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How The Rosetta Stone Unlocked Hieroglyphics

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2015
  • Thanks to the British Museum! Go help choose their first RUclips series: • Choose the British Mus...
    The Rosetta Stone is one of the most famous archaeological finds in history: and it was the key to cracking Egyptian hieroglyphics. And while it took scholars years to work it out, there was one clue in there that helped unlock everything that followed. After hours in the British Museum, I went to explain...
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @Kreege
    @Kreege 4 года назад +2609

    That simple French infantryman who realized the stone's significance is one of history's biggest unsung heroes.

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym 3 года назад +18

      Could have been a general or something I guess.

    • @etheraelespeon1986
      @etheraelespeon1986 3 года назад +88

      Perhaps even a Modern Major General! If they can write a washing bill in babylonic cuneiform, after all... q:

    • @simoun59
      @simoun59 3 года назад

      Emperor!

    • @allyw7405
      @allyw7405 3 года назад +2

      Fa lalala la lah... lah lah laaaa...

    • @Oshhtv
      @Oshhtv 2 года назад

      The thief, robber and probably rapist

  • @magic2174
    @magic2174 4 года назад +9950

    bold to throw shade at Napoleon for "acquiring" artifacts while standing in the British museum

    • @stephenmcdonnell9413
      @stephenmcdonnell9413 4 года назад +171

      😂😂😂😂

    • @idot3331
      @idot3331 4 года назад +475

      The British Empire wasn't a nationalistic conquest like the Napoleonic French Empire. It was a bunch of massive corporations realising they could exploit resources beyond Europe and make loads of money. It was still terrible, but it wasn't just imperialistic expansion for the sake of it, it was driven by capitalism. In fact, the "American empire" does very much the same thing today, most of its large corporations operate the majority of their factories in Asia where labour is cheap, which has led to the destruction of communities and many violations of human rights. Most artefacts in the British museum where purchased or traded, not plundered.

    • @Sarsanoa
      @Sarsanoa 4 года назад +197

      @Bertrum Arthur odd that you prefer "artifact" over "artefact" yet "misspelt" over "misspelled". theres some irony in being a language descriptivist who does not hold fast to one standard of spelling in the same sentence
      to the topic of discussion, I would say that theres nothing wrong about throwing shade in a joking manner over actions that happened in history that don't align with modern ethics. maybe check to see if the nationalism goggles are on a bit too tight?

    • @Sarsanoa
      @Sarsanoa 4 года назад +72

      @Bertrum Arthur sorry, my language ability isnt good enough to decipher your message. I think I have said all I meant to say already though. cheers!

    • @jmaitland5709
      @jmaitland5709 4 года назад +82

      @Bertrum Arthur While I do agree that any form of imperialism is inherently wrong, the other guy is still correct abut most artefacts in the British museum being purchased, not stolen.
      Also artefact is the correct spelling in British English and Australian English. Artifact is US and Canadian English.
      Which is a bit of an amusing quirk considering 'misspelt' is a British English thing whereas the US English spelling is 'misspelled'.

  • @KaiCalimatinus
    @KaiCalimatinus 8 лет назад +9987

    No wonder it was never totally destroyed. Nations rise and fall, but debts are eternal.

  • @trailersic
    @trailersic 8 лет назад +8437

    Maybe my DVD instruction manual could be useful in 10,000 years, it has the same instructons in 20 languages

    • @Autotrope
      @Autotrope 8 лет назад +322

      good point, you may have to do something to preserve it really well though. What could we photocopy it onto that'll last that long?

    • @CaptainSwift11
      @CaptainSwift11 8 лет назад +383

      +Autotrope *facepalm* Stone!

    • @gramursowanfaborden5820
      @gramursowanfaborden5820 8 лет назад +97

      how doth one without a DVD player, TV, the correct 240v/50hz AC power supply and knowledge of plugs (something even we get wrong often enough) play a DVD?

    • @BvousBrainSystems
      @BvousBrainSystems 7 лет назад +46

      You should carve it in stone.

    • @ShaunDreclin
      @ShaunDreclin 6 лет назад +141

      Huh that's actually a good point. Global consumer products shipped with one book in many languages (because making a unique package for every region is a waste of time effort and money) may be what saves any of our languages from going dead.
      As long as the paper doesn't rot, I suppose.

  • @Aravzil
    @Aravzil 8 лет назад +6807

    It's funny to think that the person carving the text more than two thousand years ago was probably thinking that it was such a lame job to carve tax paper work instead of having the privilege of doing the inside of a tomb.

