The Lost City Of Knowledge: What Life Was Like In Ancient Alexandria | Metropolis | Timeline

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024
  • Alexandria, a royal Greek city in the land of the Pharaohs. Along the sandy banks of the Nile delta on the African Mediterranean coast, the most powerful metropolis of its time rose from virtually nothing. The Hellenistic culture mingled with the legacy of the Pharaohs and bore the fruits of a glorious new heritage.
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Комментарии • 605

  • @rick7043
    @rick7043 2 года назад +138

    RUclips and all those who contribute all the content allow me to travel across time and the earth and fill my eyes and mind with knowledge and wonderment. I am grateful. Thank you

  • @onlyme219
    @onlyme219 2 года назад +1321

    I enjoyed that listening in bed before going to sleep and nodding off. I don't state that as an insult its the truth and a compliment if that makes any sense

    • @SaltlakePromotionz
      @SaltlakePromotionz 2 года назад +56

      Ditto

    • @onlyme219
      @onlyme219 2 года назад +42

      @@SaltlakePromotionz we are not alone, Best wishes :)

    • @Jason.cbr1000rr
      @Jason.cbr1000rr 2 года назад +63

      I do the same!! And mafia documentaries too! But these history ones are more soothing.

    • @Musick79
      @Musick79 2 года назад +13

      Ditto!

    • @swagatron9477
      @swagatron9477 2 года назад +12

      Same

  • @jon5457
    @jon5457 2 года назад +128

    Love this series, esp the narrators voice!!! Please keep the ancient history docs coming.

  • @ErnestTeeBass
    @ErnestTeeBass 2 года назад +128

    Ancient construction methods and labor practices always amaze me.

    • @anthonydoyle7370
      @anthonydoyle7370 2 года назад +4

      Can we even begin to imagine what they could have achieved with today's technology?

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky Год назад

      It was aliens, obviously.
      Jk

    • @crzzymnn911
      @crzzymnn911 Год назад +2

      @@anthonydoyle7370 or maybe the other way around ?

    • @Last_Chance.
      @Last_Chance. 5 месяцев назад +1

      Same

  • @henryjumbohead5391
    @henryjumbohead5391 Год назад +176

    It's so terrible that the library of Alexandria was destroyed. The amount of knowledge and historical accounts that we were lost is crazy if the stories of the libraries contents are true.

    • @purefoldnz3070
      @purefoldnz3070 Год назад

      what was saved after the fire was destroyed by the christians setting back civilization at least a thousand years.

    • @shailonnoelle7175
      @shailonnoelle7175 Год назад +8

      Catholic propaganda

    • @Tawadeb
      @Tawadeb Год назад +2

      Yes a huge shame

    • @baldbastardo
      @baldbastardo Год назад +4

      Knowledge is the enemy of those who are greedy for power. From the panic over the invention of the printing press, to what was deemed politically incorrect by the politburo to most recently the controlling of online content by various powers in all regions of the world this is trackable and verifiable. Pretty interesting to think where humanity could possibly be if free exchange of ideas was allowed to happen.

    • @surlygirly1926
      @surlygirly1926 Год назад +6

      @@shailonnoelle7175 Nothing to do with catholicism

  • @Bryan-fb8dh
    @Bryan-fb8dh Год назад +31

    We are where we are now because of that library. Its contents are gone but the people that studied there left and spread their knowledge around the world and others that learned from them spread it as well. It isnt a total loss.

    • @innosanto
      @innosanto Год назад +2

      Most was lost , i have heard people say we would go to thr moon 100 years prior if the library was intact

    • @firmak2
      @firmak2 Год назад +1

      ​@@innosantounlikely. Its just as possible that all the books and scrolls wrre moved.

    • @Last_Chance.
      @Last_Chance. 5 месяцев назад

      The Vatican has all the scrolls now

  • @mclarenscca
    @mclarenscca 2 года назад +25

    There is so much dialog in this video! It's a documentary with archeology! Feed me more!!!! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @grampsizzakilla7981
    @grampsizzakilla7981 2 года назад +61

    An excellent overview of the city and its development. Fascinating!

