The Olmec Legacy

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024

Комментарии • 13 тыс.

  • @MarcoPono
    @MarcoPono 3 года назад +1743

    Greetings! Thank you for your work, I really appreciate what youre doing.
    Im a Mexican Native American and I can tell you with no doubt that the facial features carved on these heads are very native of that region. I have travelled and made friends around and have seen these features in many native peoples. It is not uncommon to have a friend teased because he "looks like an olmeca head".
    I remember that in my Kickboxing class was a guy from that region, we called him LaMolle because he looked like an olmec head and he seemed to be made of stone, you could counter with jabs and it would get you nowhere, his nose would not bleed, his eye sockets would barely swell, and he would keep fighting.
    Maybe the olmeca standard of beauty revolved around the rugged features of a warrior.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +229

      Thank you! I wish I could broadcast this comment very loud for the people in the back.

    • @e.diamond4080
      @e.diamond4080 3 года назад +76

      That region also has had Africans transported in since the colonial period, no? And we don't know about the pre-colonial period. It's not impossible that other people besides and before Columbus learned to navigate the oceans. In fact, it's ridiculous to think the first to America would have been the Spanish. That by no means discredits the distinguished accomplishments or dignity of the old civilizations of the American continent. In fact, the way that the most advanced civilizations have become so great is by not re-inventing the wheel so to speak.

    • @chrisgibson5267
      @chrisgibson5267 3 года назад +216

      @@e.diamond4080 Hello. Be honest. Brutally honest if needs be.
      So if there's compelling evidence that other peoples crossed the Atlantic to the Americas then we'd be interested to see it.
      I've seen what's been shown so far and it's not even remotely convincing.
      Your use of the word ridiculous suggests an argument from personal incredulity and therefore a logical fallacy. That's not a great place to start.
      Seafaring requires specific technologies and infrastructure. Both of these would be evidenced in the archaeologiical record and local traditions on either side of the ocean.
      It can be shown that the Vikings, the Spanish and Portuguese, and the English all made the crossing.
      Ships and shipwrecks, settlements and colonies, docks and shipyards; they all leave traces.
      So we can, for instance, disregard the flights of fantasy indulged in by Graham Hancock.
      Then there's DNA. My family has Native American DNA ( Taino Indian so I'm told ).
      I'm guessing that these ancient peoples accomplished what they did by dint of their own indigenous ingenuity and indigenous efforts.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад +14

      you are a joke you make us laugh the native people of United States Mexican they all were black people this so-called Indians anchors Myers and Ash test mloecs it's so sad I truly feel sorry for you all your family's been lying to you The Truth is Out the black people will come from their true identity I'm glad I'm not you people goodbye

    • @moofacesTV
      @moofacesTV 3 года назад +59

      @@e.diamond4080 Not just that region try all of latin america. Do a DNA test on people who you think don't have african DNA. Who was Yanga? Etc. The blood is there just watered down the further you leave out of that region. 3 racial mixtures common in all of Latin America. And yes even in Mexico. African, Spanish and Native ancestry. Do a basic 23andme google search will tell you the average ancestry. Looks are deceiving. Slavery was bigger in Latin America than USA.

  • @иванпиётп
    @иванпиётп 3 года назад +1145

    I am forever impressed by the OLMECS. I remember an exhibition I saw in Moscow on American ART and I immediately fell in love with the Aztecs, Toltecs, Olmecs, Mayas, and Incas. The Americas have produced such wealth and history. I have travelled in Mexico, Guatemala and Peru besides other countries of Latin America and I can't get enough of this history. They were people who left such a legacy for us that we cannot ignore them. May the spirit of those ancient Americans live on for ever.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +47

      Agreed!

    • @AZdude
      @AZdude 3 года назад +61

      Such an awesome comment bro. Thanks, we love you too. My ancestors were very much so as important as ancient Europeans, Middle East civilizations. I myself love the history of the Rus

    • @kylenolan9679
      @kylenolan9679 3 года назад +30

      Why do they hide dat from teaching dat in American history I guess it would show dat Colombus didn't discover America compare da statues to da ones in Ancient Ethiopia meaning all black people didn't come on no slave ships 💪😎

    • @judaprinxbeatz.8008
      @judaprinxbeatz.8008 3 года назад +32

      YOU SHOULD SEE THE OTHER OLMEC HEAD CALLED 'EL NEGRO'. CLEAR DEPICTION OF AN AFRICAN MAN ;)

    • @officialdirectorscutmusicv426
      @officialdirectorscutmusicv426 3 года назад +12

      YOUR NAME IS "Peter Furst" you don't want Black and Brown people to have any connection to Africa.
      The white Man is Scared we Black and Brown will wake up.

  • @wonkaIndian100
    @wonkaIndian100 Год назад +173

    My Family are indigenous Zapotecs from Oaxaca and some of us have more Maya features and some of us look just like the Olmecs. Sometimes people confuse us for being Polynesian or from the Philippines because of our almond shaped eyes etc.

    • @likpit
      @likpit 11 месяцев назад +9

      Yeah i still dont understand how people dont know the connection with Polynesia and even Australian DNA and even clues to connection of the old world and new world via Keystone cuts DNA in Peru there was people in the Americas way longer than people know but something happened 11 thousand years ago where they had to rebuild again.

    • @tgraham72
      @tgraham72 10 месяцев назад

    • @donaldnixon919
      @donaldnixon919 10 месяцев назад +5

      The population today aren't the same population thousands of years ago

    • @wonkaIndian100
      @wonkaIndian100 10 месяцев назад +15

      @@donaldnixon919To some degree you are correct, but our people in particular just started to integrate into western society when our parents migrated to the States from their village and all of us look like our ancestors from way back then. I and a lot of my cousins look similar to the Zapotec artifacts you see in museums or found in archeological sites. I’ve also done a DNA test and confirmed I am full blooded Indigenous American.

    • @ShapeShiftingStardust33
      @ShapeShiftingStardust33 7 месяцев назад +8

      I can totally relate... when I was child in school and our textbook had images of the Olmec head statues in it ,my entire class made fun of me because I looked exactly like it. The resemblance was uncanny. And now as an adult I understand why it makes sense... both my parents are Mexican indigenous. One of my grandmother's spoke the indigenous language of her people. People still ask me if I am either Polynesian or from the Philippines till this day. Lol

  • @richyhu2042
    @richyhu2042 5 месяцев назад +20

    Im floored by the wild conspiracies around the Olmecs being Africans and that anything MesoAm is just African. It has the same exact energy as European explorers finding Angkor Wat and saying that there is no way the natives were advanced enough and it was actually Alexander the Great who built it because he conquered eastwards.
    History is such a rich panoply of cultures and development. I LOVE reading about how people interacted instead of the "everyone was isolated and had no contact with anyone they couldn't directly see". But insinuating that anything good or cool made by the Olmecs and by extension MesoAm was solely due to magical transatlantic Africans is insane. Extraordinary claims demand Extraordinary evidence

    • @snickerbar4u1
      @snickerbar4u1 Месяц назад

      I want you to look up something that is rarely shown. Google this " back of Olmec heads"...then tell me what you think. Tell me another group of people who have braids (the back shows corn row braids under all of them)

    • @juiceman104
      @juiceman104 Месяц назад +1

      @@snickerbar4u1natives had braids, Viking had braids, in sure there are other groups had braida

    • @Kingknowledge74
      @Kingknowledge74 Месяц назад

      @@richyhu2042 they are from Africa..and there's no such things as black people.. just white names,

    • @StudyTrainAchieve37
      @StudyTrainAchieve37 6 дней назад

      Is it a wild conspiracy or is it just basic common sense lol. I’ve never seen more obviously black sculptures in my entire life. And seeing how every black accomplishment gets covered up and stolen by others even in modern day, it makes more logical sense to most people that these guys were black

  • @johnmcnulty4425
    @johnmcnulty4425 3 года назад +430

    Mexico is a fascinating place with stunning landscapes!

    • @harrylovato8958
      @harrylovato8958 3 года назад

      M

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 3 года назад +6

      And, tacos. Lots and lots and lots and **LOTS** of tacos. Hey, if tacos are what you're after, go no further! You've reached **TACO CENTRAL**...(ROFL)

    • @jitumenefee1323
      @jitumenefee1323 3 года назад +3

      Do Mexicans and other Spanish speaking Hispanics truly believe that they have any connection to these ancient Black people? If so they really don’t know their history and that’s sad 😞

    • @Andres-uw2kf
      @Andres-uw2kf 3 года назад +14

      @@jitumenefee1323 yeah in fact we do. Do you know ur own history? Sad you claim others instead of claiming ur own heritage. Pathetic

    • @Andres-uw2kf
      @Andres-uw2kf 3 года назад +46

      @@jitumenefee1323 they are not black. They are Amerindian.

  • @Simonjose7258
    @Simonjose7258 3 года назад +478

    Interesting fact about the Olmec Heads is that the bottoms are flattened on a slant so that they would be naturally facing upwards towards the sky. I think they should be displayed this way.

    • @watcherspirit2351
      @watcherspirit2351 3 года назад +11

      The fatness of the heads is the flat part of the thrones from which they were carved.

    • @GregGarciaHouse
      @GregGarciaHouse 3 года назад +17

      @@watcherspirit2351 yes! They recycled the stones. From the Throne to the Stonehead of the same King. There’s a lot of evidence of that

    • @judaprinxbeatz.8008
      @judaprinxbeatz.8008 3 года назад +26

      FUN FACT: THE OLMEC ARE PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT.

    • @GregGarciaHouse
      @GregGarciaHouse 3 года назад +30

      @@judaprinxbeatz.8008 of course, in the same way we all are

    • @silverbubble1037
      @silverbubble1037 3 года назад +32

      @@judaprinxbeatz.8008 no they are not, indigenous people in this region who are clearly not of direct African descent have these facial features

  • @trevorsherwood4324
    @trevorsherwood4324 2 года назад +188

    “Let’s take a moment to thank the Olmecs for helping bestowing chocolate on this cruel world...”
    *chef kiss*

    • @vincentperrault5900
      @vincentperrault5900 7 месяцев назад +2

      Amen.

    • @MansaMusa-v5q
      @MansaMusa-v5q 2 месяца назад +2

      Don’t forget tobacco too

    •  2 месяца назад

      Tobacco is na abomination.​@@MansaMusa-v5q

    • @johnnobody3078
      @johnnobody3078 Месяц назад

      ​@@MansaMusa-v5q Don't remind my lungs 😭 lmao

    • @akken2112
      @akken2112 12 дней назад

      70% of the main ingredient in chocolate comes from West Africa.