    • @glennleader8880
      @glennleader8880 8 лет назад +236

      +Aravzil Well... tax stonework anyway :D

    • @jedrorm
      @jedrorm 8 лет назад +220

      +Aravzil Tax lawyer for either the government or some cult? I bet he was making absolute bank.

    • @fireriffs
      @fireriffs 8 лет назад +395

      +Aravzil If he knew how to read and write in three languages he was probably well paid though. Still, can you imagine chiseling all that text by hand?! It must have been a pretty important piece of tax code to chisel it into stone and not write it on papyrus.

    • @KingOfShadeEmpire
      @KingOfShadeEmpire 8 лет назад +284

      "Damn, I hate my job! Other people are actually making something that changes the world..."

    • @jedrorm
      @jedrorm 8 лет назад +127

      fireyf Well mister fireyf, I'm afraid your tax agreement is set in stone.

  • @nerglersstuff8890
    @nerglersstuff8890 4 года назад +1786

    *slaps rosetta stone* this badboy can fit so much history in it.

    • @picotrains8064
      @picotrains8064 4 года назад +31

      Slaps your comment
      “This bad boy can fit so many memes in it”

    • @ashleycrow8867
      @ashleycrow8867 3 года назад +24

      This badboy can fit so much taxpaperwork into it

    • @mip4422
      @mip4422 2 года назад +5

      Thicc. Absolute unit

    • @tee-sam-ee-red
      @tee-sam-ee-red 2 года назад +2

      *slaps you* this bad boy is so underrated.

  • @BvousBrainSystems
    @BvousBrainSystems 7 лет назад +5236

    Over here is the Rosetta stone. It was the key to understanding Egyptian hyeroglyphs...
    *pat pat*
    and it is one of the most precious and valuable posession of the British Museum.
    *rub*

    • @suwinkhamchaiwong8382
      @suwinkhamchaiwong8382 4 года назад +48

      ah

    • @MultiJejje
      @MultiJejje 4 года назад +12

      @Savage Cabbage They have the real one also...

    • @dy9955
      @dy9955 4 года назад +156

      @@MultiJejje behind glass that no one can pat or rub.

    • @whynottalklikeapirat
      @whynottalklikeapirat 4 года назад +293

      "It REALLY is quite valuable"
      * Pulls out rock hammer *

    • @dillon7981
      @dillon7981 4 года назад +3

      whynottalklikeapirat ... doesn’t look like a gargoyle to me

  • @willparkinson
    @willparkinson 8 лет назад +2246

    Amazing how the managed to do this with so much of the stone missing.

    • @TomScottGo
      @TomScottGo  8 лет назад +1178

      +Will Parkinson That's a really good point - and actually, I should have mentioned that in my script. What you see are only the last few lines of the hieroglyphics: there should be much more at the top!

    • @pseudonym4893
      @pseudonym4893 8 лет назад +299

      +Tom Scott That stood out to me, too; the hieroglyphics make up the smallest part of the text. So did they decipher the entire language using only a couple sentences? How much of the Egyptian alphabet and vocabulary is represented in that short excerpt?

    • @TomScottGo
      @TomScottGo  8 лет назад +755

      +Pseudo Nym Enough! Once you've started to crack a small part of it, you've got a way in -- maybe not just from the Stone, but in other places, in other contexts. That's one of the reasons it took twenty years! But before the Rosetta Stone, there wasn't that one starting point to work from.

    • @Neontronique
      @Neontronique 8 лет назад +37

      +Tom Scott Are there other parts/chunks of the stone from the original digging grounds? Or other stones like this? I have the tourist magnet sitting on my computer in front of me, but I often wondered as well if there have been recovered languages like this as well. Fantastic video as always.

    • @TheKyshu
      @TheKyshu 8 лет назад +86

      +Will Parkinson Once you figured out a few of the words, the rest is basically a crossword puzzle: obviously this is an oversimplification of things, but with every word you figured out, the rest of the words are easier to figure out from the context.

  • @ultravidz
    @ultravidz 8 лет назад +3017

    “Nothing is certain except death and taxes.” -Benjamin Franklin

    • @cherylhopper6076
      @cherylhopper6076 8 лет назад +39

      +AlphaOmega And political corruption.

    • @richardregpickering3287
      @richardregpickering3287 8 лет назад +2

      Nothing is certain.

    • @cherylhopper6076
      @cherylhopper6076 8 лет назад +2

      richard "Reg" pickering Except death and that no person can earn their way into heaven on good deeds.

    • @plumeater1
      @plumeater1 7 лет назад +8

      "How do we know it's real when we are not real?" - Jade Smith

    • @ssgcmwatsonusa
      @ssgcmwatsonusa 7 лет назад +29

      At least death doesn't get worse every time Congress meets!