  • @pthomson9736
    @pthomson9736 2 года назад +37

    Wonderful. Fantastic person who narrated. He kept me engrossed to the end.

    • @VOpopuliUK
      @VOpopuliUK Год назад +1

      Incredible right. Sounds kind of like John hurt

  • @Red_Rebel
    @Red_Rebel Год назад +23

    Years later Taposaris Magna is now a site of great discoveries particularly during the reign of Cleopatra VII, thanks immensely to Kathleen!

  • @roguewolf7053
    @roguewolf7053 2 года назад +51

    What is mind boggling to me is the fact that the ancient Muslim empire, Greeks & Romans were *so advanced* yet *nearly all* all of it was lost with the onset of the dark ages…not to be re-invented until *centuries* later. It’s honestly terrifying that so much advancement can be lost so rapidly.
    - But what I don’t understand is WHY so much of the technology that wasn’t directly related to the infrastructure that collapsed was lost when tons of examples were still standing & available to study & replicate.
    - The fact that multiple times in history almost everyone knew how to read. Something not seen again for centuries.
    - Also the amount of medical knowledge & basic understanding of how the body functioned that was obtained & then lost only to take centuries to be rediscovered/relearned is also shocking.
    - It’s not just the physical technology that is mind blowing but also the loss of sociological & political advancements as well. The fact that equality between races has been achieved multiple times in large cultures like the Greek Empire & to a certain extent the Roman Empire & in a few cases there was also basic equality between males & females. Yet *we STILL ARE STRUGGLING* with these issues today. But what scares & worries me from studying history is the fact equality was lost over & over. And it was typically lost rapidly & violently. Living in the US right now I fear the slide backwards towards *losing* our advancements towards absolute equality may have begun.

    • @HannahRoot55
      @HannahRoot55 2 года назад

      Rogue

    • @eastsidemuu
      @eastsidemuu Год назад +1

      Every golden age, ends with a dark age.. is just the facts of life

    • @christiehiggins4855
      @christiehiggins4855 8 месяцев назад

      God is in control, from the beginning of time and life, teaching us, over and over in every new generation

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 2 года назад +27

    Fantastic historical coverage about Metropolis to Ancient famously Alexandria & Ancient Greek civilization trailer gloriously found

  • @hmzdu
    @hmzdu 2 года назад +18

    Such great episode, thank you very much!

  • @bndrslak
    @bndrslak Год назад +4

    absolutely in love with life in ancient countries

  • @The.Original.Potatocakes
    @The.Original.Potatocakes 2 года назад +12

    The library of Alexandria is one of my favorite Magic the Gathering cards.

  • @clipzATG
    @clipzATG Месяц назад +1

    Been to Alexandria (Egypt) last week. Of course, the history in regards of museums and catacombs are great to see. Do have to say that it was sad to see how bad the conditions are and that it would make Alexander The Great cry out loud if he saw the current state of his city.

  • @carlosacta8726
    @carlosacta8726 2 года назад +7

    What a fantastic documentary!!!!

  • @Creeer2005
    @Creeer2005 2 года назад +4

    Love listening to these as I work. With an occasional peek.

    • @bosslady7611
      @bosslady7611 Год назад +2

      Same. That's exactly what I'm doing now

  • @nicolasntovas5667
    @nicolasntovas5667 Год назад +12

    An interesting fact few know is that Homer has chosen the site over 1000 yrs before Alexander. There is an incredible description in Iliad and why the site would make an excellent port city. We all know the love Alexander had for Iliad....

    • @youngzzaz5407
      @youngzzaz5407 Год назад

      Sources....

