Who Made the Pyramids? | GIZA UNCOVERED

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024

Комментарии • 911

  • @HistoryforGRANITE
    @HistoryforGRANITE Год назад +59

    I'm pleased you agree with some ideas presented in my videos, even though they contradict books published by famous Egyptologists. I'm sure it will be argued that some of this work is 'peripheral' to the core history of the Old Kingdom and therefore it was excusable to overlook, etc. My question for you is, what do you think will happen when I present a finding that requires a more significant reevaluation of historical assumptions? Will Academia dare cite a RUclips video or is that a bridge too far? Thanks for the shout-out.

    • @WorldofAntiquity
      @WorldofAntiquity  Год назад +33

      If someone is persuaded by you, they will need to write an academic paper on it, and hopefully give you credit!

    • @lastofmygeneration
      @lastofmygeneration Год назад +4

      ​@@Martin-zz8vv Dude... Khafre was Khufu's son.

    • @lastofmygeneration
      @lastofmygeneration Год назад +2

      I very much enjoy your content and never take it for granite! But seriously you are doing some awesome work outside the bounds of Academia. It certainly would be cool to see something you are able to discover being cited in a scientific paper.

    • @manbearpig710
      @manbearpig710 Год назад

      @@WorldofAntiquity just like they wrote papers for the younger dryas impact hypothesis and everyday it gets closer to becoming FACT. We were hit by comet fragments 12,000 years ago

    • @SilverLugal
      @SilverLugal Год назад

      This dude is a goon, @histroyforgranite not only are you a gentleman and a scholar but an esoteric master of magic indeed my good friend. Post more so this man can be educated, unless he wishes to keep making up stories about Basalt cutting idiot lazy geniuses who accidentally did more work than they were supposed to and did a mistake when doing something so accurate lmfao.

  • @NauerLater
    @NauerLater Год назад +13

    Hope this channel gets the million subs it deserves.

    • @rbecker9679
      @rbecker9679 8 месяцев назад

      I agree, fantastic, no BS, and fun content! Please keep up the good work!

  • @livingthelava
    @livingthelava Год назад +4

    Holy Frack. This is the best video on Giza I have ever seen. Rich in exacting professional details while being an adventure.

    • @rbecker9679
      @rbecker9679 8 месяцев назад

      Right?!? Good stuff!

  • @EditsSerene
    @EditsSerene Год назад +4

    One of the few formats pretty much everyone will enjoy to learn from. and well presented! Apprechiate all the effort you put into this.

  • @crawdadds
    @crawdadds Год назад +5

    SO glad you're doing these travel guide videos and Egypt could be the most-intriguing location

  • @wickedsamurai3323
    @wickedsamurai3323 Год назад +2

    I went as a teenager many years ago, thanks for bringing me back to one of the most incredible places in the world.

  • @MarcinSzyniszewski
    @MarcinSzyniszewski Год назад +8

    This was excellent! I've been in Giza in 2006 and it's fascinating to see an archaeologist go through a similar trip. We went to different tombs though, I remember a tomb of Mereruka with beautiful reliefs and colours.

  • @6Planet
    @6Planet Год назад +19

    Thanks for doing these, it's nice to have high quality footage that shows more than just the major attractions and nothing in between that doesn't have the pseudo science like UnchartedX.

  • @mikedrop4421
    @mikedrop4421 Год назад +7

    What an amazing video. It's easy to find travel vlogs as well as educational and academic videos on ancient Egypt but the way you blended the two genres is wonderful. Thank you Dr Miano, Natalie, your guide and the Egyptian people.
    Edit: Love the little digs at youtube "experts" 😂

  • @BSIII
    @BSIII Год назад +4

    Very informative. This was awesome. Ty Dr. Miano 👍🏼

  • @frorencenightingale1217
    @frorencenightingale1217 Год назад +10

    Props for the editing and camera work, David. I love PowerPointy vids but this is clearly next level!

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo Год назад +21

    This has been such a great series, loved every episode!

    • @serenus6633
      @serenus6633 Год назад +1

      Love your work too sir!

    • @ktiemz
      @ktiemz Год назад

      what is this, a crossover episode?!

  • @MrFreezook
    @MrFreezook Год назад +3

    AWSOME !! 💯💯👍👍❤ I Appreciate this so much. Thank You Dr. Miano

  • @divanbuys1484
    @divanbuys1484 Год назад +1

    Love it love it love it love it love it LOVE IT!!!!! Damn it's refreshing to have actual historical and archaeological explanations for the pyramids.

