Built Really Quickly
Considering the speed of construction in Italy today, you may think that Colosseum takes a lot of time to build (or may even be abandoned). But the Roman workforce is strongly motivated, and it is built really quickly this is one of the interesting facts you might not know about the Colosseum. The Flavian dynasty had a huge working force of about 60,000 slaves brought from Jerusalem after the first Jewish War, who pulled the 20-mile Tivoli rocks to Rome. While manual labor is handled by slaves, the majority of skilled labor has been completed by the Romans by professional artists, engineers, architects, and decorators.
Colosseum was built really quickly thanks to certain mechanical skills also used: the crane of the tire running by the power of slaves in the basic thing is the wheel of the human, used to lift the materials needed to be needed. Set to build the famous stone dome of the Colosseum. Recent inventions on volcanic concrete also accelerate the construction process, allowing workers to combine effectively and effectively travertine stones, bricks, and other stones. Thanks to these slaves, the construction began under Vespasian around 70 or 72 AD and was completed about 8 years later when Vespasian's son, Titus, was inaugurated of Colosseum. To be correct, the last features were added when the other son of Vespasian, Domitian, added the top floor and the underground rooms for animals and fighters.