  • @surlyguvna
    @surlyguvna Год назад +46

    Incredible video. My mother's mother came from the mountains of El Salvador. She would often talk about the story from her Great Grandmother's time. She would say they came to be there from another places. The place where the big heads that watched and told stories. You showed the Olmec's area of influence, and it makes sense now. Thank you. I wish my grandma were alive to tell her she was right. She had a small black stone head with the same motifs. It was buried with her when she passed.

  • @adreabrooks11
    @adreabrooks11 2 года назад +342

    As an artist, I'm always amazed by the realism of Olmec statues! Carving lean, well-muscled figures (like those popularized by the Hellenistic Greek era) is already a difficult process. However, I can tell you from personal struggles that adding subcutaneous tissue (fat, etc.) adds an other (literal) layer of difficulty, and is very difficult to master.
    As with all art, some of the Olmec works are more masterful than others - but compare a Greek Hercules, the Olmec wrestler and a modern-day pro-wrestler or Maori haka performer. It's clear that the Olmec depiction looks much more like a real, fleshy human being that one might meet in life.
    The fact that these figures are rendered in a medium as tricky as basalt makes it even more amazing.
    And bear in mind: the Olmec was one of those progenitor societies, with (as far as we know) no preceding tradition of dedicated artistry. Sure, there were people who *made* art - but there was no long-running history of artistic tradesmanship to draw on, as there were for the vaunted Greco-Roman or Egyptian styles.
    I've always wondered why Olmec art doesn't get more recognition and praise.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +34

      Thanks for providing an artist's perspective! It's not one I usually hear.

    • @mrrodriguezHLP
      @mrrodriguezHLP 2 года назад +32

      More impressive yet, they carved into basalt, a very hard stone, with no metal tools. The techniques can only be imagined, but the incredulous are quick to theorize with alien lasers and ancient CNC machines. They never consider a lifetime dedicated to one single task, just might lead to ingenuity and expertise.

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 2 года назад +10

      @@mrrodriguezHLP Agreed! As I mentioned in my original post, basalt is a very challenging medium. My guess is that, rather than chisels, these were made by grinding away the stone - a process which would take forever, but possibly not as long as the constant maintenance that would be needed for chisels. Mind you, that's 100% guesswork on my part as, regrettably, I've never (yet) been close enough to an Olmec carving to study such tiny details.

    • @Brokentwobutton
      @Brokentwobutton 2 года назад +10

      @@mrrodriguezHLP People talking about ancient CNC machines amaze me with how they could skip over real abrasive technology like bow drills, planks, cloth, or cordage used with an abrasive powder. They'll say that sandpaper won't work granite hardness material without even knowing that aluminum oxide is what makes most modern sandpaper and that, I presume, any ancient culture that could access granite could access quartz sand.

    • @pasetherichez
      @pasetherichez 2 года назад +4

      I don't think there statues just imagine if they were real human heads petrified!!!

  • @mexico.gexperience
    @mexico.gexperience 2 года назад +68

    I just found your channel, and suscribed right away. I'm a mixed mexican from Oaxaca with mostly zapotec blood. Always fascinated about our culture, some of my earliest memories are walking down Monte Albán's buildings, so every opportunity I had over the years old visiting old archeological sites I would take It. I went to architecture school in Central México and I learned more about this ancient native América civilizations.
    Almost 7 years ago I moved to Cancún and I friend of mine suggested me to start working as a guide in the area, It wasn't a difficult decision to make. I got certified and now I do private and collective tours in places like Chichén Itzá, Cobá, Tulum, Ek Balam, maya communities and more. And everytime It keeps growing the fascination and respect for my people of old. This video is one of the best I have seen about Olmec, thanks for putting a lot of work behind, I do videos myself and I know It really takes lots of sitting hours to come with something as good as this.
    Maybe we can meet if you come to this area, It would be great talking much deeper about the maya that for sure has a HUGE influence from Olmec.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +5

      Thank you! You've got great content as well! What's your favorite site to give tours at?

    • @mexico.gexperience
      @mexico.gexperience 2 года назад +5

      @@AncientAmericas thanks for the complement, I try to put certain amount of effort on most things I do, but sometimes I'm so límited on time. Thanks for watching too. Right now I'm just missing 1.5 videos to finish everything you got from Mesoamerica. It's awesome so far! Thanks
      Now, answering your question, from the ones around here I would say EK BALAM, I would say It has all It needs on a Maya Classical Site even not being so large. It goes from a monumental Architecture, several writing on walls and carvings of monuments and stelas, a ball court, astronomical alignments, several visible periods of construction over the Classical and post Classical, walls, roads, stucco moldings, chultuns, and a Royalty tomb, which is a most see. Plus the fact you can still climb most buildings.
      CHICHÉN ITZÁ if you haven't visit It's also something you have to see. It unique for sure and there's a lot of things to talk about.
      COBÁ is has great interestings features to be honest and it has Jungle feeling. I would definitely also do It if you got Time.

  • @andrewfortmusic
    @andrewfortmusic Год назад +64

    I have no real connection to ancient Meso-America, but being an artist, I deeply appreciate the complexity of their art, and I think it's beautiful that it is their art by which we remember them. Since my first inquiry into the Olmec, I've been very impressed by those infamous basalt heads: their features are so clearly defined, the carving technique so delicate and precise, and their expressions communicate so much longing and internal struggle, it's hard for me to look away. Perhaps it's projection on my part, but I think that might be the way they would want to be remembered.

    • @jj-bp3fr
      @jj-bp3fr 7 месяцев назад +2

      If your impressed and like the Olmec heads, you'll also like the colosal Toltec statues, the "Atlantes de Tula" in the state of Hidalgo. Some think they were space warriors due to the weapon carvings in their hands and also represent Quetzalcoatl. They weigh 8.5 tons and some are more than 4-5 meters in height, carved in basalt.

  • @duanephillips2343
    @duanephillips2343 Год назад +34

    This is so cool. I studied Mesoamerican culture and art as an anthropology major. I even spent a semester in Mexico in 1980 - what a great experience.

    • @jimmyjasi-
      @jimmyjasi- Год назад +2

      These Olmecs head features are certainly not "European or African" but they may be trait of "population Y" that David Reich, Jeniffer Raff and. Skoglund discuss extensively.
      We know already enough archeology and genetics to debunk any pseudoscientific claims of pre-Columbian"white gods" or other transatlantic contacts, but we still don't really know how many waves had or how diverse population of Ancient Beringia was, we also know now from David Reich that some Native Americans even migrated back to Asia some 5000 ya. and perhaps it were Native American sailors rather than Polynesians that settled Rapa Nui first!
      Pity that so few Native People wants to get their DNA tested. Great loss for humanity

    • @JohnDoe-ih6mj
      @JohnDoe-ih6mj Год назад

      What do you think about every retard that think they were all black

    • @Geovanni___
      @Geovanni___ Год назад

      What are you thoughts on the purepecha ppl and their mystery of origin? Would love to know if you've found anything interesting

  • @lucio.martinez
    @lucio.martinez 3 года назад +417

    Yes, as a young kid in my native México, I remember these big big stone heads on the roads to Acapulco, Guerrero, on way to visit family with my abuela.
    Cheers for my people!

    • @kiinyuum8001
      @kiinyuum8001 3 года назад +16

      The Olmecs ....if you go CA, started, example like picture...the mańs head in the stone-- warrior stuff. Like we see now, US soldiers paint their face, Chinese, Russians...
      The Jaguar then was symbolism of strength and man becoming the Jaguar....Indians in CA look just like those stone faces.
      Don’t let anyone still our history

    • @mountain-roots
      @mountain-roots 3 года назад

      @@kiinyuum8001 ruclips.net/video/SnnMfHTDNOM/видео.html

    • @mountain-roots
      @mountain-roots 3 года назад +2

      @MIDDLE PILLAR niagra falls was a tree. Now a stump

    • @moyzzhernandez5712
      @moyzzhernandez5712 3 года назад +3

      HOY EN DIA LAS KEBESAS OLMECAS ESTAN EN LAS CASAS DE NUESTROS POLITICOS DEL PRI, PAN. NUESTROS POLITICOS HAN SAQUEADO AL PAIS DURANTE AÑOS (FOBAPROA) Y SEGUIMOS PAGANDO.

    • @sharonw4325
      @sharonw4325 3 года назад +5

      @MIDDLE PILLAR No, Asian.

  • @remytheroute6503
    @remytheroute6503 3 года назад +634

    Can't break these olmec nose.

  • @calska140
    @calska140 3 года назад +214

    I'm probably one of very few people who finds a previously undiscovered , informative video on the olmecs, and fistpumps and shouts "WOOOO!" like they're at a sporting event.

    • @dissident_sojourner
      @dissident_sojourner 3 года назад +2

      Here here

    • @lenaely6146
      @lenaely6146 3 года назад +2

      Yes but I don't know that this video is more than fluff and theory

    • @CEHM82
      @CEHM82 3 года назад +1

      Ditto lol

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz 3 года назад

      You better do, the life of the team is at a stake if they lose. ;p
      Well, we don't know if Olmecs were into human sacrifice, it was just a joking comment.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад

      are you aware the OLMECS they were in communication with the aliens and furthermore they was feeding the reptilians who are blood drinkers what do you think all of those sacrifices were about please take care of yourself peace and love

  • @Bestial_Trigger93
    @Bestial_Trigger93 Год назад +28

    Mexico has such beautiful history

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 11 месяцев назад +5

      Beyond beautiful.....intriguing, mysterious and perhaps a bit violent!

    • @automaticwriting4220
      @automaticwriting4220 11 месяцев назад

      @@tedolphbundler724Fuckin every history is violent

    • @GeneralPadron
      @GeneralPadron 10 месяцев назад +3

      A beautiful history of murder sacrifice of kidnapped villagers and tribes people...

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 10 месяцев назад

      The North American Indians were worse-genocidal maniacs!

    • @UmQasaann
      @UmQasaann 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@tedolphbundler724Nothing compares to the European invaders barbarians

  • @capmidnite
    @capmidnite 3 года назад +315

    What's fascinating about meso-American civilizations is that while Old World civilizations could borrow and learn from each other, the meso-Americans started from scratch.

    • @capmidnite
      @capmidnite 3 года назад +40

      @cewilliams26 And you have proof of this? Citations from reputable authorities? Do you also think the Pyramids were built by aliens from outer space?

    • @capmidnite
      @capmidnite 3 года назад +13

      @cewilliams26 I hear the earth is flat.

    • @Likexner
      @Likexner 3 года назад +5

      @@capmidnite "reputable authorities"

    • @juanme555
      @juanme555 3 года назад +10

      @@capmidnite
      Phoenicians setting up Carthage around 1000 B.C.E is common knowledge wtf .-.

