Well, nobody knew who that was, so all the players just assumed it was Egypt again and were like "Wtf hax, ban nub!" While the persian player decided to invade and put an end to it.
A very big correction, Cleopatra did learn Egyptian and left Alexandria, she is in fact famous for being the ONLY ONE of her dinasy who did it and for being multilingual (Plutarch said she spoke Siriac, Ethipoian, Median, Parthian Aramaic, Hebrew and South Arabian, basically the most important language of her region) and for saying he was the reincarnation of Isis. She was a pretty intelligent woman, and a political mastermind, who chose a bad ally in Marc Anthony. Marc Anthony was a very good bet, but Octavius was also a political mastermind and played the Roman populus association of Orient with kings very well (and Romans hated kings, that why emperors even they were the fact kings wouldn't called themselves that, specially in the early Imperial period).
2:11 and I'm done. I could let that mistake pass, but saying that no other country gave their opinion of Egypt until it ceased to exist? WTF is this idiot talking about?
Well, it may be referring that when Greeks started to write about Egyptian history (with Herodotus), Egypt had long fallen from its glory day. Before Herodotus, there were not real historians, but that was valid for all civilizations. Historiography did not exist before Herodotus, People compiled lists of Kings and sometimes their most important deeds, but usually it was for official reasons. So it is not weird that Egypt existed before other cultures wrote about them, because no other culture was writing about other cultures, such matters were deemed too trivial to put on paper, unlike lists of kings, treaties or religious texts.
1:57 Cleopatra VII was famously the only Ptolemaic ruler who actually learned the local language. She even travelled around the kingdom, taking part in official ceremonies and festivities and whatnot, something previous Ptolemies often failed to do.
@@homelessjackie I imagine your comment pertains to word-play (or better yet, name-play). If we're going to get technical, I suppose that would also depend on which Cleopatra you're referring to, since there were technically 8 of them, including a child (Cleopatra VIII) that Cleopatra VII had w/ Mark Antony or Marc Antony, if you prefer (Marcus Antonius).
When I was 17 ( _some 15 years ago_ ), I made a 4 page work about every god in Egyptian Mythology, and I took up the whole lecture that class by talking about them to the point that my class mates wanted to die. I never studied things I didn't like, so when I studied something I was passionate about, I rocked everyone's boxxors.
Most likely included just the major ones. There are thousands of minor ones, and it is a very broad subject in general. I can say this as someone who did the exact same thing.
gillecroisd 92 - The Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt was founded by Ptolemy, a general of Alexander the Great. Following Alexander’s death, his generals broke the empire amongst themselves. The Ptolemaic dynasty is known for being an ethnically Greek dynasty. It’s really a rollercoaster of a history! 😊
@Cedric Peery It's complicated. Greece had more civilization, and that was adopted by the Roman's. The kingdom.s Alexander created did not put much in their Greek origin, until rebellions against Rome near the end of the republic.
you'd be wrong yoshifan, lol. Some dude built a pyramid in Rome for his tomb, Pyramid of Cestius, and why do you think there are so many obelisks in Rome today? Most if not all (im not 100% certain) came from Egypt
I think most people view it regarding Samurai and such. Not cats. Greece is far more characterized by cats. As there being many many many stray cats and them being considered a national treasure.
+Yoshifan9511 A weaboo describes someone who considers Japanese culture/civilization superior to their own. Not simply a fan of certain aspects of it and such.
I don't associate Greece with cats, at all. If I had to choose any non-human living being to represent Greece, it'd be the olive, first and foremost, and a fish, secondarily. Egypt and Japan have an obvious relation to cats, like the Canadians have to the moose and maple leaf, or Aussies to the kangaroo and koalas.
Egypt has been one of my three favourite civilizations ever since I was a small child. In the present one of the things that captivates me most about it is how enduring it was and how it stands at the edge of recorded history.
How strange, is it not? They hated the jews for killing Jesus (and some still do), but they also hated the Pharao for capturing and enslaving the Killers of their Lord.
Yeah it's funny that Jesus is believed to have said, "forgive them for they know not what they do" and, that the bible tells Christians to "love thy neighbor" yet self proclaimed Christians do the opposite
@@rickykrahn4959 don't bundle self-proclaimed christians into the same box. The vast majority just quietly live their lives and aren't the West-Borough baptists
I gotta say, pretty big glaring error here regarding Cleopatra VII. While many of the Ptolemaic line didn't bother to learn Egyptian, she was notable in that she did. I also find it a little disturbing seeing as Cleopatra VII's fascination with the Egyptian culture and willingness to practice it was the focus of one of the videos in the series that you claimed to have watched.
This. Having watched all the lectures myself some time ago, I was quite surprised by what he said and had to rewind just to make sure I didn't mishear. But mistakes do happen, he probably watched some lectures and then extropolated. Perhaps a correction annotation would be in order.
I'm Egyptian, and I pass every day by the pyramids of Giza to go to my college and every time I see them I can't keep my eyes away, the feeling you get seeing them can never go away. For me, this is the only good thing about being an Egyptian nowadays.
believe me they don't go to tourists only :'D, I can't go anywhere without getting approached by them, just keep an Egyptian beside you and he/she would know what to do.
Hoàng Nguyên I think you should wait, as there is an upcoming presidential election "maybe fake one", you should consider coming after the election is over and everything settles down. everything besides that is the same, the government is protecting anything that is related to tourism, they made a big campaign to promote tourism as it means a lot to them, what I want to say that they are making sure that it's safe for tourists, but wait until after the elections just to be on the safe side.
Farghali I was there a few years ago. My hotel room view was the Giza Pyramids. It was amazing to see. Plus the sheer size of them is ridiculous. I can understand why you feel like this.
Cleopatra DID speak the native language. Other contemporary nations most definitely did voice and record opinions about Ancient Egypt . The cult of isis, a cult from egypt was one of the largest minority religions in the Roman Empire even having followers among the elite. This video is filled with misinformation.
"Africans colonized the world using MATRIARCHY" No DUMBASS. Matriarchy DOESN'T FUCKING WORK! Never has, never WILL. What can work is GYNOCENTRIC PATRIARCHY, which is what we're currently in right now in the West. It works, but not for long, because inevitably a gynocracy becomes a matriarchy and matriarchies cannot exist in any form more complex than a primitive, backwards, mud-squatting civilization.
Romano Coombs there is so much more to know about Egypt. Especially before the Greek invaders. I wish to know their mysteries and what they strives for in life before they were erased by evil racism and materialistic demons
Crazy how everyone these days is against Isis when it’s such an old religion. To be fair there were no guns and bombs so they weren’t as dangerous back then I guess.
Several points made are very inaccurate. - Alexandria was admired by the Romans. The architecture is said to have inspired Augustus to modernize Rome, making it a "City of Marble". It was a city of such importance that senators needed special permission to enter the city. - As pointed out by others, Cleopatra spoke Egyptian and spent much time outside of Alexandria. - I highly doubt that average medieval Europeans had many opinions of Egypt at all. You can't compare their understanding and knowledge of biblical stories to what we know today. - The French invasion of Egypt did not go horribly at all. Napoleon crushed the Ottoman forces to such a degree that the whole Middle eastern region underwent major social changes to adapt to the modernized west. It is true that the French had to pull out and eventually lost to the British, but Napoleon got away with increased reputation and military prestige. For him the Egyptian campaigns were a big success. This is as far as I got before I stopped watching. Historical accuracy is important, even in a fun and well made medium.
KnowledgeHub is fake news. Channels like this use silly characters and imagery to distract from the lies. They think the peoples will hear him while suspending their critical thinking because of goofy characters. It's propaganda for children.
I'm not claiming to be an expert but I did get an impression that Cody's account of the ancient attitudes toward Egypt and its culture are somewhat self-contradictory. So was it admired or was it mocked after all? You really can't have both at the same time. Both the Greeks and the Romans loved all that was older than them, even if they were mortal enemies with that civilization. The first act of the Roman senate after the Third Punic War was to send a tema of scholars to the burning Carthage to salvage as many Phoenician manuscripts as possible so these could be translated into Latin. Alexander was amazed with both Egypt and Persia. Many accuracies are there, to be sure. It does feel like he pushed out the video before researching it properly, just to cash in on the AC: Origins craze.
Pharoh Akhenaten started moving buildings from Thebes to his newly built city of Amarna in order to be rid of all the gods and have everybody only worship Aten.
Yeah egypt had multiple capitals. For a long time it was Thebes (Now named Luxor) and later it was Alexandria. During the Arab rule it became Giza which was later renamed Cairo.