  • @Big_Tex
    @Big_Tex Год назад +4

    I made the mistake of chiming in on a Twitter thread about how the pyramids were built to talk some sense. Omg 🙄. These people VOTE

  • @dougbelford4565
    @dougbelford4565 Год назад +1

    So refreshing and rare to find good ole fashioned history on the internet. Thank you for that!

  • @abloke8834
    @abloke8834 Год назад +3

    I love your Egypt videos. Many thanks

  • @carlosdiaz2688
    @carlosdiaz2688 6 месяцев назад +1

    This the Best Pyramid Reality
    Episode .. I learned and Appreciate More in an hour
    Than years with lost civilization
    Guys .. The Moving stone papyrus
    Just destroyed like 99 percent of
    That. crowd .. wow

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA 8 дней назад

      The mortar and gaps in stones too... When they talk about unrealistic precision and stones you can't put paper between, that's only for the outside parts, the insides have such wide gaps you have people put cameras inside to film the builders graffiti on inside of some stones.

  • @althepalno1164
    @althepalno1164 Год назад +3

    Great video as always, thank you!

  • @exittomenu
    @exittomenu Год назад +1

    i gotta pause for a second just to say the cinematic editing is incredible, as i pause at 46:37 the feeling of suspense is like a chill up my spine

  • @caodesignworks2407
    @caodesignworks2407 Год назад +8

    This is the series Netflix should have been funding. Something with actual history and facts. Then again, nothing draws the attention quite like people lying directly to your face and just making the most ridiculous shit up.

  • @LeNomEstYves
    @LeNomEstYves Год назад +1

    This. Is. AMAZING!!!! By far the best video about Giza on youtube. Thank you for this

  • @WickedFelina
    @WickedFelina Год назад +3

    "Eh! Son-a mun-na go-na! No see you for lon-ga time! Where you be hiding you self?" A greeting from my Grandfather who immigrated here, from Italy. I thought you might appreciate it.
    "Ah-llo" to Natalie. My sister's name is Natalie. She was named after my grandmother Natalizia!
    I bet you are asking "Do you have anything better to do today?" Yes, but sadly, we were hit with more cold weather back in the States.

  • @lostpony4885
    @lostpony4885 Год назад +1

    Most complete best tour and history of Giza. Really really good dont change a thing.

  • @AHSHEEVED
    @AHSHEEVED Год назад +3

    Found your channel recently and I wanted to give you my honest thoughts…. This is perfect!.
    If I could have you in a podcast that would be amazing.

  • @keithfitzpatrick4139
    @keithfitzpatrick4139 Год назад +1

    I’m so glad you made this video. My best to you and Robert.
    It’s like a culmination of facts and research, proving it didn’t exist before the pyramids,&
    Was built by the Egyptians, what 4th dynasty. Anyway 4-4500 years ago. By the Egyptians. Thank you historians and geologists.

  • @ancientsitesgirl
    @ancientsitesgirl Год назад +9

    I've been to Giza many times, I'm going back there soon ❤ great shots, I'm jealous!👌

  • @andrewchandler9303
    @andrewchandler9303 Год назад +1

    such a sick video so far! A better documentary than you'll ever find somewhere else

  • @nancyM1313
    @nancyM1313 Год назад +3

    I enjoyed watching your walk to the Pyramids.
    Tfsharing ❤

  • @stevefaure415
    @stevefaure415 Год назад +4

    This is a very engaging education for those of us too old or lazy to go to school again. It's like free night school! Very entertaining too, with really impressive visuals and great editing. I feel like I should have bought a ticket to see this, honestly. It's amazing the amount of belief in Gods and an afterlife were necessary to go about all the incredible effort and cost of building these tombs. No one has belief like that anymore, for good and bad.

  • @Kwaark
    @Kwaark Год назад +2

    soooo good ! what a massive amount of work ! thx!!

  • @loke6664
    @loke6664 Год назад +4

    Great episode. One interesting thing you didn't talk about is if there were something in Giza before the fourth dynasty though. I am not talking about an Atlantian city or anything like that but more 1-3 dynasty and maybe even something pre dynasty, they do have found some items that are older in the site but that doesn't exactly prove or disprove the hole thing.
    There is also the Kroner dump and the artifacts found there in the 70s that do seems to point towards something going on in the place during the earlier dynasties.
    It is of course another mystery, but a very interesting one. It wouldn't be surprising if the earlier dynasties had something going on there and it wouldn't exactly be unusual if a later dynasties recycled any stones of an earlier smaller temple.
    I do find that newly found corridor in the great pyramid very interesting too, maybe it still hold some secrets. Zahi Hawass seems to think there is a hidden chamber under the Queens chamber and he doesn't seem to be the type of guy who goes for wild speculations.

