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From Times Online
November 12, 2008
Google Earth has recreated
Rome as it was in 320AD
Mike Harvey, Technology Correspondent
The glory that was Rome is to rise again. Visitors will once more be
able to visit the Colosseum and the Forum of Rome as they were in 320
AD, this time on a computer screen in 3D. The realisation of the ancient
city in Google Earth lets viewers stand in the centre of the Colosseum,
trace the footsteps of the gladiators in the Ludus Magnus and fly under
the Arch of Constantine. The computer model, a collection of more than
6,700 buildings, depicts Rome in the year 320 AD. Then, under the emperor
Constantine I, the city boasted more than a million inhabitants –-
making it the largest metropolis in the world. It was not until Victorian
London that another city surpassed it.
The project has been developed by Google in collaboration with the Rome
Reborn Project and Past Perfect Productions. The computer graphics are
based on a physical model – the Plastico di Roma Antica, which
was created by archaeologists and model-makers between 1933 and 1974
and is housed in the Museum of Roman Civilisation in Rome. There are
only 300 original ruins still standing today.
Rome Reborn: an ancient virtual city
A
huge digital representation of Rome in AD320 may help scholars and enthusiasts
get into the mindset of senators and slaves
Bernard Frischer, the director of the Institute of Advanced Technology
in the Humanities at the University of Virginia and also the director
of the Rome Reborn Project, said: "The project is the continuation of
five centuries of research by scholars, architects and artists since
the Renaissance who have attempted to restore the ruins of the ancient
city with words, maps and images.
“The partnership with Google Earth is another step in creating
a virtual time machine which our children and grandchildren will use
to study the history of Rome."
Rome is the first ancient city to be viewable in three dimensions in
Google Earth. The feature uses satellite imagery, maps and search to
show viewers a wide range of geographical information for the entire
planet.
More than 400 million people have downloaded Google Earth since it was
launched in June, 2005.
The Ancient Rome feature is designed for students and historians as well
as people with a more casual interest in the city. Viewers can find out
more through pop-up "information bubbles" for more than 250 sites identified
in the ancient city.
The first bubble provides basic information for schoolchildren and a
second click provides more advanced information including a topographical
encyclopaedia, ancient literary sources and bibliographical information
about each building. The information is available in a variety of languages.
Gianni Alemanno, the Mayor of Rome, said: "It's an incredible opportunity
to share the stunning greatness of Ancient Rome, a perfect example of
how the new technologies can be ideal allies of our history, archaeology
and cultural identity.'
Click here for more details and to download the software <http://earth.google.com/rome/> (the
link is not yet working, but should be live soon).
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