+marinus18 You have a mistake, during the Arabs it was Fustat, which was later abandoned by the Fatimids and Cairo was built near it. Giza is an entirely different city.
the person we think of as Cleopatra (banged Ceaser, etc etc) was Cleopatra X (the 10th) he referred to Cleopatra the 7th. it gets confusing since pretty much everyone for like 300 years had the same name
Hmm putting the “reopening” of Egypt to 1798 isn’t wrong, however Shakespeare wrote many plays on the matter, Julius ceaser, Antony and cleopatra. Wonder what Elizabethan England would have thought of it. How did they build the sets and design costumes in Shakespeare’s time?
He simplified the statement because it's only about a 10 minute video, and you could make an hour long video just on the Rosetta Stone, but while it's pretty obvious that wasn't it's original purpose, its discovery was the key necessary for being able to understand Egyptian hieroglyphs and the Egyptian language.
Its like how we use modern English and German, to sorta make out what Old English was like. As in, written. China still has some difficulty translating more ancient Chinese writing, because they didn't have another written language to offer similarities
Egypt, China, and the Olmecs were the only literate civilizations to survive the Bronze Age Collapse, and were the seeds around which later civilizations would develop. So this certainly gives them a great deal of historical significance.
I'm an Egyptian from Alexandria, and I can't really but help how Egypt was instrumental in history every educational video has to bring Egypt and Alexandria in specific, it's a great source of pride being from a country that has survived so long and had such a continued relatively uninterrupted millenniums and now I just feel sorry for it's current state, how so many people are illiterate and ignorant due to skimped on education and then easily manipulated from the militaristic government, it's just unfortunate how much of ourselves was lost to history and how all that faded out of the public consciousness, just living day to day with these insane inflation rates sorry for the rant but Im just really sad at whats going on currently in the country
Ather Tawfik It's a shame people are using this video as an exuse to peddle a meme about an obscure movement of historic revisonism that was meant to uplift African-Americans.
Marylandbrony It's not our job to uplift Africans by lying to ourselves and everyone else. You don't get to steal someone's culture to make yourself feel good.
There wouldn't be as a bad Afrocentrism as being suggested in the comment sections if we taught that West Africa did have important and great civilizations instead of saying that all Africans lived in mud huts and lived like cave people. Also is it hypocritical for the alt-right/lite to say "We Wuz Kangz" yet complain when social justice warriors talk about cultural apportion by westerners?
No one is hiding African history from anyone. The history we teach in school is supposed to be very broad and basic, only focusing on the most influential points of history. If anyone wants to read up on African history there is plenty of information only a click away for anyone with a computer. The Kushites for example were an influential kingdom that had control of Egypt at one point yet afrocentrists are so eager to claim Egypt. And completely revising the culture and history of a country to fit with your worldview is completely different than borrowing certain aspects of another culture that you like. By the logic of cultural appropriation it would be seen as inappropriate to use the inventions of another culture as well.
I know that point of Afrocentric is incorrect. Ancient Egypt was mostly not African in the modern sense they were natives to the Nile region with Egyptians like modern Egyptians with those lower Egypt being closer to the middle east and Europe and those in Upper Egypt being closer to Africans. Yet the thinking of of Sub-Saharan being both a product of observations of Egypt by classical scholars who referred to all of the people who lived South of the Mediterranean as "Africans" and later co-oped by 20th century African-American scholars in response to the general lack of knowledge by both the African-American and general population of the US about African history as a form of "Shock value". Today we do talk about African civilizations in school. So targeting the long discredited Black Egyptian theory today by some feel ridiculous. For cultural appropriation it was really more of an comparison of rhetoric about it and the actions by those who generally overlap. (I.e Talking about how one should not care about cultural appropriation when the criticism comes from currently active social movements by westerners yet complain about it when done by inactive Africans)
@Matthew Tenorio_3200654 That is a dumb question! Copts are not an ethnic group, Egyptians are not "ethnic" Arabs but linguistic Arabs! Egypt is Egyptian no matter religion, stop with the ignorance
Had to stop watching when it was claimed that Cleopatra never learned Egyptian and never left the capital. These were two things she, as a Ptolemy, famously and uniquely DID do.
Dude. Egyptology is my hobby. He went out of his way to say "Cleopatra VII", which is incontrovertibly the last Pharaoh of Egypt and the Cleopatra the world knows well.
Oh, and just saying, Romans were those busy businessmen who didn't have the time to think about the past, and instead they wrote stories about a Germanic commander who lived in two different worlds. (Y'know, old Germania and Rome)
What I've learned from this is that just as Renaissance was a Greco-Roman revivalism inspiring Secularism, following 1797, there was an Egyptian Revivalism inspiring European imperialism. I also learned that we see Egypt not as it truly is but reflecting the European ideals of its time. I could say the same about Ancient Greece or Rome
Saying the Rosetta Stone had translation of words from Hieroglyphics to Greek is like saying that Canadian laws are a collection of translations from English to French. It was a record of a proclamation in Hieroglyphics, Greek and Demotic from which linguists were able to work out translations of Demotic and Hieroglyphics, not a Hieroglyphics to Greek dictionary
Alexandre Brault This video is way off. This is the only video I have seen from this channel but it will be my last. He totally misrepresented what the Rosetta Stone is. Along with the rest of the material horribly presented.
Could you do a history of the Berbers of North Africa? There isn’t much information on them on RUclips and they must be interesting being at the crossroads of Europe, Arabia, and Sub Saharan Africa.
I guess it's better to direct that question to Masaman. Check out his channel if you haven't already by the way: he covers all of the stuff that self-proclaimed history buffs tend to overlook with a strong emphasis on the genetic aspect. Really awesome content with new videos coming out every three days or so.
Classymaru Nara That's incorrect. They actually traded with a Black West African "negroid" group and admired their beauty and riches.This negroid group I'm talking of is the Sarakole/Soninke.
Cleoparta VII did learn how to write and speak Egyptian. But she was the first ruler of the Ptolemaic dynasty to do so, so your point stands about the disconnect against the Greek rulers and the Egyptian common peoplle
no, actually, the Greek ruling class in Egypt was culturally and socially *isolated from the native Egyptian peasants and so by the time of the Roman conquest the Greek class spoke exclusively Greek, lived mostly in Alexandria and didn't much like the Egyptians. Cleopatra herself was the exception rather than the rule; she actively tried to portray herself as an Egyptian, within reason, and as a Pharaoh. this was one of the reasons why a lot of the Greek ruling class, including her brother, didn't like her. edit: *Greek had signficant influence on Egyptian society, just not the other way around.
The Greek language was used in all Egypt, from Alexandria all the way to the Elephantine. Sure, Greek was an "elite language", but it wasn't isolated either from the native population. Coptic, the final step in the evolution of the Egyptian language, was written in the Greek alphabet (with some additions) and with heavy borrowing from Greek. You cannot say Greek didn't leave its influence on the country.
Voytek yeah but you're still saying that Greeks mostly lived in Alexandria. Alexandria was a big city - huge for that time, second only to Rome - so of course a large part of the Greek population lived there - but also Egyptians and Jews did. As for the rest of the country: a few cities like Naucratis had the status of Greek poleis, and Greeks were spread all along the Nile: soldiers, magistrates, merchants. Not the lower class peasants though, I'll give you that, but I think you have a bit too rigid understanding of "Greek social elite". I think you could argue that the middle class of Greco-Roman Egypt was quite mixed, but that, as you indeed argued, the upper class wasn't that much influenced by the native Egyptian culture.
That description of the rosetta stone, my oh my... The Rosetta stone was a stone found to have three copies of the same decree published on it. It was erected by Egyptian priests to thank one of the Ptolemaic pharaohs for something or other, can't recall what. The reason it had the same thing written on it three times was not so it could be used as a dictionary for future historians, it was written in Hieroglyphics, as was traditional for this type of decree, then Demotic, so the local peasants could read the decree, and Greek, so the Ptolemaic pharaoh could read it. It also turns out to not be unique as we've found at least two other plinths like it that were erected for the same reason.
"and Greek, so the Ptolemaic pharaoh could read it" It was not just the Ptolemaic kings who could read Greek. Greek was a widely used language in Ptolemaic Egypt, a bit elite perhaps, but certainly used in many different towns all throughout the land.
Local middle class of merchants and large land owners (they probably couldn't write but literacy in Ptolomaic Egypt was fairly good for the time) is probably more accurate.
It's simplification because the video is only 10 minutes long; you're not saying anything about the Rosetta Stone than everyone who has ever heard of it doesn't know. Don't be pedantic; you know very well what he meant.
Uhh not really. Caesar, Kaiser and Tsar were terms used for leaders throughout history, and would continue being used by certain rulers up until 1918. Pharoah was a term used to describe an evil human character in relation to the biblical nature of the Pharoah.
John Larry In Britain for a while Napoleon was slow used for that. Though there is a cartoon criticizing the Russian pogroms by drawing the Tsar as Pharoh.