  • @larrygrimaldi1400
    @larrygrimaldi1400 Год назад +1

    Great!!! And I give you a lot of credit for going down that low corridor in the pyramid--- Bending from the waist, I quit after fifty feet and turned around and joined the line of people exiting.

  • @raylastname5864
    @raylastname5864 Год назад +4

    1:06:00 my criticism of the "heads disproportionate" comments about the sphynx remains show me a live sphynx to prove proper proportions.

    • @xl000
      @xl000 Год назад +3

      The caracal has a really small head compared to his body, and compared to other felines.
      What I don't get is why the front legs are so long.
      This proportion is generally ok in some other sphinxes that I've seen pictures of.

    • @WorldofAntiquity
      @WorldofAntiquity  Год назад +1

      😄

    • @rockysexton8720
      @rockysexton8720 Год назад +2

      To me it would be like complaining that the ears are too large on a gargoyle statue. Or a unicorn's horn is too short in a picture. Others are in a better position to comment but in the pictures taken from the angle from which I assume the things was intended to be viewed, ground level in front of it, the proportions don't look nearly as out of whack as when taken from up high and to the side. Which I assume isn't the angle that it was intended to be viewed from.

    • @Angellus502
      @Angellus502 Год назад

      @@rockysexton8720 ruclips.net/video/gVWfLe7OTKI/видео.html He actully has a realy good expenation of viewing angle and is not to full on with the LAHT BS

  • @Jack-Hands
    @Jack-Hands Год назад +1

    There's such an beauty in their simplicity.

    • @arlen1630
      @arlen1630 3 часа назад

      Then some of my simpleton friends are truly gorgeous😅

  • @erinmcgraw5208
    @erinmcgraw5208 Год назад +6

    This is phenomenal, Dr Miano!! 🩵 Thank you & Natalie for sharing your experience & academic knowledge about Giza! 🙏

  • @raviolijones5351
    @raviolijones5351 Год назад +1

    YESSSSZIR - best content ever, thank you so much professor !!!!

  • @Buckmelanoma1
    @Buckmelanoma1 Год назад +3

    No power plants? No Atlanteans? No Joe Rogans? No Graham Halfcockeds? No Thank You!

  • @jimj2741
    @jimj2741 Год назад +1

    super impressed with this video, you have mentioned some great points I have'nt seen/heard.

  • @SobekLOTFC
    @SobekLOTFC Год назад +6

    Keep up the great work, Dr Miano! 👏

  • @markspitzok3064
    @markspitzok3064 Год назад +1

    Fantastic!! Love this guy's videos, disproving myth with logic

  • @fuferito
    @fuferito Год назад +3

    32:15
    Very surprised to see that the Amarna period under Akhenaten wasn't the first time in Egyptian history where sculptors took full ownership of man-boobs.

    • @histguy101
      @histguy101 Год назад +1

      Maybe they all had man boobs, and he was just the first one to allow it to be shown in art. It's like Nero's chins

    • @arlen1630
      @arlen1630 3 часа назад +1

      😅😅fo sure

  • @arlen1630
    @arlen1630 3 часа назад

    I would honestly say that the one thing that I would love to experience in the world of antiquities is the actual building of the pyramids the actual day-to-day movement of these 80-ton stones and such😮

  • @theonlygoodlookinghabsburg2081
    @theonlygoodlookinghabsburg2081 Год назад +3

    Always looking forward to these.

  • @MGBranco
    @MGBranco Год назад +1

    Uau! This is amazing! Just what I needed for the evening! One of my favourite places on earth explored by one of my favourite history experts on you tube! And I'm at the 10min and I didn't felt asleep yet...so it's fantastic Doc! Congratulations! Going to enjoy it now until my old body let me....!

  • @nfrJulia
    @nfrJulia Год назад +3

    Very informative! On the other hand, I wish I could see your Egyptian guide and Natalie talk more about their insight and knowledge on the subject since they are also scholars. I hope to see more of them in future episodes!

  • @davidleomorley889
    @davidleomorley889 Год назад +1

    Again, excellent video full of important facts and explanations for many of the misunderstood and mysterious parts of the Giza plateau.
    I was there at Giza again myself on the 3rd of March. I intend to be back in Egypt by October or November and stay for the entire winter again.
    Thanks again for your wonderful videos.

  • @avatarian82
    @avatarian82 Год назад +3

    It'd be more appealing if all the experts simply said "we don't know "

    • @WorldofAntiquity
      @WorldofAntiquity  Год назад +3

      If everything means nothing, what would be the point of digging and studying and doing research then?

