Karlův most - Stavba pilíře a klenebního pole ve 14. století

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2016
  • 3D grafika a postprodukce: Tomáš Musílek
    Odborná spolupráce: Ing. Arch. Ondřej Šefců
    Grafická spolupráce: Mgr. Zdeněk Mazač
    Více informací o Karlově mostě naleznete na praha-archeologicka.cz/p/212
    Digitální model "Karlův most - stavba pilíře a klenebního pole ve 14. století" byl vytvořen pro projekt virtuální výstavy Praha doby Karla IV. Projekt je podporovaný MK ČR jako součást Národních oslav 700. výročí narození císaře Karla IV. a je zařazen do programu Strategie AV21.

Комментарии • 570

  • @radiothax
    @radiothax 3 года назад +348

    Man, I wish stuff still magically flew together and built itself these days!

    • @alphaspartan
      @alphaspartan 3 года назад +24

      For real, where's the Mage's Guild when you need them. That's some lost knowledge we could desperately use again right now.

    • @thomkeen3507
      @thomkeen3507 3 года назад +37

      I liked the part where they built a crane to move one stone and then remembered they can just magic them into place

    • @chrisgriffith1573
      @chrisgriffith1573 3 года назад +1

      Today, we only have to put the form into place, which is pre fabricated, and dropped into place by a barge then through down rebar and pour the concrete, slurry the inside out, no draining. I imagine it's much faster, and way stronger.

    • @elijahfordsidioticvarietys8770
      @elijahfordsidioticvarietys8770 3 года назад +2

      Goddamn building materials! Building materials have really gone down hill!

    • @tsartomato
      @tsartomato 3 года назад

      send a peasant to swing a hammer at it for a couple of minutes

  • @smallofferings
    @smallofferings 3 года назад +196

    This makes me appreciate just how ingenious and inventive humans can be.

    • @pablo1262
      @pablo1262 3 года назад +21

      European/asian/mideastern humans not Africans who couldn't build 2 story buildings. Native Americans were in the stone age when contacting Euros. Aborigines in Australia were just existing. Not all human civilizations are equal

    • @vinnregi4882
      @vinnregi4882 3 года назад +34

      @@pablo1262 man gtfo with your racist bullshit

    • @videocurcuits
      @videocurcuits 3 года назад +25

      @@pablo1262 your an idiot 1) not all European/Asian/Middle Eastern cultures developed 2 story buildings and Africa isn't a single culture or ethnicity your homogenising a vast array people in an arbitrary way. 2) not all cultures needed to develop two story buildings and excelled in other technologies and advancements the materials they had access to geographically also had different affordances also influencing the types of buildings they developed to solve problems 3) and here is the real kicker Africa has plenty of fantastic ancient 2 story stone buildings from times when Europeans were living in mud huts, Nubian cultures were carving stone from 3800BCE , they and the Egyptians were using trigonometry way before any Europeans. Ethiopia has of course domestic two storey houses called Tukul, multi storey stone churches, ancient places like Dungur, and fortresses like Fasil Ghebbi. Benin Cultures also build two storey domestic structures and large well planed cities. That does not even get to the extensive and monumental Egyptian works. Many of the techniques Europeans later use in architecture and mathematics and language were developed in Africa. There were native American cities and multi storey mud brick and stone architecture across the Americas. The Native Americans in the north were a complex set of cultures, some had been through city state phases and abandoned them due to climate change, Cahokia City near the Mississippi River was substantial example, , traditional Pueblo architecture included multiple story dwellings. If you are going to try and be divisive and racist at last do a bit of rudimentary research and read a few reputable history books that are based on actual archaeology, science. Also try and be critical of your own cultural assumptions about what advancement actually is from an objective point not what you have been conditioned to belive.

    • @pablo1262
      @pablo1262 3 года назад +7

      @@videocurcuits lol ok

    • @pablo1262
      @pablo1262 3 года назад +4

      @@vinnregi4882 did I mention race?

  • @emeraldcity_
    @emeraldcity_ 3 года назад +283

    Who else said, “damn those wood piles in a diamond shape sure looks like a lot of work, nice construction”, only to realize those were just temp forms for the foundations?