It happened in 1965, but didn't last more than a year. President Soekamo of Indonesia _did_ make his own version of the UN, CONEFO, but again, didn't last past 1966.
Cheesoos Kryst You should definitely just quit school and go to *The Great Courses Plus* where you can learn many course *The Great Courses Plus* offers. *The Great Courses Plus* teaches all 🤤
Pretty sure Cleopatra was originally exiled by her brother before she used the Romans to usurp him and take control. Was also pretty sure Cleopatra was among the few Ptolemaic Pharoahs to actually learn the Egyptian language.
I've seen that film, and know how true it is to not only the Egyptian cultures, but the Biblical morals. Plus, I don;t think the story of Joseph in Egypt is brought up in this video.
Their civilization wasn’t as grandiose and stable as Egypt, mostly because of geography. Unlike the Nile which was dependable and consistent in its flooding, the Tigris and Euphrates were downright a bitch to plan for as they were always drying up and flash flooding settlements without warning. Coincidently, the Mesopotamians gods were more bipolar and harsh, as they callously killed their worshippers while the Egyptian gods were considerably nicer and more caring of their people.
I listened to that course, I enjoyed it immensely. Although Cody if you listened more carefully you would know that it states that Cleopatra was the first pharaoh (and in a way, the last) to learn ancient Egyptian, something her predecessors shunned. That being said, not a bad video. EDIT: first Ptolemaic pharaoh to learn ancient Egyptian
One of my favorite history teachers (forgot his name) dedicated his life and career to the learning and teaching of human history from the known origins of humanity to pre-modern culture. I remember his first lecture in which he stated, as much as it'd be nice for people to get along and accept each other, it just isn't in our nature. People simply do not get along.
I contradict that, because people are coming along way more than we ever did. We always lived in smaller groups until we had some form of society where we had to work together to achieve things and make specialization possible.
what are your sources about cleopatra? according to plutarch cleopatra was very educated and she was one of the few ptolemaic monarchs who really cared about the egyptian culture and spoke many languages including egyptian fluently. "There was sweetness also in the tones of her voice; and her tongue, like an instrument of many strings, she could readily turn to whatever language she pleased, so that in her interviews with Barbarians she very seldom had need of an interpreter, but made her replies to most of them herself and unassisted, whether they were Ethiopians, Troglodytes, Hebrews, Arabians, Syrians, Medes or Parthians. Nay, it is said that she knew the speech of many other peoples also, although the kings of Egypt before her had not even made an effort to learn the native language, and some actually gave up their Macedonian dialect." Plutarch Life of Anthony chapter XXVII and why do you claim she never left alexandra? she visited caesar in rome, antony in tarsus, was kicked by her brother out of alexandria for a time and she was present at the battle of actium and these are just a few examples.
the thing that continues to blow me away is that in the Victorian era, "Egyptology" was a perfectly accepted word. And yet, find me another word, referring to another power in this format that was in the common parlance...Romanology? Greekology? Syrianology? German/Deutch/Alemanology?
verdatum There's Sinology, which is the study of Chinese culture. The "sin" part is derived from the Greek word for China, if I recall correctly. That's the only one I can think of at the moment.
+Victoria Elizabeth If you are going to use the word ignorant, then at least use the word correctly. It was a mistake, or he was misinformed, or read something wrong. That doesn't make him ignorant.
Love your videos Cody, but there's something we need to correct on this one! Cleopatra VII did speak the native language of Egypt (along with some 8 others according to Plutarch) and we have at least 2 documented cases of her visiting the rest of the country. Once in the early part of her reign, to take part in the Apis bull ceremony and to organize famine relief in upper Egypt, and another time with Caesar, on a propaganda cruise up the Nile. It's also very likely (though not documented) that she would have been present at the dedication ceremony of the large scale relief of herself and her son at the Dendera temple, in the later years of her reign.
I love what you're doing with the idea of watching lectures and summarizing them in animation! If it's not too personal, how long did it take you to make it a career (if it's gone that far already)?
The first thing i came across that got interested in Ancient Egypt was the first Yu-gi-oh manga. And now when i think of Ancient Egypt i remember the smell of the pages , the cold nipping at my nose and sending chills down my spine as i read late at night the shadows would some times move do to the cars driving by my house so it quite hard to forget. Mind you i was 12 at the time.
When I was a young child, Ancient Egypt always fascinated me, the architecture, the gods, the clothing, the grandeur that hollywood always gave it. I grew up watching "The Prince of Egypt", "The Mummy Returns", "Joseph King of Dreams", and playing games like Serious Sam. It always held this mystique to me, and always will.
It's probably why he posted it so soon because Assassin Creed Origins is coming out in a couple of days and he wants to get into the algorithm. He's hoping to leech views off of ACO by tagging his videos Ancient Egypt etc.
Away out in Egypt in the Valley of Kings, where the mummified Pharaohs pretend dead in their sleep: don't touch, never ever steal. . . Unless you're in for the kill! Or you'll be hit by the curse of the Pharaohs!
The Great Courses Plus is awesome, I'm glad that so much of your content comes from there. Maybe if you get a chance can you do some videos on Phillip Daileader's course, the High Middle Ages? The episode on Chivalry is very interesting and you could probably do a lot with it.
The Egyptians never enslaved the Hebrews. The Egyptian Empire conquered ancient Canaan and, according to one theory, the words “Egyptian, and conquer” gradually shifted to “Egypt and Slavery” Moses may have been a person who led a small rebellion, or he may not have existed at all and rather was a euphemism for independence. The Egyptians have never mentioned the biblical plagues and only passably mentioned a Canaanite tribe called by the Egyptians as Habirw, possibly Hebrew or possibly not. For a society where almost everything was written down and any natural disaster was extensively deliberated, the Egyptians were unsurprisingly silent on these ancient myths. I hate how most people only know about the one part of Egyptian history that was at worst made up entirely and at best distorted beyond reality to the point of being an unrecognisably vague fairytale.
If YOUR nation got fucked up by the kind of shit the Bible records as happening, in direct opposition to YOUR religious beliefs, WHY IN HELL would you RECORD SUCH A HUMILIATING DEFEAT?!? Back in those days, something like all of the firstborn sons dying at the decree of an alien god (who apparently your gods were too weak to stop) would never have been written down by anyone on penalty of death and any such writings that were discovered would have been destroyed in the name of state unity. Back in those days it was a hell of a lot easier to make entire nations of people forget what really happened over a few generations (which in those times 1 generation was only 40-50 years) and fill their heads with lies via conspiracy. Just because you have records saying that such and such DIDN'T happen in history DOESN'T MEAN IT DIDN'T, it just means that whoever wrote that piece of writing wants those who read it to believe it didn't for some reason, because without the Internet and cell phone cameras, nobody can prove fucking anything happened. For god's sake even with all our knowledge of physics and the universe, we still can't prove, without a shadow of a doubt, that the universe didn't spring into existence last thursday!
Joel Gawne, Wouldn’t the Egyptians have incorporated such an event into their own religion? If a god such as that we’re so powerful then why would they deny him/her? Also, even without such a god, they may have used the Egyptian Religion to explain the events. But beyond that, the Egyptians weren’t very good at censorship. Hatshepsut’s Name was decreed to be erased from all known records, and yet, we know all about her and her reign. We even have salacious paintings and papyri depicting her having relations with multiple men. If they were so good at erasing all memory, how could she have survived the destruction Thutmosis III ordered upon her memory. Furthermore, Hatshepsut was a much more minor event than the plagues that should have destroyed Egypt and it would have been easier to erase her than the plagues. If they failed to remove her, how could they have succeeded with the disasters. Also, the “Old Testament” wasn’t penned until the Babylonian Captivity, which we can prove happened, hundreds of years after the plagues. Would the Hebrews in such a time of despair not have exaggerated their travels in Egypt to give hope to their people? Get a group of 30 children. Tell the first child a statement, have him/her pass that statement on until the last child. Then see how different they are. Do that for hundreds of years and through times of war and despair until it is finally written down and translated hundreds of times until the modern day totalling ~3,000 years of changes and alterations. That is the Bible. Even most rabbinical scholars agree that the Exodus as reported in the Bible didn’t happen. During the reign of Ramesses II the Egyptian empire conquered Canaan and battled The Hittites at Qadesh. The war ends and Egypt now rules the Levant for the rest of Ramesses II’s rule. He also constructed Pi-Ramesses (modern day Qantir) as his new capital, which the Bible mentions. Even if the Hebrews were in Egypt, that doesn’t mean they were outside of Canaan nor does it mean they were enslaved. All that shows is that the Hebrews knew of the Egyptians and where their capital was. Nothing else. That still can’t show that Moses or the plagues existed at all. No other culture, INCLUDING THE EGYPTIANS, mentioned a cataclysm in Egypt. Even the Hittites who had a vested interest in the fall of the Egyptian Empire. We’re talking about history as ancient to the Romans as the Romans are to us, nothing can be proven beyond all doubt, but this can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Hold on, according to Plutarch, Cleopatra both learned Coptic (along with some seven other languages) and left Alexandria quite often. She also seemed to be in touch with the people well enough early in her life. Granted, Plutarch may be biased, but I see no reason to doubt him here.
