Why an ancient Mesopotamian tablet is key to our future learning | Tiffany Jenkins | TEDxSquareMile

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024

Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @borlani
    @borlani 4 года назад +580

    All the way through I was completely spellbound and transfixed by Tiffany's incredible self- discipline at not kicking any of the balloons around the floor. I couldn't have done that.

    • @beehappy3879
      @beehappy3879 4 года назад +7

      😂

    • @crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641
      @crouchingwombathiddenquoll5641 4 года назад +4

      Yes, I would have to pop them before beginning my talk.

    • @emytann7838
      @emytann7838 3 года назад +3

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂😂😂👍👍👍

    • @gurug9797
      @gurug9797 3 года назад +9

      Well if she leaves the red dot she gets an electric shock. Standard for TED talks.
      This same talk can be found under the title 'humans doing Pavlovian dog experiment'

    • @yfoog
      @yfoog 3 года назад +1

      @@gurug9797 yeah the outer-red shock, standard for ted talks.

  • @gargos25
    @gargos25 4 года назад +125

    Her message is to visit museums, especially with ancient pieces. I visited one yesterday in Istanbul and was blown away. This comes with age, I believe. I didn't appreciate what I was seeing, as a kid.

    • @valeriy8502
      @valeriy8502 3 года назад +4

      I loved museums as a kid

    • @etheriusmoon1809
      @etheriusmoon1809 3 года назад +3

      @@valeriy8502 me too

    • @xmarine73
      @xmarine73 2 года назад +5

      This is the reason you should take your children and let your awe, excitement, and wonderment be shared with them. Explaining as you go just how old, how incredible, and how beautiful things are. Drawing parallels between us, today, and our ancestors from past millennia while also carefully explaining the many differences. How simple life would have been (no television, video games, colleges, road side markets, very little schooling) and how difficult (no air conditioning, no refrigeration, no ice, no suntan lotion, no grocery stores, fresh water from wells or rivers, raiding hordes). Build that movie in their mind for each piece and let them decide what they find interesting. Even if it's nothing at all. That may change within a trip or two or three.

    • @Padronous
      @Padronous 2 года назад +3

      I think it come with perspective and life experience to be able to truly appreciate it.

    • @7Lace77
      @7Lace77 2 года назад

      I didn't really appreciate history when I was at school. I liked Maths and Science but had no interest in teh past. 🤷🏻‍♂️ This wasn't overly interesting tho.

  • @_Diggler
    @_Diggler 4 года назад +122

    Items like this need to be 3D scanned and made available for download and printing. Imagine the impact in a classroom hearing this Ted Talk and the students then touching and experiencing this piece of history. Amazing!

    • @scotthepborn3864
      @scotthepborn3864 3 года назад +3

      Agreed

    • @scotthepborn3864
      @scotthepborn3864 3 года назад +12

      Unfortunately it would have to be sanitized and made politically correct....

    • @homeandalone1640
      @homeandalone1640 3 года назад +1

      Sketchfab has it. Three models but two aren't very sharp. Probably easier and cheaper to just buy a resin reproduction on amazon.

    • @exhaustedmajority5134
      @exhaustedmajority5134 3 года назад +2

      Buy the replicas

    • @BOIOLA08
      @BOIOLA08 2 года назад +1

      Agreed

  • @Kell_M
    @Kell_M 4 года назад +292

    This tablet is one of thousands which have been translated.
    The Sumerians explain in great detail their daily lives, marriage and birth certificates, day to day transactions, amongst other things..
    The story of Adam and Eve is told in these tablets too, only in much greater detail.
    Most of what we know today about 'The Annunaki' is all thanks to these absolutely precious, relics of time. Knowledge left behind for us, by our ancestors, the great Sumerians...

    • @brotherx6205
      @brotherx6205 4 года назад +7

      Who are the annunaki? I keep seeing that word

    • @Kell_M
      @Kell_M 4 года назад +27

      @@brotherx6205 They are our true makers..
      We are a part of them, and they are a part of us..

    • @brotherx6205
      @brotherx6205 4 года назад +10

      @@Kell_M I have read up on the Nephilim before, they were giants that used to walk the earth correct?

    • @brotherx6205
      @brotherx6205 4 года назад +6

      @@Special-Delivery57 I definitely have my research cut out for me to do. Thank you for providing a source

    • @brotherx6205
      @brotherx6205 4 года назад +9

      @@Special-Delivery57 that makes so much sense, Prometheus is hinting at the Annunaki aka "Engineers"??

  • @louis8312
    @louis8312 5 лет назад +707

    From George Orwell : Who Control the past control the Future, Who controls the present controls the past.

    • @danam6639
      @danam6639 5 лет назад +15

      Piere B
      You are in the knowing ...

    • @stephanedemers8590
      @stephanedemers8590 5 лет назад +31

      as in the ones who win wars are the ones who write about them ,no how more biast can that be ! its like propaganda rights goes to the victor ,write all about how great we are ,and those losers did not stant a chance ,

    • @fredslawson7259
      @fredslawson7259 4 года назад +11

      Piere. He who controls the spin, wins.

    • @BillyMeierInFrenchBM
      @BillyMeierInFrenchBM 4 года назад +27

      And who controls one's thoughts (then feelings, then words, then acts, then behaviour, then character) controls one's destiny.

    • @thewrightfamily369
      @thewrightfamily369 4 года назад +5

      Louis I think he was trying to tell us something

  • @RonzigtheWizard
    @RonzigtheWizard 3 года назад +91

    When I was young right after I had managed reading I would go to the library every week and take out the maximum number of books about history and legends. The lady at the library thought I couldn't have read them but I did. I spent most of my time reading and as well as history and legends I also read all the books written for young boys. I found the books about history and legends far more exciting than the stories written for boys my age. I learned that stories of a great flood was part of history and legend from countries all over the world from those books. Trips to the museum in Toronto Canada where I was born was a highlight of my early years. There are all kinds of really exciting things to see in any museum. I highly recommend anyone who reads this to take their kids to museums as often as possible.

    • @maxheadroom683
      @maxheadroom683 3 года назад +3

      I highly recommend anyone who reads this to check Immanuel Velikovsky's book "Worlds in collision".

    • @KallePihlajasaari
      @KallePihlajasaari 3 года назад

      @@maxheadroom683 I was thinking to say the same thing. There are many strange things in our past that have been lost or misinterpreted.

  • @johnhunter2058
    @johnhunter2058 4 года назад +208

    "... you have to be obsessed with your subject, to the point where people think you are weird ..."
    YAY! I qualify!

    • @rdelrosso2001
      @rdelrosso2001 3 года назад +3

      So do I.

    • @tomiantenna7279
      @tomiantenna7279 3 года назад +3

      Where people THINK you are weird, not where you are ACTUALLY weird!
      ...weirdo

    • @nopenope1834
      @nopenope1834 3 года назад

      @@tomiantenna7279 I'm both.

  • @stjett
    @stjett 2 года назад +74

    The Sumerian kings list has been around, I've studied it over twenty years ago and recently a breakthrough was made over its numerical code. It make biblical references on the flood and lifespan of those before the flood. It then ties into history. She needs to speak more on the artifact, because it is astonishing.

