Old World Antwerp, Belgium [1876-1936] 125 Images; Star Fort + Moat, Antiquitech(?) Merchant Capitol

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 25 май 2023
  • Howdy ya’ll. Today we will look through the oldest photographs of Antwerp, Belgium. A majority of these images come to us from a 1920 series of older photographs compiled for the 1920 Olympics in Antwerp. These images will showcase the vast architecture and imagery, the artistic nature, and the invaluable Star Fort which previously encompassed the city.
    We will look through roughly 125 images dated, from artistic depictions in the 15th century to photographs dated from 1876 through 1936. Independently the structures showcased today would be worthy of their own video, but to picture a Star Fort city which was quite literally interconnected by adjoining castles, placed over a hand-made moat, complete with the most sophisticated designs for the time; it is almost unimaginable.
    Today we will try to decipher what all this could mean, while focusing on the rarest and most detailed images of Old World Antwerp. Be on the look out for photorealistic sculptures, antiquitech, and most of all, vanilla, or seemingly altered, skies. Thank you all for helping the channel to grow, I hope you enjoy the video, and I look forward to our discussion in the comment section down below.
    Links for further research;
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antwerp
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathedr...)
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antwerp...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scheldt
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_C...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godfrey...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sack_of...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_G...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_o...
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 152

  • @andrewclaes9681
    @andrewclaes9681 Год назад +14

    Wow nice to see my beautiful city featured! Lived there all my life and still do. Must be at least 5 generations now. I even lived next to the cathedral. My grandmother had stories about processions where the people from the Lodge (the freemasons) mocked the catholics in public processions. The masons wore big hats and black clothes. I’m not sure in those days (early 20th century) those processions were still real or already a theatrical rendition of it remembering history. As far as I can tell, she said the freemasons had all the knowledge about how to build these magnificent buildings. They worked together with the Church but somehow they had major disagreements resulting in intellectuals and artists fleeing from Antwerp to Amsterdam. Without the help and support of the freemasons, the city was lacking the knowledge to put such buildings off. You can see a lot of masonic symbols in the cathedral and churches.
    But that’s what I’ve been told here in Antwerp… it’s pretty interesting to take another look at the timeline of all these events. Thanks!

  • @jared3747
    @jared3747 Год назад +14

    Why are your videos so interesting yet so relaxing at the same time? Good combination..

    • @naturegazer6749
      @naturegazer6749 Год назад +2

      Super relaxing ❤
      I put them on to drift off to sleep looking at the old world and learning.
      Of course I re-watch them when more alert.
      Jarid and Jon Levi are my Old world chill go to chans. Jarid puts fabulous music as well.
      Absolutely tranquil vibe he's created along with informative.

  • @WildAlchemicalSpirit
    @WildAlchemicalSpirit Год назад +14

    My Great grandparents on my dad's side are from around there and Brussels. They passed on long ago. I wish I could have asked them about it. I remember my great grandma missed living there terribly much. She had a lovely collection of items from Belgium and as a little girl I just loved looking at them. My favorite was a beautiful handmade musical wind-up doll wearing a pink lace dress. She looked so realistic and she had real human hair.

    • @sc2543
      @sc2543 Год назад +2

      Cool family stories of Belgium .. My mom a collection of occupied Japan, and has a ballerina that I haven't found yet 💃

    • @ingevankeirsbilck9601
      @ingevankeirsbilck9601 Год назад

      You should come and visit here :-)!

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Год назад

      @wild alchemical. The correct wording in English should read: They passed away.

  • @7BlackShadow
    @7BlackShadow Год назад +17

    Even today this city looks a lot like it survived the test of time. I Would like to see some videos about swiss cities! Nice video like always!

    • @Mamba-Kush
      @Mamba-Kush Год назад

      When did you go there? Today, Antwerp is a dirty, ugly city.

  • @PravdaSeed
    @PravdaSeed 9 дней назад +1

    🌟 Dear Jarid 💙
    I had a privilege to visit the magnificent Antwerp 💚 But I had No idea that it was Star Port City ⁉️
    💌 Thanks again.
    You are the Best Urbanist Minister
    For Netizens 👑.
    My deepest appreciation for your magnificent Emotions imbued
    In your beautiful Voice 🌟👑🌟.
    Antwerp Star City of Artists...🌀🌟

  • @leilihana2991
    @leilihana2991 Год назад +7

    Excellent video as always! These buildings & cities are older than we dare to imagine!