    • @annas4843
      @annas4843 Год назад +4

      @@youngzzaz5407I think he already stated it.. Iliad 😅

    • @Last_Chance.
      @Last_Chance. 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@youngzzaz5407lol

    • @Last_Chance.
      @Last_Chance. 5 месяцев назад

      Lliad and the Odyssey was a lot of fiction

  • @jamesjohno1180
    @jamesjohno1180 Год назад +22

    I’ve watched this ten times😂I’ve always been fascinated by Alexander the Great and the legacy and the legend he left behind, he died so young but it didn’t matter he done all he needed to do to establish the name “the great” he even became a pharaoh!
    But places like this Egypt Alexandria rome Greece, these places should still be the epicentre of the world we should all look to those places as the top of the world like the way they where thousands of years ago, how did they fall into ruin! How didn’t amazing feats of engineering continue in these places how aren’t these like the west of today the heads of the world….imagine Egypt as beautiful as it was back then today somewhere where you go and live the life of royalty like a pharaoh and be in touch with history, no Egypt is a dusty sandy desert with some old rocks even the people who live there done care about past history they sell you the rocks and the bones of the ancients, it’s sad we should all dream of going to those places because of what they are and what it’s become.
    The best thing about Egypt is still what the ancients left behind not that as well as what it’s become.

  • @acsalusa7540
    @acsalusa7540 2 года назад +8

    I got addicted watching documentaries! Let's do this.

  • @martinputt6421
    @martinputt6421 2 года назад +7

    Amazing narration and visuals.

  • @TheDisinformationProjectNz
    @TheDisinformationProjectNz 2 года назад +11

    Would be awesome if they have video cameras back then to see it thriving

  • @nanayj.c.g.8675
    @nanayj.c.g.8675 2 года назад +10

    So very good content thanks for great sharing and god bless you

  • @marcusagrippa8078
    @marcusagrippa8078 Год назад +61

    We’d probably be growing weed on mars right now if that library never burned down.

    • @kiq654
      @kiq654 Год назад

      Lets be honest now. It probably was full of pornographic inscriptions and poems about getting blown off by a females. You are naive to think 'greatest' thinkers had anything to do besides jerking off to statues of goddesses. Science was rare occurrence back in that region and philosophers too btw.

  • @jordanbailey8808
    @jordanbailey8808 Год назад +1

    I love your docs for awhile I thought I had seen everyone ever made then I found you all thanks!!

  • @rogerrogerbrogan493
    @rogerrogerbrogan493 2 года назад +10

    Well done!
    Quite informative.

  • @Amaan_Zargar
    @Amaan_Zargar 2 года назад +31

    Truly magnificent!

  • @Last_Chance.
    @Last_Chance. 5 месяцев назад +4

    I would give anything to go back in time to this era and the building of the pyramids

    • @ThomasGazis
      @ThomasGazis 2 месяца назад

      The Alexandria's era is as distant to the Pyramids as we are to it....

  • @amandabarker2047
    @amandabarker2047 2 года назад +21

    Amazing videos, I always like to watch all kinds of educational videos; love learning !!

  • @grahamgillard3722
    @grahamgillard3722 Год назад +3

    “Agora” is my all time favourite movie.

  • @tarikmerdad2421
    @tarikmerdad2421 Год назад +3

    We need a movie about this story.

    • @grahamgillard3722
      @grahamgillard3722 Год назад

      “Agora” is my all time favourite movie. Its plot is about the destruction of the library of Alexandria, but its theme is universal.

  • @DAMAGE795
    @DAMAGE795 Год назад +1

    Mimi's time material 👏. If I can't sleep I throw this on and drift away

  • @andytucker6783
    @andytucker6783 2 года назад +5

    I've found a similar climate and geography to Egypt. Like a empty canvas before the pyramids and Alexandria is remote parts of northern California Oregon

  • @danielazizomar7226
    @danielazizomar7226 2 года назад +3

    I always fall asleep to these documentaries..- and the next day I don’t remember anything at all. I’ve been through almost all world history and I still struggle to remember if Napoleon was a General or a rapper! Hate it… should’ve known so much by now.

    • @mohamedabduweli5091
      @mohamedabduweli5091 Год назад

      😭😭 I'm actually opposite. I wouldn't sleep for hours thinking about the documentary

  • @TheSilmarillian
    @TheSilmarillian 2 года назад +9

    The library's of Alexander where sacked twice imagine the knowledge that was lost

    • @tulipsontheorgan
      @tulipsontheorgan Год назад +1

      Same as now…all the censoring keeping knowledge from the population

    • @TheSilmarillian
      @TheSilmarillian Год назад

      @@tulipsontheorgan There be truth in that but now the so called elites miss judged the power of the internet and social media .May their downfall be swift and painful.

