Ramps For Disabled People Trace Back To Ancient Greece (sciencemag.org) 50
sciencehabit shares a report from Science Magazine: The ramps for disabled people that smooth entry into many public buildings today aren't a modern invention. The ancient Greeks constructed similar ramps of stone to help individuals who had trouble walking or climbing stairs access holy sites, new research suggests. That would make the ramps -- some more than 2300 years old -- the oldest known evidence of architecture designed to meet the needs of the disabled.
Archaeologist Debby Sneed focused on the fourth century B.C.E., when sanctuaries to Asclepius -- the Greek god of healing -- proliferated. She found that the two best documented healing sanctuaries she looked at were outfitted with more ramps than other sacred sites, and that their ramps were more likely to access buildings other than the main temple. At Asclepius's main sanctuary at Epidaurus, near Athens, for example, a broad stone ramp led up to the temple. Two more ramps led through the sanctuary gates. And a series of smaller side buildings also feature narrow ramps just wide enough to walk up, Sneed reports today in Antiquity. High stairs would be hard for people using crutches. And though wheelchairs wouldn't be invented for more than 1,000 years, visitors to healing shrines who couldn't walk sometimes had to be carried on litters or stretchers -- both easier to navigate up a ramp.
Archaeologist Debby Sneed focused on the fourth century B.C.E., when sanctuaries to Asclepius -- the Greek god of healing -- proliferated. She found that the two best documented healing sanctuaries she looked at were outfitted with more ramps than other sacred sites, and that their ramps were more likely to access buildings other than the main temple. At Asclepius's main sanctuary at Epidaurus, near Athens, for example, a broad stone ramp led up to the temple. Two more ramps led through the sanctuary gates. And a series of smaller side buildings also feature narrow ramps just wide enough to walk up, Sneed reports today in Antiquity. High stairs would be hard for people using crutches. And though wheelchairs wouldn't be invented for more than 1,000 years, visitors to healing shrines who couldn't walk sometimes had to be carried on litters or stretchers -- both easier to navigate up a ramp.
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Didn't they make aqueducts which are essentially ramps for water?
No, that was the Romans [youtube.com].
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Because nobody in ancient times ever had difficulty walking or climbing steps, that was only invented in 1967.
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Because nobody in ancient times ever had difficulty walking or climbing steps, that was only invented in 1967.
The Spartans killed their disabled.
Helot Lives Matter
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Re: Aqueducts (Score:2)
Kinda like what the mermaid Ariel and scuttle do when they encounter unknown human objects... [youtu.be]
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I think you assume ramps are ony used because of a recent law in the US. And yet, you will find ramps that have been built and used long before this law, in the US and around the world. Human society has had this problem for a very long time, and the need for ramps has been around since we've had buildings. I saw ramps in private homes and public buildings back in the 60s. Now some societies may not have valued disabled people very much, but all it takes is one king, warlord, or wealthy person who has di
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To add to this, from the article:
Not everyone is convinced. Katja Sporn, head of the German Archaeological Institute’s Athens department and the author of a paper examining temple ramps in the Greek world, notes that ramps are found predominantly in the Peloponnese, the heartland of ancient Greece. To her, that raises the possibility they were a regional and relatively short-lived architectural trend. At most, ramps were multipurpose conveniences, she argues. “It helps everyone, also disabled people, walk into temples better,” Sporn says. “But that you would only do it for disabled people I don’t find convincing.”
So there is not full agreement here. However note that this skeptic does not take the slashdot approach of calling the scientist's work bollocks.
Can't Prove it One Way or Another (Score:2, Informative)
Moving a bunch of 3,000 pound stones (Score:5, Insightful)
The building is assembled of great number of stones, each around 3,000 pounds or so.
I don't know about anyone else, but if I have a few hundred stones to move into place and I have a choice between:
A. Have horses pull them up a ramp
B. I carry them up stairs
I'm picking A. I'm gonna use ramps.
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Yeah I came to say pretty much just this same thing.
they had ramps for building the pyramids too and ramps to wheel stuff into the pyramids.
there's ramps at a lot of places for other reasons than for the disabled in the modern world too.
Re: Moving a bunch of 3,000 pound stones (Score:2, Funny)
Do you're saying the pyramids were built by disabled workers?
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You can make ramps from packed dirt during construction and dig them away when you are finished. We still do that today because bulldozers can't drive up stairs without destroying them.
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You can dig them away when you're, but again I'm not doing that if I don't have to.
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Built by Captain Obvious (Score:1)
And before. It's a ramp, not some fancy complicated invention. Someone made one because there was a need for it.