  • @gerry7767
    @gerry7767 Год назад +24

    Finally belgium my home land ! Keep up the good work ! Much love❤

  • @mmsapollo
    @mmsapollo Год назад +9

    It is a lovely city in many respects, now and for it's history (much of which still stands). Love the trove of historical pictures. I'm assuming you've visited? The proximity to water ... all just lovely. Maybe I'll start a bucket list!😊

  • @tabascoraremaster1
    @tabascoraremaster1 Год назад +19

    A small correction; Belgium did not exist as a country untill after the 'Belgian Revolution' in 1830.
    There still are a lot of these old world buildings in Atwerpen.

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Год назад +1

      You got that wrong. When Holland and Flanders were united in the succesful confederation of the Republic of the Seventeen United Provinces, it was on maps marked as Belgica Foederata, (1581- 1795) which united the Low Countries in their Golden Age.

    • @mbrackeva
      @mbrackeva Год назад +7

      @@Foxglove963 Belgium started to exist in 1830. Take it from a Belgian. There were references to Belgica even during the Romans BC. Doesn't mean the country existed back then.

    • @sealie15
      @sealie15 11 месяцев назад

      True all these current European corporate states did NOT exist until the 1800s 🙂

  • @ErinIsReal
    @ErinIsReal Год назад +2

    Amazing, unique images, Jarid. Thank you! I'm obsessed with the ancient old world architecture and art. Their immensity is staggering combined with the intricate, symmetric details. How did they mine, fabricate and more incredibly; construct them on such a massive level? The enormous scale indicates incomprehensible technology; obviously, by giant humans with skills that will never be replicated. Tragically, so little was preserved; criminally destroyed under the guise of 'fires, quakes, wars' etc.

  • @TheTrumanZoo
    @TheTrumanZoo Год назад +5

    amazing footage.

  • @antwerpstories
    @antwerpstories Год назад +6

    Excellent video, many thanks. The buildings in the clouds are some kind of artifact in the image, especially here 04:00 (Central Station) and here 04:25 (entrance of the Zoo next to the Central Station). These "buildings in the sky" never existed and were not removed. At 04:00 , floating above the station, we can see the outline of the statue of the camel that is located at the entrance of the zoo. At the left side we see the outline of another building that I don't recognise. This probably rubbed off from other photographs that lay on top of this one.

  • @FMDocumentary
    @FMDocumentary Год назад +4

    The amount of cut and finished stonework is unimaginable because there was only the road at low tide, and I seriously doubt it could have handled the amount and weight of the stonework it took to build this massive structure. The engineering, master stone mason`s, labor, necessary for such a construction, and where was the stone quarry? How close or far away was it? There was a lost or forgotten civilization that were absolute geniuses when it came to building immense, and beautiful structures in some of the most impossible places imaginable.

    • @ErinIsReal
      @ErinIsReal Год назад

      @@dergutehut3961 LOL horses and buggies for sure!

    • @leahquispe4569
      @leahquispe4569 Год назад +2

      1800's had steam machines...

  • @gregblanton9386
    @gregblanton9386 Год назад +37

    Tesla power stations didn't need wires to transmit electricity. With Tesla, electricity is radiated throughout the atmosphere surrounding the generator received into homes and buildings by steeples, lightning rods and what many believe is flagpoles back then are actually electricity receptors, even the street lights have receptors on them.

    • @justinshades6652
      @justinshades6652 Год назад +6

      Yup

    • @leahquispe4569
      @leahquispe4569 Год назад +2

      Tesla's father was a PRIEST.... A KNOWLEDGE HOLDER.... PROBABLY HAD BOOKS THAT EXPLAINED IT.....

    • @justinshades6652
      @justinshades6652 Год назад

      @leahquispe4569 his Mother was an Inventor

    • @thatoneguy-zd4nc
      @thatoneguy-zd4nc Год назад +1

      This isn't how electricity works

    • @gregblanton9386
      @gregblanton9386 Год назад

      @thatoneguy-zd4nc wrong, the earths rotation is already more than adequate to generate all the electricity man can ever use, Tesla units captured and transmitted what is already all around us in a concentrated wave length for a ample supply of electricity at a very minimal cost.