    • @mattw5840
      @mattw5840 Год назад

      @@WorldofAntiquity He means that theories presented as fact only serve to muddy the waters around the absolute truth.
      Any answer < The correct answer

    • @WorldofAntiquity
      @WorldofAntiquity  Год назад +1

      @@mattw5840 I have been in academia for a few decades and have yet to meet a historian or archaeologist who has ever presented any interpretation of the evidence as an indisputable fact.

  • @thinking_about_beer
    @thinking_about_beer Год назад +1

    Excellent points and education on each pyramid. Concise but full of essential facts. Love the plug for history for granite channel, which is how I got here. Excellent work

  • @beepboop204
    @beepboop204 Год назад +6

    how did sand and deserts appear all over the earth? must have been some primordial Sandlantis 🤨🤨🤔🤔😜😜

    • @erinmcgraw5208
      @erinmcgraw5208 Год назад +1

      Omg you just made my day... Sandlantis!!!! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @realDonaldTrump420
      @realDonaldTrump420 Год назад

      Industrial pollution causes climate change. I'm an extremist, all that humans know to be.

    • @arlen1630
      @arlen1630 3 часа назад +1

      And to think that all that sand at one time was part of a sea shell

  • @johannesasper8440
    @johannesasper8440 11 месяцев назад +1

    Wonderful!

  • @pheadrus7621
    @pheadrus7621 Год назад +5

    Ancient Egyptians couldn't cut granite..Pfffffftt,. Those conspiracy theory types have no clue just how much lovely pink granite was being put to use to cover everything!

  • @courtneyturner5083
    @courtneyturner5083 Год назад +1

    excellent presentation. You filled in some informational holes I had from my time visiting the plateau.

  • @mrbigsmizzy
    @mrbigsmizzy Год назад +4

    Would you be able to replicate the bath salt stone saw cut? I think it would be good content if you got the same block and a saw with water and sand and make the same cut. I know you’re history but that would be good science!

    • @FelipeBido
      @FelipeBido Год назад +5

      If I remember correctly, there's a RUclips channel called Scientists Against Myths where they do this. I think they also have a video of how to drill holes in the stone using ancient techniques.

    • @mrbigsmizzy
      @mrbigsmizzy Год назад +2

      @@FelipeBido thanks I watched that but it’s not really the same stone and it’s in a different language. This guy is a great historian but in this video he started using “prophecy” around the 10:00 min mark. Replicating the same experiment would weed that out. And he is a content seller so I’m thinking why not!

    • @arlen1630
      @arlen1630 3 часа назад

      Imagine the capstone in solid gold when you consider that a cubic foot of gold is 1 ton

  • @stevengoldfein1591
    @stevengoldfein1591 Год назад +1

    Wow. This may be my favorite long-form youtube video I have ever watched and I am almost to the halfway mark and felt the need to leave this comment. Great content, dialog, and thorough explanations completely shatter and debunk much of the fringe pseudoscience peddles today.

  • @c.m.gordon359
    @c.m.gordon359 Год назад +4

    Question for Dr.Miano Why are there no carvings,glyphs,etc. Inside the "Kings Chamber"

    • @WorldofAntiquity
      @WorldofAntiquity  Год назад

      Because the Egyptians did not see a need for it.

    • @c.m.gordon359
      @c.m.gordon359 Год назад

      @@WorldofAntiquity But the "Need" is present in almost every Tomb in Egypt.

    • @varyolla435
      @varyolla435 Год назад +2

      Think about when the Great Pyramid was made:
      1 - most pyramids were built during the Old Kingdom. The Old Kingdom = was the ascendancy of the ancient Egyptian civilization.
      2 - so as is usual the Pharaohs who built the pyramids did not anticipate the eventual collapse of their dynasties. Ergo = they did not try to hide anything.
      3 - so in their religion to exist in their afterlife they believed they needed "a vessel" for their spirit to inhabit - hence they mummified their bodies. They believed they needed things used in life for their afterlife and thus they were buried with grave goods - which made their tombs a target for robbers. Finally they needed "their name" to remain alive so that offerings would be made after death.
      4 - so to accomplish #3 the Pharaohs created tombs to make themselves "stand out" + they created cults around themselves and further built nearby mortuary temples.
      5 - yet when the Kingdoms collapsed as alluded to the people believing their Gods had abandoned them rose up and destroyed the temples and looted tombs to survive.
      Moral of the story: so early on it was = in the temples adjacent the pyramids were references to them could be found. The tomb itself was merely a repository as well as a structure as noted to enhance their image to "keep their name alive". Except the temples were all destroyed leaving only their tombs. That is like smashing a headstone so that you do not know who is buried there. As an aside. There are fragments of Khufu's destroyed mortuary temple which depict him performing the Sed festival - marking the 30th anniversary of his rule.
      So later on the Pharaohs upon seeing how above ground tombs were looted and their temples destroyed while the Pharaohs who built them were declared as heretics so that offerings were no longer made in their name = opted to change up. They created underground tombs and built their temples far away so as to not give the location away. Further what might once found in mortuary temples = they now placed images of themselves and spells from the Book of the Dead directly in the tomb. Think of it as "a fail safe". If they were declared heretical after death and references of them were destroyed per _"damnatio memoriae"_ then they had what was needed within the tomb for their spirit to follow.
      Religious like other cultural beliefs evolve over time. So ancient Egyptian religious practices of the Old Kingdom were different from what was followed centuries later. Look at the Catholic Church today. Centuries ago individuals might simply be declared "a saint" by some Pope - whereas today there is an elaborate process followed = hence the rituals have changed over time. 🤔