  • @maggiemakeupnails1056
    @maggiemakeupnails1056 2 года назад +45

    So proud for my Greek heritage! So proud to be Greek! Thank you 🇬🇷♥️🇬🇷

    • @danaanceski550
      @danaanceski550 2 года назад +2

      Yes you are proud to be Greek.
      But Alexsender was not Greek.
      Hi Was Macedonian his name.
      Was Macedon from Pela.
      Hi Was fithing wit Greeks.
      You telling the wall the word .
      Bicouse hi was Alexsender the Great. His Father Philip 2and was
      Kild bay Spartan man, Greese was
      Not tere Spartans was.

    • @scottcrosby-art5490
      @scottcrosby-art5490 2 года назад +3

      I mean thats great but he was Macedonian 😂

    • @Abominable_Intelligences
      @Abominable_Intelligences 2 года назад +14

      Macedon was an ancient kingdom on the periphery of Archaic and Classical Greece, and later the dominant state of Hellenistic Greece. Which became and recognized as a Sovereign State to date

    • @danaanceski550
      @danaanceski550 2 года назад

      @@Abominable_Intelligences ; You look lake Mexican on the picture.

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 2 года назад +1

      this is Egyptian city baby boy!

  • @matthewbarber4993
    @matthewbarber4993 2 года назад +5

    I love this documentary felt like I was there

  • @wivoverse
    @wivoverse 2 месяца назад

    FOREVER PROUD TO BE AN ALEXANDRIAN

  • @morenofranco9235
    @morenofranco9235 Год назад +1

    Fascinating. Thank you.

  • @angelique7618
    @angelique7618 2 года назад +2

    Thank you, this was an excellent documentary,

  • @kemomoh9484
    @kemomoh9484 2 года назад +2

    I am an English learner and this video is very good I enjoyed it very much and I need your support guys to continue be cause I want to learn English

  • @tanias4877
    @tanias4877 Год назад +1

    Fascinating, thankyou 😯

  • @sharynhughes1061
    @sharynhughes1061 2 года назад +2

    What an Amazing Life and Stories. What an Amazing Time Line City and Country. ThankU!! Soooo! very Interesting.. I Love these Stories!!! i'm so Attracted to them!!! ThankU!!!

  • @valenciawalker6498
    @valenciawalker6498 Год назад +1

    Excellent presentation.

  • @57113
    @57113 7 месяцев назад

    Great re-enactments, narration and so full of knowledge of the ancient culture of Alexandria. Thank you for this historical documentary. 6:15

  • @stacyMighty
    @stacyMighty 7 месяцев назад

    This is wonderful! She risked so much for knowledge

  • @frankiewelch8306
    @frankiewelch8306 2 года назад +2

    This channel is way better than history hit.

  • @bloomingaccents
    @bloomingaccents 2 года назад +2

    LOVE THIS, THANK YOU

  • @Ankur_explores
    @Ankur_explores Год назад +3

    Great documentary!
    I like to think about better ways to preserve all the human knowledge and creation that we have today.
    What if all the timeless information in today's libraries can be made more engaging and easily accessible to everyone!?

  • @swymaj02
    @swymaj02 2 года назад +1

    Very captivating

  • @AYEBAZIBWEGIFT-bj3wv
    @AYEBAZIBWEGIFT-bj3wv 2 месяца назад

    It was really amazing in the ancient times

  • @dangreene3895
    @dangreene3895 Год назад +3

    I wish the library of Alexandria would not have burned down , I wonder what ancient texts it held

    • @woodhousii2445
      @woodhousii2445 4 месяца назад

      there was major emphasis on collecting the works of homer and other authors who wrote about homeric thought and philosophy, as well as many other philosophical works that still exist to this day. the likely texts that were in the library that we DONT have anymore are written works by greek authors about the egyptians and a few works in egyptian written by egyptians that were more than likely political, civic, religious, and work related.
      other works that were known to be in the library that we dont have include epics, tragedies, and comedies by greek authors who lived in alexandria but weren't very popular to have had their works spread to other libraries.