  • @annesutherland385
    @annesutherland385 Год назад +2

    This is a very juicy presentation Jarid. Great info and pics! Fascinating that Antwerp was the centre of trade in the 1500s and that it funded Henry VIII basically! Its like the families decide who is going to have the power. Then the old cycle of takedown, destroy and repopulate. Same old reset pattern been rolling out for aeons! Loved seeing the antiquitech and stunning architecture left by earlier occupants. Also the MERCHANT thing...Song of the Sea? Lots of reference to the old maritime powers of Atlantis...Poseidon statues with his trident and even the Neptune Cafe! Naturally the Jewish follow with banking and so we have the cycle. Then it is someone else's turn to be the power centre. The vanilla skies fascinate me. perhaps you could do one specifically on the shadows in the background? This is so intriguing! Were there even more giant structures back there? Really appreciate your work. Thanks!

  • @andrea-dg9fv
    @andrea-dg9fv Год назад +2

    Le tue sono tutte interessanti storie, di una Europa dimenticata. Le foto sono affascinanti. A presto

  • @glennlukemba
    @glennlukemba Год назад +6

    Man I'm from Congo but I grew up in Belgium. I also lived for a while in Antwerp. The way you pronounced names was very confusing for the fact that you translated them (Godefroy de Bouillon). Having said that it was a very fascinating video that just blew my mind.

    • @GuntherSDoumson2178
      @GuntherSDoumson2178 Год назад +1

      😂 so true, I´m Belgian too. Let´s get him butchering our beloved French.

    • @johnbeton4058
      @johnbeton4058 Год назад

      Mbote.

    • @glennlukemba
      @glennlukemba Год назад

      @@johnbeton4058 Mbote! Where did you learn this word? I guess you meet some people from Congo.

    • @glennlukemba
      @glennlukemba Год назад +1

      @@GuntherSDoumson2178 La plus belle langue du monde. Dommage qu'elle est en train de perdre du terrain partout dans le monde.

    • @johnbeton4058
      @johnbeton4058 Год назад

      @@glennlukemba Yep I have Congolese friends grew up with them so speak a little lingala. I love ❤the people, the music and mikate😉.

  • @scorpi66
    @scorpi66 Год назад +1

    A beautiful presentation about Antwerp in the early days. I have been working in the city of Antwerp for 27 years now and I am amazed at the change.

  • @Fincher123
    @Fincher123 Год назад +2

    I like to inform me about new Great Objektives for my Sony Camera.
    Some interesting things by testing a Objektiv is;
    - How is the Vignette
    - Are there Sharp Corners and where is the sharpest spot in the Picture
    - How distortet are the Pictures
    And What i here see is, i think mostly the Printer Quali that isnt so much great but all lines are Straight.
    Sharpness in the Corners are great!
    Overall these Pictures are looking verry good.
    Not much fine Details but Overall just stunning.
    Thank you for showing us these!

  • @koubenakombi3066
    @koubenakombi3066 Год назад +1

    Great video! Thank you for sharing!

  • @RegnaSaturna
    @RegnaSaturna Год назад +6

    Heey it's my hometown. Lived here all my life. The city walls actually appeared again during recent excavations and are now part of a tunnel and can be easily seen when driving thru. So they were there, no doubt. A lot of impressive buildings like the grand central station and the opera house are still there too on the other side of the once surrounding water where in old depictions and photo's there was nothing there but fields. So yeah, as a believer in this tartaria theory that was a bit of a headscratcher for me. Still is by the way. Ps. Sorry but Brialmont didn't rebuild the starfort or Citadel (build by the Spanish in 1577) in 1832 since was only 10 y/o then. He build other forts surrounding greater Antwerp. The fort was demolished by the French after they won against the Dutch in 1832. It was never rebuild.

    • @bookofrevelation4924
      @bookofrevelation4924 Год назад +1

      1832 victory of France, British and USA against Dutch and Holy Roman Empire's Berlin takeover about that time could have been the turning point of the plan for a New World Order we see being founded around 1863 reorganization/reset with US Civil War and Royal Dutch-Denmark marriages throughout Europe?

    • @glennlukemba
      @glennlukemba Год назад +1

      The grand central station? You talking out of you arse. It's been replaced a few years ago by a totally new building which, I have to admit, it's piece of art. Just beautiful!