    • @c.m.gordon359
      @c.m.gordon359 Год назад

      @@varyolla435 Thank you very much

    • @varyolla435
      @varyolla435 Год назад +2

      @@c.m.gordon359 Welcome. Good for you to actually ask questions about what you do not understand so as to be receptive to answers. Far too many today sadly = simply assume.
      Final thought. Then as now = you got what you paid for. So understand as alluded to previously that Egypt underwent multiple periods. Those accordingly represented times of "plenty" - and times of "want".
      So many Pharaohs actually did not rule for decades. Also many ruled during times when they lacked the resources and power of their predecessors. So the 4th Dynasty Pharaohs who built Giza ruled when times were prosperous and thus they had the resources for such grand constructions.
      Later Pharaohs however sufficed with smaller pyramids which would be built more quickly and cheaply - but tended to be more aesthetically ornate. An example is Menkaure. His pyramid is smaller than his father's or grandfathers = but it used a granite facade so as to "stand out" compared to the others.
      Upon his passing the dynasty he represented also ended and the Pharaohs who followed in the 5th Dynasty focused less on their pyramids to instead build solar temples. Having assumed the mantle of "Ra - their Sun deity" they put their resources into promoting that divine status so as to keep their name alive as noted.
      Moral of the story: Civilizations undergo ebbs and flows depending upon the conditions of the time.
      So you need to take what you see in the context of when it represents and the conditions of that time. Later Middle Kingdom pyramids were built of mud brick with a layer of polished stone. So the Pharaohs understanding from their past that the people would not be happy about spending decades building an all stone pyramid which cost enormous sums of resources = opted for cheaper facsimiles which could be made faster and more cheaply. So they could associate themselves with their predecessors by duplicating what was done - albeit a "knock-off" if you will.
      Later New Kingdom Pharaohs went even less resource intense by creating underground tombs which were much more ornate in their design - but which could be created using a few dozen workmen at a much reduced cost. Enjoy your day.

  • @bensondavido4525
    @bensondavido4525 Год назад +2

    Boy, this is a great video! It’s cool to really see the details up close. Most videos about the pyramid only show small sections and nothing really detailed I think because that way anything that goes against their narrative is obscured 😊

  • @BSIII
    @BSIII Год назад +4

    People who follow Brien Foerster: ask yourself this. Why doesn't Brien ever give any kind of history to any of the things he shows? Why does he use misrepresented mohs scale claims to 'prove' that granite couldn't be carved by hand with the tools the Egyptians had, and goes to Petra to make the same claims, even though Petra is a iron age site built of super soft sandstone? Why doesn't he ever demonstrate anything, when Dr. Miano, Scientists Against Myths, and SGD Sacred Geometry Decoded DO demonstrate their claims? Why are people making 'copper chisels' memes on every comment section regardless of when the the sites/statues were built? Brien posts a photo of Petra in his community tab with zero context and endless 'copper chisels' comments flood the comment section. Why?
    Why doesn't he tell you any kind of historical information about these sites and artifacts?

    • @TheMoneypresident
      @TheMoneypresident Год назад +2

      Love it when he says dynastic Egyptians couldn't have done this. Pointing at Greco-Roman era items.

    • @BSIII
      @BSIII Год назад +1

      @@TheMoneypresident exactly lmao.

  • @Eazpezey
    @Eazpezey Год назад +1

    There were some really wonderful shots in this video! I love the black dog at 1:07:31 watching people and sphinx statue. 5000 some years of our past to present, all the people came here to this place and animals. Try to imagining looking through their eyes! Timeless

  • @fillippostajano2038
    @fillippostajano2038 Год назад +3

    A waste of time without any facts,hoped for something that would really debunk other ideas but found nothing....have a nice vacation

    • @varyolla435
      @varyolla435 Год назад

      So claims another recently created sockpuppet account such as regularly trolls these videos making meaningless/unsubstantiated claims....... 🥱
      p.s. - had you exerted the effort to open the dropdown menu to see the video sources that you did in creating these sockpuppet accounts = you might have found answers to what you "claim" to have looked for...........