  • @yiliangliang5694
    @yiliangliang5694 4 года назад +341

    Legend has it that the Rosetta Stone manages to still be easier to understand than a W-4 form.

  • @shelvacu
    @shelvacu 8 лет назад +1595

    Tax paperwork! (stonework?) No wonder no one ever mentions what's actually *on* the stone.

    • @justmonica9253
      @justmonica9253 6 лет назад +122

      I actually find it more interesting than any great secrets it could have held. That something as mundane as taxes, which are seen everywhere, unknowingly became a vital piece of history for future civilizations is somewhat poetic to me.

    • @ceri-potat
      @ceri-potat 6 лет назад +1

      and it's only a vital part thanks to capitalism, thank you very much

    • @mossyrocktv4629
      @mossyrocktv4629 5 лет назад +21

      @@ceri-potat Capitalism was only invented after the Industrial revolution bro

    • @FortoFight
      @FortoFight 4 года назад +9

      @@mossyrocktv4629 That depends on how pedantic you are really. You can argue that basic currency-based exchange is capitalism.

    • @FortoFight
      @FortoFight 4 года назад +21

      I'd say "paperwork" is a figure of speech at this point. You might do "paperwork" on a computer, so it represents forming and maintaining documents in general.

  • @ugoleftillgorite
    @ugoleftillgorite 8 лет назад +680

    Just like they said in V for Vendetta, "One thing is true of all governments - their most reliable records are tax records."

  • @SgtHappyHands
    @SgtHappyHands 3 года назад +73

    Old video, but I felt compelled to say that I actually find it quite comforting to know that it's tax work. That's very human. And it's endearing to see that people are people across time and space. At least on these very long and incredibly short scales.

  • @101m4n
    @101m4n 7 лет назад +1323

    In the future, someone is going to find "rosettas flash drive" and decipher the dead language of emoji...
    They will then promptly wish they hadn't.

    • @charlottesetsu
      @charlottesetsu 7 лет назад +289

      "So Professor, you're saying that the eggplant means... oh. And you spent half your career on that. oh."

    • @SuperSmashDolls
      @SuperSmashDolls 6 лет назад +53

      Granted, ancient writing wasn't any less stupid.

    • @YouTubeExplore777
      @YouTubeExplore777 6 лет назад +27

      they'll find all the memes.

    • @p1rgit
      @p1rgit 5 лет назад +5

      that's why i have great hopes on sun flare :) smth like carrington event 1859 if i remember correctly. (check it out in wikip) all things electric and electronic will be destroyed. including tax files!!! :D but about the latter i guess they keep hard copies, jus in case. so's to collect taxes after sun flare from survivors. sun flare does not kill people, they'll do it themselves when all electric things are not working, like, pumps for water supply and so on.

    • @Dragiux
      @Dragiux 5 лет назад +3

      @@p1rgit Records are still being printed.

  • @Stefan-xr8lh
    @Stefan-xr8lh 8 лет назад +402

    I like to think at the end of the 20 years or however long you said, they just screamed 'TAX! IT WAS TAX FORMS!'

    • @tommykl
      @tommykl 8 лет назад +96

      +TheMad Gerk Well, no, like he said, the people translating already knew Ancient Greek, and the text in Ancient Greek was broadly the same. They'd have known it was tax forms pretty quickly :P

    • @Stefan-xr8lh
      @Stefan-xr8lh 8 лет назад +44

      tommykl
      You ruined it for me!

    • @artofluck3641
      @artofluck3641 4 года назад +5

      What if the reason they did that, was to express the language and numbers. Maybe telling a story doesn’t utilize all of the languages. Or they just really wanted everyone to know Egypt was ruled by Britain.

    • @moondust2365
      @moondust2365 3 года назад +8

      @@Stefan-xr8lh Not really. Imagine a Greek scholar reading through the Ancient Greek part saying "Oh God! It's f-ing tax forms. Well-- if it's the only way to crack what those Heiroglyphs mean, there's nothing we can do. Ugh..."

  • @PS3Vids10
    @PS3Vids10 5 лет назад +84

    *two languages, three scripts. Demotic and Hieroglyphic are two different ways of writing the ancient Egyptian language; the other language is ancient Greek.

  • @ultrasuperkiller
    @ultrasuperkiller 8 лет назад +1122

    You acually fooled me to think the one you where toutching and slapping was the real one (since you where allowed in after-hours, i tought you had a special permit), damn, got me so good

    • @BR-jt6ny
      @BR-jt6ny 8 лет назад +109

      +Jim Eriksson Same! I was flinching! XD

    • @TheOzumat
      @TheOzumat 8 лет назад +149

      +Jim Eriksson Same, until I heard the hollow sound.