Egypt was not "just another conquest" for Greece and Rome. Back in antiquity, Egypt was a breadbasket nation and both Alexander and Rome were in need of the huge wheat surpluses Egypt could provide. The access to the Silk Road was a nice bonus as well.
One of the excavators who found Tut's tomb died of old age in the 90"s at the age of like 93 or something, and the newspaper headline read "Curse of Tutenkhamun strikes again" LOLS
In the 17th Century (AD), a lot of wealthy people used powdered mummy to help with sickness (for some reason), so I think they were of slight interest before Napoleon.
Wait wait wait... Cleopatra was the first Ptolomeic pharaoh to learn to speak ancient egyptian. Also Rome was very tolerant to other non threading cultures, to the point they usually include gods in their religion: Zeus -> Jupiter, who was also called Jupiter whos also Amon Ra.
That's the key word, ANCIENT Egyptian, which was not the language the common people in the era spoke at the time. That would be like if I ruled Italy but only spoke Latin and not Italian. I certainly wouldn't be speaking the language of the people I rule.
...Uh... No, no, that's not being "tolerant," that's just called being around the same area as Greece and having a semi-similar pantheon, but if oyu get into specifics then it'll eventually show itself as pretty different on its own (see Mars being extremely different from Ares, as the main similarity between the two is that they're kinda just a war god).
@Mohammad Refat It's because Sub-Saharan African descendants (black people) claim that THEY were Egyptians, since Egypt is in Africa. WE WUZ KANGZ N SHIET is just a meme to make fun of black people who claim to be related to Egyptians.
Cleopatra never left Alexandria? Antony met her in Asia Minor. She came to his aid in a war against the Parthians. They were both present at the battle of Actium... Come on!
They were a empire of hard working perfectly organised not as corrupt as us people I think Imhotep and Dzoser are great examples of discipline and great work life
We hated Egypt because they rushed all of the wonders
Well, nobody knew who that was, so all the players just assumed it was Egypt again and were like "Wtf hax, ban nub!" While the persian player decided to invade and put an end to it.
Not all of them, but their 15% or something boost to wonders production is op.
coolpatrickandryan lol
coolpatrickandryan is this a strategy game joke? I now want to play civilization
Dem Rottensoul exactly its from civilization 5
A very big correction, Cleopatra did learn Egyptian and left Alexandria, she is in fact famous for being the ONLY ONE of her dinasy who did it and for being multilingual (Plutarch said she spoke Siriac, Ethipoian, Median, Parthian Aramaic, Hebrew and South Arabian, basically the most important language of her region) and for saying he was the reincarnation of Isis. She was a pretty intelligent woman, and a political mastermind, who chose a bad ally in Marc Anthony. Marc Anthony was a very good bet, but Octavius was also a political mastermind and played the Roman populus association of Orient with kings very well (and Romans hated kings, that why emperors even they were the fact kings wouldn't called themselves that, specially in the early Imperial period).
2:11 and I'm done. I could let that mistake pass, but saying that no other country gave their opinion of Egypt until it ceased to exist? WTF is this idiot talking about?
Well, it may be referring that when Greeks started to write about Egyptian history (with Herodotus), Egypt had long fallen from its glory day. Before Herodotus, there were not real historians, but that was valid for all civilizations. Historiography did not exist before Herodotus, People compiled lists of Kings and sometimes their most important deeds, but usually it was for official reasons. So it is not weird that Egypt existed before other cultures wrote about them, because no other culture was writing about other cultures, such matters were deemed too trivial to put on paper, unlike lists of kings, treaties or religious texts.
Thank you for this. I was about to flip-shit!
Elsenoromniano Reincarnation of ISIS? I think someone could misinterpret that
When talkinUg about Ptolomeic Egypt, I doubt it, unless they want to make a very bad joke.
1:57 Cleopatra VII was famously the only Ptolemaic ruler who actually learned the local language. She even travelled around the kingdom, taking part in official ceremonies and festivities and whatnot, something previous Ptolemies often failed to do.
An excellent correction.
Didn't expect to see you here. "An excellent chef".
@@homelessjackie I would say she was tag teamed by Julius Caesar and Mark Antony!
@@Mattipedersen Id have to say youre false because Mark Antony never visited Egypt while she was alive
@@homelessjackie I imagine your comment pertains to word-play (or better yet, name-play). If we're going to get technical, I suppose that would also depend on which Cleopatra you're referring to, since there were technically 8 of them, including a child (Cleopatra VIII) that Cleopatra VII had w/ Mark Antony or Marc Antony, if you prefer (Marcus Antonius).
You forgot to mention how ancient Egyptians used to play duel monsters with ancient aliens.
IT'S TIME TO DUEL
Mr Mezo
The joke --->
You: d(o_o)b
Mr Mezo ever hear the joke that aliens built the pyramids?
they basically worshiped Furries... it's no wonder we had to label them Deviants
I use my blue eyes white dragon
When I was 17 ( _some 15 years ago_ ), I made a 4 page work about every god in Egyptian Mythology, and I took up the whole lecture that class by talking about them to the point that my class mates wanted to die.
I never studied things I didn't like, so when I studied something I was passionate about, I rocked everyone's boxxors.
cool!
Can u send please
Do you still have the list of gods? And does it truly contain every single one like you claim?
Most likely included just the major ones. There are thousands of minor ones, and it is a very broad subject in general. I can say this as someone who did the exact same thing.
@@aehkzin7160 is that a… common thing high schoolers do ?
I thought it was pretty common knowledge that Cleopatra was pretty much the only Ptolemaic rulers to learn the native tounge.
gillecroisd 92 - The Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt was founded by Ptolemy, a general of Alexander the Great. Following Alexander’s death, his generals broke the empire amongst themselves. The Ptolemaic dynasty is known for being an ethnically Greek dynasty. It’s really a rollercoaster of a history! 😊
@gillecroisd 92 In fact she was pure blood Greek !!
@@guccifer764 In Cleopatra's case, both are true.
None of history is common knowledge
@Cedric Peery It's complicated. Greece had more civilization, and that was adopted by the Roman's. The kingdom.s Alexander created did not put much in their Greek origin, until rebellions against Rome near the end of the republic.
Not trying to be picky, but you stated that Cleopatra never left Alexandria. That's simply incorrect.
Yes, she visited my bedroom last night.
jk, im a vergin.
Yeah she definitely went to Rome. But none of my business
She did a few times, when she was out on the town with Julius ceaser ;)
@@tomchch Oh god, you necrophile.
Gotta love those bones tho.
@AmishRiot this video was made before that discovery, he was correct for the time this video was made
So the Romans viewed Egypt like everyone views Japan? A weird culture that likes cats.
Am I kawie Ra-san?
you'd be wrong yoshifan, lol. Some dude built a pyramid in Rome for his tomb, Pyramid of Cestius, and why do you think there are so many obelisks in Rome today? Most if not all (im not 100% certain) came from Egypt
I think most people view it regarding Samurai and such. Not cats. Greece is far more characterized by cats. As there being many many many stray cats and them being considered a national treasure.
+Yoshifan9511
A weaboo describes someone who considers Japanese culture/civilization superior to their own. Not simply a fan of certain aspects of it and such.
I don't associate Greece with cats, at all. If I had to choose any non-human living being to represent Greece, it'd be the olive, first and foremost, and a fish, secondarily. Egypt and Japan have an obvious relation to cats, like the Canadians have to the moose and maple leaf, or Aussies to the kangaroo and koalas.
Who wouldn't love egypt? It's one of the classic old countries
I love Egypt it's my country 🇪🇬 🇪🇬 🇪🇬
ReMockz we love egypt!!! Saludos from Spain
@@Reichsritter not all people friend
ReMockz ANCIENT EGYPT keyword:ancient
retsaM innavoiG i Can agree on that
retsaM innavoiG no u wouldn’t you don’t like black ppl
Actually, cleopatra did learn the language. She did that 100% so that she could gain favor with the common people and it worked for the most part.
Egypt has been one of my three favourite civilizations ever since I was a small child. In the present one of the things that captivates me most about it is how enduring it was and how it stands at the edge of recorded history.
Funny thing, medieval society didn't have a great opinion of "god's chosen people" either.
How strange, is it not? They hated the jews for killing Jesus (and some still do), but they also hated the Pharao for capturing and enslaving the Killers of their Lord.
