The Colosseum!!
The Colosseum is a giant arena where Roman citizens came together to have a good time and get away from the days struggles. The Colosseum is sixteen stories tall (144FT.) and can hold a capacity of fifty thousand people. The walls of the arena are believed to be covered in marble and plaster. The inside of the Colosseum thee walls were covered in Niches and copies of Greek statues. On rainy days it took one thousand men to drape a tarp across the roof of the arena. The tarp is a type of canvas called Velariam. It took a span of three Emperors to build the Colosseum. The emperors were Vespian, Domitian, and Titus. Also the Romans would sacrifice Christians to animals.
Pantheon!!
The purpose of the Pantheon was to worship all of the Roman gods. Pan=ALL and Theon=GODS. The pantheon walls were 20 feet thick so it could supports the churches giant dome. The church had coffered ceilings, that means the ceiling were in boxed shapes. At the top of the ceiling their is a oculus which means eye, if it was raining out water would fall into the Pantheon and it would flow out of their irrigation system. Also the ceiling and dome were covered in gold.
I like the picture of the Pantheon, it's a cool layout.
ReplyDeleteI think you should make your font a bit bigger though, it's a little hard to read.
The Christians were only sacrificed to lions, but close enough for government work. Also, was the cieling of the Pantheon box-shaped, or did it just have box cut-outs in it. I'm curious now. That would make for a very early, yet inovative form for the dome as the Moores and DaVinci would later perfect it. That would be cool to look up.
ReplyDeletenice pic of the Colosseum. I definitely agree with Cristina though- love the font but it's a little hard to read :)
ReplyDeleteExcellent job! I love the way you write; it's both informative and fun. You do need to include all of the content from the lecture, though. And the others already touched on how difficult the font is to read; it's good for large print, for a title or something decorative, but not for large bodies of text. For that, simpler is better.
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