Ancient Civilizations Youve Probably Never Heard Of

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  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2024

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  • @Sideprojects
    @Sideprojects  Год назад +49

    Get Surfshark VPN at Surfshark.deals/sideprojects - Enter promo code SIDEPROJECTS for 83% off and 3 extra months for free! Thank you Surfshark for the sponsorship!

    • @Jan12700
      @Jan12700 Год назад

      Scam! You don't need a VPN, it's just Snake Oil!

    • @victoriaeads6126
      @victoriaeads6126 Год назад +3

      Flexible abacus seems more accurate than 'crude' abacus. And PLEASE! These cultures had NOTHING to do with Christianity. PLEASE use BCE/CE!

    • @t.c.2776
      @t.c.2776 Год назад +2

      @@victoriaeads6126 I can't challenge your proper use of the New Age timeline designation... I do, however, find it amusing that it "triggered" you enough to actually comment on it...😆

    • @joshuaperry8729
      @joshuaperry8729 Год назад +1

      Jesus Christ a 2 minute ad in a 16 minute video. At least most RUclipsrs only make us skip 1 minute of a. Video lol.

    • @j.pershing2197
      @j.pershing2197 Год назад

      Look up Squatter Man Symbol and Anthony Perat

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Год назад +95

    0:45 - Chapter 1 - Nok culture
    2:00 - Mid roll ads
    4:00 - Back to the video
    6:40 - Chapter 2 - Vinca culture
    10:05 - Chapter 3 - Caral supe civilization
    13:40 - Chapter 4 - Dong son culture

  • @AnthonyCarlyle
    @AnthonyCarlyle Год назад +611

    This was a cool one. Would love a part 2 with more obscure civilizations.

    • @ghiggs8389
      @ghiggs8389 Год назад +16

      I second this

    • @JustNilt
      @JustNilt Год назад +14

      @@ghiggs8389 Thirded! Would love a whole series of these, though that may not be realistic. There are other societies known to have existed in the ancient Near East, however, which are barely known despite their having been almost certainly key in the development of agriculture long before is generally understood to have happened. As with so many other issues, however, a lack of attention to them means no funding to look for more sites.

    • @mirandagoldstine8548
      @mirandagoldstine8548 Год назад +4

      Agreed although I actually knew about the Nok because they were mentioned in a history text book during my middle school years and the Vinca are mentioned in the book Noah’s Flood.

    • @coweatsman
      @coweatsman Год назад +10

      The Taklamakan civilisation in Xinjiang, in western China in what is today the Taklamakan Desert. They were a Caucasian people similar to those in centra Asia or India today and the best record of them is in the Uramqi Museum in Uramqi, Xinjiang, China. This agricultural area turn to desert either through climate change or by destroying the soil and the people either went away or died out.

    • @coweatsman
      @coweatsman Год назад +6

      I have heard it said that forests precede civilisations and deserts follow them. The world today is losing arable land due to soil degradation and its productivity is only maintained by a once only supply of fossil fuels. The seeds for today's civilisation's collapse have been planted and seem to be fruiting now as I type.

  • @victoriaeads6126
    @victoriaeads6126 Год назад +27

    Nok sculpture is GORGEOUS!

  • @kevinmcqueenie7420
    @kevinmcqueenie7420 Год назад +66

    Loved this one. The only one of these I'd even heard of was the Vinca, and even that is just a vague tickle in the back of my brain. Imagine how many more cultures that came, went and will simply never be remembered because there is nothing left to remember them by. Great stuff. Special place in my heart for Sideprojects!

    • @catofthecastle1681
      @catofthecastle1681 Год назад

      I grow vinca in my garden, so I was surprised at that recognition!

  • @anna9072
    @anna9072 Год назад +41

    Cool. I’m an archaeologist, and you still managed to get 5 for 5. So much out there still to learn. Thanks!

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Год назад +1

      Vinca was the one I'd heard of, but maybe that's because I read too much feminist literature as a kid. Marija Gimbutas, Merlin Stone, Eisler, people like that.
      These were some... strange women. Gimbutas had some starkly nativist sympathies (she's been slandered as a N-zi); all of them were hostile to Christianity.
      With modern genetics and linguistics, Gimbutas was rehabilitated in her take on the Kurgan invasion; I guess the others might get some new respect as well.

    • @dima97
      @dima97 Год назад +1

      I'd heard of the nok before, but that was it

    • @laurieb3703
      @laurieb3703 Год назад

      ​@@dima97Heisenberg?