    • @damientonkin
      @damientonkin 6 лет назад +8

      Apparently the real one is leaning against the wall of someone’s office in the basement.

    • @himself187
      @himself187 6 лет назад +5

      maybe he is a janitor there

    • @MultiClush
      @MultiClush 5 лет назад +1

      Jim, you are crazy if you think this is real

  • @Bbonno
    @Bbonno 8 лет назад +35

    Loved the "touching ancient artifact"-gag: you really had me wondering why it was THAT accessible. Well done.

  • @Am-Not-Jarvis
    @Am-Not-Jarvis 8 лет назад +65

    The way you looked disappointed when you asked "what's on it" made me immediately go "it's gonna have something to do with taxes".

  • @PodExbert
    @PodExbert 7 лет назад +270

    the fact they wrote that much in a straight line is really impressive.

    • @acedragon1456
      @acedragon1456 4 года назад +65

      With tomb writings they drew straight lines with their equivalent of a ruler and then wiped the lines off once they finished writing so I imagine the writers of the rosetta stone did the same thing

    • @acedragon1456
      @acedragon1456 4 года назад +25

      @@o.a.m9515 What is this parties you speak of :P

    • @MajesticSkywhale
      @MajesticSkywhale 4 года назад +15

      @@o.a.m9515 it's the same thing we do now idk why that's so hard to imagine, they drew a guide line in pencil or chalk or whatever lmao

    • @francisluglio6611
      @francisluglio6611 4 года назад +18

      O.A.M that was the lamest opportunity for you to say that ever

    • @deviladvocate21
      @deviladvocate21 3 года назад +4

      @@o.a.m9515 the original comment wasnt even a joke, so your reply doesn't make sense

  • @InnovationBlast
    @InnovationBlast 8 лет назад +435

    Tom, you make some of the highest quality videos on RUclips. Never disappoints!

    • @ikonane
      @ikonane 8 лет назад +3

      Agree!

    • @TheMoonRover
      @TheMoonRover 3 года назад +1

      Indeed. 4K videos back in 2015.

  • @ThePixel1983
    @ThePixel1983 3 года назад +22

    Touching something that had been touched by thousands of visitors that day feels weird nowadays.

  • @Skill5able
    @Skill5able 8 лет назад +177

    I angrily yelled at the screen when you touched the top of the stone. By the time you started sliding your hand across I started thinking "this is just a replica". You got me good.

    • @Alex-oz9eh
      @Alex-oz9eh 7 лет назад +1

      yeah, if he had actually rubbed the real one I would have cried.

    • @Volzotran
      @Volzotran 3 года назад +1

      Shrek

    • @latiendadepaikawaii
      @latiendadepaikawaii Год назад

      Did your parents stared at you menancingly after that?

  • @GuyWithAnAmazingHat
    @GuyWithAnAmazingHat 8 лет назад +30

    The British Museum is awesome. My friend also sent me the wooden Rosetta Stone postcard with a message written in hieroglyphics, it was the greatest post I've ever received.

  • @saintdonoghue
    @saintdonoghue 8 лет назад +739

    "I'm simplifying massively" - a line super-smart people like Tom Scott find themselves saying quite often ...

    • @saintdonoghue
      @saintdonoghue 8 лет назад +60

      He makes learning things thrilling - it's a rare gift.

    • @grindstone4910
      @grindstone4910 8 лет назад +20

      +Nillie That's when you get to play the tough-but-dumb guy, slap on some sunglasses, punch the table and yell "Put it in English!"

    • @TheBobjovi
      @TheBobjovi 7 лет назад +5

      Or what people say when they want to sound smarter

    • @wdyt2121
      @wdyt2121 6 лет назад

      Blox117
      Only a thorough research needed. But still, i appreciate that effort

    • @MultiClush
      @MultiClush 5 лет назад +4

      I too find it hard being so smart. I usually have to use my "normal people vocabulary" when talking to friends and family. Sigh.

  • @LauraSchmaura
    @LauraSchmaura 8 лет назад +18

    British Museum after hours. You, sir, are living the dream!

  • @ZorroVulpes
    @ZorroVulpes 8 лет назад +19

    When I was a kid, I heard people tell me that pre-Napoleon theory of heiroglyphics you talked about in the beginning. I guess it really takes a long time for new scientific discoveries to reach public knowledge.

