MG42 derivative props and sticking bicycle handles on them, and covering it all up with much technobabble and attitude... :laugh4:
Honorary also-rans include the creatively reinterpreted WW2 props of Star Wars (the original trilogy; the next three movies Did Not Happen) and cleverly pimped-out modern guns of Robocop. :2thumbsup:
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
Please guys, lets stay ot.
What about the rotation system with the whistle?
Did the soldiers grab the guy in front of them on his hamata?
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
Let us all remember that TV Documentaries are not a good way to reasearch information. Better to get a book.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
i assume they did not actually grab the hamata in front of them, a battle scene in the begining and at philipii showed the legionaires as having their sword in the right hand and the shield in their left, unless they have three hands its not really possible. (yes, switch ranks with nothing in sword arm = good plan)
BTW to Chinese used "halberd" type weapons (by european standards) since Mid Zhou era if im not mistaken. And these weaponry are varried among armies and smiths + also units with some as long if not longer than sarissas (it was said during the warring states that some of these units had pikes up to 20 feet long). A infantry would have one similar to a spear length (6-9 feet) while calvalry would have 12-14 foot with chariot riders even longer. Over time they were replaced with the spear and by the three kingdoms era was definately gone from the armies of the Han etc
BOT, that is definately a medieval type halbard...
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
ziegenpeter
What about the rotation system with the whistle?
Seems like totally impracticable BS to me. AFAIK all infantry rotated fresh men to the frontline during the inevitable lulls in the fighting - which they pretty much must have had, as there's just no way anyone's stamina could have held up for nonstop hand-to-hand combat for the kinds of times heavy-infantry fighting could go on for.
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Did the soldiers grab the guy in front of them on his hamata?
You know I for one fail to see what there is in the hamata for them to grab, anyway... but sounds to me like the makers confused them with one of the posited explanations for those peculiar "yokes", presumably of leather strip, Byzantine infantry around one time wore over their mail; it has been suggested this was in part to adjust the "fit" of their mass-produced mail to the individual soldiers' frames, and possibly so they could if necessary grab a hold of the front guy to brace the formation against enemy charges or somesuch.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
It looks a lot like the billhooks of the English
http://therionarms.com/armor/polearm2.jpg
Images of Elizabethan billhooks
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
Except, you know, they kinda acutely lack the eponymous hook thingy in the cutting side and instead have the "stretched square" axe-blade that was very popular in particularly Swiss halberds at one time.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
I reckon it's better to appreciate the fact that it put the ancient world back into the public eye for a bit, rather than pointing out historical inaccuracies. And, for the main part, there was quite a lot of factual stuff in there. Sexual mainly, but factual too.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
From how I understand it Rome is a relatively historically accurate depiction of Rome at the time. One of the things I've never been sure of is how similar the actors playing the Romans look to ancient Romans. To me the Scot playing Lucius Vorenus and his half Indian wife Niobe strains credibility. Not too sure about old Pullo and the second actor who plays Octavian? Any comments? I personally think Atia was well cast as was Posca. I don't think Marcus Antonius was too badly cast either. What do you guys think?
Edit: I thought Cleopatra looked ok to me but I'm not sure about those weird Egyptian costumes in the show.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
as for all the sex complaints i must say that romans where very minded on sex war and strenght wich was the basis of their original society searching for a "vigorous" soldier type that could keep rome safe from all the dangers at it´s doors
someone explained this better by quoting tacitus and other authors on how the imperial era was actually rome´s old age (if we compare it with a normal human life lenght) so yes i don´t believe the sex part (appart from it´s comercial interest) is historically inacurate
as for cato i always found him a facinating caracther of rome cause while he was born in a roman senatorial family (remember he was brutus uncle) and he anexed cyprus to the roman sphere of influence (taking back an huge treasure and roping barrels to every single gold box so that in case of a sinking ship the gold wouldn´t be lost and he couldn´t be acussed of stealing from the roman people) (wich one may add seems very wierd when we know that bibulus cato´s best friend did tryed to steal the syrian gold when he was nominated governor of the syrian province of rome)
cato was very much against the corruption and expecially against epicurists and since he wasn´t an epicurist he hated everything that was considered a luxury like wine or even slaves he only had 2 greek philosophers as personal slaves i believe and was considered a terrible host cause his wine was the cheapest of wine available (but he did married his daughter originally to one of rome´s richest man and most proeminent "lawyer" some soucers claim as a lawyer he and cicero where at the same level)
actually one could write an entire history book on cato wich could explain the several tendencys that romans fallowed during the late republic after sulla´s dictatorship where sulla anihilated 3000 "noble" romans
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