  • @beyondwx
    @beyondwx Год назад +44

    I love how the size of Simon’s beard is proportional to the number of channels where he appears.

  • @mandiemoore3272
    @mandiemoore3272 Год назад +122

    I really particularly love your channel because honestly while it may not come off as exciting as some I feel like when I watch you I am learning stuff. things you talk about matter, the things you show matter, they have substance. the topics you cover are not on trend with pop culture or the newest flash trend.. they're the ones that actually stick in your brain and make you feel like you have expanded your knowledge. I love that

    • @kscnc5994
      @kscnc5994 Год назад +2

      So true. Everything’s so sensationalized and cheesy these days. I hate to admit that I get caught up in it far too much. So lucky to have Simon keeping it objective and free of sensational “narrative “

  • @tochukwuanyanwu8701
    @tochukwuanyanwu8701 Год назад +193

    Was really surprised to see The Nok Culture here😅, am from South East Nigeria and the Nok Culture is still an enigma to Modern Day Nigerians. An Interesting detail you noted was the switch from stone tools directly to Iron which i wasn't aware or taught too in School but i can say that most ancient Kingdoms in Nigeria took inspiration from the Nok Culture ranging from the ancient Kingdom of Benin to the Yoruba Kingdoms.

    • @Jumptownwore
      @Jumptownwore Год назад +17

      I reacently learnt through other channels here on YT how much ancient African Culture has been destroyed and deliberately ruined to deprave Africa of it's history. Made me want to cry...
      I vaguely remember the name of a city. Rapta, I think it was.

    • @bendover9813
      @bendover9813 Год назад +7

      It’s likely just that the first metallurgical culture that the Nok encountered were iron-age, already past bronze. They could’ve simply skipped ahead technologically, leading to a miss of extra stratification that arose from agriculture and the bureaucratic monarchal systems required for an empire

    • @Pushing_Pixels
      @Pushing_Pixels Год назад +7

      @@bendover9813 Which Iron Age culture would they have encountered at the time they were around?

    • @tryingtotryistrying
      @tryingtotryistrying Год назад +9

      well the one thing we do know is the great humor coming out of Nok, Nok Jokes.

    • @rickcarson591
      @rickcarson591 Год назад +5

      ​@@Pushing_Pixels if I were to guess - it'd be something like: if they only picked up iron smelting in approx 700BC (as per video) and they came from somewhere further north (as per the video (if I understand correctly)) then the answer to "who could they possibly have learned iron smelting from" .... is _every_ other culture in or around the mediterranean, _all_ of whom had had iron smelting for at least 500-1000 years before that.

  • @ChadJonesAYelpInTheDark
    @ChadJonesAYelpInTheDark Год назад +593

    Why isn’t your channel called Simon Says?

  • @TylerAult
    @TylerAult Год назад +16

    Loved this. Kinda lamenting not learning much about ancient civilizations in US public schools but on the other hand learning this stuff now is providing hours of entertainment as an adult.

    • @scottydu81
      @scottydu81 Год назад +2

      I remember learning about ancient Egypt, Sumer, Babylon, Greece, and Rome in grade school

    • @beershits9340
      @beershits9340 9 месяцев назад

      Lol I went to public schools in Louisiana so all I learned is that Jesus was American and white and he destroyed all other civilizations with his magical 1911 that he invented

  • @katieskarlette
    @katieskarlette Год назад +12

    I read the title and was like, "I've read a fair amount about this kind of thing, I bet I *have* heard of these." It turns out I only vaguely remember hearing about one of them. Thanks for teaching me stuff!

  • @JustNilt
    @JustNilt Год назад +61

    As a broad generalization, most metal tools are indeed better than stone tools. There are some, however, where this is not the case. The best modern example is obsidian blades used in surgeries. They are significantly sharper than the best metal options and in some instances this is a critical need. Leaving aside modern uses, however, metal alone is not reason enough to have such tools replace stone options. Metal is often an inherently limited thing while stone is ubiquitous. It is the difference in supply between the two materials which is generally understood to be the primary cause of not switching to metal tools. Metal mining needed to catch up in terms of overall supply before that transition could happen.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Год назад +5

      I would argue (on your behalf) that ceramic and even glass are forms of stone and is clearly better than metal where you need high temperatures and resistance to rust.