  • @Valkyrie1941
    @Valkyrie1941 2 года назад +10

    This video will have millions of views in long run and I'm one of the first hundred to view and comment on this video .

  • @janvisingh3464
    @janvisingh3464 15 дней назад

    Hypatia lived in Alexandria, walking in the great halls of the library of Alexandria which was completely destroyed .... cannot imagine ever

  • @hulguiniiiadolfo
    @hulguiniiiadolfo 2 года назад +13

    The ancient city of knowledge
    Because of thousands of books 📚📖

  • @osirusgtr
    @osirusgtr Год назад +9

    History is just so Amazing!!

  • @bighappygomateshwara8794
    @bighappygomateshwara8794 9 месяцев назад

    OMG. The planning, execution and maintenance of these ancient works is unrivalled, except for a few cities (metropolis) around the globe. Rome, Persepolis, Mohenjadaro and Harappa (in india) come to mind.
    These cities just didn't spring up like magic. The precursors of human civilizations must have taken at least a millennium to experiment, innovate and finalise, to pass on the knowledge for these cities.
    Thanks to RUclips that you can watch and learn from anywhere.

  • @moshemankoff7488
    @moshemankoff7488 2 года назад +2

    Thanks!

  • @emmaponymous
    @emmaponymous 9 месяцев назад

    @38:54 I screamed when he picked up an ancient papyrus with his hands and THEN BLEW ON IT. 😱

  • @Mossyz.
    @Mossyz. Год назад +1

    This is great .

  • @anubisswift
    @anubisswift Год назад +2

    Nothing like an ad every 4 minutes to keep up the continuity😂

  • @mezza_ph
    @mezza_ph 2 года назад +1

    Love the narrators voice!

  • @janinebean4276
    @janinebean4276 2 года назад +4

    The lighthouse sounds like the statue of Liberty!

    • @StoneInMySandal
      @StoneInMySandal 2 года назад +4

      Good for you for noticing, most people do not. The reason for the similarity is the Statue of Liberty is an anthropomorphic Pharos (lighthouse). Her torch held high to light to path for all who seek freedom. “Liberty Enlightening the World” is the actual name of the statue.

    • @joycelynbrandon755
      @joycelynbrandon755 2 года назад

      The Satue of Liberty was a gift from France and was not built by Americans as the Lighthouse

  • @williamcastonguay2396
    @williamcastonguay2396 2 года назад +1

    This was a good one

  • @omaroba1490
    @omaroba1490 2 года назад +4

    Top level history

  • @deepfriedlostchildren2627
    @deepfriedlostchildren2627 3 месяца назад +3

    I’m from Alexandria the bride of the Mediterranean

  • @lauralafauve5520
    @lauralafauve5520 2 года назад +2

    Really good.

  • @rasheawhite3644
    @rasheawhite3644 Год назад

    🥰! Thanks for sharing!🙏🏾💕💯😊 EXCITED!🥰🎉

  • @tnteachertim
    @tnteachertim 2 года назад +24

    Excellent presentation. Such a pity that the Egyptian authorities are so restrictive of access for archaeology and learning.
    Imagine how much MORE there is to learn from that country?

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 2 года назад

      the Egyptian authorities are sponsored by the west

    • @NorceCodine
      @NorceCodine 2 года назад +7

      They are not restrictive at all, Poland has the concession from the government to actually dig in Alexandria. The Egyptians are restricting Western countries because of their role in the Suez crisis and the following expulsion of Westerners from Egypt. The French are outsiders here, that's why they just take pictures.

    • @martinputt6421
      @martinputt6421 2 года назад

      @@NorceCodine Well that's just silly of them. The Suez Crisis happened in 1956 and the leaders that invaded Suez are long dead.

    • @盧璘壽로인수
      @盧璘壽로인수 2 года назад

      simple: *ISLAM*
      according to their narrow-minded religion, anything that is not Allah is blasphemy which should be totally destroyed

    • @jeffmiller3499
      @jeffmiller3499 2 года назад

      @@NorceCodine as an American, good. A large part of modern westerners destroy most they come in contact with. No appreciation or admiration for things, especially history. it's sad & at times disgusting.