    • @bschnoza473
      @bschnoza473 2 года назад +3

      Hey, I am new to learning about the Sumarians. I have been studying philosophy mostly then the western worlds history from 550 BC and upwards. Do you have any suggestions to where I could learn more about the Sumarians? Museums and that sort. (If what you are saying is true)

    • @stjett
      @stjett 2 года назад +5

      @@bschnoza473 Hi i just seen you question. Study the table of nation from noah grandson nimrod, from cush and Ashur the second son of Shem. study Sumer which is the earliest known civilization in the historical region of southern Mesopotamia (now southern Iraq), it dates back before 3000 BC. The city of Uruk gen 10 :10 Nimrod the mighty hunter before the LORD. 10And the beginning of his kingdom was Babel, and Erech (Uruk ), and Accad, and Calneh, in the land of Shinar. 11 Out of that land went forth Asshur, and builded Nineveh, and the city Rehoboth, and Calah. references
      The Assyrians created powerful empires of their own in several periods. Making up a substantial part of the greater Mesopotamian "cradle of civilization", which included Sumer the Sumerian-speaking peoples of Mesopotamia , and Babylonia. before 3500 bc. look up the Sumerian kings list I will try to find my notes.

    • @theradicalaxe553
      @theradicalaxe553 2 года назад +3

      @@stjett So does "The Lost Book of King Og" have any merit to you? And why are the annunaki not seen as human? What is special about them besides the amount of fingers they have which could be a air pocket (inner earth) trait all humans have regenerative properties like the annunaki/nephilim though most aren't aware of this I can touch up on this more if you end up responding

    • @stjett
      @stjett 2 года назад +5

      @@theradicalaxe553 Some quick understanding on Lost Books of the Bible.
      1st I do not except any book written after 100 AD
      2nd. during the 2nd century many fraudulent works were put forth, Pseudepigrapha, which are falsely attributed works, texts whose claimed author is not the true author. This is what is going on today.

      like Testament of Moses (Jewish, from c. early 1st cent. CE)
      Testament of Solomon (Jewish, current form c. 3rd cent. CE, but earliest form c. 100 CE)
      Testament of Adam (Christian in current form c. late 3rd cent. CE, but used Jewish sources from c. 150-200 CE).
      Apocalypse of Adam (Gnostic derived from Jewish sources from c. the 1st cent. CE)
      Apocalypse of Elijah (both Jewish and Christian, c. 150-275 CE)
      Gospel of Thomas) is as late as AD 250
      The seal portion 2007AD lol.
      These works mix known information with fiction for a entertaining read..
      Such is "The Lost Book of King Og" as well as Annunaki / Nubri,/ Nephlum conection in Chariots of the Gods, Unsolved Mysteries of the Past, written in 1968 by Erich von Däniken and much of The book of Enoch books 2-5 are myth.
      However there is truth to giants all over history. "No RUclips pictures of giants are real" The issue is to separate the facts from the fiction remembering men love to create fascinating stories.
      The Book of Giants (. AD 216 - 274) is an antediluvian (pre-Flood) narrative that originate in Aramaic copies among the Dead Sea Scrolls.
      References to the Giants mythology are found in: Genesis 6:1-4, the books of Enoch (Ethiopic, Slavonic, Hebrew, Greek), Jubilees, Genesis Apocryphon 25 BCE through 50 CE which coincides with the radiocarbon dating estimate of 89 BCE-118 CE.
      These books tells of the background and fate of these ante-diluvial giants and their fathers, the Watchers (called grigori in the Slavonic 2 Enoch),[6][7] the sons of God or holy ones (Daniel 4:13, 17) who rebelled against heaven when-in forbidden violation of the strict "boundaries of creation"]-they commingled, in their lust, with the "daughters of men." This is the hidden story
      Some Ture authentic lost books are in the Dead see scroll list.
      Others are the book of Jubilees with caution (Jewish, c. 150-100 BCE)
      Book of Enoch 1 (300 bce) with caution
      The works of Josephus a historian,, Sumerian kings list, and some archeological artifact are true. Note, Amazon does not check books for authenticity . and We don’t except writings with a demonic narrative founded on their wisdom, that would be foolish my friend.

    • @thomaslangkvist5830
      @thomaslangkvist5830 2 года назад +2

      @@bschnoza473 did you find your notebook m8? Intrested

  • @Britspence381
    @Britspence381 5 лет назад +14

    Ms. Jenkins' description of George Smith reminds me of a quote from the movie about Alan Turing: ‘Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine.’ Very interesting video.

    • @18_rabbit
      @18_rabbit 2 месяца назад

      yeah and coming from Turing, it means a lot, given he was one of the smartest ppl in history, probably in the top five, literally!

  • @garethhutchings4045
    @garethhutchings4045 5 лет назад +53

    Thank you Ms Jenkins for presenting this talk. I remember , as a child in the 50's, spending days in the museum with friends, thoroughly entranced by the exhibitions.

    • @beckylieb2637
      @beckylieb2637 5 лет назад +9

      Back then children were allowed to think and parents focused on teaching boundaries which make children feel emotionally safe and therefore free to learn. Todays kids have cluttered minds and delinquent ideologies that lead to less supple cognitive function

    • @singin4free
      @singin4free 5 лет назад +4

      She speaks of challenging orthodoxy. Today's orthodoxy is governed by universities who, when challenged, are equally as able to suppress new ideas as those who governed in the past.

    • @jennpipp26
      @jennpipp26 5 лет назад +3

      singin4free it’s almost as if we are willing slaves? We pay to be enslaved and can’t get enough. We want more. Stuff. Bills. Food. Give us morrrrreeeeee

    • @wendeln92
      @wendeln92 5 лет назад +1

      A.....I happen to agree with Gareth Hutchings comment and also spent a lot of time as a child and my teens in museums and visiting historic sites. Why does that imply a "child genius"? Why do you choose to try to insult him in that vein? maybe you are not a child genius......Children in the past - those of us who grew up before the age of computer screens, iphones and video games did such things as read books, visit museums and libraries and etc in order to learn about the world. We experienced the tangible which Dr. Jenkins speaks of and didn't live our lives floating in the clouds and vapors of the digital age.

    • @trumpsahead
      @trumpsahead 5 лет назад +1

      Yeah, me too in the 50's, then they demanded donations or would not allow you to enter. And they took away all the giant skeletons, and it became more homogenized reflecting the police state we now live in. The end.

  • @charlesyanni5195
    @charlesyanni5195 2 года назад +8

    Thank you for the experience of hearing you talk about this! I will gratefully take your advice and view such artifacts in public museums. I will also try to let the experts, the museum staff, explain these items where such guides are available. Thank you.

  • @romelanvieh2297
    @romelanvieh2297 4 года назад +167

    I'm an Assyrian and our ancient calendar which we still use in our small community is dating back 7867 years. perhaps you should ask me to translate it for you!!

    • @twoprayingbuddhas892
      @twoprayingbuddhas892 3 года назад +14

      I would love that

    • @DrJuiceMD
      @DrJuiceMD 3 года назад +5

      You’re an Assyrian!

    • @oj816
      @oj816 3 года назад +6

      YES YES YES

    • @RefractArt
      @RefractArt 3 года назад +30

      You might be Assyrian, but that's Cuneiform, and it was invented by Sumerians, hard to figure how you would translate a dead language for more than 40k years old.