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Год назад +2

      In the 19th century they almost demolished the ancient Steen (castle) where the city originated. The old quent houses there were torn down, and the Steen became an island, as it is isolated from the city.

  • @hiramdominicus7413
    @hiramdominicus7413 6 месяцев назад

    My city ❤🇧🇪
    Beautiful and exciting to see the usual streets where we live our daily lives, we take it for granted but it is indeed magical ⭐️

  • @fraukjehuyberechts8533
    @fraukjehuyberechts8533 10 месяцев назад

    Hey Jared, thank u so much for this video. I live in Antwerp city myself for 20 years now and see a lot of these buildings every day. Antwerp is so beautiful and i always wandered how they would be able to build this, the details everywhere are amazing! I got married in the Town hall seen in your video at 7:57. The inside of the building is even more incredible then the outside! Greetings from Antwerp 🤗

  • @TheEverlastingBliss
    @TheEverlastingBliss Год назад +2

    Great video, thanks and greetings from the Netherlands !

  • @NoNameGraphicss
    @NoNameGraphicss Год назад +1

    If you want to see some old remains on the star fort walls, there's a spot in a small street between Steen and Vleeshuis where one can still see it (check google street view or visit it). It's in Vleeshuisstraat - Repenstraat, when standing in front of the Vleeshuis Gilde. Also, look up the origin of the city name 'Antwerpen', connected to the story of Brabo & Antigoon (statue seen at 13:10). It came from "hand-werpen" meaning "hand-throwing". It'll make sense when u read the story ;). Thanks for this video, it's nice to see all these old pictures.

    • @ramsesds7325
      @ramsesds7325 Год назад

      That's a myth apparently. The name Antwerpen came from "aanwerpen" because of where it was located in a turn of the Schelde.

    • @Peterigepan
      @Peterigepan Год назад

      ⁠@@ramsesds7325true but there was also a leg bone found of a person estimated to be at least 1:96, if you compare that with the average height back then… you can understand the lore of giants, which is huge in antwerp, regardless of the statue. I like to think there are truths to it, alltho misrepresented, like the name indeed did not come from it 😅

  • @catherinedutilleul4208
    @catherinedutilleul4208 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much !
    I am belgian , living in Brussel , but Antwerp is ( with Gent) is my favorite town . I recognize nearly everything .
    It has always been very rich ... but I don't know so much about the history of the town, after the 16th century... you made me curious about it

  • @bookofrevelation4924
    @bookofrevelation4924 Год назад +2

    Thanks so much, now the TV show The Munsters makes perfect sense.

  • @Solarlube
    @Solarlube Год назад +2

    WEW. 27:05:2023. Jarid, where did they go?
    I am now walking around my city [Town of Ballarat Victoria Australia] and seeing the dates on the buildings and now think they are there to through us off the scent of discovery!

  • @pharmerdavid1432
    @pharmerdavid1432 Год назад +1

    Fascinating city, and it reminds me of Malta, where Paul Cook used to live and has been making videos from lately. The entire city is like one big fortification, the buildings all connected underground apparently. Malta is in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea at a strategic point for controlling navigation and trade, which is likely why it's been built-up into fortifications for centuries. Not as spectacular as Antwerp, but fascinating in its own right. It seems like civilizations in the old world built things much different, and their buildings were awesome architecture using the golden ratio, domes, spires, arches, amazing fountains, and many other features humanity doesn't build anymore. After destroying the magnificent old world buildings, they then copy the old architecture in many cases, but use different building techniques, geopolymere instead of solid stone, antiquitech, etc.

    • @Foxglove963
      @Foxglove963 Год назад +1

      The fortification in Malta were constructed against Turkish invasion.

  • @yatusabesnetaquesabe679
    @yatusabesnetaquesabe679 Год назад +2

    Gracias por compartir

  • @csmets
    @csmets Год назад +6

    Without Antwerp no Amsterdam and the Dutch Golden Age.

  • @chrisgibson2328
    @chrisgibson2328 Год назад +4

    Great pictures thanks.
    Such magnificence and then destruction.
    Like they didn't want the new people to see what beauty and skill and artistry existed before. What a shame. Imagine if all the buildings were still here next to our childish and ugly efforts that are grey and ugly and temporary.
    Have you looked at Glasgow, Scotland which was also once great and went through lots of changes.