    • @humanistwriting5477
      @humanistwriting5477 Год назад +1

      we can also add the quality of the ores into the mix of usefulness as well, and the alloyed material you get from initial refining.
      and we can look at the PreColumbian Native Americans; North Centeral and South to see how quality plays a role, there where some civilizations that dabbled in smelting, certainly it was not just panned gold and copper that the Native Americans used, but they did not use iron often.
      it was used, it was known how to beat a chunk of iron into a tool, presumably even known to some degree how to smelt it. But only one stable civilization actually smelted a lot of the stuff, and it was not used for much, just fixing stones together, there where reports from early contact of some Native America loggers using iron tools as well but not often.
      Quality matters a lot, it matters less when you have the smelting process down but it matters a lot to even get to the point of smelting and refining.

    • @catherine_404
      @catherine_404 Год назад +1

      Stone is ubiquitous, but you don't use just any stones, you need flint or vulcanic glass - amorphous silica oxide rocks. It's like earth is ubiquitous, but good clay isn't, fertile soil isn't.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Год назад

      @@catherine_404 I've coincidentally been reading a paper which suggests that anhydrous glass is comparable to steel. Most stony asteroids are basically crushed basalt and obsidian. The Sun has long ago baked all the water out of them. That will suck for colonists but if miners bring their own water, it'll be happy-hunting for, basically, Superman's obsidian

  • @Bubbaist
    @Bubbaist Год назад +13

    You’re right- you could do an entire episode on the quipu, and you should!

  • @AlexLostInWonderland
    @AlexLostInWonderland Год назад +23

    The crafting abilities of pre-historic and early history cultures is always so impressive. As a person with an art history degree, early and prehistoric art and artifacts have always been a favorite of mine. The amount of artifacts that are decorated in a period when humans (and early ancestors) were sometimes literally fighting for their lives daily speaks volumes about humanity’s relationship with and need for art in our lives.

    • @semaj_5022
      @semaj_5022 Год назад +1

      Self-expression is a primary hallmark of humanity, if you ask me. The act of creation, of making something with one's own hands, as well as the desire to leave something behind, seems to be as old as what we'd call "anatomically modern humans. I find it super cool too that some of the oldest musical instruments we've found are nearly as old as the oldest rock art.

    • @YolandaHalfAlmonde
      @YolandaHalfAlmonde Год назад +3

      ​​@@semaj_5022or maybe they are all just complex rituals for social communication, learning and mating? I love art too but this perception of it being something special that makes us human is so oblivious to how behavioral patterns in social animals often become specialised and complicated... If you look at the bigger picture it makes sense that self expression, is a tool for communication, not some transendant gift of humanity 🙄

    • @semaj_5022
      @semaj_5022 Год назад +1

      @YolandaHalfAlmonde I wasn't saying there's some "higher purpose," just that it's an extremely human thing to do. While plenty of ancient art and expression likely had a purpose, you also can not discount that not *everything* has a purpose. Sometimes, we do things simply for no other reason than wanting to do them or because they're enjoyable to do. While many things are likely enjoyable because they confer an evolutionary benefit to derive pleasure from them(eating, play, sex, etc.), not everything is going to have such a purpose. Though in that vein, I propose there's likely at least one evolutionary reason we may get pleasure from making things. Having a sense of accomplishment and a desire to share our creations with others likely ensures both individuals stay motivated to keep making things, and innovations are able to spread through a population. The pathways that allowed tool technology to take root, spread, and improve likely also helped art and music spread and develop, alongside helping to cultivate and reinforce creative thinking, which would be beneficial in both tool making and creation of art.

    • @renwhit100
      @renwhit100 11 месяцев назад

      i think it's easy for us to forget that people have always been *people* -- we've always created art and stories, we've always had petty squabbles over nonsense, we've always cared for the ill/injured/elderly, we've always been insatiably curious. we find art and instruments everywhere we know humans (and even some of our prehistoric brethren) lived. evidence suggests that humans sang before we spoke. there's little that gets me more emotional than things like the handprints of children in ancient clay or toys just like the ones we give children today -- carved animals with wheels they can pull along on string or the little ducks embroidered on clothes in king tut's tomb. we have always needed and created art, and i think remembering that tells us far more about how humans have always existed than many would assume

  • @timshepherd4626
    @timshepherd4626 Год назад +7

    Thank you for what you do mr Whistler, As a 44 yr old college grad (that had nothing to do with history) history vids are my guilty pleasure. I would choose your videos over any current tv show. Thanks again and keep up the great work =)

  • @thatcrazybutcher1682
    @thatcrazybutcher1682 Год назад +22

    Dang it Simon. Now I’m wanting to fire up Civilization III. Yes I’m oddly specific with which Civ game I want to play.