    • @mauiwauidank
      @mauiwauidank 3 года назад +2

      @@capmidnite Wrong

  • @JuanLopez-qo7yq
    @JuanLopez-qo7yq 3 года назад +47

    So from what I can see the Olmecs where like the Sumerians of America. Once they didn’t have to worry about food thanks to farming they applied their minds to writing, art etc. And the civilizations that came after them build upon their work.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +5

      A very good comparison.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад

      they never came after they bridge in and destroyed for it is their nature this is why we were told not to Mingle socialize or mixed our blood with other races

    • @nycg801
      @nycg801 2 года назад +7

      Mexicans of today of been heavily mixed with European Spaniards. The Mexicans living today are a watered down version of ancient Mexicans like the Olmec,Maya,or Aztecs.

    • @teresafernandez9849
      @teresafernandez9849 2 года назад

      @@nycg801 there are millions of full Native ppl in the Americas. The USA is very misinformed about Native ppl. They are obsessed with the word extinct!! There are full Native Maya ppl all over Mexico and South America!! It's a scientific fact, other than registered full Native ppl, Mexican Americans and México carry more Native DNA than any other group! South America ain't no slouch either! Mexican on both sides of the border marry and have kids, that Native DNA keeps getting stronger and the other weaker. We have started stressing our kids not to mix!! Not to hate, but the importance of keeping it Native!! We r going to stress, not to hate Afros,but to tell them about their culture vultures delusions!! If u bring a fox into the hen house, the hens will disappear!! Let one culture vulture in, they will want the whole tribe!!

    • @AmericanKash
      @AmericanKash 2 года назад

      @@teresafernandez9849 I thought you guys were hit with the small pox they devastated you guys plus the onslaught by the Spaniards adding the admixture and subjugation of your culture and civilization how are there full bloods still out there ? And why haven’t they revived their culture and civilization??

  • @no_biggie_smalls
    @no_biggie_smalls 3 года назад +91

    I've lived in Tres Zapotes for two years when I was 10. It's still one of my favorite places in the world

    • @lucio.martinez
      @lucio.martinez 3 года назад +1

      What state is that in?

    • @no_biggie_smalls
      @no_biggie_smalls 3 года назад +1

      @@lucio.martinez Veracruz Mx

    • @lucio.martinez
      @lucio.martinez 3 года назад +1

      @@no_biggie_smalls Órale, jarocholandia.
      Donde todo en Veracruz, es bello!
      Saludos Guerrerenses!

    • @no_biggie_smalls
      @no_biggie_smalls 3 года назад +2

      @@lucio.martinez saludos bro, yo soy de Hidalgo pero Jarocholandia es bello al igual que todo Mexico 🙌🏼🙌🏼

    • @petecarroll3949
      @petecarroll3949 3 года назад +1

      Me No TV what-so-ever

  • @josepalacios843
    @josepalacios843 10 месяцев назад +17

    Tabasco native here. Thanks for sharing this, I really enjoyed your exposition and tone/delivery. I didn't know Olmecs [possibly] originated that MesoAm calendar. There is a sense of community around the word "Olmec" in my hometown. It's weird because there is little connection with modern "peoples" so it feels like cheap/manufactured 21st century tribalism. Like Italians from Brooklyn that can't speak Italian, no offense. "You're a modern Mexican from Tabasco, not an Olmec, calm down". I saw it in another comment and can corroborate. "He looks like an Olmec head" is a common way of mocking someone's physical looks in Tabasco, even in 2023. That human face, the Olmec -face is still around in Tabasco, maybe a little bit to the south of Veracruz as well. They do not look like your median face from the Yucatan peninsula (Maya) or the Valle de Mexico (Mexica and others).

  • @jjgdenisrobert
    @jjgdenisrobert 2 года назад +18

    The fact that new and old world agricultural products remained separate until the arrival of Europeans argues convincingly against any sort of pre-Colombian extended contact.

    • @p4h10oso
      @p4h10oso 2 года назад +1

      Lookup "cocaine mummies".

    • @gyozakeynsianism
      @gyozakeynsianism 2 года назад +1

      True. The same with germs like smallpox.

    • @jjgdenisrobert
      @jjgdenisrobert 2 года назад +3

      @@p4h10oso lookup “contamination”

    • @PLATINUMARCH
      @PLATINUMARCH 2 года назад

      Lies. Trade was going on when Europe was stuck in the dark ages relearning longitude and latitude.

    • @gyozakeynsianism
      @gyozakeynsianism 2 года назад +5

      @@PLATINUMARCH Not lies. History.

  • @yayagazab4449
    @yayagazab4449 3 года назад +179

    A Cancun Chechen-Itza tour guide told our group that the chewing gum company Chiclets derived its name from a Mayan, possibly Olmec, word “chi-cle” which is the sound made when they would chew the rubber harvested from the trees. An American businessman that visited Chichen Itza in the 1920’s asked the locals what they had in their mouth & he got the idea of Chiclets from his visit. This is what I remember hearing.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +48

      That's correct! The gum came from the chicle sap. Eventually the chewing gum companies figured out how to make artificial gum. There's a whole history behind the boom and bust of the Chicle business.

    • @linnymaemullins3319
      @linnymaemullins3319 3 года назад +2

      Cool👍😊

    • @JuanGonzalez-cg8fk
      @JuanGonzalez-cg8fk 2 года назад +2

      as I remember chicle comes from the tree call Xitle and the guys name who commercialized it was Mr Chiclets as with this fact I have no science to back it up. It is what I heard from my father..

    • @joedoe5738
      @joedoe5738 2 года назад +3

      Just like Pepsi,the sound when you open the bottle or can!!! Pep-sssii

    • @Halcon_Sierreno
      @Halcon_Sierreno 2 года назад +14

      The whole world owes a lot to the ancient people's of Mexico.

  • @seiko9361
    @seiko9361 Год назад +11

    One of the main reasons that the Olmec culture grew late compared to other civilizations due to various problems. Unlike other civilization areas, Native americans were new arrivals in mexico and it took them many time to settle well in a very unpredictable enviornment. Pre dynastic egypt, for example, was better and more fertile than modern, however mesoamerican lands, even though being better than other areas, is was still a challenging place to due unpredictable fierce rains, volcanoes, flooding and storms etc. Further domestication also must have played an important role in late development since all other cradle of civilizations (except Peru) domesticated burden carrying, and milk and wool providing animals like bovids, goats, sheeps and horses etc, something they lacked; it must have been a problem in early settlement as limited trade (trade plays an important role in development since an area cannot fullfil all needs). External influence is another problem. Even though major civilizations are independently born, still they were influence as one of the best example is that the Egyptian and Indian written language wasn't indeginous to them, that was rather imported!
    So i think these factors played a great role for the late developement in Olmec civilizations compared to others:
    1. More unpredictable and nasty enviornment than those of other civilizations.
    2. Late arrival in lands.
    3. No good animals to be domesticated.
    4. No external influence.
    If these conditions improved, i believe that they would also rival others in chronology. Anyways, its a more facsinating fact that they and peru, unlike others, grew and developed wholly independently.

    • @charlessmith4009
      @charlessmith4009 Год назад +3

      Wonderful..spoken like a true European Historian..grew independent only influence was with trade..so on and so on..that the people in south America are aboriginal to the lands you speak.

    • @seiko9361
      @seiko9361 Год назад +1

      @@charlessmith4009 Thanks.

    • @Kingknowledge74
      @Kingknowledge74 Месяц назад

      @@seiko9361 you are one of the few in these comments that have real facts... it's hard being smarter this most.. in ancient history.. I been commenting on this video and your knowledge matches mines up to 95% so I know you know your stuff...much love to you

  • @jamesearlcash7725
    @jamesearlcash7725 3 года назад +57

    Same with the Aztec, that’s not what they called themselves. They were actually called the Mexica, pronounced “Mesheka”.

    • @harborarealifestyle6068
      @harborarealifestyle6068 2 года назад +9

      Those are facts. RIP Moctezuma. Long live los Mexica y los maayas

    • @macmempho1809
      @macmempho1809 2 года назад +3

      Sounds Like A Sister? 🧏🏾‍♂️
      #Sheka 💯

    • @randomuser1596
      @randomuser1596 2 года назад +5

      Mexica where the word Mexico comes from

  • @matthew_thefallen
    @matthew_thefallen 2 года назад +47

    I remember when I went for my first lesson at university about mesoamerican cultures that I was in awe discovering the symbologies they used and handed down generations after generations influencing the cultures that came after! The underworld concept is so fascinating!

  • @nicolewildman8976
    @nicolewildman8976 3 года назад +121

    This video made me realise how much I missed learning about mesoamerican history and culture. I was able to see an Olmec carving of the colossal head in the Mexico city museum of Anthropology. It was an overwheming feeling standing next to a sculpture that was so ancient, it was carved with so much precision, you can just tell they paid attention to detail. They were very talented. Thank you so much for sharing this video....ps...I am deeply grateful to them for giving the world corn and chocolate.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +3

      I agree!

    • @makisjnx007
      @makisjnx007 3 года назад +9

      And vanilla

    • @ChillWill2050
      @ChillWill2050 2 года назад +1

      Yes, it’s been pretty much proven that those heads are Amero- Egyptian.
      ruclips.net/video/KMAtkjy_YK4/видео.html

    • @victorrenderos4635
      @victorrenderos4635 2 года назад +1

      Yes. Nicole....but dont forget. that. All these. Olmec Heads.. pyramids...stellas..etc...were found. Buried..and. took..years..to. clean...organize..and study..all about..these.advance culture.....Olmec. Mayas. Toltecs and else....describe a global flood..and. no trace.of any carving tool was ever found....to explain how. These heads were made.....THERE'S a lot to talk about. It but. Wish you luck. piecing together..this amazing Culture

    • @gladeloy3341
      @gladeloy3341 Год назад +1

      & potatoes

  • @larsedik
    @larsedik Год назад +38

    I've noticed a lot of people from eastern and NE Oaxaca who have features that look exactly like the Olmec heads. I did not notice it so much in Vera Cruz, however, but I've spent much more time in Oaxaca than I have in Vera Cruz. I prefer the food in Vera Cruz and Yucatan to Oaxaca, but I like Oaxacan (Zapotec) art the best.

    • @armanddumont3959
      @armanddumont3959 Год назад +2

      Lars M- So, do you call those people in Oaxaca "Neegaz" too?

    • @roblogs7168
      @roblogs7168 Год назад +26

      @@armanddumont3959 you seem salty

    • @mr.motivation3797
      @mr.motivation3797 Год назад +19

      ​@@armanddumont3959 probably not considering they're not black.