    • @rdelrosso2001
      @rdelrosso2001 3 года назад +7

      Romel:
      7,867 YEARS OLD? WOW, so that would go back to 5847 BC!
      I think that's older than Egypt!
      Do you actually have Texts or Tablets that are 7,000 years old?
      In addition, I have always wanted to ask an Assyrian:
      How are Assyrians related to today's "Syrians"?
      Or IS there a connection?
      In Ancient times, wasn't Syria called "Assyria"?

  • @kjekelle96
    @kjekelle96 5 лет назад +129

    I think the main message is something like this:
    In out current high-paced, busy lives, where summoning information and stuff is easy beyond belief, it's also easy to get lost in being only on the surface of things. We have to learn to go deeper into specific material or occupations (again), to be really engaged, from time to time at least, in one thing at a time and nothing else (instead of many things all over the place, but superficially). And we have to do this because if you do it long enough it will make whatever you're engaged in even more interesting and meaningful, and arousing even. We need stuff like this to keep in touch with who we really are, and how to live, a large part of which is constituted by the incredible depth and mystery of our vast history.
    That's how I understand what she's illustrating with her story.

    • @BELINC7
      @BELINC7 5 лет назад +6

      who we really are -MAN WHO WAS CREATED IN THE IMAGE OF GOD FELL INTO RUIN OF MAN'S OWN CHOICE FOR HIS PART. THAT IS ALL THE HISTORY WE WILL EVER MAKE MAKE..RUINS. and how to live, =Micah 6:8 He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? - We are incapable of this. The revealed mystery is God through his son is reconciling and restoring ALL creation to himself forever,= that is our future forever. Like Hannah from the ash heap -dust pile of fallen man of dust to the royal palace of the kingdom of God because we are now in the man of heaven, Jesus Christ.

    • @BELINC7
      @BELINC7 5 лет назад +5

      Ephesians 2:4 But God, who is rich in mercy, for his great love wherewith he loved us, 5 Even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ, (by grace ye are saved;) 6 And hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus: 7 That in the ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us through Christ Jesus. 8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: 9 Not of works, lest any man should boast.

    • @kjekelle96
      @kjekelle96 5 лет назад +3

      b-b-booorringg

    • @josephefasciani7343
      @josephefasciani7343 5 лет назад +3

      A MOST excellent comment!
      Esquimalt, BC

    • @patrickshelton3053
      @patrickshelton3053 5 лет назад +2

      I feel you

  • @soloman9151
    @soloman9151 5 лет назад +15

    I think the presenter in this case is definitely on the right track about questioning 'orthodoxy' and what is seemingly taken for granted as being truth or 'fact' among Academics that view history from a standard or 'accepted or adopted point of view that may not necessarily be correct.
    Although She didn't quite say it in those terms what was hinted at pretty strongly is that it doesn't necessarily take a university degree to uncover or discover new understanding of things of the past in our 21st century and, that passion for a subject could possibly sometimes override accepted or 'assumed' knowledge - which may or may not be true.
    It certainly does no harm to keep an open mind towards all things and not assume that academics know all things - which is the image of themselves they would like us lesser mortals to keep in mind. :)

  • @bboyneon92
    @bboyneon92 2 года назад +11

    2022, And I'm dead sure that this piece of message will make complete sense in any century.
    My love and respect to Tiffany.

  • @brianmorris3290
    @brianmorris3290 4 года назад +264

    I think she may have her years wrong. Mesopotamian culture dates back way further that 2700 years ago. She should say 2700 B.C.

    • @russianbot8423
      @russianbot8423 4 года назад +25

      Yes you are correct. By 700BC Mesopotamia was long or Assyria was long extinct and the Persian Empire was close to its end.

    • @tytusromek9267
      @tytusromek9267 4 года назад +27

      It is impressive how many cultures there were. For example today only few know the Hittites, Kingdom of Kush...
      And how many are still hidden like once Göbekli Tepe who change our view of history and how many have been erased from the face of the earth

    • @hatihanise1557
      @hatihanise1557 4 года назад +1

      @Gerrit Peacock what do you mean 'they are trying to jive Abrahamic roots with this tablet' story'?

    • @russianbot8423
      @russianbot8423 4 года назад +2

      @Gogu Pãduche 200 to 300 years is not that long in the scheme of things. I'm not talking declining as an Empire, just number of years left as a Empire as you know Alexander did end the Persian empire

    • @alaindubois1505
      @alaindubois1505 4 года назад +6

      She is just talking about her piece of clay - which is way after Sumerian was written and spoken. From another extremely interesting RUclips - there appears to be the most amazing description of Nebiru people who did genetic engineering to create humans [or to finish off human evolution].
      I can't tell whether it was word for word retrieval from cuneiform script or embellishment. However, the origin of their 12/60/360 base system and how we use this today is amazing.
      Most clay tablets have not been deciphered yet. Someone soon should create a laypersons concise reading - putting the info together.
      I wonder what Irving Finkel has to say about the Annunaki.

  • @mkultra8640
    @mkultra8640 5 лет назад +27

    Good to see someone who values things that are real, touchable, actually exist. I totally get what she was talking about. I identify bigley!!

  • @nanorider426
    @nanorider426 3 года назад +12

    This is the most important lesson for us in the 21st century: Remembering those which came before us. Although a lot of people don't believe this; they believe in history is forgettable and "it's boring". They have a simplified view of history of "good vs bad" if they have any idea of history at all. RUclips comments and real life incidents have made me realize this.
    Historians fight a battle against darkness in the form of ignorance. Ignorance is a pillow and headphones merged into one: It's lets you relax into you own world of silence or the voice you chose to listen to without a doubt.

    • @sinjofin1
      @sinjofin1 3 года назад +2

      And preserve the past lest we forget

    • @skrrtskrrt2410
      @skrrtskrrt2410 3 года назад

      It's only boring because of how they teach it

    • @StrawberrySoul77
      @StrawberrySoul77 2 года назад

      @. Seems they are also fighting brainwashing. The delivery of the false information makes it inherently boring. I was bored with the fake history, but I find the truth a relief and very interesting.

  • @michelklaasen
    @michelklaasen 3 года назад +2

    To sum up this talk
    - There’s a tablet that details biblical stories way before the bible was published
    - This is the most fascinating thing she has ever seen
    - She has the date wrong of the tablet
    - Clay tablets are physical things whereas digital information is not physical
    - Because it is physical, it is tangible
    - Because it is tangible, you can touch it
    - You should not undress yourself in a public space
    - Please visit the royal british museum

    • @vanessas2363
      @vanessas2363 2 года назад

      🤣 were you being funny? Because that just made me laugh

  • @nicolaaro9752
    @nicolaaro9752 3 года назад +12

    I could listen to her for hours ! So accurate! Museum are our history!

  • @soultraveler4496
    @soultraveler4496 5 лет назад +10

    The more you know,,, the more questions you won't know...reality is unfathomable...

    • @tavoiaiono7885
      @tavoiaiono7885 5 лет назад

      If you say so, then it shall be. But only in your reality.

    • @tavoiaiono7885
      @tavoiaiono7885 4 года назад

      @Kyle Mellor yes, I guess that is true, Which is why you must find what resonates with you, instead. There is no truth or lies, just what is. YOu are a creator, so create the world you desire and create your truth so you are no longer exposed to other people's creations where you may translate as lies and more questions. Create and be happy.

    • @apexpredator9021
      @apexpredator9021 4 года назад

      A question does not end with an answer, for the answer will lead to even more questions.