The ancient Greeks used sticks as levers too. And rocks to weigh stuff down so it doesn’t blow away. And hollow containers to store liquids. Etc.
Captain Obvious history lesson complete.
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Just because there's a need for it doesn't mean it will be conceived and invented. I am sure they needed an iPhone too, but didn't invent one of those.
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A ramp is not an invention.
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I can see the ancients utilizing natural ramps. In fact, I would expect previous species would be able to do that. It's nothing that any decent mammal can't handle, now that I think of it. Somebody, though, had the first idea of "let's create this thing from materials that will allow us to accomplish a task; and we'll call it 'ramp'".
Is that an invention? Here's one definition...
"A new device, method, or process developed from study and experimentation"
...so I might argue that it is an invention.
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It's not created from materials. It's a pile of dirt in vaguely-defined shape.
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The Egyptians used ramps to build the pyramids.
What kind of fool would try to pull a huge object up anything but a smooth ramp?
Many possible reasons (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Many possible reasons (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, they sure wouldn't equip temples with ramps,because they didn't want the disabled there.
Leviticus 21:18: For any man who has a defect shall not approach: a man blind or lame, who has a marred face or any limb too long,
Re:Many possible reasons (Score:4, Insightful)
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So you still get to mooch even if you're not able to even pretend you're useful.
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Well, they sure wouldn't equip temples with ramps,because they didn't want the disabled there.
Leviticus 21:18: For any man who has a defect shall not approach: a man blind or lame, who has a marred face or any limb too long,
From the article "She found that the two best documented healing sanctuaries she looked at were outfitted with more ramps than other sacred sites". Do your hospitals forbid access to anyone who is ill? Did you read the article?
Who thought? (Score:2)
Who thought ramps were a recent invention?
The ramps for disabled people that smooth entry into many public buildings today aren't a modern invention.
It seems likely that ramps pre-dated stairs...
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Sure. Pyramids, etc. But TFA is about "ramps for disabled people" specifically.
For Somebody Rich And Important (Score:1)
Probably there was somebody high in the hierarchy who was disabled. I doubt if it was an 'initiative' like modern ramp mandates.
The ADA of -400? (Score:2)
Ramps aren't just for disabled... (Score:3)
That is not to say it could not or was not used for the disabled, but it does mean the assumptions in the article are complete bunk. Unless you are in a wheelchair a ramp does not pose a significant advantage over wide stairs, if anything wide flat stair are far superior as they are both level and have a low incline.
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Ramps are also required for wagons... any large site would require deliveries likely via a wagon
From the article: "And a series of smaller side buildings also feature narrow ramps just wide enough to walk up" (already in bold in the original article) In other words, ramps not wide enough for a wagon.
That is not to say it could not or was not used for the disabled, but it does mean the assumptions in the article are complete bunk.
Methinks it's your assertions that are complete bunk!
Unless you are in a wheelchair a ramp does not pose a significant advantage over wide stairs
Let's talk about that again when you're old and have arthritis and joint disease (see article).
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If the ramp was just wide enough to walk up and it is a side building not the main affair... that would make me think wheelbarrows rather that anything for the disabled.
As far as your last comment... wheelchairs did not exist until the late 14th century in Europe, they they far predated that in China beginning to exist somewhere between 500BC and 500 AD.
How about using your brain cells before
But did they wear masks (Score:2)
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Sorta, for people struck with the theater bug...
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/41/c... [pinimg.com]
As an aside, I was watching a docu on WWI yesterday, and saw a regiment of troops marching through a city, all masked.
Pre-Socratic philosopher nails it (Score:1)
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"The way up and the way down are one and the same." -- Heraclitus
Absolutely. Had to do that for the five miles to school every day. In the snow, natch.
ramps were for profit, not cripples (Score:1)
talking off the top of my head, without citation.
most of these sites, as far as we know, were built in the later eras of the faiths they represent, and were run by large groups and usually powerful groups of officiates, who usually fed themselves on the sacrifices of the faithful.
those ramps were to make it easier for the faithful to deliver sacrifices, on wheels.
i bet you.
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talking to myself here, probably.
this slash makes me itch, really should read the article, however.
this statement
"carried on litters or stretchers -- both easier to navigate up a ramp"
is entirely false.
it may seem true, without experience, but just try it.
you may get up a short ramp, carrying a heavy weight, of any kind, without much effort, but i will happily race you, even at my age, up any serious flight of stairs, compared with any equivalent ramp, your choice of slope, and we will see whose ham