    • @lewisc6539
      @lewisc6539 Год назад

      This is is true, many Oaxaquitas have such features. But usually, they’re very low IQ and rarely can speak Spanish.

    • @Imoldman
      @Imoldman Год назад +2

      You are entitled to your likes and dislikes, but man o man! Nothing like Mole from Oaxaca.🥰

  • @toddp.3872
    @toddp.3872 Год назад +32

    My father is from Costa Rica. The natives that I've met have VERY similar characteristics to those head monuments. Very interesting.

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Год назад +2

      So they are polynesian?

    • @toddp.3872
      @toddp.3872 Год назад +29

      ​@@tedolphbundler724Ah, you're one of those people. Trying to start drama in the comments. 👍🏻 Enjoy.

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Год назад +1

      @@toddp.3872 Yep.

    • @SpartanChief2277
      @SpartanChief2277 Год назад +17

      @@tedolphbundler724 no theyre natives, would u say south east asians are polynesian?

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Год назад +2

      @@SpartanChief2277 Maybe! I hadn't thought of it, but sure.

  • @brianmccarthy5557
    @brianmccarthy5557 2 года назад +92

    I used to work with a guy from El Salvador. He looked exactly like those Olmec statue heads. A lot of people noticed this. On a vacation to Mexico who got a tourist souvenir small statue head he kept on his desk. Some naive people thought the thing was sculpted just for him.

    • @perceptionmanagement2116
      @perceptionmanagement2116 Год назад +2

      Great story Brian. Any other lies you'd like to tell?

    • @fernandoarista3302
      @fernandoarista3302 Год назад +29

      You work construction long enough in the US, you're gonna see a bunch of dudes that look like this.

    • @leonlittle7660
      @leonlittle7660 Год назад

      So he must of been Black then?

    • @chrisgarcia5462
      @chrisgarcia5462 Год назад +27

      Plenty of people who look just like the stone head in Mexico. The Toltec people blood line also still exists. They have unusual large heads and can eat Habanero peppers like a kid eating skittles.

    • @patricknorton5788
      @patricknorton5788 Год назад

      Awesome video. Thanks so much.

  • @hh4826
    @hh4826 11 месяцев назад +5

    The quote near the end from Michael Coe really hammers it home. Impactful

  • @jorgesalas4314
    @jorgesalas4314 3 года назад +95

    The Olmecs didn’t go extinct, they just evolved into new regions and people

    • @JMosUndefeated
      @JMosUndefeated 3 года назад +7

      Humans evolved into humans?

    • @jorgesalas4314
      @jorgesalas4314 3 года назад +16

      @@JMosUndefeated how dense are you

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 3 года назад +35

      @@JMosUndefeated I believe he’s referring to cultural evolution.

    • @seniorsabali8759
      @seniorsabali8759 3 года назад +13

      They were kidnapped, killed and the remaining enslaved for generations till they forgot where they come from

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 3 года назад +27

      @@seniorsabali8759 hardly so, they mixed into the surrounding populations. Genetic tests show they are the same as other mesoamerican populations.

  • @billfry6566
    @billfry6566 3 года назад +42

    This guy does his homework. One of the best, and comprehensive presentation of the Olmec. Thanks!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +2

      You're welcome!

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад

      this guy is a liar and you are a liar supporter that you can build up false hope and keep all the benefits as a result of your ancestors wickedness and Theory of Everything . it will not change anything my people are awake now and they know what you and your kind have done I can only hope they would not be a revolution a civil war however it seems you people are not going to stop you people won't get back anything you stole and you people rather die and see your offspring lauded and booted into streets before you would share something that is rightfully mine and my kind thank you

  • @rinaldicansino56
    @rinaldicansino56 Год назад +12

    My grand father was from vera cruz, mexico..when i see his picture, he, looks like a dark skin apache indian..He later moved to honduras were he, met my grandmother who was from belize.. My grandmother was a mulatto half black, AND half white. My father was born in honduras were he, met my mother, who also has indian features and her skin tone is is triguen~a. Im proud to be born in central america, our ancestors were a great people. Great job, thanks for the video, Blessings...

  • @FOWST
    @FOWST Год назад +2

    The Olmecs depicting africans is not a conspiracy theory. It's a theory.
    Also the fact that the people of south america share some of the facial features doesn't make a very good case to disprove contact between those two cultures, rather it's an indicator for possible contact of those cultures.

    • @chicanx6756
      @chicanx6756 Год назад +1

      Bro there’s people in Southern Mexico that have those features, look at Mexican boxer Isaac Cruz for example he looks just like an Olmec would the features etc.

    • @FOWST
      @FOWST Год назад +1

      @@chicanx6756 not sure if you got my point... maybe he has african roots

    • @FOWST
      @FOWST Год назад

      @@chicanx6756 I know there's no proof, but maybe Africans went to south america thousands of years ago and their cultures mixed. We know the Polynesians somehow made it to easter island, the Phonecians were magnificent sailors aswell. Could the africans have made the journey? Who knows? It's just ignorant to call it a conspiracy theory.

  • @eezyclsmooth9035
    @eezyclsmooth9035 3 года назад +10

    Olmecs, Mayans , Aztecs , Incas , Toltecs , Nazca Lines ,Machu Picchu , Pyramids .
    Fascinations and Mysteries galore !

  • @lumptydumpty6992
    @lumptydumpty6992 3 года назад +19

    What gets me on that pyramid thing is how, after having the thought about them being influenced by the Egyptian Pyramids, how could you not think 'Wait thats just a really stable and relatively easy base structure for early peoples to build large monuments?'
    (also where tf does the question mark go there? That hypothetical thought isn't a question, the whole statement about how one wouldn't reason that is.)
    The sad part is i'm college educated.

  • @tonywestbrook9876
    @tonywestbrook9876 3 года назад +71

    Great video. I live here in Mex. Thank you for the info. Everytime i pass through that part of Mexico. I always want to slow down and discover more. There are regions that look untouched with jungle that looks impassable from a distance. The locals know everything, of course. Timeless

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +7

      Wish I could see it myself!

    • @theodoresmith5272
      @theodoresmith5272 3 года назад +7

      People fail To realize just how diverse and untouched many parts of Mexico are.
      When I stayed in palenque, its in the jungle. 1 minute outside of town and it was pretty natural. It made the ruins there some of my favorite in the world. Lizards, monkey, butterflies, and all kinds of birds. We had monkeys at my jungle camp i stayed in. Very nice people and very safe. Lots of native Americans live there and around there if you want to visit a town. Waterfalls are pretty as all get out. I will say when it rains, it rains.
      Really I love the parts of Mexico ove been. The silver country and highlands are cool. San cristabol was awesome.
      Mexico city was super way more then I thought so I rebooked my flight to get 4 more day on that trip.

    • @sierra5713
      @sierra5713 3 года назад

      How do you know English if you live in Mexico?

    • @theodoresmith5272
      @theodoresmith5272 3 года назад +5

      @@sierra5713 people often speak and can write multiple languages. Ive met europeans that can speak 7 languages. Most can speak like 3.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад

      it will be very interesting if you do some research on the Olmecs and their sacrifices and taking the bodies into the cave are you aware of the reptilian do you believe in aliens it is more than what meets the eye

  • @paulawells817
    @paulawells817 Год назад +2

    The truth will set everyone free; we don’t need any more deceit. We are all human beings and need to take care of each other and our beautiful planet.

  • @spacecodes2
    @spacecodes2 3 года назад +72

    Phenotype doesn't equal genotype. Just because they look black doesn't mean they are and just because you don't want them to be black doesn't mean they aren't.

    • @brandonmckinnon836
      @brandonmckinnon836 3 года назад +16

      history or archeological history should be viewed via Science not politics or ethnocentric interpretations.

    • @MELUCHIDANCER
      @MELUCHIDANCER 3 года назад +34

      The Olmecs were West African. The FACT is EVERY ethnicity is a genetic offshoot of Afro-ethnic people.
      Look up the Melanesians of Indonesia. They are full Afro-ethnic people with blonde hair and sometimes blue eyes. Their hair comes in wavy, straight and curly textures. And they aren't even mixed with Caucasians.
      The same goes for the Warlpiri people of Australia. Also, look up the Sans people of South Africa, the true ancestors of Asian people. This is genetics 101.
      Look at Dr. Keith Cheng's research on pigmentation and genetics in relation to human beings and animals.
      www.scienceintheclassroom.org/research-papers/golden-fish-reveals-pigmentation-loss-europeans
      ruclips.net/video/P7vkHAgIkQA/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/YVOGpkSRiS8/видео.html
      www.raceandhistory.com/historicalviews/ancientamerica.htm

    • @seann8293
      @seann8293 3 года назад +24

      @@brandonmckinnon836 Your statement is the kind that only pops up when anything glorious, advanced, or original in humanity and the history of links or pertains to Black people (or, in general, any humans but White people). Thus, for example, no mention of the Blackness of Egypt and its original Black history, even to the extend of busting African noses of pharaohs and sphinxes, attributing Egyptian/African knowledge to Grecs who studied in Africa (e.g. Pythagoras and etc.). "If it walks and quacks like a duck, it is a duck" (i.e., the Olmecs were UNQUESTIONABLY African Blacks!!!).

    • @brandonmckinnon836
      @brandonmckinnon836 3 года назад +5

      @@seann8293 To be clear, i lean toward the potential that the they were ACTUALLY black. But my previous statement stands in agreement that science determines facts and our personal bias, and ethnocentric views shouldn’t cloud our judgment. Science not bias. To make any assumption or theory based on bias or politics is exactly why women and people of color have been sidelined by historians. My personal belief that they might have been black, wasn’t fully supported by what i saw in the vid. No walking, no quacking. Just an ancient carving of a possible duck, so it might be, i agree. The adage cited by the previous commentator PHENOTYPE does not equal genotype is a near scientific axiom, and trumps the duck.
      If there are better vids that argue the African origin theory , i’d be happy to watch. 👍. But to deny Native Americans the credit on unfounded, or shaky evidence is unfair.

    • @brandonmckinnon836
      @brandonmckinnon836 3 года назад +2

      @@MELUCHIDANCER sound arguments, particularly in a grand evolutionary sense. I like that👍 though i would stray way from phenotypic descriptions and lean toward genetic profiles. it would be fascinating to test these groups and discover their migration paths.

  • @sherrywallis7718
    @sherrywallis7718 2 года назад +61

    The city of Houston was loaned an Olmec head. I remember being amazed at it as it stood in front of the Museum of Fine Art. Sometimes, flowers and offerings were left there. Eventually, it was returned. I miss seeing it still.

    • @ddgddg7918
      @ddgddg7918 Год назад

      Wow. When was that? I would have liked to see it.