  • @politecat4236
    @politecat4236 Год назад

    This video taught me a lot about making a good chicken pie so thank you for your recipe 😊

  • @bsaxton6400
    @bsaxton6400 2 года назад +8

    Plumbing is taken for granted. Today in the USA each house has the advancements that only kings, queens, and emperors were privy to back in the day.

  • @mariadaluzmoutinho5701
    @mariadaluzmoutinho5701 2 года назад +13

    Este documentário está excelente!! Teletransporta a um passado de uma Alexandria evoluída e de conhecimento ..aos nossos olhos passam memórias de viafens infindas na biblioteca em busca de livros, sabedoria em busca do zero do infinito, em busca do futuro e das portas do presente ..onde estara a chave?!! Alexandre o Grande quando viajava fazia questão de enviar a Aristóteles espécimes botânicos e no seu cofre cravejado de jóias levava uma copia da Ilíada com anotações suas ...a vida pode ser breve mas a arte e pode ser longa!!

  • @Black___Book
    @Black___Book Год назад +1

    So much that was old and ancient even then was lost

  • @drisselkhoukhi2112
    @drisselkhoukhi2112 Год назад +6

    Wonderful and magnificent !

  • @brandonlamontcooper8141
    @brandonlamontcooper8141 2 года назад

    thank you

  • @RAGNAR7722
    @RAGNAR7722 Год назад +1

    Health and safety would have a field day on that site!

  • @oscarcastro4112
    @oscarcastro4112 3 месяца назад

    Given its importance within the Roman Empire, and its role in creating the Septuagint, I’ve always wondered why it’s not mentioned even once in the New Testament.

  • @LondonPower
    @LondonPower Год назад +2

    Many million Egyptians have Greek blood and heritage that's why Greeks and Egyptians are brothers for ever

  • @gregg7992
    @gregg7992 Год назад +3

    It is absolute idiocy, or unbridled insanity that there are people in this comment section, and people in the world quite frankly, who continue to question the ethnicity of Alexander, his predecessors and his successors. The Macedonians were the largest Hellenic ethnos on the Greek mainland and one of the largest of the Greek world. According to archelogical and papyrological evidence, their dialect was grounded in Doric form, characterized by harsh consonants and elongated vowels. Dialects were common in the Greek world of antiquity, as they are in parts of Greece today. In fact, in the Lagidae Kingdom of the Ptolemaic Dynasty, it was considered a mark of prestige at court to speak the Doric dialect of the ancestral homeland. Moreover, of the written evidence uncovered throughout the kingdom of Macedon and its subsequent empire within Greece and the Balkans, close to 99% are strictly Greek. Sure, they absorbed certain Thracian words into their speech but that is a consequence of geographic proximity and exposure. In their religion, they worshipped the gods and demigods of the Olympic pantheon as other Hellenic states, particularly Zeus, Dionysos, and Herakles; the names of their people, Alexandros ("protector of men"), Philippos ("horse-loving"), Ptolemaios ("great war"), Nikanor ("people of victory"), Seleukos ("lightness"), or Antigonos ("worthy of his father") are all Greek in etymology and structure; the lunisolar calendar month names were derived from feasts and related celebrations in honor of the gods, as other Hellenic peoples such as the Athenians, Corinthians, and Spartans did. People are so hungry for identity, for a sense of belonging that they would appropriate the heritage and history of completely unrelated people. The Slavic peoples who inhabit the land around Skopje only arrived in the region several hundred years after Christ. They have a rich, fantastic history. But they are in no way affiliated with the Makedonia of antiquity. It is a fabricated nation of Slavo-Albanian peoples who took the name of Makedonia as their own in the early 19th and 20th century, though they have no rightful or just claim to it.

    • @RamonMena-u6i
      @RamonMena-u6i 6 месяцев назад +1

      Maybe u need to make ur own documentary

  • @cdfdesantis699
    @cdfdesantis699 Год назад +2

    Oh Lord, the loss of that library! Rome gave a lot of things to the world, but it surely took a lot away when it burnt that library.