  • @ShitterMcGavin
    @ShitterMcGavin 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great vid! Im really loving everything youve done. So glad I found your channel. Traveling with a beautiful Egyptologist cant hurt while in Egypt. If anything Im gonna say its a definite plus. Keep on keeping on!

  • @bryandraughn9830
    @bryandraughn9830 Год назад +1

    Excellent job!
    Perfectly legit information!
    Thank you!

  • @TheGreatPyramid
    @TheGreatPyramid Год назад +6

    Hey, for real, it’s not just independents that don’t “look at all of the evidence.” Egyptologists are as bad as any group in this regard. Why did Australian Egyptologist John Romer slam Egyptologists for their failures in scholarship at Giza, and ask the question “Why am I the first Egyptologist in 100 years to write a serious book about the Great Pyramid?” Egyptologists ignore the OBVIOUS sacred geometric layout of the pyramids and they ignore the obvious use of modern constants built into their construction, φ, π and Euler to name a few. Because they can’t explain how Egyptians could have known these constants, supposedly discovered much later by the Greeks. So they ignore this whole layer of evidence. They also ignore the tremendous repository of scientific and numerical finds that have come into the world through the metrologists like Alexander Thom, John Neal, John Michell, Harry Sivertsen and others. Metrology can be a better marker than pottery to gauge things in material culture. So if you are truly going to be the channel of truth that keeps us protected from the ancient high tech, Atlantis, power plant, alien deceptions, then you better find a way to incorporate this knowledge… or be as blind as the independents - and the Egyptologists!📐🔑🌀

    • @disturbed1734
      @disturbed1734 Год назад +6

      What makes the layouts sacred? Were they built under the right star signs or during the right month enhancing their astrological importance? I could really use some help understanding this stuff to improve my chances on Tinder.

    • @mattking993
      @mattking993 Год назад

      The answer to your 1st question obviously is... he is an asshole that is why he said that. You can play connect the dots all you want and toss in some math to make it sound believable and then add in techno babble to make it sound sacred but without actual proof it is just more pseudo science. There is no proof that the egyptians did any kind of sacred geometry stuff and without evidence to back up these observations made by the people you named it is all just an unsubstantiated hypothesis.

    • @TheMoneypresident
      @TheMoneypresident Год назад

      ​@@disturbed1734 he has to measure your penis.

    • @twonumber22
      @twonumber22 Год назад +1

      "Egyptologists are as bad as any group in this regard"
      lmao, ok man

    • @JH-pt6ih
      @JH-pt6ih Год назад +2

      Any person who can seriously claim they are the "first Egyptologist in 100 years to write a serious book about the Great Pyramid” would be sorely lacking in their knowledge of the subject as well as how research is done. The narcissism is a different issue - a narcissist can still be a good scholar, thought it might tend to cause some problems.

  • @edgarsnake2857
    @edgarsnake2857 Год назад +1

    That was a great tour. I wish it went on and on. Just fascinating. Thanks Natalie and David.

  • @GraemeWight-wx3xz
    @GraemeWight-wx3xz 4 месяца назад

    Hiya, Edinburgh Scotland here.
    Not just sand but little chips of the same. Grains if you like of grainite. Anywhere from a mil to 3. If the surface being worked is rough to begin with this method picks out grains as it goes. I rubbed to peices of roughend grainite together to see and they partially polished out as expected but quite a bit of material was loosened off as it went along. A process of rough and rub would abraid quite nicely and determined folk could i imagine perform wonders.

  • @brennonbrunet6330
    @brennonbrunet6330 Год назад +1

    I wish more eyes got to see your great content. Thanks for knocking it out of the park once again!

  • @swintondavid
    @swintondavid Год назад +1

    This is such a great documentary! Thank you 😊

  • @patrickblanchette4337
    @patrickblanchette4337 Год назад +1

    21:43 I love learning these bits of history that show us how similar ancient people could be to modern people (in certain ways at least)😊.

  • @JRRichards123
    @JRRichards123 Год назад +1

    Keep these videos coming. Great job.

  • @stefan-vasileionita2510
    @stefan-vasileionita2510 Год назад +2

    Good that you post!

  • @TomHand3
    @TomHand3 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this great video David!

  • @garygallozzi2979
    @garygallozzi2979 Год назад +1

    Another brilliant upload,really informative and not a power tool or alien in sight,thank you very much

    • @doctormarazanvose4373
      @doctormarazanvose4373 Год назад

      with loads of mays, coulds, theories and hyphotheses - yup - brilliant - screw facts - who needs those?

