The Joys of Discovering the Roman Underground

(smithsonianmag.com)

26 points | by ulrischa 2 days ago

2 comments

  • jtwaleson 9 hours ago
    I visited Rome two weeks ago but only knew about St Clemente. Too bad I'm only reading this now, would have loved to have visited the other sites too!

    St Clemente is great though, and not nearly as busy as other sites. Highly recommended. You can see three different buildings all on top of each other.

  • deepsun 12 hours ago
    Interesting that no one says "The Joys of Discovering the Nazi Underground". Even though the Roman empire was a cruel war machine, with war and slavery being it's cornerstone. What Nazi called "The First Reich" was originally called the "Holy Roman Empire".

    But now it's all forgotten and Roman Empire is almost adored.

    UPDATE: I honestly don't know what tortures were worse, nazi ones or crucifixions with flayed back, practiced in Roman empire as punishment.

    • margalabargala 10 hours ago
      Despite the similarity of name, the "Roman Empire" and the "Holy Roman Empire" are politically unrelated states. One was named after the other, but it was not a successor state.
      • deepsun 52 minutes ago
        Exactly, I wanted to point out Nazi _wanted_ to be similar to Romans (as well as way more ancient Germanic people of the HRE, having no connection with Romans.

        Italian fashists also used a lot of Roman symbolism, but it's understandable because history.

    • southernplaces7 6 hours ago
      This kind of moral absolutism heavily breaks down the ability to form a reasoned historical analysis, or give consideration to context. By the standards of its time, the classical period Roman state often showed a remarkable degree of humane consideration to its subjects. If it was also often despotic and cruel, this stands out partly because the more sophisticated elements of that society made it so. Your average nation during classical antiquity on the other hand, could be much worse.

      For example, by any modern ethical standards, an emperor like Marcus Aurelius, or his mentor Antoninus Pious would be considered slaving, war-making monsters, but in the context of Rome and most rulers of Rome's time, they were remarkable paragons of forbearance and ethical nuance, and given the context of their upbringing, this makes them remarkable leaders, not just something so simplistic as cruel war mongers.

      By the implicit logic you use, we should disregard the vast majority of major figures, systems and philosophies that have ever existed because they lacked the magical foresight of first having also developed our exact modern ethics (which in any case are often broken today by many respected leaders).

      Also, please, there's no comparing the truly deliberate monstrosity of the Nazis to the practices of the Romans. Rome never developed intentional industrial extermination of human lives as a deliberate state policy. The Nazis did, and worse still, did so despite millennia of philosophical moral development being available to guide them otherwise.

      • AStonesThrow 1 hour ago
        > Rome never developed intentional industrial extermination of human lives as a deliberate state policy.

        Uh, except perhaps for a few centuries worth of persecuting Christians, subjecting them to tortures and deliberately putting them to death by the thousands, creating a basis for the veneration of martyrs in the years to come? Except for that, Rome really didn't intentionally exterminate human lives, right?

    • Swenrekcah 10 hours ago
      Context matters. The world has changed quite a lot in 2500 years. We can put higher ethical standards on leaders of modern countries than were made in the distant past.
    • mjburgess 9 hours ago
      You're right that the Roman empire was every bit as ruthless as any nation which followed, and very plausibly much more so. But people treat the past as a fictional place when it goes much beyond the memories of people who are alive; and the more powerful and impressive a civilisation was, the more people are interested in it.

      It's very hard to find any one really taking the past literally, as events which happened and could easily happen again. One imagines it's a symptom of how we're born and die: before our birth feels unreal to us unless we have some contact in our lifetimes with people who were alive before it.

      This effect becomes more concerning when people try to take advise from glorified people of the past: every roman emporer was a genocidal tyrant, none should be immitated. But here we are.

    • dudefeliciano 9 hours ago
      what about the joys of the United States underground, or the joys of the British Empire underground, or the joys of the Mongol Empire underground?
    • cat20 10 hours ago
      girl it was 2000 years ago??? Unlike the Nazis, they didn't commit a genocide?? And they gave citizenship to people they conquered... I'd say for the standards of the time, they did pretty damn well. It's crazy to compare them to modern standards. And anyways, I'd still rather live under the Romans than the Nazis...
      • rebuilder 10 hours ago
        The Roman destruction of Carthage seems like a pretty clear genocide.
        • card_zero 9 hours ago
          The part about modern standards can't be overlooked, though. Somebody from before the 1600s would lack egalitarian values, does that failure deserve blame? That's like saying they should have invented and promoted egalitarianism early. I mean sure, in principle, but it's a lot to ask, and they should have invented transistors too.
    • jtwaleson 9 hours ago
      Wellll, there is Berlin Unterwelten. They don't glorify the Nazi past by any means, but they do allow you to visit bunkers from WW2 and the cold war.
    • MemesAndBooze 9 hours ago
      Is this an AI slop comment?
    • aaron695 9 hours ago
      [dead]