  • @DarkMatterX1
    @DarkMatterX1 6 лет назад +7

    Older American here. Want to say thanks for your videos. It's great to see someone breaking down all manner of material and subjects into smaller, bitesize pieces that might awaken curiosity in youth around the globe. You're doing great work here. It's hopefully not thankless, and absolutely worth every second you spend making these.
    From your friend(s) across the pond, thanks. May Britain last another thousand years, and may they and the US always be friends.

    • @woahflamingo
      @woahflamingo Год назад

      sometimes i forget that it really is a loud minority of Americans still burning with hatred of the British, it's nice to be reminded that people can appreciate century long friendships.

  • @mirlov
    @mirlov 3 года назад +6

    It’s cool that a language learning site has a famous rock named after it

  • @DavoidJohnson
    @DavoidJohnson 7 лет назад +16

    I know this is a quickie, but no mention of Jean-François Champollion, the man who cracked it?

    • @F_A-18
      @F_A-18 26 дней назад

      Did you expect the British to admit defeat to the French?

  • @themanwiththepan
    @themanwiththepan 8 лет назад +15

    After about 10 seconds I thought to myself: "What, you can just touch it?" Heh, you got me

  • @peppertalks6948
    @peppertalks6948 4 года назад +130

    Imagine having to carve your tax forms into stone every year.

    • @acmefixer1
      @acmefixer1 3 года назад +17

      Even worse is the cost of the postage!😂🤣🤣😂

    • @jameswalker199
      @jameswalker199 3 года назад +1

      Talk to Prof Finkel about Cuneiform!

    • @notstudmuffin
      @notstudmuffin 2 года назад +1

      and have to file schedule a, b ,c and form 10k, they have to make 2 copies as well. yikes

    • @margo3367
      @margo3367 2 года назад +2

      What if you made an error, a "typo"?

    • @migolo1415
      @migolo1415 Год назад

      AND do it in 3 different languages

  • @WouterWeggelaar
    @WouterWeggelaar 8 лет назад +28

    I always like to compare this to breaking World War 2 cipher text by finding a crib. The crib in this case was a name, and that gave linguists a start. Imagine puzzling all the pieces together for many many years. Amazing work!

  • @ArtemisScribe
    @ArtemisScribe 4 года назад +26

    They should have realised it was a tax form from the beginning, it's in triplicate!

  • @Morbos1000
    @Morbos1000 8 лет назад +119

    The first time I went to the British Museum I had no idea they had the Rosetta Stone. It always seemed almost like a mythical object. I figured if it existed it would be in Egypt or somewhere exotic like that. When I came across it I was speechless. The British Museum is the most amazing museum I've ever been to (and I've been to a lot), and the Rosetta Stone has to be one of the most amazing objects in there.

    • @asurvivor6150
      @asurvivor6150 3 года назад +26

      What’s sad is most Egyptians will never get to see this since a plane ticket to London costs hundreds of dollars. It’d make more sense if Egyptians could access their history more easily than the British do.

    • @jackhopewell1745
      @jackhopewell1745 3 года назад +33

      @@asurvivor6150 why the modern Egyptian state has very little in common with ancient Egypt. Makes just as much cultural sense to remain in the British museum where it was studied.

    • @gemavaliente7675
      @gemavaliente7675 3 года назад +24

      @@jackhopewell1745 its part of Egypt's history, imo they have a right to their past

    • @a-drewg1716
      @a-drewg1716 3 года назад +27

      ​@@gemavaliente7675 modern Egypt's only relation to ancient Egypt is its geographic location otherwise there is not a single similarity. For example, famous Egyptian ruler Cleopatra lived closer to the modern era than when the Pyramids were built. It would be like saying that only Italy has a right to all of the Roman artifacts even though Rome and modern-day Italy hold no real connection in any way except their geographic location. Britain has a far better claim to the Rosetta stone since it is a hallmark in British history where they revived a long-dead and and remembered a once forgotten language.

    • @peterc.1419
      @peterc.1419 3 года назад +13

      @@a-drewg1716 Actually it was a French soldier who noticed it. So French have a better claim. But seriously UK will one day have to return these artefacts to their ex-colonies. Your type of thinking is dying out and as UK becomes more multicultural and the post colonies become more dominant they will demand a return of their goods and the UK will have to comply. At least there will be some justice then.
      And there are valid reasons for the Egyptians to host this. This item is from that area. And it ties in with the rest of ancient Egypt which is too big for the UK to loot. The tourism revenue from people visiting this stone would help the Egyptian society prosper meanwhile the UK is already rich enough and does not need more, especially not based on something not made by their own people.