    • @monscarmeli
      @monscarmeli 3 года назад +15

      Exactly - and THEN i said "holy cow, how did they just pull those back out again???!!"

    • @brooos
      @brooos 3 года назад +13

      and how did they get those first pilings in before they could built the machine to get the others in?

    • @cvoque
      @cvoque 3 года назад +3

      @@brooos From a boat, I'd assume.

    • @brooos
      @brooos 3 года назад +4

      @@cvoque Yes, but how did they anchor them in the ground to support everything that followed without a pile driver?

    • @cvoque
      @cvoque 3 года назад +4

      @@brooos Pile driver on a boat/barge?

  •  3 года назад +163

    Standing on the shoulders of giants.

  • @TheCymbalProject
    @TheCymbalProject 3 года назад +141

    Very cool demo... I don't even make my bed in the morning lol

  • @crimsama2451
    @crimsama2451 3 года назад +80

    Incredibly insightful video on old technology and building processes. Would love to see more videos on the construction process and maybe other issues surrounding such massive public works projects.

  • @johanstreulens7639
    @johanstreulens7639 3 года назад +52

    Stunning.. Somehow like reaching the moon.. We did this and that. Animation helping out. Most seeing what is left behind.. not ever questioning how it was created..

  • @sverrehu
    @sverrehu 6 лет назад +99

    Thank you! I always wondered how they built those stone bases in the water. Now I know they didn't, they drained the water first. Great video!

  • @bkbj8282
    @bkbj8282 6 лет назад +357

    You Czech people are cool as hell. I miss your beer.

    • @enigma_7772
      @enigma_7772 4 года назад +1

      Zenbun Katatakala doufejem že budem...

    • @NickCMOS
      @NickCMOS 4 года назад +1

      @Zenbun Katatakala true

    • @richardtheedition1003
      @richardtheedition1003 4 года назад +5

      @Zenbun Katatakala ele my vůbec muslimy nezajimamé to co okamura říká se prostě nestane

    • @HybOj
      @HybOj 4 года назад +1

      @@richardtheedition1003 jasne, zustaneme jedinej ostruvek uprostred islamsky evropy... vole, po par desetiletich si sem pro to jen prijdou, pokud nemci, italie, francie a podobný "stány" to nezastaví. A zastavit je to nemozny. Jen krátkozrakost ti muze davat ten pocit jistoty. Na okamuru seru, je to taky idiot... nemame zadnyho normalniho zastánce čr momentalne :X

    • @richardtheedition1003
      @richardtheedition1003 4 года назад +2

      HybOj no tak budeme se chovat přesně jak izrael

  • @bigredc222
    @bigredc222 6 лет назад +30

    The crane powered by men in squirrel cages is brilliant.

  • @TheNumber22
    @TheNumber22 6 лет назад +57

    This was therapeutic to watch.

    • @euroschmau
      @euroschmau 3 года назад

      try this one...ruclips.net/video/b77XFALHNXw/видео.html

  • @MsFoland
    @MsFoland 4 года назад +15

    I've walked this bridge many a time, love it and Prague, thanks for this grand animation:)

  • @arkadiusztrzesniewski4237
    @arkadiusztrzesniewski4237 4 года назад +5

    I have been once in Prague. Seen this bridge. Whole city is absolutely marvelous. So much old architecture to behold. Beautiful old town.

    • @mihokradovan
      @mihokradovan 4 года назад +2

      You sound like a guy from 200 years old "modern australia" that cant believe how deep history the europe has .but you are from poland, one of the most history-rich countries. Im surprised...best wishes

  • @user-rn9hg9qg2z
    @user-rn9hg9qg2z 4 года назад +5

    Який прекрасний Карловий міст! Чудо інженерної думки свого часу.

  • @Bodulik
    @Bodulik 7 лет назад +266

    Pěkná animace a klobouk dolů na umem stavitelů ze 14. století, kteří si s náročností stavby dokázali poradit bez dnešních vymožeností a to ještě k tomu se vší parádou, která se ke Karlovu mostu váže. Dávám like s hvězdičkou ... :).