moonburn
as for all the sex complaints i must say that romans where very minded on sex war and strenght wich was the basis of their original society searching for a "vigorous" soldier type that could keep rome safe from all the dangers at it´s doors
someone explained this better by quoting tacitus and other authors on how the imperial era was actually rome´s old age (if we compare it with a normal human life lenght) so yes i don´t believe the sex part (appart from it´s comercial interest) is historically inacurate
as for cato i always found him a facinating caracther of rome cause while he was born in a roman senatorial family (remember he was brutus uncle) and he anexed cyprus to the roman sphere of influence (taking back an huge treasure and roping barrels to every single gold box so that in case of a sinking ship the gold wouldn´t be lost and he couldn´t be acussed of stealing from the roman people) (wich one may add seems very wierd when we know that bibulus cato´s best friend did tryed to steal the syrian gold when he was nominated governor of the syrian province of rome)
cato was very much against the corruption and expecially against epicurists and since he wasn´t an epicurist he hated everything that was considered a luxury like wine or even slaves he only had 2 greek philosophers as personal slaves i believe and was considered a terrible host cause his wine was the cheapest of wine available (but he did married his daughter originally to one of rome´s richest man and most proeminent "lawyer" some soucers claim as a lawyer he and cicero where at the same level)
actually one could write an entire history book on cato wich could explain the several tendencys that romans fallowed during the late republic after sulla´s dictatorship where sulla anihilated 3000 "noble" romans
I believe you are experiencing Cato the philosopher, not Cato the politician. One can argue that Cato himself was instrumental in the downfall of the republic. While Cato publicly disdained corruption that did not stop him from participating in massive bribery to get bibulus elected. Additionally, he was against prosecution of clodius (for actions during his tribunate, which really were illegal) because that would in fact anull his annexation of cyprus. Additionally, he was in fact a drunk, which make his famous quip to caesar (read about the cataline conspiracy, cato called ceasar a drunk, caesar in fact rarely drank). If you would like me to further my assertation that Cato was in fact instrumental in the establishment of the principate, send me a PM.
I am not trying to be mean, but I am quite sick of people eulogizing cato, in the same way i am sick of people condeming sulla.
As cicero himself lamented Cato lived in plato's republic not in romulus' sink.
My main goal is to simply say that while inredibly entertaining and vivid. "Rome" presents an unrealistic description of events, by grossly skimming down details to simplistic forms and in many cases completely removing major characters while inserting imaginary ones.
I would place the series in the same category as the movie "JFK", enthralling and exciting but without a solid historial basis
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
i´m not stating that i didn´t knew about that (except perhaps for that bibulus bribings wich i might have not noticed but then again bibulus didn´t need any help to use illegal means to better himself)
cato´s anexation of cyprus was never in question since the egyptians didn´t wanted to fight the romans for it
his conduct however was (the reason why he placed barrels of air and tied them to the coffers so they could be recovered if something happened and thus not be accused of theft) but then again it was a time in rome where an honest man could be draged to court and be forever in judicial crap for the rest of his active life thus robbing a good roman of his destiny while lesser men could continue to persue their goals after removing the better man (ceasar´s reason for crossing the rubicon with a legion behinde him to protect himself while there was the 13th and 14th of pompey in rome about to sail for hispania wich could have been used to end the civil war right away)
if we compare cato´s life with for instance his nephew brutus wich abused his power and entered into the high finances extorting money from the rich lands that lucullos (?) conquered (and pompey got the credit for) we can see he might have done many wrong things but all he did was never to better himself but out of his beliefs of what was best for rome and such a man with such inner discipline is someone worth analysing cause rome had a tradition of individuals who always sacrificed themselfs for the res publica and cato believed he was one of them.
clodious was another matter since it seemed he was another crazy reformer probably the 1st true plebocratian wishing to remove the nobles power to better himself
but to the best of my knowledge clodious was murdered by milan wich was not conected to the boni (?) thus cato´s persecution of clodious was just another of his actions to protect the res public (this time from the brainless masses who would obey clodious on everything)
as for the cataline conspiracy i have very litle information about it (read an article on wiki thats how weak i am there)
as for cato being instrumental in the downfall of the republic that is true cause had pompey not given batle to cesar and he would have won but then without cesar who would stop pompey from becoming dictator for life ? (thus cato would have been instrumental again for the downfall of the res public)
the way i see it cato the politician is a matter of taste he brought down the republic while trying to protect it you are clearly not a big fan of the old man who would rip his own hair off when talking about ceasar
i do not wish to get into a childish debate i was just trying to share my opinion and a bit of my small knowledge in here but if proven wrong then i will apologyse and recognise my mistake but not on matters that are up to personal interpretation of historical actions and figures.