  • @mecho68
    @mecho68 5 лет назад +14

    I can listen this lady teaching about ancient history all day long .Thank you for this video .

  • @rich4444hrsm
    @rich4444hrsm 3 года назад +2

    I understand, museums must be maintained for people like you Tiffany to be inspired to succeed in your endeavors. I think that is very fair and an admirable goal for all of us to aspire to.

  • @ericgibson2079
    @ericgibson2079 2 года назад +7

    We need a sense of the past taught in schools big time. Our best sense too.

  • @Vulpes79
    @Vulpes79 3 года назад +73

    I could listen to her voice all day

    • @Sargentleman
      @Sargentleman 3 года назад +7

      Get a girlfriend.

    • @lora97006
      @lora97006 3 года назад +5

      Her voice is great, but sticky saliva picked up on mic, not so much. I've heard that a cpl other ted talks too...kind of strange.

    • @knifen2478
      @knifen2478 3 года назад +4

      Bruh...that saliva noise is killing me. Reminds me of a joe rogan episode completely un listenable

    • @markstaddon4993
      @markstaddon4993 3 года назад

      For maybe 1 day and there is some more tangibillity needed

    • @rusmanyatim7393
      @rusmanyatim7393 3 года назад

      Cfhbm gJ k knn hd
      Nc
      .btYk k

  • @prcaprca9440
    @prcaprca9440 3 года назад +106

    The oldest Classical Tamil language above 2000years old also has registered the same Great Flood in its literatures.

    • @kushagr7132
      @kushagr7132 3 года назад +7

      So you mean from 1st century CE
      But Assyrian record of it is older than that

    • @luckyluckyloulou6100
      @luckyluckyloulou6100 3 года назад +6

      Remember the great flood lasted 1,300yrs and ended 12,800yrs ago...

    • @fcukyou2_
      @fcukyou2_ 3 года назад +6

      @@luckyluckyloulou6100 no it did not...the floods (more then one) in america atleast lasted only a brief time, a few days before it stopped and receded. Atleast that's what I believe based on the evidence I've been presented..
      Watch some randall carlsonz especially the rogan with him and hancock..he explains his theory well his hypothesis with his evidence and he makes a good argument.
      "Nick on the rocks" is another guy who's pretty good at explaining it

    • @danielryder5808
      @danielryder5808 3 года назад +7

      The pyramids and the sphinx’s surrounding erosion have been proven to be about 10-12,000 years old. Meaning that they were constructed around 8,000 to 10,000 BC. Right around the time of yunger drias. Crazy stuff we’re learning

    • @dalewinter8227
      @dalewinter8227 3 года назад +2

      @@danielryder5808 Yea erosion from rain water and it hadn’t rained in the desert for thousands of years.

  • @stevenzapiler5806
    @stevenzapiler5806 3 года назад +2

    The truth matters. Its just the truth, but when it becomes possible to know the real deal, it makes everything matter. This is an all time great take on the modern discovery of the gilgamesh tablet. Amazing talk.

    • @tylerjohnson4825
      @tylerjohnson4825 3 года назад

      we live in the time of the annunaki and gilgamesh. (we just think we are different)

  • @emiliayonekokumata4764
    @emiliayonekokumata4764 2 года назад +1

    We are all amazed by the things the algorithm can do nowadays, but great were the ancient civilizations who, without much instruments or proof about their theories were able to develop ways to improve their livings.

  • @daxinventor3542
    @daxinventor3542 5 лет назад +37

    This video attempts to give beginners a glimpse of what the middle east may have contributed to civilization back then and now.
    I believe that our past is nothing like we where told. Some people are completely satisfied with what they have been taught. The lady in the video is entertaining and pretty but not much else. Each one teach one, now and beyond. Our reality is a convincing illusion, and by learning this simple fact will truly set us free.

    • @joefoley1480
      @joefoley1480 5 лет назад

      yes I just imagined you but I cant imagine why.............

    • @laylow96
      @laylow96 4 года назад

      Well said

    • @politickery9412
      @politickery9412 3 года назад

      I like James C. Scott's recent book Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States. The early Medieval Dark Ages show that civilization doesn't always advance.

    • @7NEMISIS
      @7NEMISIS 2 года назад +1

      there is no Middle East, it's all Africa

    • @gloriabaylor2048
      @gloriabaylor2048 2 года назад +1

      If you haven't, I would study historiography if I were you. It tends to be hard for many students because half of it is understanding what you have just described in your comment.

  • @cjhodges2933
    @cjhodges2933 3 года назад +8

    I love her voice so calm and soothing she's a great teacher

  • @Rustyspoonssssss
    @Rustyspoonssssss 4 года назад +6

    Love talks like this, we need to understand more of this before they destroy what’s left

  • @joseluisalcantarasanchez269
    @joseluisalcantarasanchez269 4 года назад +2

    The historical context in which we as humans have been understanding ourselves has changed dramatically. The latest archeological discoveries have catastrophic consequences for the current orthodoxy models about the history of civilization. That is a very interesting issue.

  • @jtellehman2561
    @jtellehman2561 5 лет назад +14

    Definitely agree that many people have little grasp of the Past and thus, the Real. It bears on all things-- and those who don't get this, endanger us all.

  • @emunahoxendine9408
    @emunahoxendine9408 5 лет назад +4

    Incredible history, brilliant minds, great civilization, my roots go back to this civilization.

  • @nigelgrimmett851
    @nigelgrimmett851 3 года назад +40

    Interesting that the more knowledge we obtain the more some people try to hide it or deny it.

    • @major1388
      @major1388 3 года назад +1

      Definitely the case

    • @jujumama
      @jujumama Год назад

      It's for money

  • @satoshifury2957
    @satoshifury2957 3 года назад +4

    i’d love to meet this lady, im Chaldean and have been compelled by this stuff for about 3-4 years now... some day I will have an independant team of archeologists, and we will work tirelessly in the search for truth

  • @mikenaughton4298
    @mikenaughton4298 5 лет назад +12

    Great talk. She reignites the reason for museums: To become more physical, more real, with the past.

  • @dgtv71
    @dgtv71 5 лет назад +4

    For those asking. She's referring to the age of the tablet not the story on the tablet.

  • @richardmason902
    @richardmason902 Год назад

    What a wonderfully intelligent and engaging speaker.

