I don’t have the energy to revisit the arguments about Roman concrete that come up every time it is mentioned on HN. Needless to say, the notion that their “superior” method was “forgotten” is a massive oversimplification of what actually happened.
Another comment made my point better than I did - which was that Roman buildings that remained standing did so because they were useful for some purpose, often an alternative one (such as a church). It speaks to their value specifically as architecture and is mostly orthogonal to their construction techniques. There are plenty of old buildings (such as Hōryū-ji, Ruwanweli Maha Seya, Mousa Broch, etc) that don’t use any kind of magical construction techniques but have stuck around because of their value to the surrounding society and active efforts at preservation and/or repurposing.
> There are plenty of old buildings (such as Hōryū-ji) that don’t use any kind of magical construction techniques but have stuck around because of their value to the surrounding society and active efforts at preservation and/or repurposing.
This is true, but rather misleading. Hōryū-ji burned down and is probably around 80-90% new material.
The Roman concrete structures on the other hand survived this long with their original construction materials.
> which was that Roman buildings that remained standing did so because they were useful for some purpose,
that's a fallacy.
A lot of buildings were useful back then, it wasn't easy to build them nor cheap.
But most of them collapsed, because they weren't strong enough.
You get roman buildings everywhere in Europe and Northern Africa, a lot of civilizations lived there in the past 40 centuries and their remains are scarce at best.
It is like saying that Amazon beat many other startups of its times because they got lucky, it's simply because their execution was better than the competition.
There are very few Roman buildings that had survived intact. Besides the theaters and aqueducts there are basically none which were not later turned into churches. While Roman buildings might have been stronger than those built by the preceding civilizations (then again in the case of Europe (outside of Greece) and Northern Africa Roman there was very little competition, who else built massive coliseums at the the time?) most ancient buildings did not just simply collapse due to age but were destroyed by people who wanted to reuse their building material.
Trust me, the Domus Aurea was never a church, Villa Adriana has never been a church,they are both UNESCO's World Heritage Sites.
I think the misunderstanding comes from the fact that romans built several Basilica (for example the Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine), but for romans basilica meant a different thing: from the Greek word "stoà basileiós" the term basilica refers to the function of a building as that of a meeting hall. In ancient Rome, basilicas were the site for legal matters to be carried out and a place for business transactions.
Most of them never became religious buildings, they remained public places to meet other people.
> most ancient buildings did not just simply collapse due to age but were destroyed by people who wanted to reuse their building material.
that happened to roman buildings as well, Colosseum is maybe a third of what originally it was made of, but it's still standing and survived a massive earthquake in 1349 that opened a huge crack in it, but didn't destroy it.
Yes there are plenty of relatively well preserved Roman ruins, neither Hadrian's Villa or Domus Aurea had survived intact.
I'm not denying that Roman construction techniques were advanced, but it's not like we have much to compare them against. Sure, there aren't as many well preserved Etruscan or Greek ruins in Italy, but they preceded the Romans, had way less resources and not as advanced technology. And the same happened to the Romans who were eventually surpassed by medieval and renaissance Europeans. There magnitudes more surviving medieval buildings compared to Roman buildings, just like there are magnitudes (I would assume) more Roman ones compared ones built by Etruscans/etc.
But that does not mean that Roman architecture was somehow inherently superior. For example had the Carthaginians or some Greek state conquered the mediterranean instead of the Romans (obviously that was unlikely due to various non architecture related reasons) and had the resources to build as much as the Romans did would less of their buildings have survived or would they have been of worse quality everything else staying equal?
> and had the resources to build as much as the Romans did would less of their buildings have survived or would they have been of worse quality everything else staying equal?
Thanks for the question.
It would be a very long discussion to have in details, starting from the fact that even in ancient Rome there was some culture of preservation, like the restoration of 82 temples in the programs of Augustus (see “Preservation Practices in Ancient and Medieval Rome”), but it wasn't until 15th century that a real program of preservation and protection of old buildings was created by the papacy.
Rome was, more than any other city of its times, subject to invasions and destruction of its ancient monuments, used as construction material for new buildings and churches.
The need for churches was actually more a detriment than a a blessing.
The capital was moved to Constantinople more than a century before the sack of Rome and the fall of the western Roman empire, its monuments, its marbles, its travertine, its bricks, have been for more than a millennium up for grabs, by many conquerors.
In Greek cities, for example, there were no monuments to steal from, because they had been ruins for centuries already, Rome almost disappeared during the middle ages and, but the need for materials and the sacks never stopped, making new buildings, every time larger and richer, was the new normal, it was probably the most prolific period in history.
The fact that so many Roman buildings survived despite most of the original material was removed and used somewhere else, it's kinda miraculous.
Take for example two great historical figures: Alexander the great and Genghis Khan, their empires were immense, some of the largest in history, but buildings of their era are virtually non existent.
It wasn't their strongest trait, they were not builders.
Compare them to the Mesopotamians or the Egyptians and it becomes easier to see the difference.
Greeks influenced a lot both Etruscan and Romans, but it was more of a style.
Advanced construction techniques in Etruscan region were brought directly by Greek natives, but only the most privileged classes built proper houses, the rest of the population was living in villages made by tents or wooden shelters.
In East Asia, Japan in particular, most "old" buildings are reconstructed fairly often. They might reuse a lot of the old supplies, but many are very much a Ship of Theseus. Roman structures are, for the most part, preserved as they were--not fully disassembled and rebuilt.
One thing is that most places with extremely old structures have them far and few between. A 2000 year old building that wasn't rebuilt from the ground up is often a symbol of national pride for a country and seen as somewhat of a miracle that it's still standing. What makes Rome unique is the city alone is full of such structures, and it's a living, active city. In other countries that had a Roman presence, many of their oldest structures are remains built by Romans.
Most Egyptian structures were buried under sand for millennia and well-preserved as a consequence of that. I have to wonder how they'd hold up if they were in a different climate and with humans bustling about constantly into the modern era.
Either way, Romans were clearly doing something special.
The Roman period was followed by general population contraction and a total collapse of urban centers. The city for Rome itself did not reach the population it had in the 200's AD until the early 20th century. Of most ancient Rome was an abandoned or sparsely inhabited ruin (much like many other Roman cities) which is why so many buildings survived.
If Rome had remained a densely inhabited city most of the ruins would had likely been completely destroyed and built over (besides a few temples which were converted to churches). If we look at smaller Roman cities like Cadiz, London, Paris, Milan etc. there aren't that many traces of Roman times there because their population levels eventually rebounded during middle ages.
This is probably a rehash from your linked thread, but... perhaps it's both? Better construction materials used in buildings that had the most value in their architecture and/or purpose?
Another comment made my point better than I did - which was that Roman buildings that remained standing did so because they were useful for some purpose, often an alternative one (such as a church). It speaks to their value specifically as architecture and is mostly orthogonal to their construction techniques. There are plenty of old buildings (such as Hōryū-ji, Ruwanweli Maha Seya, Mousa Broch, etc) that don’t use any kind of magical construction techniques but have stuck around because of their value to the surrounding society and active efforts at preservation and/or repurposing.