    • @sherrywallis7718
      @sherrywallis7718 Год назад +1

      @@ddgddg7918 I think it was in the late 1950s or early 60s. They've been gone for a long time.

    • @tesmith47
      @tesmith47 Год назад +3

      I saw that head ! I was shocked that it looked pretty strongly African to me!

    • @mr.motivation3797
      @mr.motivation3797 Год назад +12

      ​@@tesmith47 they would if you dont know many Natives or Mexicans. Black people are not the only ones with large noses and lips and not all black people have larger noses and lips. I know plenty of people in Texas that resemble those statues and they are not African at all. I actually doubt they are African. 2 reasons. Informed, educated Africans were near Egypt. The rest were and in many cases still are exactly as they were then. Simple minded people that build and do very little in the way of innovative or technologically advanced construction. So it's doubtful they are African. Have a good day. 🙌🏼

    • @tesmith47
      @tesmith47 Год назад

      @@mr.motivation3797 you do know the early progenitors of western civilization, Greeks, sent their children to African university's for advanced studies, , greater Zimbabwe is still there, and the library was old ,before there was any European civilization. Get better educated

  • @SyriusStarMultimedia
    @SyriusStarMultimedia 3 года назад +24

    I like how you asked questions for me that I didn’t know I wanted to ask or have answers to! Great video!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +3

      Thank you!

    • @lorriebrown1243
      @lorriebrown1243 2 года назад

      His assertions or am answers were biased. Watch this video that speaks of the Olmecs from an objective perspective based upon thorough research:
      ruclips.net/video/K-FG2oWl-2k/видео.html

  • @jeannieves6275
    @jeannieves6275 Год назад +3

    We’re incredible

  • @hackermusic3355
    @hackermusic3355 3 года назад +13

    The main problem I always had with theories of transatlantic contact is wheels weren't used in the Americas.
    If I were to visit a place where people were dragging things around the first thing I would do is say, Hey bud, let me show you how to make that easier.

    • @hackermusic3355
      @hackermusic3355 3 года назад +6

      @@jhowblackman There are plenty of uses for the concept of a wheel that have nothing to do with animals. The most obvious is the potter's wheel because that was actually used for a long time before somebody thought of using the concept for moving objects. Another is rollers.

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 3 года назад +9

      @@hackermusic3355 technically they did have the wheel, as reflected in toys. However I do like your point.

    • @hackermusic3355
      @hackermusic3355 3 года назад +1

      @@macarde10 Yeah, hard to figure why somebody didn't put two and two together with the toys and bigger uses. Then again I feel pretty sure I wouldn't have even figured out that the seasons were a cyclical thing. :)

    • @mfun503
      @mfun503 3 года назад

      @@hackermusic3355 probably because they didn't need them. They clearly figured out better ways to transport things. They certainly weren't dumb and I'm sure if they would have needed them, they would have made things with wheels.

    • @salaialexander7022
      @salaialexander7022 2 года назад +3

      The aztecs and mayan had wheeled toys. Investing the wheel and axel independently from the rest of the world. Not only that, but their calendar incorporated cogged wheels..SMH, prior to eastern contact

  • @TonyfromTO
    @TonyfromTO 3 года назад +365

    The place of the olmecs, would be olman, olman is where olmecs would be from. Not olmen. Aztecs are from aztlan.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +123

      Just confirmed. You are correct! That's my mistake. Thank you for pointing it out!

    • @TonyfromTO
      @TonyfromTO 3 года назад +64

      @@AncientAmericas thank you!

    • @rodneyholley8875
      @rodneyholley8875 3 года назад +82

      The Caucasian race ain’t but six thousand years old We walked the earth for millions of years years before any other race came about. Every continent they went to they found us already there. I do my research. Proof is in the pudding. There is no other race that look like us. Look up the definition of American in the 1828 Webster dictionary. Look in all the old dictionary and books. The diary and other proof. We were already here in America and all over the earth. Do you think I am going to believe my oppressor the one who gave me white Jesus

    • @TonyfromTO
      @TonyfromTO 3 года назад +131

      @@rodneyholley8875 actually many different genetics look just like you, caucasian phenotypes may only be 6000 years old but their ancestors were wandering Eurasia, perhaps Africa from much longer, blondism means nothing more than northern efficiency at absorbing vitamin d. Native americans and eurasians are the ice age people. Africa did not have sheets of ice. Thats about the biggest difference. Looking the same does not promise kinship. Same with culture, aztec and mayan are as different as french and chinese

    • @kiinyuum8001
      @kiinyuum8001 3 года назад +7

      Olmecs come from Olomega, El Salvador where 4 tribes from Chile arrived 12 thousand years ago.

  • @blankface5052
    @blankface5052 Год назад +9

    It makes me so angry when afrocentrists deny Olmec history

    • @adolforuiz6031
      @adolforuiz6031 Год назад +1

      2018, mitochondrial DNA study carried out on Olmec remains, one from San Lorenzo and the other from Loma del Zapote, resulted, in both cases, in the “unequivocal presence of the distinctive mutations of the “A” maternal lineage. That is, the origin of the Olmecs is not in Africa but in America, since they share the most abundant of the five mitochondrial haplogroups characteristic of the indigenous populations of our continent: A, B, C, D and X.not african 🤭💯💯 Afrocentrics getting a tantrum over the false fairy tales they were told 😉😉😉

    • @DrippyChipNick
      @DrippyChipNick 10 месяцев назад

      Seems like something silly to get mad over

    • @blankface5052
      @blankface5052 10 месяцев назад

      @@DrippyChipNick afrocentrists actively deny the heritage and histories of millions of people, maybe even upwards of a billion if you include all of Latin America. From Beethoven to Cleopatra to the ancestry of native Americans, they actively deny so much. It’s something to be mad about

  • @ta-setiwarrior1848
    @ta-setiwarrior1848 3 года назад +57

    They knew about this since 1865 but national geographic refusal to publish the findings.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +8

      Hey, if the evidence is out there, go out and publish it. Your academic career would be set for life!

    • @treasurehuntingnewyork5979
      @treasurehuntingnewyork5979 3 года назад +12

      @@AncientAmericas yea see that’s the thing anyone can publish almost anything but to be considered academic it would have to be peer to peer reviewed by experts in the field and deemed as fact or theory this is the main issue in modern archaeology and anthropology for example esteemed expert a who has spent a career of tryin to prove one point on a certain topic might not approve of expert b who has evidence that disputes there claims

    • @PatheticHero
      @PatheticHero 3 года назад +6

      @@AncientAmericas You are being naive. There is constant infighting by academics, and often all evidence be damned. In the end it becomes the politics of tiny Napoleons, whorish little people who seek support from their wealthy overlords.

    • @digoravas1986
      @digoravas1986 3 года назад +1

      We are in the age of Aquarius...if u know u know

    • @gregorybrooks1888
      @gregorybrooks1888 3 года назад +1

      @@AncientAmericas The evidence is out there, as is the truth as stated by Scully and Mulder. The question is, do you have the power of discernment to understand it, if you see and read it ?

  • @ruthnovena40
    @ruthnovena40 3 года назад +26

    This was most interesting, we may never know what they called themselves. but one can see the influence.Each group adding another layer that became the whole.

    • @trueprofit724
      @trueprofit724 3 года назад

      I dig that

    • @origineeman6421
      @origineeman6421 3 года назад

      They were most likely called "The Guardians of Earth" in their ancient language.

    • @iansahleen1173
      @iansahleen1173 3 года назад

      Reminds me of how we may never know what certain Greek and Chinese civilizations called themselves

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe 3 года назад

      - Hey hey hey. Don't swear. We're werejaguars, not Swear-Jaguars. What are we?
      - Werejaguars, not Swear-Jaguars.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад +1

      excuse me we definitely know what we called our self Gods and we will reclaim our throne

  • @JJGuccione
    @JJGuccione 2 года назад +5

    Your personal observation on chocolate was spot-on!

  • @misspat7555
    @misspat7555 11 месяцев назад +7

    I am curious regarding the possibility that ancient Africans managed to cross the Atlantic; South America and Africa are after all much closer together than Europe and North America, and the south Atlantic currents would have helped with the trip. The voyage may not have been taken frequently, but even taken occasionally, may help explain some archaeological finds (the African-featured heads, identical metal alloys, the better survival of indigenous Americans in that area compared to more distant areas upon exposure to Old World diseases…), and also Columbus’s certainty that land could be found by sailing west.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  11 месяцев назад +7

      It's entirely possible that someone could have made that trip intentionally or unintentionally. However, the evidence of a sustained contact and exchange between both continents from that time period is lacking.

    • @misspat7555
      @misspat7555 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@AncientAmericas Perhaps best to think of the Atlantic crossing as something few people would do once, in either direction, and even fewer would do twice. It remained a risky prospect even in American colonial times, nevermind pre-history! 😬

    • @africantruth2539
      @africantruth2539 5 месяцев назад

      Africans were the first human beings on earth and spread out to the rest of the world. They crossed the ocean to Australia and became the Aborigines. This happened for about 120.000 - 130.000 years ago. The distance to Mexico is not farther than that. Native Americans said they inhabited America for 13.000 years ago. However, Scientist say this continent may already been settled for 33.000 years ago by Africans. It is a hot political stuff. Therefore, scientists are reluctant regarding the African originality.

    • @vamoneygroup
      @vamoneygroup 5 месяцев назад

      ​​@@AncientAmericasyou seem to not understand the difference between fact and speculation. The original commenter is speculating. You discredit his opinion with further speculation phrased as insight which you do not have. Im not a race warrior but ive notice that this is something that Europeans and jews do. They dominate conversations entirely with the credibility given by positions and titles but not with anything that can be scientifically proven as fact.

    • @ashlouw5350
      @ashlouw5350 5 месяцев назад +1

      Have you ever heard of Mansa Abubakari 2nd from the great Kingdom of Mali... He was quite the explorer..Apparently he built 2000 fleets of ships which sailed the Atlantic. Some of them landed in the Americas before Columbus, others landed else where and some went back home. Lol..so Africans that were explorers and seafarers weren't impossible.

  • @TheBullethead
    @TheBullethead 2 года назад +9

    The Olmec being the "Mother Culture" of Mesoamerica is indeed the received wisdom from decades past but that view, I think, is changing. Sure, they had definite and significant influence but more recent discoveries have shown they were just one of several contemporary cultures in the region, all of which had some influence on later civilizations. It was rather a shock to me to read this as I'd been raised thinking it was the Olmec alone, but there it is, and this implies that the ideas originally attributed solely to the Olmec, but which now seem to have been fairly common in their day, go back even further in the cultural history of Mesoamerica. Which is even cooler, because it shows just how old those shared cultural traits are, and we have yet to find the true "mother culture".. Arguably, Oaxacan civilization had a bigger influence on the Pre-Classic Maya than the Olmec. See _The Origins of the Maya States_ by Traxler and Sharer. And the Pre-Classic seems to have been the height of the Maya culture, even if they didn't go so much into writing things down.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +2

      Yeah, this was one of my first videos and I really wish I could go back and redo it.