  • @michaelmelamed9103
    @michaelmelamed9103 2 года назад +1

    TED SPEAKERS ARE THE BEST SLEEPING AIDE SOOO MONOTONOUS

  • @allmendoubt4784
    @allmendoubt4784 5 лет назад +20

    I left London 4 years ago. Just before I left I visited the British Museum. I studied ancient history so it was nothing new, however...
    I had got into a conversation with an old Spanish man in a cafe in the West End by sheer chance, he was rather ill and an ancient history enthusiast. He wanted to visit the museum to see a relatively new exhibit, and I offered to accompany him as he was frail and full odd intriguing stories. He kept repeating a legend about the ancient kings of Ireland being descended from the Egyptian Pharaoh's; all I heard in my head was my old lecturer repeating, 'beware of nutter' theories.' I looked up the legend and yes it was said to be a legend. However, the day we visited he was clutching an old article cut from some journal, describing the sarcophagus of the last Pharaoh with a sketch in detail. According to the old man this was the father of the princess who escaped at some ancient time to Eire. We looked around the Egyptology department without finding his grail. Practically minded I took him to the help desk and asked they search the catalogue for our his exhibit. They had nothing they said, I read through the article and it did say it was heading for the Museum, so I donned my mental Indiana Jones hat and thought let's find this baby - you can't hide a ten tonne sarcophagus. We used the pattern inscriptions and a lot of time to trace it, it sat un-highlighted in the display rooms, with a very uninspiring sign offering absolutely no real information upon the piece. The mystery was that - why was it not catalogued (it had no number like the other exhibits) or described like all the other sarcophagi? What secrets do they hold behind the scenes?
    My obsession for the brief time I was there was spotting masonic iconography - that came by chance, through an unsuspecting job I did and them taking an interest in me, anonymously offering me a way in through being tailed and prompted for an impromptu interview (that probably came from my wandering around and spotting markings along the streets of the West End. I was basically not able to leave the umbrella of employment in the fine dining industry that they control - by what I thought were chance events but in hindsight linked up agencies and places of business - I got better and better paid positions as I jumped each ship. I never got to understand what I was finding; trails and discrete names or Victorian architecture referencing the OT; linking modern business, politics and the old establishment of the UK to the secrets of the organisation, whom I suspect, believe they are holding some flame of knowledge handed to them from antiquity.
    Emigrating was quite a relief. I look back at western culture realising it is a historiography constructed by these old Victorian patrons and that they truly envisage a society based upon masters and servants, pawns and priests, Kings and serfs. That message is emblazoned across the city of London, and its post Wren layout attempts to map Westminster city as a celestial compass; but, as I cannot shed the words of my old lecturer, I am loathe to fall into the rut of creating my very own nutter theory...

    • @josephcharlestower1685
      @josephcharlestower1685 5 лет назад +1

      jonoboyle
      Fascinating reply .
      I myself studied western civ, after gaining a degree in fine art.
      ... I must confess I am an entered apprentice Mason.
      Hoping that doesn’t disturb you?
      As well as the other events you mentioned I can not speak on, as I am merely an initiate.
      America has a deep historical narrative within the context of freemasonry.
      I’m not certain that it’s clear to some the profound impact and actually good results and intentions that has manifested.
      I’m hoping you come to a better understanding of Free Masonry
      As it is NOT in fact, a secret brotherhood
      But rather a fraternity of men seeking to become better men

    • @cayetanosoler3432
      @cayetanosoler3432 5 лет назад

      Its not a secret anymore .

    • @jojobean9260
      @jojobean9260 4 года назад +2

      @@josephcharlestower1685 That is not what freemason are... You are only an initiate so you know nothing yet
      It is way more sinister they higher up you go

    • @PhuketWord
      @PhuketWord 4 года назад

      If it's not mainstream theory, you'e on the right track.

  • @mikesy3097
    @mikesy3097 5 лет назад +26

    All she says is, “learning about history is good, go to a museum and take the time to learn from real (ie. not digital) objects”. Are we so dumbed down now that this is a revelation worthy of a TEDx Talk?

    • @sonjak8265
      @sonjak8265 5 лет назад +6

      yes

    • @thealch3myst
      @thealch3myst 5 лет назад +8

      actually yes, and there are dumber folks out there who think that this is absolutely unnecessary

    • @suchanhachan
      @suchanhachan 5 лет назад +7

      And who are you, exactly, to decide what's worthy of a TEDx Talk?...

    • @johnmiller7453
      @johnmiller7453 5 лет назад +1

      Yes we are that dumbed down.

    • @nightcandle62
      @nightcandle62 5 лет назад

      shutup obey and be smart like your phone minion.

  • @masterprophet8378
    @masterprophet8378 3 года назад +4

    Simply because the Story of Gilgamesh precedes the biblical account of the ancient Deluge doesn't necessarily mean it's the more accurate version just as if a cluster of people witness an automobile accident simultaneously doesn't necessarily mean the first person at the scene of the accident interviewed by the police has given the more accurate version of the account than all subsequent witnesses interviewed.
    The advantage of the biblical account of the Flood is that it gives us the divine whys and wherefores of the catastrophe not delineated in the Gilgamesh narrative.

    • @dhutch71
      @dhutch71 2 года назад +2

      The Epic of Gilgamesh, because it predates the Biblical account, is all the proof I need to see the Bible as nothing more than a collection of stories written by men of the time. "God's Word".... I think not.

  • @raevj
    @raevj 2 года назад

    It is becoming more evident that there were many scientifically-advanced, pre-historical civilizations.

  • @roberthamill2451
    @roberthamill2451 5 лет назад +7

    Before there was writing, there was lore. Stories of actual occurrences which were passed down, told to travelers, altered the timeline here, moved the location there, changed the characters names. Once writing came about, civilization by civilization put into the writing of their language whatever story the "lore" had then become.
    Whoever it was that survived the flood told the story.
    The author of the writings also told the story, but who knows how different it was?

    • @knothead9802
      @knothead9802 5 лет назад

      In a sense, George Smith was also an author. He "authored" the interpretation of cuneiform writing.

    • @roberthamill2451
      @roberthamill2451 5 лет назад

      @@knothead9802
      So true, so true. Never thought that I'd say that to a Knot Head.

  • @chrisbaltazar7164
    @chrisbaltazar7164 3 года назад +25

    You look at every culture around the world and you’ll notice they have a story of a great catastrophe in history

  • @casteretpollux
    @casteretpollux 3 года назад +1

    We should send these things back. This woman doesn't even seem to consider this is somebody else's history.

  • @dawnmariemay8324
    @dawnmariemay8324 3 года назад +32

    What needs to be done first is get all these places to release the hidden knowledge that they keep from humanity.

    • @ashzole
      @ashzole 3 года назад +1

      you mean like the roman catholic church who holds the greatest knowledge and for some odd known reason the great library of alexandria just happened to burn, no way the church had anything to do with that even though many at the time blame the church

    • @jcashbbeblockbreadent3198
      @jcashbbeblockbreadent3198 3 года назад

      Facts

    • @jcashbbeblockbreadent3198
      @jcashbbeblockbreadent3198 3 года назад +2

      @@ashzole Isn't so wild that the knowledge stored in the Vatican library is not accessible to the public also it is heavily guarded with highly trained armed officials... I wonder why?

    • @ashzole
      @ashzole 3 года назад

      @@jcashbbeblockbreadent3198 ::::gasps:::
      the illuminati ancient enemy of the vatican, but everyone turned on the illumuniti

    • @richardpotter6313
      @richardpotter6313 3 года назад +1

      Speaking of museums, especially the Smithsonian who BURY truth rather than digging it up. EVERY sample and writing they've conned folks out of on giants ...shrank to non-existence.

  • @shakeypeet
    @shakeypeet 5 лет назад +307

    The Sumerian tablets are much , much older ...

    • @peterpagano8954
      @peterpagano8954 4 года назад +33

      @Dave Smith
      FYI, 35,000 years ago the entire world was still in the hunter-gatherer stage. The earliest known examples of writing are not much older than 4000 BCE. That's just about five thousand years ago. You need to be doing ng some serious reading as you lack a basic knowledge of ancient history.
      EDIT: "That's just about 6 thousand years ago."