  • @siddhantparekh8007
    @siddhantparekh8007 7 лет назад +39

    Lessons from Ancient Egypt: Do your tax paperwork

  • @DarthSoda
    @DarthSoda 8 лет назад +6

    Great video Tom! Brilliant summary of what would be an hour long TV documentary

  • @Peckingbird
    @Peckingbird 8 лет назад +32

    How did it end up in the British museum? Did we pilfer it as the spoils of war after Napoleon's defeat? Or did it just arrive in the post? Ebay?

    • @meanwhile_0
      @meanwhile_0 8 лет назад +39

      +Peckingbird craigslist

    • @CatnamedMittens
      @CatnamedMittens 8 лет назад +1

      +EresirThe1st can't say I blame him. I wouldn't wanna give it up.

    • @CatnamedMittens
      @CatnamedMittens 8 лет назад

      EresirThe1st I'd rather the French have it than the British as they found it.

    • @foobar201
      @foobar201 8 лет назад +12

      +EresirThe1st By that argument it should go to Egypt.

    • @CatnamedMittens
      @CatnamedMittens 8 лет назад

      EresirThe1st You snooze you lose, besides Britain temporarily lost control of the land.

  • @DaveTexas
    @DaveTexas 4 года назад +3

    I know I’m several years late, but I want to point out something: "Hieroglyphic" isn’t a noun. It’s an adjective. The noun is "hieroglyph." The stone is covered in hieroglyphs, not hieroglyphics. The writing is hieroglyphic writing, but the noun for what’s written there is hieroglyphs.

  • @brunoleal5123
    @brunoleal5123 4 года назад +2

    This is the Rosetta Stone the key to understanding hieroglyphics
    *SLÄP SLÄP SLÄP*

  • @mikejones-go8vz
    @mikejones-go8vz 7 лет назад +7

    I always thought it was a shame to remove artifacts from where they were found, but a lot of ancient Egyptian temples were destroyed for their stone, England and France saved a lot of it. Some will argue but it is true

  • @SuperSmashDolls
    @SuperSmashDolls 7 лет назад +5

    "Ancient Egyptian Tax Paperwork" sounds like the kind of joke LittleKuriboh would stick into an Abridged Series episode.

  • @Dizzula
    @Dizzula 8 лет назад

    Best one yet. You answered a bunch of questions I didn't realise that I didn't know the answers to. Spot on job Tom!

  • @Marquesian
    @Marquesian 8 лет назад

    Enjoyed your talk today tremendously, thank you Tom.

  • @rorrt
    @rorrt 8 лет назад +3

    Back in the mid-nineties my mother knew one of the senior curators of the British museum, and she decided to take me and my older brother. So, me a 7 year old. And my brother had a beautifully tailored lecture by a person who is arguably the most knowledgeable about the subject matter. After hours. It was pretty amazing. I loved it. One of my favourite museum experiences.
    Actually! More memorable... My mother, perhaps against her better judgement, but with a babysitter flaking out. Taking me to Sensation, the famous exhibition at the Royal Academy... More memorable perhaps, because my mother tried to explain the concept of murder to a 6-7 year old. It was quite a wonder. In relation to the hand painting of Myra Hindley.
    And the pretty mind blowing Hirst shark in the tank.
    What can i say, i went on to an arts degree, and that was the tipping point perhaps.

  • @Shamsithaca
    @Shamsithaca 4 года назад +3

    Thank you to the person who carved this. We owe you so much, i hope you had a wonderful and happy life when you were alive. Amen.

  • @nickcortes686
    @nickcortes686 3 года назад +2

    Rober Greene’s mastery brought me here, I use to think Rosetta Stone was just a language learning program infomercial lmao

  • @Dekke360
    @Dekke360 8 лет назад +2

    I was expecting it to say "the quick brown Fox jumps over the lazy dog"

  • @myleslos9658
    @myleslos9658 3 года назад +9

    If I just find Tom standing on a pedestal in a museum I ain't even questioning that I just be taking my selfies and MOVING.

  • @kalebbradburn5298
    @kalebbradburn5298 5 лет назад +5

    “I’ve got here the REAL Rosetta Stone!”
    *hits and makes plastic noise

  • @cyansloth1763
    @cyansloth1763 3 года назад +2

    Hieroglyphics are incredibly complex and so worth learning, in my opinion.

  • @Leopold5100
    @Leopold5100 2 года назад

    well done Tom, yet another fascinating topic explained so eloquently and succinctly

  • @GamesFromSpace
    @GamesFromSpace 8 лет назад +63

    I wonder what happens to the leftover replicas. Would be pretty awesome to have one.

