I just want to say, it's crazy how far you've come. I've been subscribed since before you hit 10,000 and you've been amazingly consistent with quality while continuing to improve your production. Well done, Cy!
Thanks my friend, it's viewers like you who are responsible for this channel's success...so thank YOU! Haha 10k, seems like yesterday. Thanks so much for the continued support, really appreciate it!
Thanks, glad you liked it! Hope to do more videos focusing on daily life and maybe will read some of the documents from Egypt and Mesopotamia. Thanks for watching and more on the way!
Thanks! Yeah, I used to see videos in the past without them and would sometimes wonder what I was looking at, so decided to add them whenever possible and credit the museum or photographer when necessary. Thanks for watching!
This was a great video. Hearing about the lives of the people who kept communities working is what I find most interesting about history. What was life like for people who weren’t kings or priests. Scribes have given a lot of information about their lives in private letters and writings. That’s the real history. Great work Cy.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed this! I hope to do more short videos like this in the future about less political and more, for lack of a better term, human/everyday life history. Thanks for continuing to watch these and your support, means a lot!
Please do a video on the relationship between the Anatolian / Middle Eastern civilizations and the civilizations around the Black Sea like Dacians , Thracians , etc
Great video! So many people say they would like to go back in time and be warriors and whatnot. I'd love to be a scribe. Memorizing a lot of specific weird rules that are useless outside of very specific applications is sort of my jam. (I would probably be a slave or landless peasant but hey, goals matter).
Yeah given my love of books and the written word, I think I might have been one as well. Thanks for watching, really appreciate it and more on the way!
Just a little nitpick: uni-, bi-, and triliteral signs represent one, two, or three consonants, not syllables. For example (iirc) the hieroglyph of a head represents the consonants /tp/, with no indication of vowels (or syllables).
Great question. So the earliest actual papyri that has been discovered (at least according to what I remember) dates to the time of the Giza pyramids around 2600-2500 BC. However, scholars believe that it was at least in existence sometime around or before 3000 BC. I don't know the answer for the Levant and Mesopotamia - in the latter, it was not common at all since clay tablets with cuneiform were the norm. Hope this helps and thanks for watching!
With my limited skills I can clearly read the text fragment at 6:25 = spH niA in = "lassoing ibex by.....", or at least I think that's the translation....
Haha I've shown it in some of the other videos but yeah, not too often unless I have to. That might change in the near future. Thanks for watching, really appreciate it!
Oh man, that was a old game... I remember seeing once though never got to play it. I also played a lot of Age of Empires and Civilization as a kid. Thanks for watching and more on the way, stay tuned!
I adored this so much. I would love love love to know more about the the alleged scriptorium at Qumran. I know that no Christian documents were recovered at Qumran however ... after discussing what Qumran means to Judaism, it must be seriously evaluated what it also might have meant to the original Christians. I know the ways in which academia dismisses these notions, based on prejudice toward religion and political appeasement. Yet the heart and mind do seek the truth.
You may want to remaster this with higher volume, I have some difficulty listening even with all the volume sliders maxed. Otherwise very good, like always.
Thanks to Blinkist for sponsoring this video! Click the link www.blinkist.com/historywithcy to start your 7-day free trial and get 25% off a premium membership.
I guess just like today, scientists, lawyers, military officers, engineers are still well respected amd services are sought for. Five thousand year history of scribedom. (As an engineer I have some bias of course)
Priest: What are you writing? Scribe: I'm recording the grains of dust around the feet of the statue of Ramesses at Abu Simbel. Priest: Why? Scribe: So the people will know. Priest: What people? Nobody cares about that. Scribe: PEOPLE IN THE FUTURE MIGHT!!