    • @jamesdolan4042
      @jamesdolan4042 4 года назад +15

      Summaria was in southern Mesopotamia in the ancient world. It is inevitable that the stories in the Old Testament in particular and some from the New Testament should come from the vast empires of Eygpt, Persia, and Mesopotamia in particular. After all Abraham supposedly came from the ancient city of Ur in Mesopotamia that bordered what was to become Caanan. And it was supposedly Abraham who concieved the idea of a Monotheistic God who spoke.

    • @dannyboywhaa3146
      @dannyboywhaa3146 4 года назад +32

      Peter Pagano absence of evidence is not evidence of absence as they say! The further back in time one goes, naturally the harder it is to find evidence etc... especially with worldwide flooding and multiple cataclysms every few thousand years!

    • @benjerry6442
      @benjerry6442 4 года назад +35

      @@peterpagano8954 I think you have made up your own history. The Sumer, or Sumerians pre date the melting of the ice age. Thus 35,000 years is nothing in the timescale in the tale of the Sumer. The Sumer, had a civilisation of immense technological advancement, thousands of years before the Akkadians and eventually the Assyrians, stumbled into their history. This we know because the Akkadians circa 2350 BCE told us so, they themselves viewed the Sumer as extremely ancient. Sargon of Akkad killed the last King of Kish, and the Kish King linage had lasted approx 2000 years, and yet the Kish king linage was born out of the rubble of the Sumer empire. That is all the Kish Kings came post Antediluvian times. The Sumer were pre Antediluvian.

    • @clemfandango5908
      @clemfandango5908 4 года назад +17

      Peter Pagano that’s what they want you to think

  • @richardpisano893
    @richardpisano893 5 лет назад +6

    Imagination was always key for me as well....

  • @shoftim
    @shoftim 4 года назад

    When she says "Forward Thinking" ... It explains, touches on her position and biases.

  • @victoriabrewer5960
    @victoriabrewer5960 3 года назад

    Reading the comments after watching this video, then following the replies thread was at times thought provoking and in some cases enlightening. Thank you and love to you all.

  • @rhythmictiger
    @rhythmictiger 5 лет назад +39

    She has such a soothing voice! Nice talk :)

  • @user-fq3lk5se6p
    @user-fq3lk5se6p 4 года назад +15

    The tablet is about "annunaki".
    Anu means heaven
    Naki means earth
    And "annunaki" means From heaven to earth.but on other languange annunaki means leader,Higher being,etc..
    And the most ironic part is sumerian's first leader is called "gilgamesh" which means "Hybrid human"and at 2003 some person found the mummy of the gilgamesh and it was sent to the authorites and when they did a research,they immidietly stopped the project..
    So you know what i mean right?😏
    Ancient leaders are from outerspace..
    If you dont believe me just search it up

  • @JT-lw1oh
    @JT-lw1oh 2 года назад +6

    The flood tablet she talks about always brings me back to “the Adam and Eve story” that was finally declassified by the CIA in 2013 they still “sanitized” some pages. But it’s really interesting and talks about how cataclysmic events match and are tied to different ancient civilizations. The author makes some compelling theories, tbh some parts are a little outlandish for me but who knows the CIA suppressed it for so long it begs the answer as to why in the first place?

    • @derektaylor169
      @derektaylor169 2 года назад +3

      what Adam and Eve story that was funny declassified by the CA in 2013 everybody knows the Adam and Eve story it's in Genesis what version of the story are you talking about? please enlighten us

    • @a70duster
      @a70duster 2 года назад

      State your source please

    • @rocketpixi
      @rocketpixi 2 года назад +1

      They’re talking about a book by Chan Thomas

  • @wesamal_iraqi1100
    @wesamal_iraqi1100 3 года назад +5

    She encouraged me to go to the iraqi museum
    In baghdad to see the three major empires of old Mesopotamia

    • @sonofakkad
      @sonofakkad 3 года назад +2

      Their was never three empires....Akkad, Assur and Babylon were all ethnic Assyrians and these were all city states. Only the west separated our history into three different empires

  • @nskiran
    @nskiran 4 года назад +5

    Summary of the talk is You should go to British Museum.
    Well I can give a talk on India and I can ask the audience to go to Culcutta Museum.

  • @sinjofin1
    @sinjofin1 3 года назад +5

    And why some states destroy past histories…to prevent questioning!

  • @shantinaturechild3239
    @shantinaturechild3239 3 года назад +1

    Just a shame the British museum stole the majority of the artefacts and does not even think about giving them back even if asked to!

  • @bhuggins76
    @bhuggins76 2 года назад +1

    it is time everything ever collected in every museum was noted online in a central database for all to access....

  • @charisselinnell-morton2193
    @charisselinnell-morton2193 5 лет назад +8

    She has a most beautiful,interesting and unique way about her.

    • @nightcandle62
      @nightcandle62 5 лет назад

      kind words. i dont know about you but i could really feel her anxiety and thought how impressive brave and strong of her to complete the presentation without really showing it obviously. britts...sometimes i think we dont half suffer under the pressure.

  • @loribulat2271
    @loribulat2271 5 лет назад +16

    Tiffany, loved your talk. I’m going to read more of your works. What a strong family resemblance. We are decedents from Barsby England. We are the Barsby’s.

  • @supaipai420
    @supaipai420 2 года назад +1

    It's sad that Zacharia and Llyod Pye is not with us anymore. They were the two big on the Anunnaki.

  • @michaelfraser4396
    @michaelfraser4396 5 лет назад

    One of the most interesting things about archaeology, history, science, or the Bible is how they are interpreted. One interpretation can point us in one direction, while another interpretation can point us in the opposite direction. Interpretation depends on the frame of reference, validity of our sources, background, education or lack thereof (sometimes a lack of education can be a good thing), and the use of imagination, and insight. Sometimes the hardest thing to overcome while interpreting things are tradition, dogma, doctrine, or something that is believed to be an "established truth"; the willingness to challenge such things often lead to the biggest breakthroughs and insights.

  • @abddfa5234
    @abddfa5234 3 года назад +20

    So why is it in the British Museum...? Return it to its rightful owners.

    • @hodz
      @hodz 3 года назад +3

      they've been gone for about 4000 years, nd ain't coming back anytime soon

    • @michaelspooner9160
      @michaelspooner9160 3 года назад

      God only truth?Some nations have ended slaveries.Unstable economies,even so sharing culture and cultural objects may extend magic impress upon new ally populations historical memories.Forced share negotiations and touring objects to educate global citizens.Blame or bragging of religions or business competitions.L&gentlemen thanks.Nice talk.

    • @sebastiaosalgado1979
      @sebastiaosalgado1979 3 года назад +6

      The British Museum is a safer place for those archeological treasures

    • @mohammedkh4321
      @mohammedkh4321 3 года назад +10

      I am from Iraq and we want them in the British Museum because it is safer than Iraq

    • @maxpax7389
      @maxpax7389 3 года назад +1

      Isis destroyed Syria. Great idea.

  • @virginiatilley6467
    @virginiatilley6467 4 года назад +25

    Most of this is a promo for museums. There's a few minutes in the first half profiling three people who found and interpreted the "flood tablet" and about one minute on the connection of the Assyrian story of Gilgamesh to the biblical version. The entire second half is an endorsement of museums generally and encouragement to visit the British museum.

    • @marcdemell5976
      @marcdemell5976 2 года назад

      YAHUAH through Yahushua will recompense and it will happen in our lifetime. This redheaded lady is lost.Halleluyah!