    • @venconmige
      @venconmige 2 года назад

      The issue with archeology is that , the oldest thing found is chosen as the first, instead of just acknowledging its at LEAST that old. Who knows what else has not been found under cities and towns etc

    • @venconmige
      @venconmige 2 года назад

      Let me know what updated booms I should be reading

    • @TheBullethead
      @TheBullethead 2 года назад +1

      @@venconmige As stated above, _The Origins of the Maya States_ by Traxler and Sharer is a good place to start.

    • @lorriebrown1243
      @lorriebrown1243 2 года назад +1

      I appreciate your objective approach and thought process surrounding these new discoveries of our shared past. Although we may be prohibited culturally from agreeing...Watch this video that speaks of the Olmecs from an objective perspective based upon thorough research:
      ruclips.net/video/K-FG2oWl-2k/видео.html

  • @commodoreallen8970
    @commodoreallen8970 3 года назад +28

    Correction: the captain of winning team of ball game was killed/sacrificed. Not the losing team’s captain. The losing team captain killed the winning team captain so the winner could ascend to the other side easier than a natural death...so to speak. Learned this while on tour of Chichen Itza recently.

    • @rabioramos1796
      @rabioramos1796 Год назад +2

      No logic behind that thank god Spaniards arrived

    • @os8527
      @os8527 Год назад

      This channel doesn't like being corrected so please watch your step...... Anything that doesn't follow "the narrative" is a conspiracy theory....

    • @CausticSpace
      @CausticSpace 11 месяцев назад

      @@rabioramos1796 The Spaniards believe if you don't follow their god that you will be condemned to eternity in hell, and that anyone with a different God must be killed or converted. Where is the logic in that?

  • @bruzavich5242
    @bruzavich5242 3 года назад +32

    Started with one video ended up watching all you have to offer. Absolutely wonderful content. Thank you for your work.

  • @georgecuyler7563
    @georgecuyler7563 2 года назад +15

    Our ancestors traveled, not only Turtle Islanders but people of the old world. We traded with one and all. From the Arctic to the Antarctica on Turtle Island. That was told to me by a Dakota Elder of which I was related to through marriage. He said that is why some of the Dakota's look like me of the West Coast of Canada. When I first met my brother in law I told my wife he reminded of my uncle George James of the Kwakiutl nation. I'm Heiltsuk (hey-sook) and Nu7lhalk nation's.

    • @lorrenaelliott161
      @lorrenaelliott161 Год назад

      This is backed up by the findings at Quintana Roo near Tulum in Yucatan Peninsula.... 4 archaelogical discoveries that shows the bodies are closer to genetically being from 'Greenland or Alaska... 2020 research conclusion - America had startling biological
      diversity

    • @roblogs7168
      @roblogs7168 Год назад

      Could you elaborate my brother I’m learning about my culture and from what I have learn so far including my dna we are Decadent of Toltec and speak nawat which is a form of Nahuatl. Now I spoke to gentleman he was frol Florida I forgot his tribe but he spoke about it with me and told me about the connection from north to Central America

    • @georgecuyler7563
      @georgecuyler7563 Год назад +3

      @RoBlogs we used longboats with sails above and below our boats. We traveled the oceans to many of the pacific islands including Japan, New Zealand and the Philippines. They also came across to trade with us. On the Atlantic side the stories are the same, trading with Africa

  • @BHeisler59
    @BHeisler59 3 года назад +16

    People in Guatemala today can be found to have these facial features. Perhaps the part about rubber is key. We use rubber bladders in footballs and basketballs and soccer balls today and if we vanished and all these items were all that was found later then the wizards of smart of that later era would deduce we were heavily into sports. Having no idea that we used the material for gaskets, latex molds to make wonderful castings and we even tuck rubber away on boats and metal warships so when our iron age technology begins to sink beneath the waves, we can put on a rubber life jacket and get into a rubber raft. In fact, I can't think of a more important item back in the day of mythical deluge(s). Who knows, once realizing rubber is less dense than water whereby it floats, they may have taken it to the next level.

    • @judaprinxbeatz.8008
      @judaprinxbeatz.8008 3 года назад +3

      "We use rubber bladders in footballs and basketballs and soccer balls" NOW IMAGINE THE PEOPLE WHO DOMINATES EACH OF THEM SPORTS LMAO YES, PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT. HINT: THEY ARE THE ORIGINAL PEOPLES OF THE AMERICA'S. A SECRET THE BIGOTS and RACIST HATES TO ADMIT SO INSTEAD THEY WILL TELL THE SIMPLE MINDED PEOPLE. THE ANCIENT AMERICANS ARE NOT OF AFRICAN DESCENT. EVEN THO THE OLDEST HUMANS ON THE PLANET ARE AFRICANS lol

    • @78yoda7800
      @78yoda7800 3 года назад +4

      @@judaprinxbeatz.8008 we wuz kangs n shiit

    • @manifest_bot3162
      @manifest_bot3162 3 года назад +3

      @@judaprinxbeatz.8008 schizophrenic boi

  • @georgeachimbi4692
    @georgeachimbi4692 Год назад +3

    Bravo!! Really well researched and presented. Only thing that continues to bother me is why I can’t find well researched videos like this calling out those that continue to claim that the ancient Egyptian civilization is not African.

  • @Sandwiches-bo8xo
    @Sandwiches-bo8xo 2 года назад +10

    I’ve actually been to chalcatzingo very beautiful. the monuments and scenery there are gorgeous.

  • @rickecheverria8052
    @rickecheverria8052 3 года назад +28

    I never could understand when discussing Olmec calendars you guys keep showing the Aztec Sun Stone...

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +17

      Yeah, that is a spot on observation. In retrospect, I wish I hadn't used that as a visual because the sun stone is not a calendar. Oh well...

    • @patriciademekpe5522
      @patriciademekpe5522 3 года назад +2

      Racism

    • @judaprinxbeatz.8008
      @judaprinxbeatz.8008 3 года назад +5

      A BUNCH OF CONFUSED AND MISEDUCATED PEOPLE LMAO AWHOLE VIDEO ON OPINIONS, NO SOURCES NOR FACTS LOL ALSO DENIAL AS WELL LOL

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад

      exactly sir do you know why because if you don't have melanin please search stay out of the Sun as you have noticed they have been spraying stem trails into the atmosphere trying to block out the Sun won't be long now sir I'll see you in the underground city or a banded cave most likely the mall.

    • @disprogreavette8545
      @disprogreavette8545 3 года назад +4

      @@davidtyson6869 the brothers yo, the original culture vultures pretending to everything from the Samurai to first nations of the Americas to European Royalty.

  • @bosse641
    @bosse641 Год назад +7

    Their stone art is amazing.

  • @adriancano3991
    @adriancano3991 Год назад +11

    I worked with a Mexican about 15 years ago. When I looked at him I knew he was a descendent of the Olmecs. Fat lips and I mean huge lips, fat nose, and Indian Hair. His ancestors come from South Mexico he explained. I believe him

    • @Blue-v1h
      @Blue-v1h 7 месяцев назад

      And their genes came from Africa

    • @vamoneygroup
      @vamoneygroup 5 месяцев назад

      A lot of people in South Mexico are from other places like Honduras or Cuba.

  • @mrniceguy7168
    @mrniceguy7168 3 года назад +13

    4:59 that is an awesome little sculpture

  • @nicolasgamble3980
    @nicolasgamble3980 2 года назад +4

    You're teaching me more then my school ever did on this subject

  • @intractablemaskvpmGy
    @intractablemaskvpmGy 2 года назад +27

    Fascinating! The history of the Americas and human civilization has been oft overlooked and downplayed. Regardless, there is a rich and complicated history there/here.. The Olmec's also seemed to be fond of carving spheres of all sizes and they left them all over the place. Some of them are simply enormous yet perfectly carved spheres. We don't know how they managed it as carving a perfect sphere from stone is quite difficult for us, even.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +1

      Thank you!

    • @lorriebrown1243
      @lorriebrown1243 2 года назад

      Watch this video that speaks of the Olmecs from an objective perspective based upon thorough research:
      ruclips.net/video/K-FG2oWl-2k/видео.html

    • @kalprao
      @kalprao Год назад +14

      @@lorriebrown1243 The Olmecs were not Africans, and no, they did not have contact or any kind of influence coming from the continent of Africa. The author of this video has read those papers or "research's" like "they came before Columbus" and others, and he states that "They were painful to read"... I don't understand the fascination with Africa in the Americas first, why do people believe such nonsense?
      The continent of Africa and it's people have a rich and colorful history of their own! there's no need to exaggerated and invent outlandish theories/stories of "African's in the Americas", when you can indulge and be proud of the history that came from the home land of Africa itself and their closest neighbors in the North and East... But the West before Columbus? it's all fairy tales.

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Год назад +2

      @@kalprao No need to avoid truth either. Romans borrowed heavily from the Greeks but I don't see any Italians offended by that fact.

    • @kalprao
      @kalprao Год назад +11

      @@tedolphbundler724 That has nothing to do with the Olmecs and the Africans. The Romans and the Greeks occupied the same region, so they were bound to have influence each other, heck, the Moore's influenced much of Europe and they were African. That I can believe and it's a fact because they are literally nextdoor to Europe... But the Americas? Nah bro. That's another story.

  • @ابنعناقه
    @ابنعناقه 28 дней назад

    Bravo! This ancient history documentary covers so much ground in such a captivating way.

  • @6471917
    @6471917 3 года назад +4

    I laughed at that joke about the Africans not taking chocolate back to Africa. I gotta be the nerd here though: chocolate was not consumed in the same way as in modern times. Mesoamericans consumed chocolate in the form of a drink which was usually mixed with chilli and even maize. I don't know what it was called, but even the Aztec Emperor over a millennium later was drinking it. In fact, in Tabasco (the heartland of the Olmecs and where I'm from) a VERY popular drink called "pozol" is made precisely from chocolate powder, water and grounded maize, and sometimes sugar.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +4

      Glad to hear someone appreciated the joke! And yes, you are 100% correct on how chocolate was consumed. Someday I'll do an episode on chocolate and we can all experience that history in its full delicious glory.