"There is a basic principle that distinguishes a hot medium like radio from a cool one like the telephone, or a hot medium like the movie from a cool one like TV. A hot medium is one that extends one single sense in "high definition." High definition is the state of being well filled with data... Hot media are, therefore, low in participation, and cool media are high in participation or completion by the audience... A cool medium like hieroglyphic or ideogrammic written characters has very different effects from the hot and explosive medium of the phonetic alphabet." [Understanding Media: The Extension of Man, Marshall McLuhan, 1964, Ch. 2: Hot Media and Cold]
Have you ever heard Martin Luther King, Jr.'s last speech given? I am the only one who sees a Lil trick of rhetoric he threw in it. But, I think YOU may be the only other person who can see/hear it. I guess, it could be considered a "coincidence ", but I consider this "phenomena" in line with Carl Jung's concept of "Synchronicity ". But, maybe I am just a troll? Check it out. Great work. Been a subscriber for over 2 years now. You helped me so much. From YOU I theorized "Abram" is a literary tool to actually refer to Ibin-Sin. But, that is another story....
President stick figure multiple arrows one stars dust down arrow Prophet stick figure activation time fi mind creation time back time units and such...future boy
its letters, not hieroglyphs. so constant alphabet exists, no "new hieroglyphs" added. its fommon misconception among Europeans, while that letters always was "decifered" and well known and well read by Arabs and books about it always was and is available and famous
I just want to say, it's crazy how far you've come. I've been subscribed since before you hit 10,000 and you've been amazingly consistent with quality while continuing to improve your production. Well done, Cy!
Thanks my friend, it's viewers like you who are responsible for this channel's success...so thank YOU! Haha 10k, seems like yesterday. Thanks so much for the continued support, really appreciate it!
?
@@Scruffybo4 ?
Sub-scribed
It is insane how detailed pictures of everyday life those documents can offer, 4000 years later. Great video!
Thanks, glad you liked it! Hope to do more videos focusing on daily life and maybe will read some of the documents from Egypt and Mesopotamia. Thanks for watching and more on the way!
@@HistorywithCy Looking forward to it!
Well explained, great video! I like the pictures with descriptions. It will be very useful for me😉💗
Thanks! Yeah, I used to see videos in the past without them and would sometimes wonder what I was looking at, so decided to add them whenever possible and credit the museum or photographer when necessary. Thanks for watching!
This was a great video. Hearing about the lives of the people who kept communities working is what I find most interesting about history. What was life like for people who weren’t kings or priests. Scribes have given a lot of information about their lives in private letters and writings. That’s the real history. Great work Cy.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed this! I hope to do more short videos like this in the future about less political and more, for lack of a better term, human/everyday life history. Thanks for continuing to watch these and your support, means a lot!
I was just rewatching your Mesopotamia playlist last night for the 50th time! Love your work Cy 💕 Thank you for these fascinating videos 😊
Thanks! I have a big one on Mesopotamia / Babylonia coming out soon...thanks for watching!
Please do a video on the relationship between the Anatolian / Middle Eastern civilizations and the civilizations around the Black Sea like Dacians , Thracians , etc
Great video! So many people say they would like to go back in time and be warriors and whatnot. I'd love to be a scribe. Memorizing a lot of specific weird rules that are useless outside of very specific applications is sort of my jam. (I would probably be a slave or landless peasant but hey, goals matter).
Yeah I'd just love to be a scribe or simple librarian in the Library of Ashurbanipal or in Alexandria. That's honestly the life for me!
I agree. 👍
Great stuff, Cy! I love these slice-of-life videos that describe the lives of comparatively average ancient people.
Thanks! I hope to do more of these types of videos in the near future...something different than the same old political history. Thanks for watching!
Great video! I love your Egyptian series.
Thanks! D13 & 14 out early next month, stay tuned and thanks for watching!
@@HistorywithCy looking forward to them:)
Thank you for posting. I was just saying yesterday that I think I was a scribe in a past life.
Yeah given my love of books and the written word, I think I might have been one as well. Thanks for watching, really appreciate it and more on the way!
Nice work👍👍👍👍
Just a little nitpick: uni-, bi-, and triliteral signs represent one, two, or three consonants, not syllables. For example (iirc) the hieroglyph of a head represents the consonants /tp/, with no indication of vowels (or syllables).
