New Special on the History Channel, Rome: Engineering an Empire
New Special on the History Channel, Rome: Engineering an Empire
On The History Channel(R)
"The Things That Made Them Great Were the Same Things That Brought Them Down."
September 5, 2005 at 9:00 P.M. ET/PT
LOS ANGELES, July 14 /PRNewswire/ -- For more than 500 years, Rome was the most powerful and advanced civilization the world had ever known, ruled by visionaries and tyrants whose accomplishments ranged from awe-inspiring to deplorable. But the primary elements of Rome's rise to power were its consistently masterful use of engineering and labor, used to build cities and works of architecture that still stand today. Go inside the remarkably advanced culture of the Roman Empire as The History Channel presents ROME: ENGINEERING AN EMPIRE, premiering Monday, September 5th at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT.
The death of Julius Caesar, who found himself on the receiving end of twenty-three stab wounds on the floor of the Roman Senate in 44 B.C., touched off a 600-year succession of Roman dictators that was a historical roller coaster ride of extraordinary proportions. These men pushed the Roman borders past unseen frontiers, built its cities to heights never before seen, and installed astonishing public works such as sewers, running water and heated pools. But the drive for power and growth wrought enemies, decay, and betrayal as well as Rome often saw its leadership fall to the unfit hands of men who murdered enemies, oppressed citizens, and even burned Rome to the ground. ROME: ENGINEERING AN EMPIRE chronicles the rich history of the Roman Empire from the reign of Caesar in 44 B.C. to its eventual fall around 537 AD, detailing the remarkable works of architecture and technology in between that helped create Rome's indelible mark on the world.
Highlights include:
* Digital re-creations of some of Rome's greatest engineering feats,
beginning with Caesar's bridge across the Rhine River, a 1,000-foot
long wooden passageway built in just ten days to allow thousands of
troops to cross the river and conquer Germania.
* Shocking tales of the brutality of some of Rome's most notorious
leaders, including the teenage emperor Nero, whose reign included:
presenting the severed head of an ex-wife to a future wife as a gift;
kicking a wife to death while she was pregnant; murdering his mother;
and allegedly burning much of Rome to the ground to make room for a new
palace.
* The revolutionary Roman aqueduct system, which provided 200 million
gallons of running water per day into Rome (as much as was provided to
New York City as recently as 1985), and a sewer system built 2,500
years ago that still functions today.
* The creation of the Roman Highway, or Via Appia, the first modern
highway in the world and the passageway that laid the foundation for
Roman expansion.
* Explanation of one of the main secrets of Rome's architectural
proficiency: the use of durable, waterproof concrete that still
sustains many of its key structures today.
* Detailed renderings and explanations of the masterworks of some of
Rome's most prolific emperors, including: Vespasian's Roman Colosseum,
which featured a retractable roof; Trajan's Roman Forum, featuring a
160-store shopping mall; Hadrian's Wall, protecting Rome's borders in
Brittania, and his Pantheon, which stood as the largest unsupported
concrete dome on earth; and Caracalla's Baths, a magnificent recreation
area the size of a small town that featured, among other things,
several heated pools.
* Historians' ideas on the fall of Rome, ranging from theories that the
population was subject to large-scale lead poisoning to the notion that
the empire simply grew too big and complex to be centrally governed
anymore.
Ancient Rome was an empire of architectural brilliance and modernized culture that still affects the world today. Its story is also one of the violence, vindictiveness, greed, and ego that contributed to its ultimate fall. ROME: ENGINEERING AN EMPIRE presents the full picture of one of the truly rich civilizations of all time.
ROME: ENGINEERING AN EMPIRE was produced for The History Channel by KPI. Executive Producer for The History Channel is Dolores Gavin.
Now reaching more than 88 million Nielsen subscribers, The History Channel(R), "Where the Past Comes Alive(R)," brings history to life in a powerful manner and provides an inviting place where people experience history personally and connect their own lives to the great lives and events of the past. In 2004, The History Channel earned five News and Documentary Emmy(R) Awards and previously received the prestigious Governor's Award from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for the network's "Save Our History(R)" campaign dedicated to historic preservation and history education. The History Channel web site is located at http://www.historychannel.com/. Press Only: For more information and photography please visit us on the web at http://www.historychannelpress.com/.
NOTE TO EDITORS: Press Only: For more information and photography please
visit us on the web at http://www.historychannelpress.com.
Source: The History Channel
CONTACT: Jenna Farkas of The History Channel, +1-212-210-9184,
jenna.farkas@aetn.com
Web site: http://www.historychannel.com/
http://www.historychannelpress.com/
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