    • @jurajsemancik2949
      @jurajsemancik2949 6 лет назад +7

      Naši sa staraju o peniaze a potom ich to nezaujima ako dlho vydrži ....

    • @breznik1197
      @breznik1197 5 лет назад +9

      @@PB-zu6bn V roce 2007 byla však publikována hypotéza, podle níž je projektantem a prvním stavitelem mostu kameník a pražský měšťan Oto, zvaný též Otlin.

    •  4 года назад +15

      @@PB-zu6bn Souhlasím s těmi vašimi prvními komentáři, protože Praha byla opravdu zejména německá a většina staveb ve městech a vůbec měst jako takových byla dílem Němců. Ale ten zbytek už zase skoro vypadá, že máte nějaké komplexy vy. Protože nepřiznání žádných zásluh etnickým Čechům až do roku 1850 je přece nesmysl. A to s tím počešťováním křestních jmen se dělalo analogicky i v ostatních zemích. Když Händel odešel do Anglie, tak mu tam říkali George, když Zelenka odešel do Saska, tak mu tam říkali Johann. Není to nějaká výsada Čechů, co by si chtěli přivlastňovat cizince. Kde s vámi opět souhlasím, je ten nesmyslný kontrast mezi vnímáním Němců ze starších dob a Němců v roce 1945.

    • @humakabula6305
      @humakabula6305 4 года назад +3

      @ Naprostý souhlas ten oikofob je zamindrákovaný xenofil

    • @mertinovic
      @mertinovic 4 года назад +3

      @@PB-zu6bn Nějak pletete moderní pojmenování národů a států a historické vnímání identity. Podle vaší logiky byl Baruch Spinoza izraelský filozof, kterého si přivlastňují Holanďané :-)))

  • @WyeExplorer
    @WyeExplorer Год назад +1

    Incredible illustration. And I said, 'now there's a bridge that's going to last several hundred or thousand years plus.' They knew how to build em. Mark

  • @felipeoliveiramusic
    @felipeoliveiramusic 3 года назад +7

    I particularly like how the first piles fall from the sky in their right places in the water. Whoever was up there was very skilled. Great mix of science and religion.

  • @josefvogeltanz2858
    @josefvogeltanz2858 4 года назад +6

    Na příkladu stavby tohoto mostu a také staveb tehdejších katedrál lze snadno pochopit původ svobodného zednářství. Tehdejší stavitelé byli intelektem prostě výše.

  • @mayyryu
    @mayyryu 3 года назад +4

    That would have taken so much hard work! Also, I love how much good vibes the song brings.

  • @jlg395
    @jlg395 6 лет назад +35

    I love everything about this video.

  • @Galejro
    @Galejro 4 года назад +4

    The most amazing thing is that these kinds of bridges were so sturdy they literally supported an extention of the city on them, whole city blocks suspended atop of these things. Modern bridges struggle to support traffic at rush hours.

    • @robertvanderdrift4524
      @robertvanderdrift4524 4 года назад +2

      And these bridges still exist! Look in Erfurt (D) There you have the wonderful Krämerbrücke.
      www.google.com/search?q=erfurt+br%C3%BCcke&oq=erfurt+br%C3%BCcke&aqs=chrome..69i57.12900j0j7&client=ms-android-tmobile-nl&sourceid=chrome-mobile&ie=UTF-8#lkt=LocalPoiPhotos&trex=m_t:lcl_akp,rc_f:,rc_ludocids:17860731413719954313,rc_q:Kr%25C3%25A4merbr%25C3%25BCcke,ru_q:Kr%25C3%25A4merbr%25C3%25BCcke
      Erfurt has more gems to discover though.

  • @vladimirpecha1068
    @vladimirpecha1068 2 года назад +1

    Nádhera! Opravdu působivé.

