I have never seen anything like this before! And as impressed as I am with the archeology that reveals this very impressive find, I am equally impressed with the preservation structures that enable the experience, and with the staging of the find to grant immersion as we do. Lastly I must also mention the photography that gave us the experience, all combining to a very great moment of education!
Best filming Thanku Slow enough for us to appreciate details too & pausing long enough for us to take it in. And you showed us the view the houses had before them. I admired The clouds in the sky too! It was nice walking with You without music & unnecessary noise. Thankyou so Much. I didn’t want your film to end !
I went to Ephesus a few years ago, they were just beginning to uncover these terraced houses. It’s an incredible place and to think it was an important Roman port in the Mediterranean.
Just unbelievable! When this was built, times were anything but “dark”! Amazingly modern for the age! Thank you for this more than impressive tour, which I really appreciate!
Благодаря за прекрасното представяне на обекта. Преди 20 години бях в Ефес, но терасовидните къщи бяха в процес на проучване и не бяха отворени за публиката. Поздрави от България!
Wow! These rooms are just sublime🥰 now I want my walls and floors to be like these, Wow! Gorgeous 👍🏼😍 so much meticulous care put into every step, every floor, every wall
Efes antik kentine girseler dahi, teras evlerin girişi extra oldugu için çoğu insan burayı gezmeden çıkıyor. o yuzden ziyaret etmeyenler gormeyenler için çok yararlı bir yürüyüş videosu olmuş. tesekkurler.
Fantastic. I was there many years ago and this area was not open. It is great that you can show it to us. Loved the "sound" in the theater. I was mad when our bus left and I saw the ARENA on the way out near the road. I hope you can make a video of that half-buried mini Coliseum.
@@taylanzek7 Never. I know and love it because of the apostle Paul's letter in the Bible-Ephesians. To be able to see, thru actual video and through reconstruction simulations the place where he and many other early Christians actually walked is very cool. So great to finally actually see a real time walkthrough of one of the homes of Ephesus. Loved your video!!.
@@dmd5645 i hope that you come one day and walk here. İ have another walking videos on the street of ephesus that u ld love. Check them please. Have a great day. Best regards.
It's amazing how much of the Roman lifestyle and esthetic carried through in French culture for another 2000 years. Very similar in the early painted plaster with strencilling and faux scenery painting, and the framing of paneling.
It's a Greek city not Roman. This you call "roman esthetic" is a typical paradigm of Hellenistic-Greek painting and art (and hellenistic frescoes etc) of the hellenistic type and times (that existed also to Magna Grecia, the Greeks of South Italy), and as it continued throught the Roman times (the Latium conquer). It didn't become suddenly "something else" "roman" for that reason, just because the romans had the political and military control. As if, if you are an artist and create something and evolve it, and your house pass under my control but you continue to live there (let's say to live in rent there) , and typically be your home, and continue to create, your creations will still be yours. The same thing. This art continued by Greeks in the Greek byzantine times. The Romans tooked all this things by Greeks and learned by them. The inhabitants of Latium were very rustic compared to the Greeks. Τhat's why Oratios himslef says ( Epistole 2.1, 156-157) "Conquered Greece conquered the victor and introduced the arts to peasant/uncultivated Latium."
How wonderful that must have been 2000 years ago .... The Mosaics , wall art , the pillared courtyards and amazingly teh internal pipping ....amazing building technology ...
This is amazing:) I hope I'll visit Turkey one day. I would love to see Greek and Roman legacy, Ephesus, Hagia Sofia etc. I would also love to see Ottoman and Turkish heritage, Topkapi Palace, Blue Mosque and other stuff:)
You re always welcome. İ would love to be your guide. İf you come to turkey one day, u can contact me for your travel in turkey. İm licensed tourist guide here.
Thank you for flimimng and posting. Really nice and detailed. What the Greek and Romans left behind, is just amazing. So civilized. And so sad to see them being replaced so recently, by the violent Asiatics.
And this is such a RACIST comment. Violent asiatics? Turks? Who are you? What makes you and your culture superier? THERE SHOULD BE NO GREEK HATE AND RACISM HERE!
Imagine people who built like this with period tools and technology. Primitive by today's standard I guess. But it's all they knew and they did unbelievable things with it. Mind boggling.😮
Nice Walk-Through, but Mr. Taylan Onor didn't stop at any of the signs/maps explaining what the viewer was seeing or how it may have looked before it was ruins. I hope Mr. Taylan Onor knew what he was viewing on his walk, otherwise it was a nice hike looking at ruins without an understanding of context. If he knew the context of what he was viewing, a narrative would have helped the viewers of his video.