    • @Beryllahawk
      @Beryllahawk Год назад

      Because Civ III is best hehe

    • @n3v3r1s4
      @n3v3r1s4 8 месяцев назад

      aren't we all

  • @RHCole
    @RHCole Год назад +16

    1:11 WOW, that is some seriously impressive sculpture! Shows plenty of advanced techniques. Very nice!

  • @The_Lone_Wolf
    @The_Lone_Wolf Год назад +21

    Thank you Mr. Simon, I enjoy your content and I think that I may have heard of the NOK culture in passing, due to various history RUclips videos doing similar content to you, though I haven't (at least I don't think I have) heard of the other civilizations you mentioned today, and it just makes me appreciate human history even more.

  • @Im-Not-a-Dog
    @Im-Not-a-Dog Год назад +10

    0:41 Nok Culture
    6:38 Vinča Culture
    10:01 Caral-Supe Civilization
    13:38 Dong Son Culture

  • @DreamMarko
    @DreamMarko Год назад +5

    I'm really glad to hear someone talk about Vinca culture :)

  • @chcomes
    @chcomes Год назад +7

    I thought "ah, lets watch one minute, surely it will be akkad or something like that"... and then four civilizations that were (almost all) unknown to me! Great video!

    • @owenshebbeare2999
      @owenshebbeare2999 Год назад +1

      It was good to see something more obscure, not the usual suspects.

  • @kdebaar
    @kdebaar Год назад +16

    A fascinating video well presented. Inspires you to wonder of all those past forgotten peoples living their lives different to us now but still with mostly the same motivations. This easily could be a series; spin a globe, poke a finger at a random place and there was people there living in a certain way worth remembering.

  • @Anglomachian
    @Anglomachian Год назад +5

    Love learning about civilisations I’ve never heard of. One of the greatest delights in history I ever discovered was the centuries of kingdoms and empires that existed before the more well known Greece and Rome. Mitanni, the Hittites, the Kassites, the Chaldeans, the Assyrians, the Arameans, the Ur dynasties, the ever present kingdom of Elam.
    It’s truly inspiring to know there are yet more to know about.

  • @multiyapples
    @multiyapples Год назад +8

    I love learning about these cultures.

  • @rahrah5091
    @rahrah5091 Год назад +4

    I am not a expert but i think the stone glyph at 9:23 is a star chart.

  • @serenitygoodwyn
    @serenitygoodwyn Год назад +6

    Am I the only one who thinks the pot at 9.23 looks like a star map. Perhaps not quite the constellations we are used to in the west but then that pot probably predates those.

  • @PalmelaHanderson
    @PalmelaHanderson Год назад +7

    It's interesting to think about how many cultures that may have existed 10,000-8,000 years ago or so that are now under water, and we will probably never know anything about them.

    • @catherine_404
      @catherine_404 Год назад

      How about cultures that relied on degradable materials like plant and animal products, and they lived in environments which destroy such materials. There barely anything left of such cultures.

    • @891Henry
      @891Henry Год назад +1

      @@catherine_404 To leave nothing behind, not even a stain on the landscape - isn't that what we now think is the ideal way to live?

  • @jorgelotr3752
    @jorgelotr3752 Год назад +9

    6:10 the Copper Age is not that common; most made the jump from Stone to Bronze (after all, the Copper Age is only possible in places with native copper; if you're going to smelt it, it's better to just alloy it with cassiterite, which is tin ore, or arsenic, which was the route many civilizations chose).

    • @kevwills858
      @kevwills858 Год назад

      Yeah, but gotta realise that the word 'alloy' didn't mean 2 knobs of goat shit back then 🤔

    • @jorgelotr3752
      @jorgelotr3752 Год назад +3

      @@kevwills858 I'm using modern terms.
      People who smelted copper ore usually did so either by advancing from the Copper Age or by learning from their neighbours, and any that smelted it to copper learnt that when they added some weird rocks to the mix, the result was way better soon enough to never really do it for enough time to warrant the "Age" moniker.

    • @dawnfire82
      @dawnfire82 Год назад

      @@kevwills858 The **only** way to make bronze is to alloy copper. The chief impediment to bronze age production was lack of tin (which is significantly rarer than copper). The earliest (known) currency was electrum coins (made of alloyed gold and silver) from around Illyria. You can't just assume that ancient people were stupid. In all likelihood, the average ancient was more intelligent than the average modern, because back then your stupidity would get you killed while now stupidity is subsidized.