  • @petr-podrouzek
    @petr-podrouzek 7 лет назад +19

    Krásně udělaný..!! :-)

  • @Generalove2013
    @Generalove2013 5 лет назад +4

    Ačkoli je tato představa o technologii našich předků moc pěkná, rád bych našel pramen, který ji takto popisuje... Pokud vím, tato technika je jasně dokumentovaná teprve u opravy mostu poničeného ledochodem v 1784 roce.
    Domnívám se, že stavba byla prováděna mnohem jednodušší metodou a totiž přímo ve vodě za její nízkého stavu. Mám pro to několik podpůrných argumentů:
    Stavba trvala zhruba 50 let! To by mohlo být zapříčiněno krátkou stavební sezónou.
    Vltava byla před regulací břehů, která začala probíhat v 19. století, širší, ale také mělčí, což při nízkém stavu vody mohlo umožnit založení stavby.
    Základ mostu je založen v maximální hloubce 2,4 m pod říčním dnem. Kamenný poklad je přitom o 7 metrů níž. Pokud naši předkové zvládli složitou techniku výstavby vodotěsné hráze, snad by v dosahu jejich možností bylo i důkladnější vyhloubení základů.
    Je to samozřejmě jen teorie, chci však upozornit, že pro technologii prezentovanou ve videu také nejsou nezvratné důkazy. Budu rád, pokud mě někdo přesvědčí o opaku.

    • @tomasbuchta1312
      @tomasbuchta1312 4 года назад

      Dobře si to napsal,jen mám na tebe dotaz. Když o pár tisíc let,postavili Sfingu a pyramidy,proč by ve čtrnáctém století Naši stavitelè neuměli toto;)

    • @gas4348
      @gas4348 3 года назад

      Tato technologie nebyla pro tuto dobu nikterak neobvyklá a používala se už od dob starých Římanů. Ve středověku ji pouze dokázali uplatnit ve větším měřítku.

  • @welshpete12
    @welshpete12 4 года назад +2

    Nikdy jsem nevěděl, že vytvořit jeden z těchto mostů bylo těžké úsilí a náklady! Děkujeme za zveřejnění příspěvku.
    I never know it was such a hard effort and cost to make one of these bridges ! Thank you for posting .

  • @kege1
    @kege1 3 года назад

    Outstanding! just wonderful! Thank you!

  • @tomasbayer6002
    @tomasbayer6002 6 лет назад +6

    Perfektní animace. Smekám.

  • @CM-dq7fe
    @CM-dq7fe 3 года назад +2

    Prague is such a beautiful and magical city!

  • @carninuz1
    @carninuz1 3 года назад

    This is an incredible window into history! Thank you for sharing

  • @erikziak1249
    @erikziak1249 4 года назад +2

    Pekne animované, technologicky zaujímavé.

  • @leovigild_
    @leovigild_ Год назад +1

    Absolutely fascinating stuff. It's amazing to see how they were able to construct things like this back then. There's an enormous amount of precise work involved in these bridge projects. It's easy to see how it took 45 years to finish!

  • @jimkey920
    @jimkey920 6 лет назад +3

    Fantastic! Thank you.

  • @brill7
    @brill7 4 года назад +3

    Niesamowite. Wszystko wygląda tak prosto, ale pewnie budowa trwała wiele lat.

  • @ivortomana
    @ivortomana 4 года назад +3

    Nádherna animácia, ako oslava ľudskej šikovnosti aj bez zložitých a energeticky náročných strojov....

  • @HarryVerey
    @HarryVerey 3 года назад

    Amazing vid showing the astonishing skill and artistry of the builders all those centuries ago.

  • @southend26
    @southend26 3 года назад

    Amazing. Loved the music

  • @praha-archeologickacz
    @praha-archeologickacz  6 лет назад +6

    Pane Pavle Ligasi,
    podle autorů animace má být smyslem prohnutí mostu jeho "směřování" proti různé síle vltavských proudů, tj. nemělo by se jednat o řešení "nahodilé", ale zcela záměrné a "inženýrsky" funkční. Díky za zájem o naše videa!

  • @Einstein52
    @Einstein52 3 года назад

    Díky za skvělé video. Animace v něm jsou velmi dobré a poskytují dobrý pohled na konstrukci mostu ve středověku. 👍👍👍 Moc děkuji.

  • @vinegarlikeschicken9671
    @vinegarlikeschicken9671 3 года назад

    It's amazing! They didn't even need people to make them! Everything just fell into place perfectly!