  • @DaimonAnimations
    @DaimonAnimations Год назад +22

    What is the most impressive thing is, Meso American cultures did not depend on the Sumerians or Egyptians, they developed on their own (most likely) since they were separated by the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean.
    However it is intriguing that the art style and architecture is very similar to the Egyptians and/or Indonesians.

    • @teddyjackson1902
      @teddyjackson1902 Год назад +1

      Most impressive thing is they never invented the wheel.

    • @enrique6001
      @enrique6001 Год назад +21

      @@teddyjackson1902 They knew about the wheel but there was not a real use for it, they geographic place was not wheel friendly and didn't have work animals. The only use they had for the wheel was in toys

    • @teddyjackson1902
      @teddyjackson1902 Год назад +1

      @@enrique6001 nah, they didn’t invent the wheel and to the contrary of your bizarre assertion they had very nice roads.

    • @herbertthepervert9129
      @herbertthepervert9129 Год назад

      @@teddyjackson1902 The Ancient Egyptians didn't have a wheel until the middle kingdom around 1,500 BC when it was introduced by invading peoples from the middle east. The great Pyramids of Egypt were built during the old kingdom around 2,700 BC before the wheel was introduced in Egypt. The ancient Celts, Germanics, and Slavic tribes of Europe had the wheel but they didn't build any architecture that was on the same level as that of the Mayans, Aztecs, and other Meso-American civilizations. The Wheel is an overrated invention pushed by eurocentric white supremacists.

    • @teddyjackson1902
      @teddyjackson1902 Год назад

      @@herbertthepervert9129 lmao, kid the Aztecs didn’t last but a few centuries. The Egyptians and Aztecs had slaving civilizations in geographic regions with optimal climates. There’s nothing white supremacist about the wheel unless you recognize it’s a peak technology and give white people credit for its invention because they’re superior. By the way, the people’s of Egypt, Europe, Asia and the Americas came out of the same migratory branch in southern India. The Egyptians were a group of humans that took a left out of India and the Western Europeans went a little further north before hanging a left. It’s a human story that racists like yourself who seem hung up on nonsense don’t seem to understand. Europeans and the ancient Egyptians/Phoenicians/Canaanites/Persians are from the same genetic stock.
      You ever wonder why you’re mad at history and why you feel the impulse to invent strange and illogical fictional narratives in your head? Is it self loathing?

  • @zombiehunter5923
    @zombiehunter5923 3 года назад +10

    Thank you we really need to decipher those ancient olmec tablets

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад +1

      no we don't have to do anything just sit back and watch the sun do his job they better find a cave or a underground city the government has built many of them they are preparing have you not noticed the stem Trail this being sprayed into the clouds in to be at the sphere trying to block out the Sun no melanin goodbye

    • @katelawyer3689
      @katelawyer3689 2 года назад

      @@davidtyson6869 what is wrong with you

  • @johannesswillery7855
    @johannesswillery7855 7 месяцев назад +5

    Come on man, that could be Jim Brown!

  • @johnnyhenry7065
    @johnnyhenry7065 2 года назад +12

    Thank you for sharing this wonderful message on our history. The Olmec were a very intelligent and creative people with a purpose and destiny.

  • @caoyuann
    @caoyuann 2 года назад +5

    I love your channel! I'm obsessed with Mesoamerica and your videos are so interesting!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад

      Thank you!

    • @caoyuann
      @caoyuann 2 года назад

      @@AncientAmericas No problem! I can't wait to see where this channel goes!

  • @fireworksfactoryshow
    @fireworksfactoryshow 3 года назад +5

    Great video! For all of you D&D 5E DM nerds out there I am running The Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan adventure and I would highly recommend using this video as a resource. Without spoiling anything many topics discussed here make an appearance in the game.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +1

      Thank you!

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад

      who are you what are you where are you from and why are you here on this Earth Hunter and gatherer

  • @TheAnonymousDoctor-cw6bg
    @TheAnonymousDoctor-cw6bg 3 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for this video! It's beautiful!! You are saving millions of people!

  • @user-mp3eq6ir5b
    @user-mp3eq6ir5b 3 года назад +6

    These heads are the Hero Twins, Hun Batz & Hun Ahpu, who were tricked by the Lords of Death and their Decapitated Heads used in the Sacred Ball Game.
    One of the heads was found by a young woman. The head spoke to her then impregnated her by spitting in the palm of her hand.
    She gave birth to Twins, who then tricked the Lords of Death at their own Game.
    Read the Maya Book, the Pop Wuj.

  • @Bshipbuilder
    @Bshipbuilder 3 года назад +11

    Great content! Have always been most curious about the Olmec.

  • @goldplatealuminum1102
    @goldplatealuminum1102 2 года назад +9

    Some genetic analysis found that native Americans had closer relations to one ethnic Russian population in Siberia. It makes sense by crossing through Alaska towards the south.

    • @chitown-dallasmain5586
      @chitown-dallasmain5586 2 года назад +2

      Stop with the bs

    • @facade538
      @facade538 2 года назад +4

      If you want to see the Olmec head removed from a Juneteenth mural that is appropriating Native American history search for petition titled: "Remove the Olmec from the Heart of Hyde Park Mural in Los Angeles, CA"

  • @renelopez8227
    @renelopez8227 Год назад +2

    I think I might have an actual Olmec relic in my home. My house was originally owned by a mining engineer who worked at mines across Mexico in the 1920's. Tucked away in an old wooden drawer in my closet, wrapped in mid century newspaper; was 6 red beans (or seeds) and a small stone Olmec face that seems like it was chipped off a wall

  • @robswright68
    @robswright68 3 года назад +8

    I don't know how I missed this episode. Gotta love the Olmec.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад +1

      I'm like to thank you for loving me and my people the truth is out now and they could no longer live a stolen identity

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 3 года назад

      thank you we are still here we are coming out of psychological Wolfie of slavery and we as black people one day we'll return to our true identity and all others who try to apologize however nature the Sun the universe the Galaxy will exterminate them all

  • @ZeusMcKraken
    @ZeusMcKraken 3 года назад +8

    This video is superb. Have always loved the Olmec.

  • @saulledesmap-n-sanemas
    @saulledesmap-n-sanemas Год назад +2

    This is dope!! I’ve been passing this video up for a year or two..
    I’ve had it saved in my Watch Later..
    Glad I started it.. 9:15

  • @littlerock8926
    @littlerock8926 3 года назад +21

    This is a great video and really enjoyed it. I started reading comments and this "racism" statements are overly insane. Doesn't people realize they are trying to steal another culture by claiming it as their own? Eating tacos or Chinese food is not cultural appropriation, but that definitely is. Also, there is one commenter dead set on being the foremost knowledge of anything and to prove him wrong, you have to find scientific papers, written by an author he agrees with. He is not totally wrong, just really rude in any thought or ideals that have not already been "proven" or accepted.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +11

      Thank you. Don't worry, I really don't lose any sleep over the comments.

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 3 года назад +6

      No worries Little Rock, ill continue to point out the weaknesses of those claims, enjoy:)

    • @frootbars3781
      @frootbars3781 3 года назад +7

      @@AncientAmericas these comments are crazy, have had so many arguments with these people and their crazy conspiracy theories

  • @jmfn3966
    @jmfn3966 3 года назад +37

    Great video! Thank you for not being afraid of including the "conspiracy theories." Some of those pseudohistories have been gaining traction in recent years. It's been painful. You got a new subscriber! :)

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +8

      Thank you!

    • @msmith82
      @msmith82 2 года назад

      Lmao

    • @gyozakeynsianism
      @gyozakeynsianism 2 года назад +5

      BS history needs to be addressed head on! This video is a great example of a serious minded person doing just that.

    • @nenobrown4189
      @nenobrown4189 2 года назад +8

      @@gyozakeynsianism Ivan Van Sertima was a highly skilled researcher. To dismiss his work as "bs" is very problematic. If someone showed up in the Antebellum South looking like an Olmec head, I think we all know what would have happened to them. The Olmec heads and other Meso-American artifacts suggest two different phenotypes; one is clearly African. Also, Columbus wrote that when he reached Haiti the native people told him that black-skinned people had come from the south and southeast in ships trading in gold-tipped metal spears. I don't think those Africans were the Olmec, but clearly, there was an African presence in the Americas. It is staggering that the obvious is cavalierly dismissed. And yes this is very Eurocentric. Let's get serious. Egyptians are still depicted as European!

    • @gyozakeynsianism
      @gyozakeynsianism 2 года назад +5

      @@nenobrown4189 It's a load of crap, and your explanation for its not being accepted is a conspiracy theory.
      If you cared about good evidence, we wouldn't be having this conversation.

  • @rockypalacios2494
    @rockypalacios2494 Год назад +4

    Like the Egyptians and Chinese empires the kingdoms of the Olmecs Maya and Aztecs were in different time periods that's why there were different but had a lot of the same foods customs and living places

  • @robber233
    @robber233 5 месяцев назад +1

    Olmec ruling class debate:
    Man 1: I'm just saying...I think 3 stone heads by the front gates is enough.
    Man 2: But, if we had a fourth one, we could move one over and have 2 on each side!
    Man 1: Look, I get the idea of symmetry, but these heads aren't easy to move. And we need the sculptors to help make the new tomb.
    Man 2: ...But imagine a fourth head though.
    jokes aside very fascinating civilization, good video.

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo 3 года назад +6

    This was a great video!

  • @hollybyrd6186
    @hollybyrd6186 2 года назад +16

    I remember spending five minutes on ancient America s in AP world history. My America history class like to think nothing happen before Columbus. So this was very informative.

  • @sonarbangla8711
    @sonarbangla8711 3 года назад +6

    The African theory cannot be ignored. It is quite possible that Egyptians sailing to the west coast of Africa, where fishermen might have ventured into the Atlantic and into the gulf of Mexico and played overlords to the natives spreading whatever of civilization they learned from the Egyptians to the Maya, Aztecs etc.

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 3 года назад +2

      It isn’t ignored. It’s been debunked and rejected.

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 3 года назад +2

      @@MCfact1827 were they actually true, his 2000 ships would have brought disease with them. We’re it actually true, those men on 2000 ships, would have spread their genes around. “Where armies go genes flow.” Where it actually true they would have left behind something. Nope, not true.

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 3 года назад

      @@MCfact1827 personal speculation? Not at all. Cite the sources that show us the diseases that 2000 ships brought? In Fact show me any studies answering what I mentioned above. 2000 ships and they couldn’t leave behind any genetic material, they must have had issues with their biological processes.

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 3 года назад +1

      @@MCfact1827 so rather than provide actually cite anything, you say, “stop trolling me.” Always the excuse with you.
      personal speculation? Not at all. Cite the sources that show us the diseases that 2000 ships brought? In Fact show me any studies answering what I mentioned above. 2000 ships and they couldn’t leave behind any genetic material, they must have had issues with their biological processes.