  • @playwow2670
    @playwow2670 Год назад +5

    I would live to see an extensive history of the ancient peoples of malta a deep dive into the history of the structures beneath malta would be awsome!

  • @Godflakes
    @Godflakes Год назад +4

    i’m from Kaduna and from the Nok region, i’m really happy to see this content ❤

  • @2024FingersCrossed
    @2024FingersCrossed Год назад +6

    Fascinating, never heard of any of them, thank you.

  • @carthienesdevilsadvocatenr2806
    @carthienesdevilsadvocatenr2806 Год назад +3

    Would be nice to see individual videos on these cultures and others like them, or the brave idea of decoding their apparent writing systems. A Video on Quippu (or however you spell it) would also be enjoyable...

  • @regardingthepope
    @regardingthepope Год назад +9

    How much did ancient civilizations know about their past? The Romans and Egyptians reigned for thousands of years, but were they able to learn from their history?

    • @GameHammerCG
      @GameHammerCG Год назад +6

      Yes, they were. Greeks, Romans and Egyptians had archaeologists of their own.

    • @-rate6326
      @-rate6326 Год назад +2

      Roman were pretty new if compared with Egyptian. Don't mix them.

    • @GameHammerCG
      @GameHammerCG Год назад +1

      @@-rate6326 They still had people digging up the past and being amazed by it.

    • @-rate6326
      @-rate6326 Год назад +1

      @@GameHammerCG every major civilization had peoples like that. Records from them didn't survive. Roman didn't exist when most of these civilization existed.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Год назад

      @@GameHammerCG Assyrians too. Ashurbanipal built what can only be described as a museum, cataloguing old tablets the Assyrians and Babylonians had dug up and attempting to translate them to his neo-Assyrian Akkadian dialect

  • @ptemps1145
    @ptemps1145 Год назад +7

    9:27 Looks more like a star map than lettering. It's probably a calendar, but could stil be a map to help guide people from location to location. That's what I'd bet my speculative internet dollars on.

    • @etienneporras7252
      @etienneporras7252 Месяц назад

      You beat me to it! I was literally coming here to say that!

  • @enlilofnippur8409
    @enlilofnippur8409 Год назад +5

    6:12 Another example of the jump from stone to iron tools are the ancient Korean cultures.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Год назад

      ... and then insane Korean emperors did their best to bring Korea back to the stone age

  • @jamesdelb6885
    @jamesdelb6885 Год назад +2

    Thanks, an interesting look back at some old cultures that disappeared, though not without a trace.

  • @travellingwithjeff
    @travellingwithjeff Год назад +6

    Great episode, very interesting, well done as usual Simon and crew.

  • @dinsdalemontypiranha4349
    @dinsdalemontypiranha4349 Год назад +2

    That was awesome Simon! Thanks.

  • @MusicalRaichu
    @MusicalRaichu Год назад +5

    So chibi art style was invented in ancient africa? wow!

  • @Amberjack1973
    @Amberjack1973 Год назад +1

    Background music is practically overwhelming your narration. Awesome topic!

  • @-el-gato
    @-el-gato Год назад +7

    It would be interesting for you to do a video on the longest surviving continuous culture - the First Nations/Aboriginal people of Australia who have been living here for over 60,000 years.

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Год назад +4

      The aboriginal peoples of Australia and New Zealand aren't a singular culture, though. They have an array of various tribal identities and cultures that are in no way homogeneous. Calling the aboriginal peoples of Oceana a singular culture is like saying that Indigenous Americans were all one culture.

    • @-el-gato
      @-el-gato Год назад +2

      @@SkunkApe407 Oh that was by no means what I was trying to say but I can understand how it came off that way. I'm well aware that there are hundreds of First Nations in Australia. I just thought it would be cool if Simon could bring some attention to those cultures. Literature often calls Aboriginal Australians (as a group) the "longest continuing culture" but doesn't actually ever say "this Nation has history dating back X amount of years and these Peoples have history going back Y amount of years" so it's a bit difficult to actually find that information.

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Год назад +1

      @@-el-gato no worries. You are correct, though. The aboriginal Australians are incredibly fascinating people. The same goes for any Polynesian peoples, as well. It is mind-boggling to think that those folks were able to venture out of Asia on primitive, yet simultaneously advanced boats, and populate the most far flung and remote land masses on the planet. Truly awe inspiring stuff.

