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The Colosseum
"As long as the Colosseum, there will Rome when the Colosseum falls, Rome will also fall, but when Rome falls, the world will fall"
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![]() The Romans shared the hours of the day into two parts: 12 day (from 6 to 18 or from sunrise to sunset) and 12 night (from 18 pm to 6 am). The 12 hours of day calculated from 6 to 18 were called the first hour, secunda hora, etc. hora tertia. The noon was the hora sexta, hence the word "siesta". The night was divided into 4 periods called "vigils" of 3 hours each and corresponded to 4 duty (Indeed vigil means sentinel). The first day went from 18 to 21, the second from 21 to 24, the third from 24 to 3, the fourth of 3 to 6. During the reign of Romulus the 10 months of the year were counted as irrationally: some were of 20 days, others 35, others even more. Then the king Numa Pompilio, who wanted a calendar with a meaning more civil and military, began in January ( "januarius" from "janua", which means door, which opens and closes, a symbol of the god Janus) in the first place, February (which means something like "purification", because this month the Romans brought bids to the dead and celebrated the feast of Lupercali) in March to the second and third. The months following the cycle of the moon, the first day of each month corresponded to new moon (new moon) and was called "calende" hence the name "roadmap". The full moon (full moon), towards the middle of the month, was the day of the "ides", dedicated to Jupiter; among calende and ides fell "none", in the day on which appeared the first quarter. The year based on the cycles of the moon is the shortest of 11 days and fourth in relation to the calendar, so the Roman calendar remained behind the sun and the difference increased from year to year, despite attempts made to correct it and so at the time of Julius Caesar month did not correspond to more effective seasons: eg when the calendar marked in March, wheat was already mature. Only the priests knew the exact duration of the year and used to add suddenly called months interlayer, called "mercedonio" on the basis of the reform of Numa. The Romans also had a week of eight days: After seven days working the peasants had a day of rest to get to market, deal with its affairs etc.. Only in the third century. d.C. decided to adopt the week of seven days. To indicate the years the Romans citavano the names of two consuls in office for that year ( "under the consulate ... and ..."). Towards the end of the republic fixed a starting point for the account of the years, choosing April 21 753 BC date the foundation of Rome. In the sixth century. took a year of birth of Christ. |
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