    • @photoo848
      @photoo848 6 лет назад +7

      Joshua Pearce if you have the space for ut. I'm surprised by how massive it is. From pictures I saw I assumed it was the size of a sheet of paper

    • @artemkras
      @artemkras 3 года назад +3

      @@photoo848 Well, as a piece of paperwork - it technically was the size of a sheet of paper, but the sizes were different back then )

    • @Corn0nTheCobb
      @Corn0nTheCobb 3 года назад

      @@artemkras but it's not really paperwork... More like rockwork

    • @artemkras
      @artemkras 3 года назад +4

      @@Corn0nTheCobb It took us thousands of years to learn that paper beats rock )))

  • @DevinJarosz
    @DevinJarosz 4 года назад +3

    YO WE GOT ASSIGNED THIS FOR HISTORY AND WHEN I SAW YOU I JUMPED OUT OF MY CHAIR WITH EXCITEMENT!!!

  • @DanDart
    @DanDart 8 лет назад +2

    I love languages and linguistics and this is a brilliant example of some amazing work

  • @reddcube
    @reddcube 8 лет назад

    Whenever your videos are in my subscription list, I always watch them first. Keep making videos, because they are always great.

  • @elevatedfilm
    @elevatedfilm 8 лет назад +4

    Ah, monday again, time to feed my brain. Thanks tom!

  • @PeJayCee
    @PeJayCee 8 лет назад +45

    Taxes, why is it always taxes?!? Great civilisations rise and fall, and all the documents that are left are the tax paperwork :L

    • @a-drewg1716
      @a-drewg1716 3 года назад +1

      "nothing is certain except death and taxes" Benjamin Franklin

    • @jameswalker199
      @jameswalker199 3 года назад +1

      Someone always has to pay the rent, it seems.

  • @yoianrhodes
    @yoianrhodes 8 лет назад

    Love your videos, always make me think of things i never knew i would be interested in.

  • @calvinfamily4273
    @calvinfamily4273 3 года назад +1

    cant believed they had did this hard work

  • @SkyFonForger
    @SkyFonForger 8 лет назад +20

    I thought that this was an ad for rosetta stone™

  • @DragonFang409
    @DragonFang409 5 лет назад +90

    “It is one of the most precious-“
    *slap slap*
    “And valuable treasures-“
    *slap*
    “Of the British museum”
    *stroke*

    • @psicopaticduck
      @psicopaticduck 3 года назад +1

      Hola vendo enpanadas

    • @Hazamelis2
      @Hazamelis2 3 года назад +1

      @@psicopaticduck tiene con aji?

    • @psicopaticduck
      @psicopaticduck 3 года назад +1

      No, ya solo me quedan de (leer con voz de pueblerino) Pehelagalto

  • @mizzraika
    @mizzraika 8 лет назад +2

    Finally. A video of yours I actually know stuff about because I was that Egypt-obsessed kid with a photo of the Rosetta Stone hanging on my wall. Never thought it would happen, but here it is. This was a cool experience, thank you for that blast-to-my-past there. Feeling a bit more youthful right now :)

    • @maggiehay9383
      @maggiehay9383 Год назад

      Have you read Gods, Graves and Scholars by C.W. Ceram? It tells great stories about a variety of Egyptologists, including Champollion, who was the one who "cracked" the Rosetta Stone. Made me want to see it. I never got to see it in person but I found out what it looked like. This is a great video.

  • @nvdawahyaify
    @nvdawahyaify 4 года назад

    Thank you for telling us what is on the Rosetta Stone. I've wondered that for years.

  • @Yurinsm
    @Yurinsm 8 лет назад +70

    I wonder if you dream about finding a stone with emojis carved on it.

    • @medalex195322
      @medalex195322 4 года назад

      Look up the 9gag meme rock

    • @MurriciTerceiro
      @MurriciTerceiro 3 года назад

      @@medalex195322 DESTROY THE 9GAG ROCK!!

    • @TheSleepingSeer
      @TheSleepingSeer 3 года назад +1

      @@MurriciTerceiro Carry the vinegar, smash the stone

  • @Swordopolis
    @Swordopolis 4 года назад +10

    *slaps roof of rosetta stone*
    this badboy can fit so many languages in it

  • @fratercontenduntocculta8161
    @fratercontenduntocculta8161 8 месяцев назад

    The speed of Tom's explanation is the most fascinating part of this video.

  • @morganisapro6
    @morganisapro6 Месяц назад

    watched this in school a few days ago and i was suprised to see you since i watch your videos!

  • @zoranhacker
    @zoranhacker 8 лет назад +8

    0:13 oh ok lol I was like "you're touching it, stop touching it"

  • @elazarpimentel5340
    @elazarpimentel5340 4 года назад +5

    I was horrified until you said it was a replica, and then realized you did it on purpose ;_;

  • @yorkyleefairbank
    @yorkyleefairbank 5 лет назад

    You are really interesting to watch. I have watched a few videos I'm gona watch a few more. Well done.