    • @bellephegor
      @bellephegor Год назад +2

      I live near Antwerp, nearly every building depicted in this video still stands today.

    • @chrisgibson2328
      @chrisgibson2328 Год назад +1

      @@bellephegor That is what remains of an even grander place but you still have a beautiful city.

  • @MoonFlowerCreations
    @MoonFlowerCreations Год назад +6

    Hearing the word Antwerp so many times in this video got me thinking about the slang word “twerp.” 😁 So I then google searched ‘What is the origin of the slang word Twerp?’ It’s pretty interesting.

    • @FRESHboosters
      @FRESHboosters  Год назад +7

      Absolutely a great comment! Just to elaborate (because I had no idea myself), Twerp is slang. The creation of the word is often credited to J.R.R. Tolkien in 1910, however the American Dictionary of Slang claims the word was in written use as early as 1874 (This is key as Antwerp was only “opened” up again in 1863). It may be a variant of Middle German, however the confirmed 1870 first appearance of the word refers to specific “racing pigeons” that would travel between Antwerp and London. Again, between 1544-1574 Antwerp financed much of Great Britain… it’s all so interesting. There’s also the old Welsh “twp” which means fool, and more closely represents the definition of the slang term today.

    • @mac-qt3wd
      @mac-qt3wd Год назад +2

      Good call, didnt know it was a slang word but i remember my geordie dad saying it alot, not always to me, yeah alright always to me

    • @RobWool
      @RobWool Год назад +2

      @@FRESHboosters I have found that anything attributed to the committee"Tolkien" is usually a cover or diversion.

    • @DBeQ-ih8zm
      @DBeQ-ih8zm Год назад +2

      Wikipedia, and local tour guides, explains the name of Antwerpen, like this:
      “ Silvius Brabo [ˈsɪɫviəz ˈbraːboː] was a mythical Roman soldier who was said to have killed a giant, and by this would have created the name Brabant.
      Brabo statue in Antwerp
      Later this story was also used to explain the name Antwerp ('Antwerpen' in Dutch) which, according to the story, is a derivative of 'handwerpen' (meaning hand throwing). Brabo once killed a giant, called Druon Antigoon, who asked money from people who wanted to pass the bridge over the river Scheldt. When they didn't want to or couldn't pay, he cut off their hand and threw it in the river. Because of this, Brabo also removed the hand of the giant, and threw it into the river.”
      Funny how we’re talking “giants” again. As in, Tartars? Who were taller people..
      Great video JB! I’m from Bruges, another great Tartarian city in Belgium! ;)

    • @kingchristopherpaul477hutc8
      @kingchristopherpaul477hutc8 Год назад +1

      My Uncle helped develop the Exxon refinery back in the early 90s. Got to visit for three weeks. It was beautiful

  • @attorneyprocessingservices5985
    @attorneyprocessingservices5985 Год назад +1

    The narrative is clear and very enlightening🛵

  • @freakyivonne
    @freakyivonne Год назад +2

    Jarid! I hope you are doing some day a video about Holland/ the Netherlands ❤️
    I can help find /dig
    Where can i send you images?
    Greetings from holland

  • @MrBlindbird
    @MrBlindbird Год назад

    Thx for posting the vid with all the old pics that show how beautiful Antwerpen once was...To bad it turned into the open sewer it is today...every time i pas there now and see what it has become,i feel bitterness and resentment for how it has been wasting away

  • @geoffreycraigwilliams4104
    @geoffreycraigwilliams4104 29 дней назад

    Excellent

  • @hervaro
    @hervaro Год назад +3

    Mijn geboortestad in betere tijden... Edoch, in het oude centrum en eigenlijk ook binnen de Leien, is toch nog veel bewaard gebleven (Dios Gracias!).
    Knap gedaan!

  • @stephensecord6919
    @stephensecord6919 Год назад +2

    it's the tiny hat brigade. Insert happy merchant meme here

  • @bookofrevelation4924
    @bookofrevelation4924 Год назад +2

    I think you're on track.

  • @Xili84
    @Xili84 Год назад +1

    12:47 To anyone who wonders, this is the last piece standing of the star fortress "the rock".