  • @kevinclements8749
    @kevinclements8749 6 лет назад +29

    Well that was just delightful

  • @mittensfastpaw
    @mittensfastpaw 3 года назад

    The sheer time and effort to do it this way. Just nuts!

  • @SeVzbudteHolomci
    @SeVzbudteHolomci 4 года назад +1

    Úžasná práce.:)

  • @pavelfischer5072
    @pavelfischer5072 3 года назад

    To je nádhera!

  • @gabrielasuchankova2372
    @gabrielasuchankova2372 6 лет назад +2

    Úžasné! Moc krásná animace. Opravdu obdivuji, co vše dokázali naši předkové postavit, v podmínkách, které si v dnešním světě plném vymožeností ani nedovedeme představit. Klobou dolů. Buďme hrdí na naše památky :-)

  • @robiny9457
    @robiny9457 Год назад

    brilliant. and a lot of hard work and fantastic engineering.

  • @CedyTheMagnificent
    @CedyTheMagnificent 3 года назад

    Fascinating video. This really makes you appreciate the hard work and ingenuity people showed throughout history. Even with their limited technology and tools (by today's standards), these engineers were able to design and build something this grandiose. It took 45 years to complete this bridge - I imagine a worker might have spent their whole career building it and not have lived to see its completion, but once built wonders like these can last for ages. Truly impressive stuff.

  • @khanklatt7261
    @khanklatt7261 3 года назад +15

    There were two details in the video that the level of detail in this animation left unanswered for me. The first is, as some have asked already, how the water from the buckets was removed from the basin. It seems there is a channel that the buckets could pour into; placing a guide on the bottom of the bucket ahead of the one dumping out could direct the bulk of the water into the channel.
    The second is how the original logs were placed that helped build the island supports and support the pile driver. Some of that could have been achieved by waiting for dry seasons, some comments I translated via Google in Czech suggested a diversion strategy (presumably during low water flow, damming or redirecting the water to the portion of the basin not being worked on could work), and a third strategy could be to use a foundation built by stones or rock to support the initial beams until enough of the foundation is built to support the pile-driver approach.
    A final thought was what insights the builders had to be more efficient? I presume that the builders used beasts of burden to lift the piledriver weight(s). Building a set of pulleys could ensure the beasts (mules, oxen, etc.) could continuously walk in a circle and men would reattach/clip the weight(s) to the continuously turning rope so that (nearly) all forward motion of the beasts could be used productively. And hence why I added the (s) to weight; if they used (at least) two of them, while one had just been used to drive the pile down into the river bed, the other weight could be on its way to the top of the frame to be dropped so the oxen just keep moving forward and at any point in time one of the two weights has, or is about to be, lifted into position.
    In any engineering challenge there are the already invented things you can leverage, the things you have to invent as you go to make things work, and the insights you have along the way to speed things up. This video is interesting enough that it stokes one's curiosity to see how they managed.

    • @gr6e
      @gr6e 2 года назад

      A person would take the bucket once it reached the top and dump it into the river before placing it back on the conveyer. I'd reckon a person would be lifting the weights to run the piledriver, too, as there's not really room for beasts of burden to stand or work on the dewatering platform. As for your second question, Grady over at Practical Engineering did a video about dewatering and he touches on some of the techniques used in those days.

  • @ziotom78
    @ziotom78 3 года назад

    Awesome animation! Thanks a lot for having shared it!

  • @MollarCZ
    @MollarCZ 7 лет назад +9

    Super!

  • @yves-noel-mariegonnet1043
    @yves-noel-mariegonnet1043 4 года назад

    Mě to hodně zajímalo! Velmi dobře zdokumentováno. Děkuji!
    Çà m'a beaucoup intéressé! Très bien documenté. Merci!

  • @ninaricciricci
    @ninaricciricci 3 года назад

    Que Construção! Lindo.

  • @miladasebkova4121
    @miladasebkova4121 3 года назад

    Úžasné 👍❣️

  • @negritorican
    @negritorican 6 лет назад +5

    We need more videos like these. This is what the internet was made for! I loved it! So well done!