    • @juswavvy9634
      @juswavvy9634 3 года назад

      @@MCfact1827 abu did leave his throne with 200 ships to travel the atlantic but its no evidence he ever reached the americas as he was never heard from or seen again

  • @mizkimo466
    @mizkimo466 15 дней назад

    I was eating chocolate when you mentioned that Olmecs introduced us to it and I felt like I was in a movie

  • @6400loser
    @6400loser 3 года назад +9

    The last 5 minutes of this episode were really vital, thank you.

  • @jfk64kennedy95
    @jfk64kennedy95 Год назад +1

    I was working with a Guatemalan immigrant, he was about 45 yrs old, smart, hard worker...I mentioned the Olmecs to him once, and he shut me right down,. "we no talk about..." apparently, the Olmecs were not that nice

  • @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705
    @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705 3 года назад +6

    I commented on another video about a satirical book I read when I was a kid in the late 80's about the origens of the Olmecs. In the book the Olmecs are a family going on vacation from somewhere in Asia to a new land. They get lost or something (I read it more than 30 years ago. Can't remember too many details) in the new land (yes, they crossed over the Bering Strait). It's a guided tour, they are left behind. In the book the dad gets stung by something and his head gets extremely big. Like I said it was a satirical book. I read it in Spanish.

    • @lorriebrown1243
      @lorriebrown1243 2 года назад +1

      Why is it believable that Asians could have traveled to the Americas but not Africans? It's relatively the same distance by boat depending on which route taken...Watch this video that speaks of the Olmecs from an objective perspective based upon thorough research:
      ruclips.net/video/K-FG2oWl-2k/видео.html

    • @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705
      @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705 2 года назад +5

      @@lorriebrown1243 well, it's easy because it's easier to get to the Americas thru the Bering Straight from Asia, than Africa thru the Atlantic. I'm not nearly verse on all the hypothesis. So, the study you mentioned may have it's merits.
      On another subject, have you heard the one about Quetzalcoatl perhaps being a European white man?

    • @lorriebrown1243
      @lorriebrown1243 2 года назад

      @@toomanyjstoomanyrs1705 I have not. I'll look into that one

    • @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705
      @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705 2 года назад

      @@lorriebrown1243 Orson Scott Card, hopefully you're familiar with his work. Writer of Ender's Game, one of his best sci-fi works and regarded as a great work all around. Anyway, he wrote Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus. It's an interesting twist on Europe being invaded by the natives of the Americas around the same time he would have tried his voyage to India. Read it about 20 years ago.

    • @lorriebrown1243
      @lorriebrown1243 2 года назад

      @@toomanyjstoomanyrs1705 Thanks for the suggestion

  • @jameslanning8405
    @jameslanning8405 3 года назад +6

    If you notice, on the 'altars,' or 'throans,' down where the carved man sits, above his head is what appears to be a helm or crown. The crowns are different... Could they not represent a tribe of Olmecs?
    Each tribe represented by a chief, each crown with a distinct crown.
    Every carving, while similar, also shows different things, like the size of each of the carved men. And the throans are all sculpted with different patterns and shapes. 'No two are alike.' Just as the carved heads.

  • @InsaneEyes_
    @InsaneEyes_ 5 месяцев назад +1

    20:29 it's interesting because it reminds me of the one Avatar: The Last Airbender episode about the twins that played a ball game, and Aang spun a story about the twins being infants that played said ball game and stayed angry about it until they essentially developed two different cultures. It's probably just a coincidence but I think it's interesting nonetheless!

  • @martinavaslovik3433
    @martinavaslovik3433 2 года назад +6

    A very nicely made and educational video! Thank you very much!

  • @allones3078
    @allones3078 4 года назад +22

    Hope to see more on the andes and hope to see videos on the Mississippian civilization which is often over looked

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  4 года назад +8

      Don't you worry. We're heading north next episode.

    • @sanchezatilano14
      @sanchezatilano14 3 года назад +1

      @@AncientAmericas
      Hey, just a note......i had a friend in Nacadoches, Tx that kept hitting a rock when she would cut her lawn. She finally dug it up and it was an Olmec head sculpture....a bit larger than the size of an average mans fist.....she kept it on her mantle, where i saw it and asked about it.
      That would tell me they traveled and or traded beyond central America...then again, did they nake the head sculptures rhat small orxare they akeays larger?

    • @roscoe4092
      @roscoe4092 3 года назад

      @@sanchezatilano14 they were all over the gulf, everybody seems to forget the pyramids underwater off of Cuba

    • @judaprinxbeatz.8008
      @judaprinxbeatz.8008 3 года назад

      @@roscoe4092 BUILT BY AFRICANS! ANCIENT KEMET "egyptian" ARTIFACTS FOUND ALL AROUND THE AMERICAS ... MEANWHILE IDIOTS WOULD CLAIM ... THEY WERE TRADING WITH THE OLMECS IN THE AMERICAS LMAO WTF

    • @Vastatio
      @Vastatio 2 года назад

      @@judaprinxbeatz.8008 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 delusional 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @Matteus2109
    @Matteus2109 Год назад +2

    I remember the animated tv show "The Search for the Mysterious Cities of Gold" that showed them as being sub-human (as in ape-like) highly technologically advanced civilization.

  • @oskarblonde1
    @oskarblonde1 2 года назад +6

    They weren't africans. Please don't be ignorant.

    • @EA-rc6xc
      @EA-rc6xc Год назад

      You will be proven wrong soon!

    • @PattyFlatz
      @PattyFlatz Месяц назад

      @@EA-rc6xc Well... we're waiting.

    • @EA-rc6xc
      @EA-rc6xc 29 дней назад

      @PattyFlatz Waiti for what? Just know this whiteness is a dying cult in your lifetime.

    • @kingleonvlogs244
      @kingleonvlogs244 26 дней назад

      Don't be blind!!!

    • @oskarblonde1
      @oskarblonde1 25 дней назад

      @@kingleonvlogs244 I am from Mexico, I was born and raised in Mexico. I live in the Huasteca area, I see indigenous people every day, I have friends of direct indigenous I am from Mexico, I was born and raised in Mexico. I live in the Huasteca area, I see indigenous people every day, I have friends of direct indigenous I am from Mexico, I was born and raised in Mexico. I live in the Huasteca area, I see indigenous people every day, I have friends of direct indigenous descent, I have relatives of indigenous descent, and I have relatives of African descent, believe me when I tell you that they are nothing alike. Mexicans are too mixed, those concepts of races for us are empty and useless.

  • @sebastianzep007
    @sebastianzep007 3 года назад +22

    I would like you to talk about the Agustinian Culture, a very ancient civilization in the South of Colombia, with art very similar to the Olmec, in fact, it could be said that they were contemporary. I would appreciate it

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +10

      Wow! I was completely unaware of this! Many thanks for bringing my attention to it. I've added it to my list of future topics. I will say though that Columbian topics pose a difficulty for me because nearly all the literature on those topics is in Spanish. It's very hard to find information in English. Hopefully that won't be the case here though.

    • @-MONTEZUMA
      @-MONTEZUMA 3 года назад +5

      @@AncientAmericas Talk about the Marajoaras and the "Santarém Culture" in northern Brazil too. It's very interesting and raises many questions about forest civilizations.

    • @trueprofit724
      @trueprofit724 3 года назад +4

      @@-MONTEZUMA I just watched a video about tribes in the middle of the Amazon Forest near Colombia...very interesting 👌

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  3 года назад +3

      @@-MONTEZUMA I've actually got marajoara in the lineup already.

    • @NOTTHASAME
      @NOTTHASAME 3 года назад

      @@AncientAmericas
      If you find it in English , it's a lie or has been changed... Fact !

  • @stevenserna910
    @stevenserna910 Год назад +1

    Maize....no, Ma-i'z.
    If wheat is the European staple crop. Maiz (corn) is the New Worlds staple crop. How fortunate for Europeans that wheat, could grow in this hemisphere.
    How fortunate for all of us that we all have corn bread. Delicious. Beans, greens, chicken, chilies, all go great with cornbread. Love it!

  • @DaLostProfit420
    @DaLostProfit420 3 года назад +4

    Want to say... you make very informative videos and I enjoy them a lot very well put together and presented thank you for your hard work and time as many will appreciate them in due time

  • @leesenger3094
    @leesenger3094 3 года назад +38

    Very cool and interesting video! I will tell you something in regards to the stone heads. My Mexican buddy Ernesto is the spitting image of one of the heads! Flat broad nose, thick lips and round as a ball! It is my belief that he is descended directly from the lineage propagated by the "Olmec's"! Thank you for the insights!

    • @jazzytimes2373
      @jazzytimes2373 3 года назад +6

      they look polonese to me or african.

    • @louieDsypo
      @louieDsypo 3 года назад +22

      @@jazzytimes2373 native Americans have polynesian blood , they are 2 waves 1 from siberia the other one from polynesia

    • @jazzytimes2373
      @jazzytimes2373 3 года назад +1

      @@louieDsypo ok thanks ,so thats where the african look comes from the polynesians..im from north indian heritage from persian line.we have a eye for lineage.

    • @louieDsypo
      @louieDsypo 3 года назад +37

      @@jazzytimes2373 i dont see the African at all... native Americans are 20,000+ yrs they developed many languages and civilizations of their own they are not related to Africa

    • @jazzytimes2373
      @jazzytimes2373 3 года назад +7

      @@louieDsypo africans left 70.000 years ago ended up in south india .then 40.000 ago to australia .then mixed with asians making polynesians ,who are olmec ..

  • @chicanx6756
    @chicanx6756 9 месяцев назад +3

    Every one saying those heads look like Asians or Blacks😂😂, Clearly indigenous features, look at Mexican Boxer (Isaac cruz) he looks exactly like those Olmeca heads, and many in southern Mexico and central America do too!

    • @robertbihn3005
      @robertbihn3005 9 месяцев назад

      As an old white dude I saw them as African , I'm changing my mind, as they very well may be Mexican or South American ... thank you

    • @EternalEmperorofZakuul
      @EternalEmperorofZakuul 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@robertbihn3005was it because of the violence and despotism they do in their communities and countries

    • @HawkemCinco
      @HawkemCinco 8 месяцев назад +1

      God will punish you for your ignorance

    • @EternalEmperorofZakuul
      @EternalEmperorofZakuul 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@HawkemCinco lol cope

    • @HawkemCinco
      @HawkemCinco 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@EternalEmperorofZakuul you live your life in a lie you are a victim of the Masonic order of white supremacy 🤡