    • @trustydiamond
      @trustydiamond 2 года назад

      So....?

    • @virginiatilley6467
      @virginiatilley6467 2 года назад +3

      @@trustydiamond, So... if you're looking for a good documentary on the tablet, this isn't it.

    • @napoliansolo7865
      @napoliansolo7865 2 года назад +2

      Good to know, thank you.

  • @markjanssens5817
    @markjanssens5817 2 года назад

    Nice Job! The lost book of ENKI gives me a better understanding of how and why we are currently on Earth. Powers to be do not want our Ancestors to return. They are afraid and know that the are more animals then vegetables. The added DNA from Kingu and the incantation’s converted us into conscious being with speech. The modified beings we currently are will continue to be tweeted for eternity. They are again bothering the Demigods. Life is so fun, challenging and full of lessons to be learned. See you all in future lives. Love you all so much.

  • @user-ty6do8yz4l
    @user-ty6do8yz4l 2 года назад +1

    Enki can be found right down the street from most people. They just don't know he's hiding so close by.:.
    It's almost warm enough for the return SMIB.

  • @andrewowens92
    @andrewowens92 5 лет назад +502

    Six minutes in and still waiting for her to say what’s on the damn tablet

    • @brettb9194
      @brettb9194 5 лет назад +23

      TEDx tends to be somewhat less inspiring than TED not that it wasn't interesting but it could have been tightened up a little.

    • @johnessmyer4665
      @johnessmyer4665 5 лет назад +19

      Have some patience..or take your meds :)

    • @benferm150
      @benferm150 5 лет назад +34

      3 nibutes ibn and she's said "the flood tablet" several times...

    • @hilohahoma1547
      @hilohahoma1547 5 лет назад +1

      IKR lol !!

    • @nevaidos
      @nevaidos 5 лет назад +86

      It contains the passage of the flood story of the famous Gilgamesh epic. In this passage the hero Gilgamesh has gone to the end of the world to find immortality and there he meets the survivor of the flood called Utnapishtim. He tells him how the gods were angry with mankind since they multiplied and created too much noise. So much so that the main deity could no longer sleep. Therefore he sent a flood to humankind. The god Enki notified Utnapishtim of the coming of a flood and he built an ark through which he was able to survive the flood with his wife. After the flood the gods needed offerings but there were no more humans but Utnapishtim. He gave them offerings and the gods decided that mankind should not have died. In order to keep them in check however, humans have become mortal and negative things like disease and war have been created. Utnapishtim and his wife became immortal and spent the rest of their lives at the end of the world. That's the story in a nutshell and as you can see it is very similar to the flood story of the Bible.

  • @reaganjoseph3436
    @reaganjoseph3436 5 лет назад +6

    She said Assyrians previous people like they are extinct!!!! They are still alive in the modern world. Christians of Iraq

    • @worldwidemapping9314
      @worldwidemapping9314 5 лет назад +3

      i'm Assyrian :# and there are millions of us remaining

    • @daieast6305
      @daieast6305 4 года назад

      joseph: yes, what is a few thousand years compared to millions

  • @charleshendrick7266
    @charleshendrick7266 4 года назад +1

    I think it is just fortunate this tablet survived. Like ISIS, so many Christians would prefer to destroy anything that was a threat to their holy book.

  • @walle2239
    @walle2239 4 года назад +1

    Gather as much information as you can, then process it to the best of your ability. Because someone of stature analyses it and says nothing is there, doesn't mean you will miss it too. we are all constructed slightly different from the human next to us.

  • @billkaroly
    @billkaroly 6 лет назад +100

    Similar to other Ted Talks in that they are too short forcing the speaker to pretty much generalize.

    • @gordonanderson3111
      @gordonanderson3111 5 лет назад +3

      It would help if she did not talk so slow and ti is not until 5:40, nearly half way thru, that she tells us something about what the tablet says.
      Great info 'tho.

    • @jccoy1412
      @jccoy1412 5 лет назад +4

      People’s attention span now a days is pretty much non existent, so keep it short keep people coming back..

    • @mac2brown
      @mac2brown 5 лет назад +1

      @@gordonanderson3111 I sped up play back.👍🏾

    • @diegrinder6851
      @diegrinder6851 5 лет назад +6

      I think all Ted Talks are designed that way. They allow Liberals to walk away feeling like they really learned something and are smarter for it, without ever actually delivering anything more than the all important "feeling." Thus giving the average low information Liberal virtue signalling rights about how much smarter they are, and the Tedx t-shirt to prove it.

    • @stephanedemers8590
      @stephanedemers8590 5 лет назад +1

      speaking of generalized ,the way she portrays his happiness ,why would someone be elated ,because as they do not say ,he could only decifer a few words ,and in fact after he was done ,the book he wrote had much more unknown words than known ,so to make a readable book they had to ,yes guess about the rest ,gimme a break either she honestly is that much of a terrible dumbwitted ,or she just fails to say the truth ,even the way she tells us who he was how he reacted ,this is a norm in todays worlsd ,to take words from a book a believe that ,well it was written must be true ,

  • @gyalsnextman4725
    @gyalsnextman4725 3 года назад +4

    The Sumerians, Mesopotamia and other ancient civilisations are so fascinating to me to the point where I actually started to learn the ancient languages just like George but on a low-key level

  • @chaldean7043
    @chaldean7043 3 года назад

    I’m so glad that my ancestors history are stored in England and taken care of. I was so sad when isis destroyed artifacts and statues in Mosul Iraq 2015. And my people and many other minorities were killed. The persecution of Christians in middle east is still ongoing even 100 years after Saifo. I only wish I had the chance to visit the British museum to see my history.

  • @aikishugyo
    @aikishugyo 3 года назад

    those who do not look for history won't be learning from it anytime soon, and thus be condemned to repeat it, along with everyone around them....

  • @EmaNymtoN88NotmyNamE
    @EmaNymtoN88NotmyNamE 4 года назад +8

    I didn't know that Mesopotamia was in the UK! It,s amazing how many archeological sites there are in the UK like Mesopotamia, Ahtens Acropolis, the Valley of the Kings. That's why so many ancient statues and artifacts there are kept in the British Museum.
    Or is it just because they've been theft?

  • @terbospeed
    @terbospeed 3 года назад +19

    The British Museum is essential for learning ... about earlier cultures ... when the British have subjugated many of them and destroyed/hidden their histories? Hmm seems legit.

    • @daspecialist1220
      @daspecialist1220 2 года назад +1

      Exaaaaactly! Critical thinking... i love it

  • @ruththomas6361
    @ruththomas6361 3 года назад +1

    The Assyrians were just the first to actually write down the story that was know by peoples all around the world. It probably was a collective memory of the Younger Dryas event that caused massive melt-off of the great ice sheets of the norther hemisphere, although this is just a theory. For most of the world, people did not have a written language, so it was oral traditions. One of these stories was passed down to Plato whose relative had learned it from Egyptians and it told of a lost civilization called Atlantis. Even North American Indians had flood stories. The Hebrews developed writing derived from the Phoenician alphabet and they wrote their version from their oral traditional story. It is a story as old as mankind.