@@taylanzek7 Thank you so much, a narration or stopping long enough and zooming in at each contextual sign or map so a viewer could stop the video and read the sign or map at their leisure and then start the video again. And your interpretive narration would give a personal touch. You do a great service for those of us unable to travel to see the splendors and wonders of Turkey's many-layered past. I am a student of your country's history, and you are so wonderful to provide a glimpse of what I have studied about for some 60 years, thank you again.
Korumasi cok guzel herkes rahat gezer ben cok beğendim herkesin emegine teşekkürler istenince yaparsan demekki oluyor nedir burasi bilgi verin olmazmi saygillar dilerim❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Ιt's a Greek city first of all, from Anicent Greece and until the Greek Byzantium. Never stopped to be Greek. So you walk at a Greek terittory and land. Greek city of the Greek Ionians. Built by them. Not Roman (from a time and after was only under Roman political and millitary control, but that was way - way after, and didn't become sunndenly "something other" - "roman". Then it passed again to political control of Greeks, in the Byzantine times. The city didn't stopped to be typically Greek in everything, it's population, it's architecture, art etc. The houses included, the art of mosaics, frescoes etc, that is hellenistic art from hellenistical times. The Romans typically did more just "restorations" of those that where already there by the Greeks. And also "Roman" is too Greek culture and something strongly connected with Greece and it's civilization and culture, that's why the good historians say Greco-Roman world, or Greco-Roman times etc. to emphasize the Greek character of Rome or it's connection with it). Nowhere mentioned in your description.
The Greeks in later Roman times and into the Byzantine period referred to themselves as "Rhomaions" -- "Romans". ...As they turned Christian, they even repudiated the term "Hellenes" as a self-description and proudly called themselves "Romans" (particularly after the fall of the Roman Empire in the West, leaving them as the heirs of the Roman imperial state). So, the ruins seen here are probably Roman Ephesus and not Ionian Ephesus (of classical period) nor Seleucid or Attalid Ephesus (of the post-Alexander 'Hellenistic' age).
@@MrJm323 this is typical western propaganda or others. And the ancient Greeks of Homeric times or before called their selfs Achaeans or Danaoi, this doesn't mean that they didn't know that they are Greeks or was not Greeks. The words doesn't matter. Are signifiers, what they signifie it matters. For example we don't ever call our selfs "Greeks". This is an exonym. Still Greeks call theirselfs Romioi, this doesn't mean that they mean that are Latins and that they don't know that they are Greeks (all Greek Byzantines knew that they are Greeks, and not always call theirselfs "Romioi" , some times they say that they are Greeks, and speak about those subjects, even if things was otherwise that are not, it doesn't matter. They were and are Greeks. It didn't happened any genocide to Greeks you know by the Romans of Latium, as Turks have done many times. It is a perplexed subject why Greeks call their selfs Romioi most of the times and not Greeks. But in the end after all not so difficult to understand one. Only if one does not want to see the truth for different reasons. One of the reasons that Greeks call like that theirselfs have to do about the empire, it is political. The other has to do with the religion . When Greek Byzantines say that they are Romioi or Romans they mean that they are Greeks and that Rome is theirs - in a nutshell)
@@MrJm323 only idiots or ppl that don't live in Greece can not understand those things and want or need "explanations" about the obvious. Just imagine for example, I say just a simple example ,( but that comes only from every day living experience) I can go on for hours and hours, imagine speaking Greek, living in Greek places, and seeing in your city or town an ancient Greek temple or whatever like that, with Greek writings that you can perfectly read and understand with your language. Do you think that you would not immediately not understand what is happening and that one is Greek ? Of course would have that consciousness even if one didn't know any other history or whatever (that the Byzantines of course knew about history and their Greek past. Just from the Latin and Greek historian's etc and the Greek texts that were reading and translating and many other things, their folk and symbolic traditions , architecture and many many other things that connected them with their past )
@@MrJm323 "...whether someone calls us Hellenas or Romans, that is what we are and we safeguard the succession of Alexander and that of those after him..." Manuel Chrysoloras, Byzantine writer [Exchortation on behalf of the Genus] «...Έλληνας βούλοιτο τις λέγειν είτε Ρωμαίους, ημείς εσμέν εκείνοι και την Αλεξάνδρου δε και των μετ' εκείνων ημείς σώζομεν διαδοχήν...»