  • @mcusa77
    @mcusa77 Год назад +1

    Thanks.

  • @chanchingcheng8204
    @chanchingcheng8204 Год назад

    Much love from Antwerp ❤️🤍

  • @kaka7279100
    @kaka7279100 Год назад +2

    Are mechants and money changers the same?most empires last 200-250 years.

  • @gregoryagogo
    @gregoryagogo Год назад +1

    7:00 the 'shadow buildings' in this photo are sideways... Must be a printing issue of the time, or maybe the opposite page in the book rubbing off?

  • @user-km4ve4nh3y
    @user-km4ve4nh3y 6 месяцев назад

    I really enjoyed this documentary, I will also help you to understand a saying that we have in Antwerp and that all
    people from Antwerp know: "Antwerp is the centre of the world and the rest is parking" . for many of us, it's real.

  • @kendrajean536
    @kendrajean536 Год назад

    Alot of the time when I learn that nothing of these places remain knowing that they torn it does after these pictures actually can bring me to tears how dare they it's criminal

  • @storm1968eu
    @storm1968eu Год назад +2

    this is a very simpified narrative of the long and complex history of an old european city, without much context. all the pictures in this video are available on the web, on pinterest and from the (online) antwerpen city archive. there are even a few right-out mistakes in the narrative. f.e. the belgians never conquered antwerp. belgium, of which antwerp is a part, just became independent from the united netherlands around 1831. half of the buildings in the photographs date from in or around the 19th century when 'neo' was the word. a lot of them were torn down by the mid 20th century because they couldn't stand the test of time, read: practilality, maintainability, 'modern' taste. over centuries every city goes through massive changes, to keep up with contemporary circumstances, needs, and fashions of the day. nothing strange about that. and it goes on today. antwerp keeps changing and growing.

  • @dottikult2525
    @dottikult2525 Год назад

    Chronicles from Pre-Celtic Europe (Survivors of the Great Tsunami a book by Alewyn J Raubenheimer will give you the answers you are looking for!
    Thank you for your presentation.

  • @user-ut8xv8ne6u
    @user-ut8xv8ne6u Год назад

    Excellent video, many thanks

  • @EDP1
    @EDP1 Год назад

    great docu . do you know were the name ANTWERPEN comes from ?

  • @erikschiegg68
    @erikschiegg68 Год назад +1

    I still do not put much into those mud flood theories. What could have deposited such sediments so widespreadly would be a mega tsunami. There were many lesser known and unknown tsunami events, in the mediterranean sea with half mile high waves, the Burckle impact in the pacific south of India caused probably the deluge with the tsunami sweeping to ancient mesopotania, covering it with at least 20-50 meters of water. However, such a mega tsunami would have been very destructive doing more than just covering with mud.

  • @jameswatkins3815
    @jameswatkins3815 Год назад +1

    Clouds carry a powerful positive charge and that is what the earth is attracted that produces lightning. Lightning strikes happen from the ground up.

  • @lynnmcmullen3157
    @lynnmcmullen3157 Год назад +1

    Great video. Always amazes me the inevitable misspronunciation comments. It's foreign words and languages, you surely get the meaning. Nobody cares, it's not that serious

  • @caymann93
    @caymann93 Год назад

    Little detail adjustment , the name of that castle isnt the rock , but the stone. Small , but a detail nonetheless. I live in Antwerp xd. Very interesting video tho xd

  • @stijnjanssens571
    @stijnjanssens571 Год назад

    There where 7 main fortification walls around Antwerp through history, the first Medieval wall wich can't really be seen anymore consisted of 2 walls, with het steen being the gatehouse of the inner most wall. From there on out there where 4 more expansions to the city, the 4th one being the biggest and most visible to this day. The location of the 4th expansions' wall is de leien, what now is the inner ring of Antwerp. The next great expansion was the Spanish wall, build by the Spanish during there control of Antwerp. This wall got expanded into the largest of Antwerps' walls, the brialmont wall that consists of the massive starfort wall around Antwerp and 2 bunker rings in towns around Antwerp.
    A lot of history happened in this city

  • @Alpinerbergen
    @Alpinerbergen Год назад +3

    ruclips.net/video/jCvNX4WHKgw/видео.html This is the Waterpoort, nicknamed 'the wandering gate', since it has been moved a few times. This stereophoto shows this watergate in its previous location and was taken somewhere between 1888 and 1931. Originally build in 1624, they say, but who knows for sure? It might have been moved to Antwerp in 1624. Why are there 'suicide doors' at the second and third floor?