Thanks for watching and the clarification! More on the way, stay tuned!
People like you are the scribes of our time, and so thank you for all the historical videos
I love your work, thank you so much!
Thanks so much, glad you enjoy these! Lots more on the way, stay tuned and thanks for watching!
Very cool as always my guy
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it! More on ancient Egypt and other areas on the way, stay tuned and thanks for watching!
When was papyrus / papyrus rolls introduced in Egypt, the Levante, and Mesopotamia?
Great question. So the earliest actual papyri that has been discovered (at least according to what I remember) dates to the time of the Giza pyramids around 2600-2500 BC. However, scholars believe that it was at least in existence sometime around or before 3000 BC. I don't know the answer for the Levant and Mesopotamia - in the latter, it was not common at all since clay tablets with cuneiform were the norm. Hope this helps and thanks for watching!
@@HistorywithCy, thank you!
New History with Cy? It's Morbin'Time!
χαῖρε βασιλεύς!
Thanks my friend, hope you enjoyed it!
👍👍👍Interesting, as always😃
Thanks my friend, glad you found it interesting! More on daily life in Egypt and Sumer on the way, stay tuned and thanks for watching!
Thank you for making this video!
Cy, all of your work is excellent.
All of it!
Thank you, so glad you're enjoying all of them. Lots more on the way, stay tuned and thanks so much for continuing to watch!
I remember when History with Cy was below 100,000 subs!
Haha yes, feels like yesterday. Thanks to viewers like you I reached 100K! More on the way, stay tuned and thanks for watching!
Awesome work!
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it!
Very informative 🤗 thank you Cy!!
My pleasure, thank YOU for watching!
@@HistorywithCy 💖❤💛💙
I don't think it would be an exaggeration to say that scribes were as essential to ancient Egyptian society as IT is to ours in 2022.
Very true, both are the unnamed heroes of their respective societies! Thanks for watching!
thanks Cy
You're welcome!
Yeah!!!
Thanks!
Oh you are wetting my appetite for Dynasty XIII
Coming really soon, hopefully this weekend!
@@HistorywithCy yes I'm looking forward to it
With my limited skills I can clearly read the text fragment at 6:25 = spH niA in = "lassoing ibex by.....", or at least I think that's the translation....
Haha you could be right, I have to look at my hieroglyph dictionary to confirm. Thanks for watching, really appreciate it!
First time ever that I saw your face, I was actually surprised to realize that the voice has a body lol I wasn't expecting that
Haha I've shown it in some of the other videos but yeah, not too often unless I have to. That might change in the near future. Thanks for watching, really appreciate it!
@@HistorywithCy you look good! Thank you for the vid
@@igor-yp1xv my pleasure!
When will your Episode on Nabtia Come?
No plans in the immediate future...but Fall of Civilizations did a great one on the subject recently, check it out!
@@HistorywithCy I did but didn't like it
That's interesting... 🤔
reminds me video game Sierra's Pharaoh Video Game... 😏
Man that brings back memories. However I never played that specific video game. I stuck to playing Age of Mythology and Age of Empires.
Oh man, that was a old game... I remember seeing once though never got to play it. I also played a lot of Age of Empires and Civilization as a kid. Thanks for watching and more on the way, stay tuned!
There were really more scribes than construction workers (boat builders as well) in Ancient Egypt. If so, how do you tell?
Ancient scribes of India are called - KAYASTHA. Very similar history to the scribes of ancient Egypt. Great video. thank you for uploading
My pleasure, thanks for watching!
I adored this so much. I would love love love to know more about the the alleged scriptorium at Qumran. I know that no Christian documents were recovered at Qumran however ... after discussing what Qumran means to Judaism, it must be seriously evaluated what it also might have meant to the original Christians. I know the ways in which academia dismisses these notions, based on prejudice toward religion and political appeasement. Yet the heart and mind do seek the truth.
One day I hope to cover it...thanks for watching!
The scribes understood entrepreneurship😮
“He is Boss” is like the sound of that my Seneb😂❤
You may want to remaster this with higher volume, I have some difficulty listening even with all the volume sliders maxed. Otherwise very good, like always.