  • @jaroslavaf338
    @jaroslavaf338 6 лет назад +2

    krásny

  • @martinnovak5398
    @martinnovak5398 6 лет назад +2

    Krása! :-)

  • @dockkkerr
    @dockkkerr 4 года назад

    Замечательная реконструкция!

  • @robertvanderdrift4524
    @robertvanderdrift4524 4 года назад +16

    This really is a wonderful animation!! This explains how they used the technique of building a cofferdam, using cranes and pumps and pumping the site dry. Although I'm very technically inclined, all my life I just considered those bridges to simply "be there" without further thinking about it... How stupid of me!! Therefore thanks again for waking me up from this lazy slumber and posting this fantastic explanation.

    • @JeremyLawrence-imajez
      @JeremyLawrence-imajez 3 года назад +1

      That's a caisson, not a cofferdam. Coffendams are permanent and used as part of structure. Caissons are temporary and removed after construction.

  • @borikkiv
    @borikkiv 3 года назад

    Fantastic, clear and interesting!

  • @Edbup1
    @Edbup1 3 года назад

    What kind of beautiful and awesome!

  • @sergejzr
    @sergejzr 3 года назад

    Wow! Very impressive visualization! Thanks for sharing!

  • @Keys879
    @Keys879 4 года назад +5

    The entire construction of this bridge spanned over 400+ years, from 1432 to after 1890. Incredible.

    • @jlperron4702
      @jlperron4702 4 года назад

      @@magor6496 Yeah I was just gonna say after reading THAT particular comment...the engineer would have been hung if he'd been that slow.

    • @gas4348
      @gas4348 3 года назад +1

      This bridge was already finished in 1432. Construction started on the 9th of July 1357 (at 5:31AM) and lasted only 45 years and not 400+. (Though some construction was happening in 1890s, after two arches collapsed during big flood.)

  • @PalinoCestovatel
    @PalinoCestovatel 4 года назад

    Úžasné video, hneď to pošlem vnúčatám, budú tiež nadšené. Vďaka !

  • @mefistofeles666111
    @mefistofeles666111 6 лет назад +3

    Nádherná animace.

  • @sirskeptic
    @sirskeptic 3 года назад

    That was just beautiful.

  • @ElenaHaskins
    @ElenaHaskins 3 года назад

    Very interesting and beautifully animated. Thank you.

  •  7 лет назад +21

    pěkná grafika :)

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics Год назад

    That's what I'd call real engineering! What a beautiful and clear animation. It's certainly impressive how it was all done, and some of that stuff we still see today in how we build concrete structures. Not to mention that shutting off water and pumping it away is how the Netherlands were made :)

  • @studiokubacz317
    @studiokubacz317 6 лет назад +4

    Hrozně ale hrozně pěkný a ta grafika je taky pěkná 🙋🙋

  • @ROMA--AETERNA
    @ROMA--AETERNA 3 года назад

    Excellent, concise video. This is essentially Ancient Roman bridge construction.

  • @christianaastorp6105
    @christianaastorp6105 3 года назад

    Excellent visualization. Very interesting.

  • @alexandrecharlier1425
    @alexandrecharlier1425 4 года назад

    Mille mercis !

  • @JP__video
    @JP__video 6 лет назад +2

    hezky provedene :)

  • @coreyhughes1456
    @coreyhughes1456 3 года назад

    Looks like a helluva lot of work!

  • @papablopapapablo8123
    @papablopapapablo8123 4 года назад +2

    Praga bonita. ❤️

  • @przemysawwitasik1823
    @przemysawwitasik1823 4 года назад

    SUPER !!!!🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱

  • @treelinehugger
    @treelinehugger 3 года назад +3

    The Charles Bridge is an historic bridge that crosses the Vltava (Moldau) river in Prague, Czech Republic. Construction of the still-standing 600-year-old bridge took a half-century to complete. It was started in 1357 and completed in 1402. Peter Parler (“Petr Parléř” in Czech), the famous German-Czech architect, designed and supervised its construction. The bridge is 564 yards in length and 11 yards wide,

  • @TouchedProductions
    @TouchedProductions 3 года назад

    Fascinating.

  • @ManufacturedLack
    @ManufacturedLack 6 лет назад +3

    Bravo

  • @SeSmokki
    @SeSmokki 4 года назад

    God I miss Prague. Such a beautiful city.