  • @Potkanka
    @Potkanka Год назад +2

    Awesome episode! If I do ever go to Egypt, I'll need to rewatch this to know what to look for :) Also thanks for the explanation for the discrepancy between the sphinx's head and body. I never much wondered about why it was because maybe it was intentional for one reason or another... but it's cool to hear the probable cause after all :)

  • @ndothager
    @ndothager Год назад +1

    Excellent!

  • @DavidVilmundarson
    @DavidVilmundarson Год назад +1

    This is excellent. Very enjoyable.

  • @jsociety4964
    @jsociety4964 Год назад

    Can’t wait for the Utopia launch premiere

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl Год назад +1

    Leaving a hit-and-run like and comment for your Almighty Algorithm. I love you content, it's always fascinating!
    ❤❤

  • @Eyes_Open
    @Eyes_Open Год назад +1

    This is such a great series.

  • @ErgoCogita
    @ErgoCogita Год назад +1

    Awesome presentation! I'm no slouch when it comes to Egyptology but have learned so much from this series. I've also accrued a lot of dangling queries as a result...😅

  • @davidawelty
    @davidawelty 6 месяцев назад

    So grateful for your work!! This is APEX quality content sir

    • @davidawelty
      @davidawelty 6 месяцев назад

      Also you have the best ‘shorts' on here! Can’t get enough of those

  • @deathdoor
    @deathdoor Год назад +1

    That opening shot... don't remember seeing from that exact angle. Really conveys show big it must big.

  • @Depipro
    @Depipro Год назад +1

    I really enjoyed this video. Thanks Dr. Miano in particular for addressing the "Sphinx as a reworked lion" hypothesis. I remember seeing a documentary which fervently pushed this idea as a teenager, and while I've long since come to recognize the nature of many "theories" it is associated with, I didn't yet know how to debunk this particular idea. After all, the Egyptian designers and artisans were no idiots when it came to realistic proportioning. The way you explain it: no, indeed they weren't, but they also understood they had to work with the entire set of circumstances they had on their hands. Perfect sense this makes, hm! :)
    As for the size differences of the pyramids, one explanation I've come across is that the three represent the central stars of Orion, not only in their positioning, but also in their relative (perceived) sizes. Now this is not to say that the pyramid builders were from there, on the contrary, it is Earth's position that determines we see those stars together, while in reality they are hundreds of lightyears apart. However, the Egyptian scholars/priests did study the stars as best they could, since (as far as we know from what they left us) they believed the stars represented a divine order, which was to be mirrored by their earthly empire, lest it crumble and chaos engulf the world. So this to me sounds like at least as good an alien-less (inalienable?) explanation for the pyramids being the way they are as any.

    • @WorldofAntiquity
      @WorldofAntiquity  Год назад +2

      I would give more credence to the Orion's belt theory if all three pyramids were built at the same time. But as it is, we have three pyramids built by non-consecutive kings.

    • @Depipro
      @Depipro Год назад

      @@WorldofAntiquity Fair point, but not fatally so (to the idea) if you ask me. After all, there were architects who designed the pyramids for the kings, and they may have been the ones working on the larger plan - basically, Qar and his colleagues. You mentioned the inbetween kings as well as having built less sturdy pyramids to the north and south. Perhaps those could be taken to represent other stars in Orion (Betelgeuse and Rigel, for example), or perhaps these kings didn't want to subject themselves to the grand priestly design and therefore had to resort to different architects - and by the looks of their pyramids, less able ones. It is even conceivable that they had short reigns because their priests saw them as potentially upsetting the divine order.
      I totally realize I am just speculating here, albeit based on what little we know of the actual culture of these people, rather than fantasy and science fiction.

  • @halo.hunter5079
    @halo.hunter5079 Год назад +1

    Thanks for giving us the "straight dope" 😎 you make ancient history cool as always.
    How abt Boncuklu Tarla next?

  • @rschultz9492
    @rschultz9492 Год назад

    I know I talk a little smack, but this really is one of the absolute best channels on RUclips. #itWasntAliens thank you for logic and truth, Sir.

  • @thomascook3336
    @thomascook3336 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for doing a deep dive into this and actually showing the architecture. I have gotten so annoyed with the constant "Egyptians of high technology" when things could be so easily explained.

  • @jcie1210mk3
    @jcie1210mk3 Год назад +1

    I just got back from Cairo to Dublin yesterday! Wish I watched this first haha I had an amazing time just strolling around taking it all in though. I had a great time, such an amazing place I hope I can go back at some stage. Thanks for the video and information.

  • @ehguy3628
    @ehguy3628 Год назад

    Straight dope, like it, an expression from the 40's.