  • @michaelwiberg7419
    @michaelwiberg7419 2 года назад +3

    This building was constructed with material that upon being burned turns into powder. Marble doesn’t survive fires , try the experiment if you like. Knowledge is required to be aware of truth.

  • @JohnathanMackenzie-h8z
    @JohnathanMackenzie-h8z 10 месяцев назад

    Aparently the library of alexandria had information on botany and the origins of some rose breeds etc..things that are lost due to the fire during the egyptian fight against the greeks ..absolutely tragic.

  • @stevenleek1254
    @stevenleek1254 2 года назад +2

    What of Hypatia and her murder--one of many events that suggest some interesting political/religious tensions?

  • @zchesiq
    @zchesiq 6 месяцев назад

    hii when was this aired on television? bc the frames looked nostalgic, albeit circa 2010?

  • @andrewtongue7084
    @andrewtongue7084 2 года назад

    Superlative !

  • @ninogaggi
    @ninogaggi 2 года назад +2

    3:50 Belloq!

  • @KangaKucha
    @KangaKucha 2 года назад +11

    This is why if I have a daughter, I'll call her Sascha which is a kind of Alexandria name :)

    • @ssherrierable
      @ssherrierable 2 года назад +2

      This is the weirdest comment on the tube

    • @KangaKucha
      @KangaKucha 2 года назад +1

      @@ssherrierable What?

    • @HannahRoot55
      @HannahRoot55 2 года назад +1

      @@KangaKucha Matt 😮

  • @Last_Chance.
    @Last_Chance. 5 месяцев назад

    I wish I lived back then

  • @LondonPower
    @LondonPower Год назад +2

    The first Cosmopolis in the world was Alexandria not London New York and Paris

  • @ikeyshuster9801
    @ikeyshuster9801 Год назад +1

    I wonder what year this was released

  • @woodhousii2445
    @woodhousii2445 4 месяца назад +1

    I know this video is a year old and I'm a bit late in saying this, but alexandria isn't "lost" at all, its still a city in the exact location that it was in egypt. in fact, some of the old mosques from the moors are still standing and used to this day, the serapeum is uncovered and available for touring, and the coliseum has been uncovered. its like saying the "lost" city of paris or the "lost" city of hiroshima or the "lost" city of washington DC just because they didn't completely stop doing construction and building over the old buildings.

    • @woodhousii2445
      @woodhousii2445 4 месяца назад

      also that reconstruction of alexandria overhead in the first few seconds is... WILDLY inaccurate. after that, shown in the first few seconds, makes me afraid a bunch of other things in this documentary are going to be, well... wildly inaccurate.

    • @woodhousii2445
      @woodhousii2445 4 месяца назад

      WHERE IS THE HEPTASTADIUM AND PHAROS ISLAND??? WHERE DID YOU GET THIS 3D MODEL? WHY DOES IT SUCK SO BAD?

  • @pamlovell9125
    @pamlovell9125 2 года назад +9

    All that knowledge yet not the common sense to take measures to protect the library from a possible fire.

  • @gleefulme9617
    @gleefulme9617 2 года назад +2

    300 yrs is not a drop in the bucket.

  • @menikiwarren2473
    @menikiwarren2473 2 года назад +2

    Does the hat give anyone else silence of the lamb vibes

  • @monwell250
    @monwell250 Год назад

    Today cities are hot because of the heat from the roads 🔥

  • @mikemondano3624
    @mikemondano3624 Год назад +1

    Eratosthenes did NOT discover that the Earth was not flat. He measured it's circumference. In no written records is the Earth ever referred to as "flat". Even the earliest written records call the Earth an orb or globe.

  • @buckwheatINtheCity
    @buckwheatINtheCity 2 года назад +2

    The system of clay pipes fitted end to end was used by people of the Indus Valley. Alexander was a late comer in this resect. He copied this system from the Persians who he hated so much.

  • @cyn7869
    @cyn7869 2 месяца назад

    How much knowledge from those who we now know built and had an advanced civilization before Alexandria was in that library? What did they know about those people?

  • @markgarin6355
    @markgarin6355 2 года назад +1

    Nice ladder...