Thanks for letting me know, I'll take a look into it. Thanks for watching and your support, always really appreciate it!
11:00 If I was born in Ancient Egypt, def would want to be a scribe
Main stream media for that day.
Thanks to Blinkist for sponsoring this video! Click the link www.blinkist.com/historywithcy to start your 7-day free trial and get 25% off a premium membership.
Ancient Egyptian scribes writing the first draft of Lonely Island's "I'm the Boss"
Praise be to the scribes of old indeed.
Strange, you don't address how the communication with other civilization ls was also conducted
🙃
Thank you!
It is funny to note, that scribes could write and read, but masons did not. As a result, there are quite some spelling mistakes in Egyptian tombs.
My brother's and sister's we can't let Egypt steal African culture 🧫 we have to educate this generation of black students period 💯 true
👏🙂
Thank you!
@@HistorywithCy it really is my pleasure.
Keep up the great work
LUOA?
I guess just like today, scientists, lawyers, military officers, engineers are still well respected amd services are sought for. Five thousand year history of scribedom.
(As an engineer I have some bias of course)
Priest: What are you writing?
Scribe: I'm recording the grains of dust around the feet of the statue of Ramesses at Abu Simbel.
Priest: Why?
Scribe: So the people will know.
Priest: What people? Nobody cares about that.
Scribe: PEOPLE IN THE FUTURE MIGHT!!
Haha exactly! We, the people of the future need to know this stuff! Thanks for watching, really appreciate it and more on the way, stay tuned!
Well, how many grains of sand were there! The people of the future demand answers.
!!
I wish I were an ancient Egyptian scribe.
Yes, if I could be one person in ancient Egypt besides the pharaoh, it'd be a scribe. Thanks for watching!
"There is a basic principle that distinguishes a hot medium like radio from a cool one like the telephone, or a hot medium like the movie from a cool one like TV. A hot medium is one that extends one single sense in "high definition." High definition is the state of being well filled with data...
Hot media are, therefore, low in participation, and cool media are high in participation or completion by the audience...
A cool medium like hieroglyphic or ideogrammic written characters has very different effects from the hot and explosive medium of the phonetic alphabet."
[Understanding Media: The Extension of Man, Marshall McLuhan, 1964, Ch. 2: Hot Media and Cold]
History with cy ! Never enough 🛖🏹 brilliant channel 🛡⚔️
Thank you, really appreciate it! More on the way, stay tuned!
First comment!
Thank you, enjoy the video!
Europeans and Mediterranean people don't have black eyes 👀 African and black people do period 💯 true facts
Have you ever heard Martin Luther King, Jr.'s last speech given? I am the only one who sees a Lil trick of rhetoric he threw in it. But, I think YOU may be the only other person who can see/hear it. I guess, it could be considered a "coincidence ", but I consider this "phenomena" in line with Carl Jung's concept of "Synchronicity ". But, maybe I am just a troll? Check it out. Great work. Been a subscriber for over 2 years now.
You helped me so much. From YOU I theorized "Abram" is a literary tool to actually refer to Ibin-Sin. But, that is another story....
President stick figure multiple arrows one stars dust down arrow
Prophet stick figure activation time fi mind creation time back time units and such...future boy
Fake 🤥 News 📰
Egypt is and still is in Africa 🌍 it was known as kemet civilization not Egyptian civilization period 💯 true facts 💯 facts truth
Cleopatra was born in Africa 🌍 it would make Cleopatra African Queen 👑 not Egyptian Queen she was Greek okay 👍 who cares I don't 💯
King 👑 Tut mummie African his grandmother Queen Tiye African Queen Nerfertiti was African not a white Egyptian woman ♀️ 💯 true
its letters, not hieroglyphs. so constant alphabet exists, no "new hieroglyphs" added. its fommon misconception among Europeans, while that letters always was "decifered" and well known and well read by Arabs and books about it always was and is available and famous
Fascinating
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it!