  • @dennissalisbury496
    @dennissalisbury496 Год назад +1

    Dating the Sphynx based on the three types of limestone that it is made of is very insightful. On the subject of power saws to cut stone, the Egyptians did know how to make windmills and water wheels for grinding grain or other uses.

    • @varyolla435
      @varyolla435 Год назад +1

      Examination of the blocks making up Khafre's valley temple with the limestone seen on the walls of the Sphinx pit show similarity of composition - remember that limestone being formed from old seabed contains the fossils of ancient marine life. The conclusion then is that as stone was cut away from around the Sphinx to create it = that was used to create the blocks of Khafre's adjacent temple.
      As an aside. Look at the topography of the plateau area surrounding the Sphinx and the nearby Great Pyramid. Now look at the location of the main limestone quarry which rests between Khafre's Pyramid and his valley temple/Sphinx. Conclusion: if the Sphinx and its pit was already there at the time of the creation of the Great Pyramid = it would have obstructed operations.
      Moral of the story: the once harbor area was just to the east of Khafre's temple - while the worker village was just south of the harbor. The harbor further spanned from the area of the worker village past Khafre's temple to the head of Khufu's own causeway leading uphill to his mortuary temple and Pyramid.
      So the Sphinx takes up a lot of area and just north of it you see the modern road leading up to the Great Pyramid. That road runs along the natural incline of the plateau. So a preexisting Sphinx would obstruct an area which would have been otherwise occupied with the main ramp used to create the Great Pyramid and likely Khafre's as well. The area between the raised escarpment upon which the Great Pyramid rests and the quarry is not that wide and is broken/sloping ground.
      Thus what is most likely is that upon Khafre's Pyramid complex being constructed and the ramp leading from the quarry removed they completed his connecting causeway and temple/Sphinx as by then nothing was in the way. Menkaure building further to the south as was his own quarry could simply divert from the harbor area directly to his own pyramid rather than going around the main quarry as Khufu and Khafre had to do. 🤔

  • @peterwikvist2433
    @peterwikvist2433 Год назад +1

    Top quality presentation and editing.

  • @dennisrydgren
    @dennisrydgren Год назад +1

    Great episode ❤

  • @Tony11442
    @Tony11442 Год назад +1

    Great video! Happy to see you went there. I just went to Baalbek last week with my wife. We live and work in Lebanon. I wouldn't mind meeting you guys if you ever visit Baalbek.

  • @mikesands4681
    @mikesands4681 Год назад +2

    A lovely trip.

  • @itsnot_stupid_ifitworks
    @itsnot_stupid_ifitworks Год назад +1

    The section starting at 14:10 should be turned into a youtube short and distributed widely. Many people misunderstand these facts.

  • @ANONM60D
    @ANONM60D Год назад +1

    Have you tried softening the dismissal of extra terrestrials and "ancient high technology" in the intro? Perhaps the people who believe this will stick around longer if the smoke and mirrors aren't pulled away so fast? Just a random guy with a random thought. I understand this isn't a new strategy in the slightest. Great content as always!

  • @tombuilder1475
    @tombuilder1475 Год назад +1

    thanks for all the debunk paleobabble videos!

  • @ocevicheband502
    @ocevicheband502 Год назад

    Musician Steven Douglas ( Wind /Horns ) recorded in the ' kings / machine ' room ,75/76 ...his album ' THE MUSIC OF CHEOPS ' IS truly gorgeous .

  • @therealb888
    @therealb888 Год назад

    Man I feel bad for not watching this & commenting as soon as I got the notification.
    I have a lot to say about this one.

  • @ohlangeni
    @ohlangeni 10 месяцев назад

    Fun fact: Kerma was founded by the sons of the 4th Dynasty Pharaoh of the Old Kingdom period, the dynasty that first built the pyramids. The Kingdom of Kerma thus spoke the same language, had the same culture or civilation as the Old Kingdom of Egypt. After the First Intermediate period, the capital of Kerma was moved south to Napata. That is when Kerma became known as Kush. Thus, the Kushites and the Kemeti were the same people as France (Franks) are to Germans

  • @heatherrocchi6232
    @heatherrocchi6232 Год назад

    4:43 Ful in a pita? So good! Thanks for another amazing video!

  • @DjCringefest
    @DjCringefest Год назад +1

    wow amazingly interesting. you cover so many topics and hella lots of information! it almost seemed this was not a travelguide at all. the subtle and deveous undertone of ownership of thruth made it sound more like an ordinairy debunking ploy than anything else. i have no doubt more wonderful imagery is to follow. fully narrated by, and only by, the knowlegable Doctorbutthurt 🙈🙉🙊