No one likes jews
Yeah it's funny that Jesus is believed to have said, "forgive them for they know not what they do" and, that the bible tells Christians to "love thy neighbor" yet self proclaimed Christians do the opposite
Ricky Krahn Good fences make good neighbors
@@rickykrahn4959 don't bundle self-proclaimed christians into the same box. The vast majority just quietly live their lives and aren't the West-Borough baptists
I gotta say, pretty big glaring error here regarding Cleopatra VII. While many of the Ptolemaic line didn't bother to learn Egyptian, she was notable in that she did.
I also find it a little disturbing seeing as Cleopatra VII's fascination with the Egyptian culture and willingness to practice it was the focus of one of the videos in the series that you claimed to have watched.
This. Having watched all the lectures myself some time ago, I was quite surprised by what he said and had to rewind just to make sure I didn't mishear. But mistakes do happen, he probably watched some lectures and then extropolated. Perhaps a correction annotation would be in order.
And another thing! She left Alexandria from time to time!! She went on a bloody tour with Caesar through the Nile; that's an example.
Ryan Collins
Nah that was romans and jews.
I'm Egyptian, and I pass every day by the pyramids of Giza to go to my college and every time I see them I can't keep my eyes away, the feeling you get seeing them can never go away.
For me, this is the only good thing about being an Egyptian nowadays.
believe me they don't go to tourists only :'D, I can't go anywhere without getting approached by them, just keep an Egyptian beside you and he/she would know what to do.
Hoàng Nguyên
I think you should wait, as there is an upcoming presidential election "maybe fake one", you should consider coming after the election is over and everything settles down.
everything besides that is the same, the government is protecting anything that is related to tourism, they made a big campaign to promote tourism as it means a lot to them, what I want to say that they are making sure that it's safe for tourists, but wait until after the elections just to be on the safe side.
Hoàng Nguyên i realize you are not, the statement was in agreement with you.
Farghali I said the same thing about the twin towers in NYC until they got fucked up.
Farghali I was there a few years ago. My hotel room view was the Giza Pyramids. It was amazing to see. Plus the sheer size of them is ridiculous. I can understand why you feel like this.
Cleopatra DID speak the native language. Other contemporary nations most definitely did voice and record opinions about Ancient Egypt . The cult of isis, a cult from egypt was one of the largest minority religions in the Roman Empire even having followers among the elite. This video is filled with misinformation.
"Africans colonized the world using MATRIARCHY"
No DUMBASS. Matriarchy DOESN'T FUCKING WORK! Never has, never WILL.
What can work is GYNOCENTRIC PATRIARCHY, which is what we're currently in right now in the West. It works, but not for long, because inevitably a gynocracy becomes a matriarchy and matriarchies cannot exist in any form more complex than a primitive, backwards, mud-squatting civilization.
Romano Coombs there is so much more to know about Egypt. Especially before the Greek invaders. I wish to know their mysteries and what they strives for in life before they were erased by evil racism and materialistic demons
Crazy how everyone these days is against Isis when it’s such an old religion. To be fair there were no guns and bombs so they weren’t as dangerous back then I guess.
@Romano Coombs Black Greeks kek.
+Romano Greeks weren’t black nor did Africans colonize anything. The Parthenon was built in Greece’s classical age.
Cleopatra was closer to the moon landings, with 1000 years to spare, than the beginnings of ancient egypt
mammoths still existed when the pyramids were built.
PP Hyjynx but they never met any humans
but they still existed
@@pphyjynx8217 but did anyone know they existed then?
or did the egyptians know the mammoths existed?
Maggie Ent no, there was only a small population left on an island in siberia
Several points made are very inaccurate.
- Alexandria was admired by the Romans. The architecture is said to have inspired Augustus to modernize Rome, making it a "City of Marble". It was a city of such importance that senators needed special permission to enter the city.
- As pointed out by others, Cleopatra spoke Egyptian and spent much time outside of Alexandria.
- I highly doubt that average medieval Europeans had many opinions of Egypt at all. You can't compare their understanding and knowledge of biblical stories to what we know today.
- The French invasion of Egypt did not go horribly at all. Napoleon crushed the Ottoman forces to such a degree that the whole Middle eastern region underwent major social changes to adapt to the modernized west.
It is true that the French had to pull out and eventually lost to the British, but Napoleon got away with increased reputation and military prestige. For him the Egyptian campaigns were a big success.
This is as far as I got before I stopped watching. Historical accuracy is important, even in a fun and well made medium.
Philip Høeg Eriksen He was talking a out the other Cleopatra, but he didn't specify which one for some reason.
No, he specifies Cleopatra VII, which is the one I also referred to.
KnowledgeHub is fake news. Channels like this use silly characters and imagery to distract from the lies. They think the peoples will hear him while suspending their critical thinking because of goofy characters. It's propaganda for children.
Big Mofo The only propaganda I see is your comment dumb one...
I'm not claiming to be an expert but I did get an impression that Cody's account of the ancient attitudes toward Egypt and its culture are somewhat self-contradictory. So was it admired or was it mocked after all? You really can't have both at the same time. Both the Greeks and the Romans loved all that was older than them, even if they were mortal enemies with that civilization. The first act of the Roman senate after the Third Punic War was to send a tema of scholars to the burning Carthage to salvage as many Phoenician manuscripts as possible so these could be translated into Latin. Alexander was amazed with both Egypt and Persia.
Many accuracies are there, to be sure. It does feel like he pushed out the video before researching it properly, just to cash in on the AC: Origins craze.
My great grandfather was almost on the team that discovered king tuts tomb! He left the expedition two week before they uncovered the entrance!
I just love how Cody adds memes from time to time
On a serious note, didn't the Egyptians move their capital...like physically?
Papi Shekel physically? This is either some really high level bait or some Trump level stupid
Let's take the capital, and push it somewhere else!
Pharoh Akhenaten started moving buildings from Thebes to his newly built city of Amarna in order to be rid of all the gods and have everybody only worship Aten.
Yeah egypt had multiple capitals. For a long time it was Thebes (Now named Luxor) and later it was Alexandria. During the Arab rule it became Giza which was later renamed Cairo.
+marinus18 You have a mistake, during the Arabs it was Fustat, which was later abandoned by the Fatimids and Cairo was built near it. Giza is an entirely different city.
Cleopatra definitely spoke Egyptian and was famed for knowing like 9 languages in total
Regarding Jimmy's warning of the cursed tomb:
"Tomb cursed, be weary. - Jimmy"
Weary = tired
Wary = cautious
😉👍
How is this the 2nd top comment? It has 2 likes after 2 days!
Before sneering at warnings about tombs, remember everyone who opened Tut's cursed tomb DIED!
cleopatra did speak egyptian, just not as a mother tongue.
GripTape first language
she also left alexandria on multiple occasions
He said Cleopatra the 7th 🤣😂🤣😂
dread pirate it doesn't sound like an opinion to me. It sounds more like a statement of fact, whether true or false.
the person we think of as Cleopatra (banged Ceaser, etc etc) was Cleopatra X (the 10th) he referred to Cleopatra the 7th. it gets confusing since pretty much everyone for like 300 years had the same name
I thought this would be sponsored by Ubisoft, with the all-new Assasins Creed game and all.
yeah, same
Pretty sure this is somehow
Oh, that explains why this is the 3rd ancient egypt video i saw get uploaded today from my subscriptions.
I thought that too xD
Many others such as Half as Interesting have been doing them... gcp probably gave a better offer or something idk
You should put a disclaimer in the text where you fix the glaring Cleopatra error, people are ripping you to shreds for it.
Hmm putting the “reopening” of Egypt to 1798 isn’t wrong, however Shakespeare wrote many plays on the matter, Julius ceaser, Antony and cleopatra. Wonder what Elizabethan England would have thought of it. How did they build the sets and design costumes in Shakespeare’s time?
AlkalineAjay yeah i wonder that too!
Poe wrote about living mummies before the movie craze.
Actually, Shakespeare's plays didn't have props or good sets.
chris long really? Interesting! any sources or contemporary accounts?
Both the Egyptians and Romans were portrayed like normal European royalty in Shakespeare's globe theatre, not in period accurate costumes.
Rosetta stone was a royal decree written in the languages of the day, not the translation tool it was eventually used as.
He simplified the statement because it's only about a 10 minute video, and you could make an hour long video just on the Rosetta Stone, but while it's pretty obvious that wasn't it's original purpose, its discovery was the key necessary for being able to understand Egyptian hieroglyphs and the Egyptian language.
Its like how we use modern English and German, to sorta make out what Old English was like. As in, written.
China still has some difficulty translating more ancient Chinese writing, because they didn't have another written language to offer similarities
Cleopatra absolutely learned Egyptian, that's a well recorded fact, cmon guys.
Egypt, China, and the Olmecs were the only literate civilizations to survive the Bronze Age Collapse, and were the seeds around which later civilizations would develop. So this certainly gives them a great deal of historical significance.