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Год назад +1

      ​@@SkunkApe407 human migration to southeast asia and oceania came in many "waves". new zealand was first inhabitated by maori people in like 14th century CE, far later than aboriginal australia.

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Год назад +1

      @@rizkyadiyanto7922 and your point is? All you've done is further prove my point that the various peoples of Oceania are not one in the same. What, you think that human settlement of the Americas was a one-and-done migration? It happened in waves, as well. Most landmasses were populated that way.

  • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
    @davidanderson_surrey_bc Год назад +1

    12:20 First use of string theory to explain the cosmos.

  • @theophrastusbombastus1359
    @theophrastusbombastus1359 Год назад +1

    Two ads and an embedded sponsorship in the first four mins?!?
    I would say it's shocking, but then again, I've watched a few of Simon's multitudinous channels

  • @WholeWheatWhale
    @WholeWheatWhale Год назад +4

    Excellent video. Would love to see more on this topic.

  • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
    @davidanderson_surrey_bc Год назад

    8:00 The Vinca's Petruvian Man
    8:20 World's first Batman action figure
    9:00 World's first POGs

  • @alyssinwilliams4570
    @alyssinwilliams4570 Год назад +2

    The title of this video is correct for me, I had not heard of any of these ancient cultures! Very nice to learn something new :)

  • @Hobbes4ever
    @Hobbes4ever Год назад +1

    1:30 nice last name. His descendants must have had a lot of friends in school

  • @foodiemukbangs9494
    @foodiemukbangs9494 Год назад +4

    You should have included Cucuteni-Tripilla prehistoric civilization. They are 7500 years old and fascinating af. Had a huge city and pottery etc...

  • @YoKhai1221
    @YoKhai1221 Год назад

    Yessss the Nok, i love when something I’m currently researching pops up in a “random” YT video

  • @BoozewithNick
    @BoozewithNick Год назад +1

    This was very fun- cheers to your research team on this one. I hope we’ll see more like this.

  • @jameshill2450
    @jameshill2450 Год назад +43

    The obvious theory for how the Nok skipped straight to iron is that they just remained stone age until they made contact with another culture who had made the usual progression that was able to teach them iron directly. And from there, there's a pretty clear theory about why their population might have suddenly declined a while later ...
    Vinca symbols - possibly "names"? They didn't have writing, so they could have been symbols to represent a person. Possibly a sort of ownership or membership, like it shows who a thing belongs to/who can use it?

    • @gregmchurch
      @gregmchurch Год назад +7

      Makes you wonder what an archeologist 2000 years from now would make of key chain logo or a partly preserved billboard.

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Год назад +17

      Many indigenous American tribal groups saw a similar jump from stone tools to iron when Europeans started venturing into the Americas. It is entirely reasonable that a similar scenario has played out in other parts of the globe.

    • @mike-oxmol
      @mike-oxmol Год назад +6

      I like the idea of symbols being a form of written name. It reminds me cattle brands to denote ownership

    • @JcoleMc
      @JcoleMc Год назад +15

      Can't let Africa have anything

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Год назад +24

      @@JcoleMc the rest of the world had already begun using iron tools prior to the Nok culture's adoption of the technology. It isn't "taking" anything from Africa. Especially not when talking about a single, short-lived culture. Try dropping the victim mentality for a minute. You might actually learn something.

  • @BarrySuridge
    @BarrySuridge Год назад +6

    The Moon of Pejeng is in Bali which is nowhere near Vietnam. The Dong Son civilisation was spread out a lot farther than your video indicates.

    • @adh6886
      @adh6886 Год назад

      That would sit very nicely with Vietnamese lore. The lore said there was initially 100 tribes and at some point half of them left sail to the sea and half stayed inland.

  • @joshjones6072
    @joshjones6072 Год назад +5

    To me the Vinča writings look like seasonal activities. Arrows being shot, an angled stick with meat cooking over a fire. One has a sort of sun on a stick dividing a plant depiction from an animal skull, warm farming season divided from cold animal hunting season. Another has a goat running from a fire on a stick and a person with beater sound sticks behind the fire.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Год назад +2

      I was wondering about the zodiac; this is a big thing on the OldEuropeanCulture blog.
      The zodiac matters if you are a farmer. You better plant your crops in the correct season

  • @alexlocatelli2876
    @alexlocatelli2876 Год назад +3

    Having heard of all of them makes me think I need to rethink my social life priorities. 😂

  • @erichtomanek4739
    @erichtomanek4739 Год назад +1

    Fascinating.
    An excellent video informative and visually appealing.
    Please create more on the less known extinct cultures of our world.