    • @jamesstarseeker
      @jamesstarseeker Год назад +2

      I really want to break in those doors to look what's inside for a long time, maybe I'll do it this year. (Not damaging them ofcourse)

    • @Alpinerbergen
      @Alpinerbergen Год назад +1

      @@jamesstarseeker Cool! Exciting! Please report us on what you find.

  • @nerys723
    @nerys723 Год назад +2

    I noticed all the pictures nobody carries any bags or boxes with shopping.

  • @yvtvyvonneridgwell3472
    @yvtvyvonneridgwell3472 Год назад +1

    Do we have any idea what is happening in this photo at 18mins ?

    • @ivo_huth
      @ivo_huth Год назад

      Early plane tryout?

  • @Wastelander2281
    @Wastelander2281 Год назад +1

    You should research the Anglican Cathedral of Liverpool

  • @mbrackeva
    @mbrackeva Год назад

    The castle is called 't Steen which translates more like the stone than the rock.

    • @mbrackeva
      @mbrackeva Год назад

      Having said that... this is a great video. Beautiful and interesting pictures and some pretty accurate history. I've been living in Antwerp for 57 years now, so you can take that as a compliment...

  • @simonehughes5374
    @simonehughes5374 Год назад +1

    Cross over print in sky at 10:20 of picture at 10:30

  • @baakhoda1477
    @baakhoda1477 Год назад

    Antwerpen Is Beautifull City, mijn Stad ❤

  • @mz.lippey8791
    @mz.lippey8791 Год назад +1

    GENE DECODE EXPLAINS INNER EARTH HUMANS AND CIVILIZATION

  • @toonderoeck6341
    @toonderoeck6341 Год назад +1

    The zoo entrance image just has background blur, maybe birds... There has never been a building you could/can see from that angle... Tallest structure in antwerp is the cathedral, to the north east.. Cant be a structure in that picture.

  • @lenalena8071
    @lenalena8071 Год назад +3

    Дякую ❤🇺🇦

  • @Toumasu
    @Toumasu Год назад

    The word "antwerp" is derived from "hand werpen" (hand throwing) after a legend of a warrior, brabo, cutting off the hand of a giant, antigoon, and throwing it in the river schelde. Just an FYI.

    • @Toumasu
      @Toumasu Год назад +1

      Also at 10:23 the "buildings in the sky" I think it's just the next picture with the statues on the roof that was on the other side in the photo album and were imprinted on the other picture.

  • @BloodsplatterBE
    @BloodsplatterBE Год назад

    It sounds like you're saying star forge or star force a lot... I must be mishearing, but I can't make out a more sensible word.
    EDIT: I should have read the title properly... 😅

  • @Peterigepan
    @Peterigepan Год назад

    Het steen means the stone, not the rock (minor, from a local)

    • @triskelworkshop2855
      @triskelworkshop2855 11 месяцев назад +1

      Het steen is een ander woord voor versterkte burcht. Eigenlijk hete het 's Heeren Steen' De burcht van de Heer dus (Hertog van Brabant). Gelijkaardige benaming vind je ook terug in Gent (De burcht van de Graaf) Gravensteen

    • @Peterigepan
      @Peterigepan 11 месяцев назад

      @@triskelworkshop2855 Interessant, ik had het gewoon vertaald. Maar inderdaad ik steun deze verklaring best wel

  • @kellyguest4735
    @kellyguest4735 Год назад +1

    The Rock? Like the San Francisco prison in a rock, also nicknamed, "The Rock". Hmm.

    • @Mamba-Kush
      @Mamba-Kush Год назад +2

      A better translation would be "the Stone".

    • @ArthurTheLibraryDetective
      @ArthurTheLibraryDetective Год назад +1

      Michigan has a Port. (1 of 4 'gates') on/at The Isle Royal known as "The Rock" too. Detroit.had a "Van Antwerp" as a Mayor, etc...😎..was wondering Y the name seemed Familiar to me..💞

  • @kmaterne
    @kmaterne Год назад +2

    I think these buildings were made in the thousand year Earthly reign of Christ. I think our history has been obfuscated from us. It's been mixed up, and presented to us, in a way that has us confused about when we are. I cannot account for these buildings, in any other way. Jesus was a master carpenter, so, it would stand to reason, that our world would be covered, in His handy work. It would also account for the zeal, in which these people go after His work. Who else would draw that kind of ire??