Well, considering the Chinese Empire didn't even exist yet, and the Olmecs were on a completely different landmass, it's kind of arbitrary then.
I'm an Egyptian from Alexandria, and I can't really but help how Egypt was instrumental in history every educational video has to bring Egypt and Alexandria in specific, it's a great source of pride being from a country that has survived so long and had such a continued relatively uninterrupted millenniums and now I just feel sorry for it's current state, how so many people are illiterate and ignorant due to skimped on education and then easily manipulated from the militaristic government, it's just unfortunate how much of ourselves was lost to history and how all that faded out of the public consciousness, just living day to day with these insane inflation rates
sorry for the rant but Im just really sad at whats going on currently in the country
Ather Tawfik It's a shame people are using this video as an exuse to peddle a meme about an obscure movement of historic revisonism that was meant to uplift African-Americans.
Marylandbrony It's not our job to uplift Africans by lying to ourselves and everyone else. You don't get to steal someone's culture to make yourself feel good.
There wouldn't be as a bad Afrocentrism as being suggested in the comment sections if we taught that West Africa did have important and great civilizations instead of saying that all Africans lived in mud huts and lived like cave people. Also is it hypocritical for the alt-right/lite to say "We Wuz Kangz" yet complain when social justice warriors talk about cultural apportion by westerners?
No one is hiding African history from anyone. The history we teach in school is supposed to be very broad and basic, only focusing on the most influential points of history. If anyone wants to read up on African history there is plenty of information only a click away for anyone with a computer. The Kushites for example were an influential kingdom that had control of Egypt at one point yet afrocentrists are so eager to claim Egypt. And completely revising the culture and history of a country to fit with your worldview is completely different than borrowing certain aspects of another culture that you like. By the logic of cultural appropriation it would be seen as inappropriate to use the inventions of another culture as well.
I know that point of Afrocentric is incorrect. Ancient Egypt was mostly not African in the modern sense they were natives to the Nile region with Egyptians like modern Egyptians with those lower Egypt being closer to the middle east and Europe and those in Upper Egypt being closer to Africans. Yet the thinking of of Sub-Saharan being both a product of observations of Egypt by classical scholars who referred to all of the people who lived South of the Mediterranean as "Africans" and later co-oped by 20th century African-American scholars in response to the general lack of knowledge by both the African-American and general population of the US about African history as a form of "Shock value". Today we do talk about African civilizations in school. So targeting the long discredited Black Egyptian theory today by some feel ridiculous. For cultural appropriation it was really more of an comparison of rhetoric about it and the actions by those who generally overlap. (I.e Talking about how one should not care about cultural appropriation when the criticism comes from currently active social movements by westerners yet complain about it when done by inactive Africans)
I've been looking at a medieval occitan-language history book, and they knew a bit about Egypt (especially Ptolemaic Egypt and mamluk Egypt)
Hello from Egypt!❤️
Hello from the future! :)
(But I’m guessing you’re here, too)
ازيك D:
Malak Amir Hello from Italy!
@Matthew Tenorio_3200654
That is a dumb question! Copts are not an ethnic group, Egyptians are not "ethnic" Arabs but linguistic Arabs!
Egypt is Egyptian no matter religion, stop with the ignorance
@@eca3101
Do not try to persuade
He is inspired by envy that never ends and he will never be persuaded even by thousand evidences
Had to stop watching when it was claimed that Cleopatra never learned Egyptian and never left the capital. These were two things she, as a Ptolemy, famously and uniquely DID do.
Asterra2 He was talking about the other Cleopatra. The one that came before the one everyone knows.
Nope. He explicitely talked about Cleopatra VII
Dude. Egyptology is my hobby. He went out of his way to say "Cleopatra VII", which is incontrovertibly the last Pharaoh of Egypt and the Cleopatra the world knows well.
Did do ? Wtf does that mean LOL
You have my pity. On the one hand, grammar is hard. And yet, on the other, answers to grammar questions are literally just a Google away. Try it.
Finding this video from your newer stuff is like discovering a new channel. Wild.
Oh, and just saying, Romans were those busy businessmen who didn't have the time to think about the past, and instead they wrote stories about a Germanic commander who lived in two different worlds. (Y'know, old Germania and Rome)
Is it just a coincidence that this video came out just when AC origins comes out
What I've learned from this is that just as Renaissance was a Greco-Roman revivalism inspiring Secularism, following 1797, there was an Egyptian Revivalism inspiring European imperialism. I also learned that we see Egypt not as it truly is but reflecting the European ideals of its time. I could say the same about Ancient Greece or Rome
Saying the Rosetta Stone had translation of words from Hieroglyphics to Greek is like saying that Canadian laws are a collection of translations from English to French.
It was a record of a proclamation in Hieroglyphics, Greek and Demotic from which linguists were able to work out translations of Demotic and Hieroglyphics, not a Hieroglyphics to Greek dictionary
Alexandre Brault 😂😂😂😂
You win the Internet.
*claps* give this man a cookie. I swear everyone is a linguist these days
Linguist? I learnt it at school when I was like 9yo
Alexandre Brault This video is way off. This is the only video I have seen from this channel but it will be my last. He totally misrepresented what the Rosetta Stone is. Along with the rest of the material horribly presented.
no where did he say that it was a dictionary, you charlatan!
Could you do a history of the Berbers of North Africa? There isn’t much information on them on RUclips and they must be interesting being at the crossroads of Europe, Arabia, and Sub Saharan Africa.
I guess it's better to direct that question to Masaman. Check out his channel if you haven't already by the way: he covers all of the stuff that self-proclaimed history buffs tend to overlook with a strong emphasis on the genetic aspect. Really awesome content with new videos coming out every three days or so.
Rhaegar Targaryen
No they're not cross road people they are middle eastern invaders.
Classymaru Nara
That's incorrect.
They actually traded with a
Black West African "negroid" group and admired their beauty and riches.This negroid group I'm talking of is the Sarakole/Soninke.
Classymaru Nara
Do some research.
Atlantean survivors.
0:27 You used the word "literally" correctly. So rare to see these days. So nice to see on RUclips. I am proud of you.
Cleoparta VII did learn how to write and speak Egyptian. But she was the first ruler of the Ptolemaic dynasty to do so, so your point stands about the disconnect against the Greek rulers and the Egyptian common peoplle
*i m a g e n o t f o u n d*
Harry Obser *s e a r c h i n g*
*Gravity falls*
I think the Pyramids of Giza when they were new (limestone/gold) was the most beautiful man made structure ever.
no, actually, the Greek ruling class in Egypt was culturally and socially *isolated from the native Egyptian peasants and so by the time of the Roman conquest the Greek class spoke exclusively Greek, lived mostly in Alexandria and didn't much like the Egyptians. Cleopatra herself was the exception rather than the rule; she actively tried to portray herself as an Egyptian, within reason, and as a Pharaoh. this was one of the reasons why a lot of the Greek ruling class, including her brother, didn't like her.
edit: *Greek had signficant influence on Egyptian society, just not the other way around.
Voytek that's exactly what Cody said
it's not though, you're just misinterpreting.
The Greek language was used in all Egypt, from Alexandria all the way to the Elephantine. Sure, Greek was an "elite language", but it wasn't isolated either from the native population.
Coptic, the final step in the evolution of the Egyptian language, was written in the Greek alphabet (with some additions) and with heavy borrowing from Greek. You cannot say Greek didn't leave its influence on the country.
Voytek Silence weeaboo, men are speaking.
Voytek yeah but you're still saying that Greeks mostly lived in Alexandria. Alexandria was a big city - huge for that time, second only to Rome - so of course a large part of the Greek population lived there - but also Egyptians and Jews did. As for the rest of the country: a few cities like Naucratis had the status of Greek poleis, and Greeks were spread all along the Nile: soldiers, magistrates, merchants. Not the lower class peasants though, I'll give you that, but I think you have a bit too rigid understanding of "Greek social elite". I think you could argue that the middle class of Greco-Roman Egypt was quite mixed, but that, as you indeed argued, the upper class wasn't that much influenced by the native Egyptian culture.
That description of the rosetta stone, my oh my... The Rosetta stone was a stone found to have three copies of the same decree published on it. It was erected by Egyptian priests to thank one of the Ptolemaic pharaohs for something or other, can't recall what. The reason it had the same thing written on it three times was not so it could be used as a dictionary for future historians, it was written in Hieroglyphics, as was traditional for this type of decree, then Demotic, so the local peasants could read the decree, and Greek, so the Ptolemaic pharaoh could read it. It also turns out to not be unique as we've found at least two other plinths like it that were erected for the same reason.
"and Greek, so the Ptolemaic pharaoh could read it"
It was not just the Ptolemaic kings who could read Greek. Greek was a widely used language in Ptolemaic Egypt, a bit elite perhaps, but certainly used in many different towns all throughout the land.