  • @sonneh86
    @sonneh86 Год назад +2

    This video should get a sequel!

  • @jamesgibson8321
    @jamesgibson8321 Год назад +2

    Awesome thanks for great video!

  • @jonnuanez7183
    @jonnuanez7183 Год назад +1

    For us knuckledraggers not familiar with hectares, it is 2.47 acres to 1 hectare. You're welcome

  • @nneichan9353
    @nneichan9353 Год назад +5

    I like the art of the Nok, it is eye-catching.
    The Vinca discs look like star constellations.
    The Dong San drums are striking!

    • @traceywilson3077
      @traceywilson3077 Год назад +2

      I also though the Vinca etchings looked like constellations.

  • @wickjezek5093
    @wickjezek5093 Год назад

    I finally found sideprojects. I feel like this is the holy grail of Simon's channels.

  • @ZealPropht
    @ZealPropht Год назад

    What a fascinating video! You’re right that I hadn’t heard of any of these ancient peoples.

  • @Jll31527
    @Jll31527 Год назад +2

    Hey out of curiosity, what method was used to determine/estimate the population density in the Vinca culture settlements? Thanks in advance to anyone who answers!
    Greetings from Indonesia

  • @lynnkay417
    @lynnkay417 Год назад

    Love this!!! Thank you Simon & Crew!!

  • @katesisco
    @katesisco Год назад +2

    Seems like each of these 'founders' had SPECIALIZED KNOWLEDGE that determined the emphasis of their settlement.
    Then you have to wonder if the original group agreed to a separate culture emphasis knowing they would be the sole influence.

  • @xxAlitheprettygurlxx
    @xxAlitheprettygurlxx Год назад +5

    I guess you can say these ancient civilizations stopped using their Surfshark VPN 👉😎👉
    (I’m funny I promise)

  • @TazTom
    @TazTom 9 месяцев назад

    I'm so pleased that I'd not heard of these, bar one which i had heard of but nothing about yet.
    So refreshing to learn more things 🎉

  • @EuphoricIntentions
    @EuphoricIntentions Год назад

    Yes, keep it private online, and offline, stay by the moment, or go to church.

  • @almitrahopkins1873
    @almitrahopkins1873 Год назад +4

    I swear you do it on purpose, Whistler. When you say Caral-Supe, you can’t say Supe right, but when you mention the river, you do.
    Quipu is pronounced keypoo.
    And I’m sure Kevin had a giggle getting you to say both Bernard Fagg and Dong Son in one video. I’m surprised it wasn’t age restricted.

  • @CrazyUncleChris
    @CrazyUncleChris Год назад

    The sound effects had me searching the house for what fell down, what hit the wall, etc 😂

  • @sophiechappell6216
    @sophiechappell6216 Год назад

    I love how Simon just has so many channels. I want a history video? Simon. I want true crime? Simon. I want a geographical video? Yup also Simon.
    Keep it up whistle boy. 🙌👏

  • @SeeDIfRiT
    @SeeDIfRiT Год назад

    Love your stuff, Been off work for abit. but I pretty much watched all your stuff on every channel. Been waiting for a back log to watch again. But i couldnt stop myself from watching this

  • @bryanjacla1068
    @bryanjacla1068 Год назад +2

    I hope you tackle also the Oxus Civilization

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Год назад

      BMAC for the win

  • @badger297
    @badger297 Год назад +1

    I l9ve & subscribe to all your channels, but I really like this one. I like how often you crack jokes & go off the cuff in the "side projects" videos. Thanks to everyone involved in making these. Including, but not limited to, Simon Wistler

  • @janebree3912
    @janebree3912 Год назад +1

    You are fantastic! Love and trust your episodes! Curious if you have done and acoustic research? ie, the red pyramid has A note chamber or the theory of chanting to move or raise heavy items such as boulders raised to create stone henge…. thanks ❤

  • @Theflag_Streamersguy
    @Theflag_Streamersguy Год назад +1

    Sir Simon, your beard is biblically majestic sir! Oh, and uhh, excellent vid too.