  • @daxinventor3542
    @daxinventor3542 2 года назад

    I think her talk is for people who think that the western education that they have received is a wonderful thing. The truth is that in our society today and for about the last 200 years we have been spoon fed information which serves our world now. When we think about Sumerian history we should bow down and understand that they knew so much more than we do today. Our arrogance about what we have been taught about how the world works is infantile at best. The ancients not only knew how the world worked, they also walked and talked with beings who from the heavens came. We have yet to do that. We should take our rightful place in history which is not a people of the greatest, but only the people of the latest. Becoming humble again might help us to see the big picture for what our reality really is. We have so much to relearn because we have spent thousands of years destroying everything that we have built. Smart people do not practice self destruction with such perfection.

  • @luistoral1192
    @luistoral1192 3 года назад +4

    In Ecuador is unique place was the anunnakis.millones years at go. Encontaron gold water for conation . Etc..?

  • @trumpsahead
    @trumpsahead 5 лет назад +24

    She didn't say squat about the Gilgamesh tablet. It looked important enough, but we were left in the dark, and she gave a hoot for museums in general. So animated, but not enlightening one bit as far as that tablet goes, which reminds me of a one line joke: In a movie scene, after a main character gets everyone's attention, says, "I'll never forget what's his name." Having said that, I do appreciate her plea for all of us to explore deeper than what the status quo dictates is truth; follow your passion to another level, investigate, research and discover truth. ciao.

  • @bbalila
    @bbalila 4 года назад +1

    Been there many time. One of best part in British museum.

    • @kerimcandrew4628
      @kerimcandrew4628 4 года назад +1

      I've wanted to be an archeology school since I was 4, according to my father. I envy your experience friend. I live in Pennsylvania. So I must dig harder for truths here 😆

  • @codyparrish3383
    @codyparrish3383 2 года назад

    Great and enlightening presentation. Huge bonus that she's gorgeous!

  • @joeyholthusen6495
    @joeyholthusen6495 4 года назад +7

    I believe that the true great flood was during the younger dryas event there was another smaller flood event during Gilgamesh when a impacts hit the ocean sending a tsunami larger than we could dream of today tword that area. I believe that the Noah event was much older than Gilgamesh because Nimrod is the ancestor of cush, who is the ancestor of Noah way before the Sumerian culture. The younger dryas event a series of impacts hitting the earth over North America and ice evaporated and melted almost overnight the oceans rose over 400 feet almost overnight. Exactly the same time Plato wrote about Atlantis disappeared under the waters. Graham Handcock and Randall Carlson speaks on this subject. Very interesting theory indeed

  • @daehttub7737
    @daehttub7737 5 лет назад +9

    *Mesopotamia*
    Never Forget 3100bc

  • @missmonkeyglam
    @missmonkeyglam 2 года назад +1

    The Vedas, quite a few thousands of years before. They lived until the age of 120 on average, so I don't agree that we know more now than then. Those objects in The British Museum, like most of them, are not brought back but stolen.

  • @yolo_xenophone
    @yolo_xenophone 2 года назад

    21st century British museum doing the world a favor by keeping the objects they have and also TEACHING PEOPLE ABOUT THEM!!!!!!!!!!

  • @All-Father-Odin-967
    @All-Father-Odin-967 3 года назад +5

    Her voice is very soothing.

  • @araunapalm
    @araunapalm 5 лет назад +5

    The bible - the flood - was written in 1513 BCE if one studies the chronology of the bible itself. If the flood really happened then it would be in the collective memory of many nations. Is there evidence for this? Yes.... the flood story appears in more than hundred ancient cultures. The Chinese word for boat means " eight people saved from water".

    • @neil9231
      @neil9231 5 лет назад

      The flood can also be found in astronomy, a story of the heavens.look up and you will find 12 zodiac signs with the SUN...

    • @bigm0e89
      @bigm0e89 4 года назад +1

      Archeology is also catching up.
      Graham Hancock just recently started making waves in the community with his evidence of a comet impact causing a melting of the northern ice shelves.
      Eventually our science will catch up to what people already knew and more.

    • @marcdemell5976
      @marcdemell5976 2 года назад +1

      YAHUAH will be sending the saviour for the chosen few in due time ! Yahushua will crush man's tinker toys and mock the armies of satans puppets ! HALLELUYAH, HALLELUYAH , HALLELUYAH!!! AMEIN!!!!

  • @brucestewart3170
    @brucestewart3170 4 года назад

    Time to update her talk. The story of the flood written by Moses is much older. Western Semitic writing dates to 1800 BC. In Wadi El-hol there has been found inscriptions of Semitic characters influenced by hieroglyphic characters. This is the oldest phonetic alphabet (alef-bet). Do to it's location of origin and age, it is quite possible for Moses to have used it.

  • @keith.anthony.infinity.h
    @keith.anthony.infinity.h Год назад

    It is fascinating that British archaeologists discovered but these artifacts belong to the descendants of the ancient Mesopotamians, modern-day Iraqis and those of us who have ancestry from there. It should be given back to them.

  • @nmagain24
    @nmagain24 4 года назад +42

    Does the British Museum have ANYTHING in it from its own "ancient" history?? Or is everything the have looted from elsewhere??

    • @nmagain24
      @nmagain24 4 года назад +3

      @@duppyman2332 I guess Ill have to, because I never hear them or anyone else talk about anything in them of British Antiquity

    • @lupooflunarorigin120
      @lupooflunarorigin120 4 года назад +5

      Yep. UK has preserved world history. You're welcome

    • @nmagain24
      @nmagain24 4 года назад +7

      @@lupooflunarorigin120 Hmmmm, thats an interesting choice of word.

    • @carolinaorqueda9177
      @carolinaorqueda9177 4 года назад +6

      All looted mate!

    • @c.s.froggis9982
      @c.s.froggis9982 4 года назад +2

      Nowadays England's own history is being sacked.

  • @farnorthweaver7793
    @farnorthweaver7793 5 лет назад +6

    Excellent Presentation! Thank You so very much!

  • @TransitionalApe
    @TransitionalApe 4 года назад +1

    Cuneiform isn't a language, its an alphabet. Several languages were written in this script. Akkadian, Sumerian, Hittite, Hurrian, etc.

  • @sonofakkad
    @sonofakkad 3 года назад +2

    As an Assyrian I thank you 🙏🏼....

  • @jeffc9673
    @jeffc9673 2 года назад +3

    Excellent presentation, and an excellent presenter.

  • @chrisj6439
    @chrisj6439 5 лет назад +71

    Bad start...the tablets are much older than 2000 years old

    • @EvanCastor
      @EvanCastor 4 года назад +12

      Yeah, it is. That's why she says it's 2,700 years old. Bad start for you too it seems.

    • @bennyboy2079
      @bennyboy2079 4 года назад

      @@EvanCastor 😂

    • @Humbertin1974
      @Humbertin1974 4 года назад +1

      4,200 yeasr old, 2,000 BC

    • @davinci234
      @davinci234 3 года назад +1

      @@Humbertin1974 I thought Summarians were from Tigris and Euphrates civilization dating Bronze age of 6/7 millennium..............

  • @jms9057
    @jms9057 2 года назад +1

    The danger of our digital history is that it is so easily altered, and can be wiped out or rendered inaccessible in a heartbeat (solar activity, for example). When we think of what we'll leave behind, very little is in a substantial, enduring form.

  • @denniscannon769
    @denniscannon769 2 года назад

    That tablet looks 'pretty old'- the understatement of the year.