_so the local peasants could read the decree_
This phrase wouldn't cease to be a natural oxymoron until the 19th century.
Local middle class of merchants and large land owners (they probably couldn't write but literacy in Ptolomaic Egypt was fairly good for the time) is probably more accurate.
the "rosetta stone" pharaoh was en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptolemy_V_Epiphanes
It's simplification because the video is only 10 minutes long; you're not saying anything about the Rosetta Stone than everyone who has ever heard of it doesn't know. Don't be pedantic; you know very well what he meant.
Correction: Cleopatra did learn Egyptian and she left for Rome with Caesar
I did not have a sexual relation with that woman.
CIA well I'm sure the CIA didn't
CIA don't lie to us boi we both know she gave u da fuk
CIA I did have
lol
But you DID do the JFK assassination
People used "Pharaoh" as a catchall term for dictator/evil up until Hitler came along
Uhh not really. Caesar, Kaiser and Tsar were terms used for leaders throughout history, and would continue being used by certain rulers up until 1918. Pharoah was a term used to describe an evil human character in relation to the biblical nature of the Pharoah.
John Larry In Britain for a while Napoleon was slow used for that. Though there is a cartoon criticizing the Russian pogroms by drawing the Tsar as Pharoh.
Really? In which culture/language? Never heard that
John Larry wtf
An Interesting Video would be the Indonesian withdrawal from the U.N
It happened in 1965, but didn't last more than a year. President Soekamo of Indonesia _did_ make his own version of the UN, CONEFO, but again, didn't last past 1966.
Cleopatra spoke ancient Egyptian including many other languages.
Should I just quit school and go on *The Great Courses Plus*
Cheesoos Kryst You should definitely just quit school and go to *The Great Courses Plus* where you can learn many course *The Great Courses Plus* offers. *The Great Courses Plus* teaches all 🤤
Cheesoos Kryst yes yes you should
Also rick and morty
Fucking Malfurion oh no, I’m not smart enough for rick and Morty.
Cheesoos Kryst Yes, because Great Courses Plus good, School bad
Pretty sure Cleopatra was originally exiled by her brother before she used the Romans to usurp him and take control. Was also pretty sure Cleopatra was among the few Ptolemaic Pharoahs to actually learn the Egyptian language.
0:18 Oh, Cody... Don't tell me you're playing music from Joseph: King of Dreams, are you?
I've seen that film, and know how true it is to not only the Egyptian cultures, but the Biblical morals. Plus, I don;t think the story of Joseph in Egypt is brought up in this video.
I am not Christian anymore but I must be honest and admit that that was a great movie,
WE
That movies sound track was the bomb.
WUZ
Maybe we should start celebrating Ancient Mesopotamian culture, that barely ever gets brought up.
Max Wasson YESOPOTAMIA
There's also the Akkadians, Babylonians, and Assyrians
The big reason is that they have left behind far fewer remains than the Egyptians did.
WE WUZ GILGAMESHES N SHIT
Their civilization wasn’t as grandiose and stable as Egypt, mostly because of geography. Unlike the Nile which was dependable and consistent in its flooding, the Tigris and Euphrates were downright a bitch to plan for as they were always drying up and flash flooding settlements without warning.
Coincidently, the Mesopotamians gods were more bipolar and harsh, as they callously killed their worshippers while the Egyptian gods were considerably nicer and more caring of their people.
Cleopatra learned Egyptian. That one was the major difference between her and her ancestors-
The release of this video is infulenced by AC origins not a debate.
I listened to that course, I enjoyed it immensely. Although Cody if you listened more carefully you would know that it states that Cleopatra was the first pharaoh (and in a way, the last) to learn ancient Egyptian, something her predecessors shunned. That being said, not a bad video.
EDIT: first Ptolemaic pharaoh to learn ancient Egyptian
She was not. She was the first Ptolemaic ruler to learn the language.
Fabian Hale I meant the first Ptolemaic pharaoh to learn ancient Egyptian. My fault for not clarifying though.
One of my favorite history teachers (forgot his name) dedicated his life and career to the learning and teaching of human history from the known origins of humanity to pre-modern culture.
I remember his first lecture in which he stated, as much as it'd be nice for people to get along and accept each other, it just isn't in our nature. People simply do not get along.
I contradict that, because people are coming along way more than we ever did. We always lived in smaller groups until we had some form of society where we had to work together to achieve things and make specialization possible.
what are your sources about cleopatra? according to plutarch cleopatra was very educated and she was one of the few ptolemaic monarchs who really cared about the egyptian culture and spoke many languages including egyptian fluently.
"There was sweetness also in the tones of her voice; and her tongue, like an instrument of many strings, she could readily turn to whatever language she pleased, so that in her interviews with Barbarians she very seldom had need of an interpreter, but made her replies to most of them herself and unassisted, whether they were Ethiopians, Troglodytes, Hebrews, Arabians, Syrians, Medes or Parthians. Nay, it is said that she knew the speech of many other peoples also, although the kings of Egypt before her had not even made an effort to learn the native language, and some actually gave up their Macedonian dialect."
Plutarch Life of Anthony chapter XXVII
and why do you claim she never left alexandra? she visited caesar in rome, antony in tarsus, was kicked by her brother out of alexandria for a time and she was present at the battle of actium and these are just a few examples.
Flavius Honorius He was talking about the other Cleopatra.
StrickenWithFear umm he is not sweetie,“ Cleopatra Vll “ is THE Cleopatra that we had known
No he is not talking about another Kleopatra.
the thing that continues to blow me away is that in the Victorian era, "Egyptology" was a perfectly accepted word. And yet, find me another word, referring to another power in this format that was in the common parlance...Romanology? Greekology? Syrianology? German/Deutch/Alemanology?
verdatum There's Sinology, which is the study of Chinese culture. The "sin" part is derived from the Greek word for China, if I recall correctly. That's the only one I can think of at the moment.
Indology bids you welcome, fellas.
2dDon
The greek word for China is kina.
ALso thers is Byzantinology,that studies the Byzantine culture.[alos known as easter roman empire]
That was because by that time, the Greeks and Romans and Judea was already well catalogued, but Egyptian archaeology was a new thing.
verdatum There's also albanology lol
Cleopatra learned the language and left the Capital city ...this is ignorant .
Thank you! I was about to say something to this effect but you got it.
+Victoria Elizabeth If you are going to use the word ignorant, then at least use the word correctly. It was a mistake, or he was misinformed, or read something wrong. That doesn't make him ignorant.
And she was very famously the first of her dynasty to learn the language.
Victoria Elizabeth
Use ignorant correctly.
Samuel Davidson lmao i like how being condescending towards americans makes such little people feel smart.
Love your videos Cody, but there's something we need to correct on this one! Cleopatra VII did speak the native language of Egypt (along with some 8 others according to Plutarch) and we have at least 2 documented cases of her visiting the rest of the country. Once in the early part of her reign, to take part in the Apis bull ceremony and to organize famine relief in upper Egypt, and another time with Caesar, on a propaganda cruise up the Nile. It's also very likely (though not documented) that she would have been present at the dedication ceremony of the large scale relief of herself and her son at the Dendera temple, in the later years of her reign.
I love what you're doing with the idea of watching lectures and summarizing them in animation! If it's not too personal, how long did it take you to make it a career (if it's gone that far already)?
The first thing i came across that got interested in Ancient Egypt was the first Yu-gi-oh manga. And now when i think of Ancient Egypt i remember the smell of the pages , the cold nipping at my nose and sending chills down my spine as i read late at night the shadows would some times move do to the cars driving by my house so it quite hard to forget. Mind you i was 12 at the time.
When I was a young child, Ancient Egypt always fascinated me, the architecture, the gods, the clothing, the grandeur that hollywood always gave it. I grew up watching "The Prince of Egypt", "The Mummy Returns", "Joseph King of Dreams", and playing games like Serious Sam. It always held this mystique to me, and always will.
Should have asked ubisoft for a sponsorship to promote assassins creed origins (It is set in ancient Egypt)
Hooked on Gaming isn't it the Greek Egypt though?
It's probably why he posted it so soon because Assassin Creed Origins is coming out in a couple of days and he wants to get into the algorithm. He's hoping to leech views off of ACO by tagging his videos Ancient Egypt etc.
Abid M good.
well, half as interesting was smarter than Cody, he did exactly that
Well, who's not to say he didn't? He could have asked 'em but got denied/
As soon as you started speaking about the curse my nose started bleeding fast
Cleopatra never left Alexandria? She actively followed Marc Antony during the Civil war after Caesar died
Away out in Egypt in the Valley of Kings, where the mummified Pharaohs pretend dead in their sleep: don't touch, never ever steal. . . Unless you're in for the kill!
