Obvious Historical Errors on Television

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by iamtiberius, Mar 31, 2019.

  1. Bert Gedin

    Bert Gedin Well-Known Member

    Caesar gets stabbed to death by assassins. - APRIL FOOL !!!
     
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  3. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    What do you think, @furryfrog02 ?
     
  4. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    I hereby declare myself Empress of Rome :p
     
  5. Bert Gedin

    Bert Gedin Well-Known Member

    "Veni, vidi, vici !", says Crispina Kermit, Glorious Empress of Rome !!!
     
    Oldhoopster likes this.
  6. David Atherton

    David Atherton Flavian Fanatic

    A BIG pet peeve of mine with a lot of films and TV programmes that are set in ancient Rome is the common trope that Christians were a fairly populous trodden down minority in the 1st century. According to the biblical scholar Bart Ehrman by the end of the 1st century there may have been up to three thousand or so Christians empire wide, mostly in Asia Minor, meeting quietly in each other's homes. Christians were far less numerous than the Amish are today in the US, but yet Hollywood would have us believe they were plentiful enough to be a huge problem for the empire early on.

    1358296787_9.jpg
    Brian Blessed as a persecuted Christian in the epic 1984 mini series The Last Days of Pompeii. There is no evidence of any Christians having lived in Pompeii.

    And who can forget the Christians swarming all over Rome in 1951's Quo Vadis.

    1951 Quo Vadis 1.jpg

    It makes for compelling film viewing, but very bad history.
     
    Last edited: Apr 1, 2019
  7. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    I have my doubts about the historical accuracy of this scene.

     
  8. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Cast your doubts aside! It is true and quite accurate! This was clearly documented in The Book of Brian, Chapter 82, Verses 16-73.

    Best to you,
    Brian (great grandson 19th generation)

    :D
    upload_2019-4-2_7-41-6.png
     
    Last edited: Apr 2, 2019
  9. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    As long as we're talking about Bible movies, one thing that irks me is when Romans are depicted speaking Latin in Greek-speaking countries. Latin was used in Italy, Gaul, Britannia, Hispania, Dacia and Africa. Everywhere else consisted of the former empire of Alexander the Great, the Seleucids and the Ptolemies, and had been Greek-speaking for centuries. Every Christian text was written in Greek.

    In this movie, for example, Pilate speaks to Jesus in Latin:

    12121314.jpg

    He would have used Greek to communicate with the Greek-speaking locals. After all, what language is on these coins?

    Pilate Prutah.jpg
    Pilate Prutah 2.jpg
     
  10. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Question: If the Procurators, Prefects, Proconsuls, etc. were sent as Governors from ROME... would they be more apt to speak Latin as their mother tongue?

    I do understand they were probably schooled in local languages, and that the lower echelons probably spoke the local languages. And, yes agreed, no way Jesus probably spoke Latin.
     
    Last edited: Apr 2, 2019
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  11. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Most inhabitants of the Roman Empire were bilingual or multilingual but most inhabitants could NOT speak Latin, which was spoken in the rural, western part of the empire. Romans spoke a mother-tongue (Latin, Aramaic, Phrygean, Coptic, or whatnot) and also Greek, which was truly the lingua franca of the day. It's analogous to the situation we have here at CT. Jochen's mother tongue is German, Q's is French, for others it is Spanish, Arabic or another language, but we all use English here as our lingua franca.

    Pilate would have been very skilled at Greek, if not fluent, even though Latin may have been the language he learned as an infant.
     
    Last edited: Apr 2, 2019
  12. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Most Hollywood movies/ TV series are way off in historical accuracy. There are some exceptions, where a movie had it right. Some examples:
    Waterloo : Rod Steiger as Napoleon 1970
    Bridge Too Far: Robert Redford/ Maximilian Schell/Hardy Kruger
    Hannibal: Victor Mature (only flaw) had lots of War Elephants in Battle scenes) few survived Alpine trek.
    Cromwell

    Relay bad historically...but highly entertaining movies....
    Gladiator
    The Patriot
    Genghiz Khan (Omar Sharif)
    Braveheart
     
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  13. thejewk

    thejewk Well-Known Member

    I watched the first episode of that Commodus series on Netflix and couldn't get past the hysterical grasping at the most salacious reading from each source and then magnifying them by a hundred. Faustina running off to rut with Cassius, Commodus as a pretty boy in his mid twenties before his father's death, Faustina dramatically drinking poison in camp directly after seeing Marcus after her 'affair'. The whole thing was a mess, comically supported by 'historians' doing their talking head routines .

    Gladiator is nonsense, but at least it had some merit in pacing and drama. Even without all the faults, the Commodus program was bad melodrama at best .
     
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  14. Ocatarinetabellatchitchix

    Ocatarinetabellatchitchix Well-Known Member

    The professor Alan Millard, a scholar of Near Eastern languages and archaeology, wrote in his book Discoveries from the time of Jesus :
    “In the course of their daily duties the Roman governors certainly spoke Greek, and Jesus may have answered Pilate’s questions at his trial in Greek.”
     
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