  • @iannickCZ
    @iannickCZ 5 лет назад +14

    Když si představím, že nastupuji jako 16letý tovaryš na stavbu Karlova mostu a ve věku 61let je to hotovo....prostě neuvěřitelné. Taky si myslím, že je to sezonní práce, v zimě se nejspíš nestavělo.

  • @csmaster65
    @csmaster65 4 года назад

    its a great bridge and in a sense we considered this big work

  • @ainsleymoore9390
    @ainsleymoore9390 3 года назад

    Beautiful video!

  • @ladyhistoria002
    @ladyhistoria002 2 года назад

    Strašně dobře udělané, je vidět, že naši předci už byli dávno vykutaní....

  • @HybOj
    @HybOj 4 года назад +1

    Skoro nechápu jak to dokázali... a stoji dodnes. A to vydržel za tu dobu neskutečný věci, povodně, v zimě ledový kry jaký si dnes ani neumime predstavit uz... wow

  • @argelovec6216
    @argelovec6216 4 года назад +2

    Moc pěkná animace

  • @UraFlight
    @UraFlight 3 года назад

    Amazing demo ! They also had a crane that time

  • @Cherb123456
    @Cherb123456 4 года назад

    Fantastic!

  • @tristanchristiansen9054
    @tristanchristiansen9054 3 года назад

    Thank you wonderfully done wishbi could thank you more

  • @luckydude2090
    @luckydude2090 4 года назад +7

    Beautiful bridges, compared to today. I do not believe that they can make such bridges today. .

    • @andrea.pernicova
      @andrea.pernicova 4 года назад +6

      Well they can, but why would you do that.

    • @stlkngyomom
      @stlkngyomom 4 года назад

      Building bridges in 21st century,while utilizing 14th century technology would bankrupt even the folks who didn't epstine Epstine...
      For example search:B1M Norway, and try to imagine time and cost of that project using quarried stone and mortar.It would be astronomical!!!
      Slightly less though,than some would pay Epstein not to testify,but they killed himself.
      Allegedly...

  • @pavelfriedl410
    @pavelfriedl410 6 лет назад +1

    Hmm super.

  • @dronillon2578
    @dronillon2578 4 года назад +1

    Pecka.

  • @sarmadali7191
    @sarmadali7191 3 года назад +6

    People still watching this and commenting on this,this video and THAT MUSIC IS EPIC!

    • @vyomthakkar8209
      @vyomthakkar8209 3 года назад +2

      Ya man I've been trying to find that music since the past few days and still haven't found it

    • @sarmadali7191
      @sarmadali7191 3 года назад +2

      @@vyomthakkar8209 you could shazam it

    • @sarmadali7191
      @sarmadali7191 3 года назад +1

      @@vyomthakkar8209 Did you found it?

    • @vyomthakkar8209
      @vyomthakkar8209 3 года назад

      @@sarmadali7191 nope

    • @jjjeremiahz
      @jjjeremiahz 2 года назад

      I came here to comment about the music! I tried shazam and sound hound with no luck! Does anyone know the song?!? It’s soooo good!

  • @lator1941
    @lator1941 3 года назад

    the music is therapeutic.

  • @gamesmile1440
    @gamesmile1440 4 года назад

    dekuji youtube, potreboval jsem to vedet

  • @ivanstrelar6935
    @ivanstrelar6935 3 года назад

    Brilliant engeenering and presentation

  • @sulista-consulting
    @sulista-consulting 3 года назад

    Iconic bridge in the capital of Czechia 🇨🇿🥰

  • @honkynel
    @honkynel 3 года назад

    Brilliant.

  • @JeroenKransen
    @JeroenKransen 3 года назад

    Thank you! I always wondered how they built bridges without modern technology.

  • @ryansplace2009
    @ryansplace2009 3 года назад

    Very well done!

  • @pavelkubena2479
    @pavelkubena2479 3 года назад +1

    Fun fact: The foundation stone was laid on 1357 July 9 at 5.31 (1357 9/7 5:31) which is a palindromic time - the plaindromes were very symbolic/magical for the society of that time.