Or you'll be hit by the curse of the Pharaohs!
Ah I can hear Hank Sherman's wonderful guitar as I read this...classic.
The Great Courses Plus is awesome, I'm glad that so much of your content comes from there. Maybe if you get a chance can you do some videos on Phillip Daileader's course, the High Middle Ages? The episode on Chivalry is very interesting and you could probably do a lot with it.
The Egyptians never enslaved the Hebrews. The Egyptian Empire conquered ancient Canaan and, according to one theory, the words “Egyptian, and conquer” gradually shifted to “Egypt and Slavery” Moses may have been a person who led a small rebellion, or he may not have existed at all and rather was a euphemism for independence. The Egyptians have never mentioned the biblical plagues and only passably mentioned a Canaanite tribe called by the Egyptians as Habirw, possibly Hebrew or possibly not. For a society where almost everything was written down and any natural disaster was extensively deliberated, the Egyptians were unsurprisingly silent on these ancient myths. I hate how most people only know about the one part of Egyptian history that was at worst made up entirely and at best distorted beyond reality to the point of being an unrecognisably vague fairytale.
If YOUR nation got fucked up by the kind of shit the Bible records as happening, in direct opposition to YOUR religious beliefs, WHY IN HELL would you RECORD SUCH A HUMILIATING DEFEAT?!?
Back in those days, something like all of the firstborn sons dying at the decree of an alien god (who apparently your gods were too weak to stop) would never have been written down by anyone on penalty of death and any such writings that were discovered would have been destroyed in the name of state unity. Back in those days it was a hell of a lot easier to make entire nations of people forget what really happened over a few generations (which in those times 1 generation was only 40-50 years) and fill their heads with lies via conspiracy.
Just because you have records saying that such and such DIDN'T happen in history DOESN'T MEAN IT DIDN'T, it just means that whoever wrote that piece of writing wants those who read it to believe it didn't for some reason, because without the Internet and cell phone cameras, nobody can prove fucking anything happened.
For god's sake even with all our knowledge of physics and the universe, we still can't prove, without a shadow of a doubt, that the universe didn't spring into existence last thursday!
Joel Gawne,
Wouldn’t the Egyptians have incorporated such an event into their own religion? If a god such as that we’re so powerful then why would they deny him/her? Also, even without such a god, they may have used the Egyptian Religion to explain the events.
But beyond that, the Egyptians weren’t very good at censorship. Hatshepsut’s Name was decreed to be erased from all known records, and yet, we know all about her and her reign. We even have salacious paintings and papyri depicting her having relations with multiple men. If they were so good at erasing all memory, how could she have survived the destruction Thutmosis III ordered upon her memory. Furthermore, Hatshepsut was a much more minor event than the plagues that should have destroyed Egypt and it would have been easier to erase her than the plagues. If they failed to remove her, how could they have succeeded with the disasters.
Also, the “Old Testament” wasn’t penned until the Babylonian Captivity, which we can prove happened, hundreds of years after the plagues. Would the Hebrews in such a time of despair not have exaggerated their travels in Egypt to give hope to their people? Get a group of 30 children. Tell the first child a statement, have him/her pass that statement on until the last child. Then see how different they are. Do that for hundreds of years and through times of war and despair until it is finally written down and translated hundreds of times until the modern day totalling ~3,000 years of changes and alterations. That is the Bible. Even most rabbinical scholars agree that the Exodus as reported in the Bible didn’t happen.
During the reign of Ramesses II the Egyptian empire conquered Canaan and battled The Hittites at Qadesh. The war ends and Egypt now rules the Levant for the rest of Ramesses II’s rule. He also constructed Pi-Ramesses (modern day Qantir) as his new capital, which the Bible mentions. Even if the Hebrews were in Egypt, that doesn’t mean they were outside of Canaan nor does it mean they were enslaved. All that shows is that the Hebrews knew of the Egyptians and where their capital was. Nothing else.
That still can’t show that Moses or the plagues existed at all. No other culture, INCLUDING THE EGYPTIANS, mentioned a cataclysm in Egypt. Even the Hittites who had a vested interest in the fall of the Egyptian Empire.
We’re talking about history as ancient to the Romans as the Romans are to us, nothing can be proven beyond all doubt, but this can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Egypt: The stuff that wasn't boring.
Never heard a more accurate use of the term "long story short"
I'm pretty sure the great courses plus opening is pre-recorded
1:39 "Built temples for the old gods"
Alright kids, and this temple appears to have been dedicated to Yogg'Saron.
Hold on, according to Plutarch, Cleopatra both learned Coptic (along with some seven other languages) and left Alexandria quite often. She also seemed to be in touch with the people well enough early in her life. Granted, Plutarch may be biased, but I see no reason to doubt him here.
Pyramids were landing pads for the Goa'uld
I learned all i know about Egypt from Stargate :P
Egypt was not "just another conquest" for Greece and Rome. Back in antiquity, Egypt was a breadbasket nation and both Alexander and Rome were in need of the huge wheat surpluses Egypt could provide. The access to the Silk Road was a nice bonus as well.
Cody, can you do a video on what would happen if we wasn't kingz and shit?
Hey Brendan Fraser is a really nice guy!!! And the mummy movies were pretty alright I like seeing the British in Egypt.
Ya the broke every thing and we’re still suffering cause of this
One of the excavators who found Tut's tomb died of old age in the 90"s at the age of like 93 or something, and the newspaper headline read "Curse of Tutenkhamun strikes again"
LOLS
Holy shit! The internet is Egypt!
8:35 JUST
what is the joke i didn't get it
MY
In the 17th Century (AD), a lot of wealthy people used powdered mummy to help with sickness (for some reason), so I think they were of slight interest before Napoleon.
No Stargate references, how disappointing.
Be careful, Kid. RUclips is on a witchhunt.
You mean witch pursuit thingy?
Yea witch pursuit thingy.
Don´t you worry. Halloween is over now.
UNITE THE WHITE
what witch hunt
I am in shock that u didn't show the Isambard Kingdom Brunel's Iron Bridge.
Cleopatra VII did learn hieroglyphics
Wait wait wait... Cleopatra was the first Ptolomeic pharaoh to learn to speak ancient egyptian. Also Rome was very tolerant to other non threading cultures, to the point they usually include gods in their religion: Zeus -> Jupiter, who was also called Jupiter whos also Amon Ra.
That's the key word, ANCIENT Egyptian, which was not the language the common people in the era spoke at the time. That would be like if I ruled Italy but only spoke Latin and not Italian. I certainly wouldn't be speaking the language of the people I rule.
...Uh... No, no, that's not being "tolerant," that's just called being around the same area as Greece and having a semi-similar pantheon, but if oyu get into specifics then it'll eventually show itself as pretty different on its own (see Mars being extremely different from Ares, as the main similarity between the two is that they're kinda just a war god).
Wow all those Rosetta Stone commercials finally make sense to me as to why they called it "Rosetta Stone."
WE
Fanatic808 please no
Iam not sure whether you are trolling or being sincere but either way ancient Egyptian are just like modern Egyptians ( semitic)
Mohammed Refat a bit of both my dude
@Mohammad Refat
It's because Sub-Saharan African descendants (black people) claim that THEY were Egyptians, since Egypt is in Africa. WE WUZ KANGZ N SHIET is just a meme to make fun of black people who claim to be related to Egyptians.
Fanatic808 ARE FARMERS BUMBUMBUMBUMBUMBUMBUM
“Look at the Galls, the Britons, the Jews... even Jesus.”
Umm...
Jesus WAS Jewish...
He’s referring to culture. Jesus was ethnically jewish but they didnt like him
I don’t think he doesn’t know that. Do you think he doesn’t know that?
The fact that you dont have at least 1M subs is a fucking injustice. I love your work bro
in 45 BC cleopatra left alexandria to join Caesar in Rome, so she did leave the capitol city
Cleopatra never left Alexandria? Antony met her in Asia Minor. She came to his aid in a war against the Parthians. They were both present at the battle of Actium... Come on!
That was Cleopatra X, not Cleopatra VII, who he was referring to. (Cleopatra was a popular name.)
Troodon Cleopatra VII was the last ruler of pre-Roman Egypt. There was no X.
Spencer Evans Remember Cleopatra XX? Ye I Do
I never saw the ancient Egyptians to be hated. I found ancient Egyptian history fascinating.
I can see why USA likes Egypt. The marrying the sisters part inspired Alabama.
As a Egyptian I have spat my water reading this
Eh, tired joke.
I thought Cleopatra visited Rome once in a “diplomatic” mission
Referring to Brendan Frasiers’ The Mummy: ‘let’s not talk about that’
Me: ‘that’s, why I’m here...’
They were a empire of hard working perfectly organised not as corrupt as us people
I think Imhotep and Dzoser are great examples of discipline and great work life