the grachus brothers where the 1st reformers and sulla was someone who fallowed on their footsteps in an attempt to change roman ways that where becomign decadent and authoritarian (for the best of my knowlege) i didn´t made any attack on sulla wich is actually someone i have a keen interest in but sadly i can hardly get any decent information outside the average historical romance wich are inacurate (at best). and the final reformer was ofc gaivs jvlivs (altough this can be debatable since his nephew octavian trying to prove his rightfull rights had to make ceasar the greatest roman that had ever lived to be able to challange marc anthony with his title of cesar´s son)
so i would never attack sulla i just stated that after sulla´s attempts on reforms wich ended with 3000 dead knights (the 2nd class of roman nobles) the way roman politics where made became diferent
actually one could bring this back to the grachus brothers that for the 1st time saw assassins being used as a political leverage weapon in roman politics (not that they weren´t used before but because they had never been used against such influential individuals)
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
All the important events of the show are correct. Dramatic license is taken with some characters, but it's not a big deal because the show is amazing. James Purefoy's portrayal of Mark Antony in particular is possibly the greatest acting performance ever.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
option
James Purefoy's portrayal of Mark Antony in particular is possibly the greatest acting performance ever.
Agreed :yes:, his performance was brilliant, although I do believe much better and more well-known performances exist in multitudes. Caesar, or the actor who played him, was rotten however, and his looks (face of Spock) did not help either.
Ancient Rome: Rise and Fall of an Empire (BBC) is a series I would recommend to anyone interested in Ancient Rome, and they have absolutely the right actor for Caesar, although their Anthony is as lousy as Caesar in HBO. That series is, however, is an "action" documentary (docudrama), which follows the lives of the pivotal figures in real-time and otherwise normal fashion but with a narrator commenting very frequently. Thus, not to be compared with the HBO series.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
Space_Ed
To me the Scot playing Lucius Vorenus and his half Indian wife Niobe strains credibility
Given that the character is said to come from the Po valley its not too much a stretch the of the imagination to have a red haired celt playing the part.
I can understand the half indian wife one though(even if the actress is part italian), not that it bothers me indian/middle eastern/european people have quite similar features anyway.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
Aemilius Paulus
Agreed :yes:, his performance was brilliant, although I do believe much better and more well-known performances exist in multitudes. Caesar, or the actor who played him, was rotten however, and his looks (face of Spock) did not help either.
Ancient Rome: Rise and Fall of an Empire (BBC) is a series I would recommend to anyone interested in Ancient Rome, and they have absolutely the right actor for Caesar, although their Anthony is as lousy as Caesar in HBO. That series is, however, is an "action" documentary (docudrama), which follows the lives of the pivotal figures in real-time and otherwise normal fashion but with a narrator commenting very frequently. Thus, not to be compared with the HBO series.
I thought that was a good series, unfortunately there weren't many episodes but it was good.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
Aemilius Paulus
Agreed :yes:, his performance was brilliant, although I do believe much better and more well-known performances exist in multitudes. Caesar, or the actor who played him, was rotten however, and his looks (face of Spock) did not help either.
Ancient Rome: Rise and Fall of an Empire (BBC) is a series I would recommend to anyone interested in Ancient Rome, and they have absolutely the right actor for Caesar, although their Anthony is as lousy as Caesar in HBO. That series is, however, is an "action" documentary (docudrama), which follows the lives of the pivotal figures in real-time and otherwise normal fashion but with a narrator commenting very frequently. Thus, not to be compared with the HBO series.
I love "Rome" because it just looks great. Most rome drama is far too polished and "classicistic", "Rome" had grime, filth and roughly weaved toga's. As for historicity, they have the same problem as all hollywood style historical drama, as in that all details (clothes, lamps, graffiti) is meticulously recreated, while in the story, some dramatic liberties are taken. I don't mind it, it's not a historical document.
As for the acting, although Mark Anthony is very very entertaining, there's also a pinch of overacting going on, as with most of the cast. "I am not leaving this bed! Until I've fucked someone":laugh4:
Caesar in BBC "Rise and Fall" is a femine Russell Crowe that starts beating up his soldiers when they should fight for him, it's really ridiculous. The BBC episodes on Gracchus, Nero and Vespasian are nice though. Caesar in "Rome" is way better, but is also not a complete character because he is viewed thorugh the eyes of the other characters, he is in a sense more a "phenomenon" (for example, in the episode where Erastes Fulman wants to kill Lucius Vorenus)
For the Cato question, it's already been answered (the mourning thing), but it's also nice to add that he doesn't wear a tunica under his toga, which being a Greek infuence, was not done for the true roman Cato.
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
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Originally Posted by
ziegenpeter
3. What kind of weapon is that?
Could it be a fasces???
could be the only explanation outside of an medieval hellebard...
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
A fasces doesn't exist. Fasces is plural
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Re: Authencity of "Rome" tv show?
singular fasces
verbum plurale fascis
more common today:
plural subject fascismus
it´s not fascesmus