    • @negritavg5435
      @negritavg5435 Год назад

      I was born in Brussels
      These buildings were not built for commercial use
      The tech involved to build these today is just not doable.
      We are all being lied to about our past. Vatican wants to keep us stupid and pay taxes

  • @lauralauren6432
    @lauralauren6432 Год назад +4

    Please pronounce Antwerpens real name. Think about it. Think of The possibility if we pronounced New York as Nya Jork. Florida-Blommiga. My countrys name is Sverige. Not Sweden. Deutchland not Germany. Thanks for all amazing images.

    • @Tibovl
      @Tibovl Год назад +1

      That's not how languages work. It's literally incorrect to call Antwerp Antwerpen in English. Do you say Deutschland when speaking to friends? Or have you ever called Japan Nipon?

    • @lauralauren6432
      @lauralauren6432 Год назад

      @@Tibovl Who decided that?

    • @Tibovl
      @Tibovl Год назад

      @@lauralauren6432 No one did, who decided that this is how words are spelled? Spelling rules exist for a reason because if ai decaided to wrait lak dis ju wuldnt ndurstand mi.

  • @gipsy1695
    @gipsy1695 Год назад

    I’m from Antwerp ☝️ I still have Viking DNA in my blood (3%) probably from the last raid 😂😂😂 They are destroying all these buildings, monuments and gates with the walls around Antwerp.

  • @GuntherSDoumson2178
    @GuntherSDoumson2178 Год назад +1

    Brussels is bigger than Antwerp.
    1.3 mill. > 600k

    • @triskelworkshop2855
      @triskelworkshop2855 11 месяцев назад

      yes, when it comes to inhabitants. Not as size.
      Antwerp is the 3 rd largest city in Belgium 204 square Km (after 1= Doornik and 2= Couvin)
      Brussels is only 33 square Km

  • @mz.lippey8791
    @mz.lippey8791 Год назад

    I believe that Christ has already fulfilled the 1000 years of Peace and it's been buried by the Cabal

  • @gregoryagogo
    @gregoryagogo Год назад

    So tired of hearing about beautiful places being destroyed.

  • @ausirezchristensen5797
    @ausirezchristensen5797 11 месяцев назад

    It Seems like the Ukraine war is destroying the last Tartarian buildings.

  • @ronnywouters7037
    @ronnywouters7037 Год назад

    Hi, I live north of the city of Antwerp in the Antwerp provence. The story of Antwerp misses one giant detail. Antwerp’s decline came from the Spanish invasion, the Spanish soldiers killed everyone bc they couldn’t compete with free market. Trade is more powerful than war. I hope the thousands of innocent victims didn’t die for nothing. Antwerp invented anarcho-capitalism and altered the course of human history 500y ago.

  • @Private.Willie.Stroker
    @Private.Willie.Stroker 11 месяцев назад

    Alternate title
    "Antwerp before it became the capital of the middle east"

  • @Foxglove963
    @Foxglove963 Год назад

    The correct name for the city is ANTWERPEN.

    • @triskelworkshop2855
      @triskelworkshop2855 11 месяцев назад

      Or Anvers, Antwerp, Amberes, Antverpia, Anda Verpa, Andoouerpenses , Ambidouesrepi (zij die aan de oevers wonen) and even Aantwaarepe. Antwerpen is just the Dutch version

  • @Cnoted33
    @Cnoted33 Год назад +3

    The architecture is Islamic and it appears in a much latter time frame Christian images were implanted onto the structures

    • @bellephegor
      @bellephegor Год назад +5

      No it doesn't have anything to do with Islamic architecture at all lol. And there are plenty of original building plans, etchings, drawings and descriptions of those buildings still around.

    • @scorpi66
      @scorpi66 Год назад

      Please always be honest and don't tell lies. Name the Islamic buildings in Antwerp.
      Bizarrely different, if you look at the year from which Muslims had only settled in Antwerp.
      The original old buildings in Antwerp have no influence whatsoever with Islam.