    • @kevwills858
      @kevwills858 Год назад

      He has it all 😄, besides patience and Audio ... ✌

  • @williamliamsmith4923
    @williamliamsmith4923 Год назад +1

    11:11 we have to be careful about assuming aridity that far back. From 14000 BCE to 3000 BCE even Sahara was green due to humid climate in northern hemisphere. It is likely to be the case in Southern Hemisphere also.

  • @TheGholiday
    @TheGholiday Год назад

    Excellent video. I’d never heard of these civilisations before. Definitely would like to learn more about them all.

  • @DavidMacDowellBlue
    @DavidMacDowellBlue Год назад +1

    13:37 You missed an important part of the Caral civilization--it lasted around 900 years with trade across much of the continent yet no hints anywhere of battles or warfare. At all.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Год назад

      Like Tiahuanaco? They were pretty advanced without much martial-imagery.
      Huari, yeah, was a violent empire...

  • @Fkidd702
    @Fkidd702 Год назад

    I wish this was a podcast . Would love to listen to it while I worked

  • @aaronseet2738
    @aaronseet2738 Год назад +1

    4:55 his chin is resting on his knees, right? right?

  • @denisevlogiev
    @denisevlogiev Год назад

    Would love a second part to this with more cultures

  • @jjw56
    @jjw56 Год назад

    Really good episode. Will definitely do more research about the Vinca culture.

    • @absurdoom3948
      @absurdoom3948 Год назад

      Check the mesolithic Lepenski Vir culture aswell as Starčevo and Vučedol culture. All of those are related to Vinča.

  • @adrianariaratnam5817
    @adrianariaratnam5817 Год назад

    Thank you for this very informative & equally intriguing vid ; learned something new.

  • @temitopepinmiloye
    @temitopepinmiloye 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for covering the Nok culture, I’m Nigerian and had no idea such a civilisation existed.

  • @allanfahrenhorst-jones6118
    @allanfahrenhorst-jones6118 Год назад

    One of your best videos. Doing a great job, keep it up.

  • @SusanC147
    @SusanC147 5 месяцев назад +1

    At 9:25, did anyone else see Constellations??
    ...or maybe I've seen too much Stargate🤔

  • @JohnSharpo
    @JohnSharpo Год назад +3

    Have you considered the culture of Vučedol for your videos? It is also near the territory of Vinča.

  • @jays-move8803
    @jays-move8803 Год назад +2

    Thank you for this wonderful presentation.
    I wanted to add what I hope will be a helpful note. Most people don't know this, but the term "sub-Saharan Africa" is not legitimately geographical since there is no cohesive geographical feature that unites all of the parts of Africa south of the Sahara. The term is meant to be racial. It is meant to convince people of the inferiority of certain Africans, so it's important not to use the term as it places a non-existent distinction within Africa that creates an imaginary divide.
    Black people have always lived in North Africa (no matter how you define it), and non-black people have just about always travelled to, moved to, and lived and settled in places within Africa that are south of the Sahara Desert. But the region of sub-Saharan Africa exists in reality no more than sub-Alpine Europe, sub-GreatPlanian North America, or Sub-Amazonian South America. It is an imaginary divide that is used to promote the idea of the inferiority of people with typically black skin, and the superiority of people with light, fair skin.

  • @swagmama408
    @swagmama408 Год назад

    great video! loved the art style of the nok and dong son :o

  • @aroneaton2639
    @aroneaton2639 Год назад

    Thanks for sticking with BC/AD on this one. Just a pet peeve of mine.

  • @spectre-8
    @spectre-8 3 месяца назад +1

    Why isn’t this 10 hours long 😢

  • @LmaoMoni
    @LmaoMoni Год назад +1

    Please do another one of these!

  • @nigelflood7074
    @nigelflood7074 Год назад

    Great episode

  • @bforman1300
    @bforman1300 7 месяцев назад

    I actually had heard of some of these!
    Kudos!

  • @nosuchthing8
    @nosuchthing8 Год назад

    I look forward to the day all of simons videos are just one long commercial. With yt commericals every 5s of course.

  • @Mountlougallops
    @Mountlougallops Год назад

    This was wonderful.

  • @daughterofeve3148
    @daughterofeve3148 Год назад

    Simply fascinating

  • @Jayjay-qe6um
    @Jayjay-qe6um Год назад +1

    More Ancient Civilizations that I've never heard of!

  • @victoriaeads6126
    @victoriaeads6126 Год назад +1

    9:24 seems likely to be star patterns, but that is just my gut speculation.