  • @alexlandherr
    @alexlandherr 5 лет назад +1

    I read the book about Champollion’s work on this 10 years ago. It was a fascinating read indeed.

  • @spirit469
    @spirit469 4 года назад +3

    "this is the most precious artifact" ==> proceeds to aggressively smack it "jk it's a replica"

  • @ThingsStuffAndLike
    @ThingsStuffAndLike 8 лет назад +7

    Tom, how t-shirts do you own in that exact shade of red? Vision of a Steve Jobs-esque wardrobe with dozens of only red t-shirts on the rail!

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 6 лет назад +1

      he literally buys them by the box, so yes, hundreds

  • @illusionz9053
    @illusionz9053 8 лет назад

    So fascinating and intriguing for some reason.

  • @JimmyBoogaloo
    @JimmyBoogaloo Год назад

    Top stuff as always, cheers Tom

  • @MiceAndMinecraft
    @MiceAndMinecraft 8 лет назад +3

    I used to live in Egypt growing up and the first year we were there I was a bit bored so I taught myself hieroglyphics from some books we got. I can understand and write the letters but never got as far as learning the Coptic language they are written in so I only know the alphabet not the words lol! It is still fun to be able to write people's names in Hieroglyphics for them, and when my boyfriend took me to the British museum I had him cover up the information cards on the Egyptian exhibits while I translated the names, then he could check if I got it right, which I did :) random but fun.

  • @kp5602
    @kp5602 4 года назад +5

    Should be given back to Egypt.

  • @krnswn2496
    @krnswn2496 5 лет назад +2

    thanks for 4k quality

  • @justicewarrior9187
    @justicewarrior9187 4 года назад +2

    Your videos are so freaking interesting!!

  • @bahnspotterEU
    @bahnspotterEU 8 лет назад +73

    So after "Emojli", how about "Hyroglyphli"?

    • @AntonyDerham
      @AntonyDerham 8 лет назад +25

      +Highspeedline01 It would have to be "hieroji", since the "ji" on the end of "emoji" is the Japanese word for "character". Since "glyph" is an English word adopted from Ancient Greek to mean a single "character", you'd drop that and replace with "ji" for consistency.

    • @lookwhoitisnt
      @lookwhoitisnt 8 лет назад +16

      +Antony Derham
      Tom Scott: where even the comments section is educational.

    • @robertlinke2666
      @robertlinke2666 8 лет назад +2

      +Caitlin McIlvenna on frikkin youtube!!

    • @raykent3211
      @raykent3211 8 лет назад

      You made me wonder what the egyptian hieroglyph(s) is/are for the word hieroglyph, which I guess comes from greek, and whether unicode supports hieroglyphs!

    • @SquareyCircley
      @SquareyCircley 5 лет назад +2

      @@AntonyDerham _hieromoji_ better? _ji_ means character, but so does _moji_ and _moji_ is the bit that stays consistent between _emoji_ and _kaomoji_ already (。・ω・。)ノ♡

  • @Liggliluff
    @Liggliluff 3 года назад +5

    We need to make our own stone. Write down a long, mundane sentence. Translate it to proper English, French, Spanish, German, Arabic, Chinese, Cantonese, Japanese, Urdu, Hindi, and more big languages that has existed for a long time. Maybe even Esperanto and Lojban too, as those languages are much more structured, and have a chance to at least have their documentation survive.

  • @triotech
    @triotech 4 года назад +2

    Hahaha okay you got me for a second.. "Why do they have it out? WHY ARE YOU TOUCHING IT?!?! NO!!! Wait.."

  • @Pining_for_the_fjords
    @Pining_for_the_fjords 8 лет назад

    You seem to be following me around, Tom Scott. I was in Iceland in February last year looking at a geyser, and a few days later you uploaded a video of you by that same geyser. And now just a few days ago I was in the British museum, looking at the Rosetta stone - both the original and the replica - and now you post this video.

  • @HQ_Default
    @HQ_Default 8 лет назад +78

    So now I know that I lose MY taxes, way down the line, a generation of humans will use it to decode all of the English language!
    **throws away taxes**
    Excuses, yeah!

    • @notbobby125
      @notbobby125 8 лет назад +15

      +HQDefault Sorry to rain on your parade, but the stone appears to have been "filed" correctly. This was probably somewhere on the front of the temple, for all the world to see, declaring something along the lines of, "this Temple has been granted special rights, NO tax collectors allowed."

    • @HQ_Default
      @HQ_Default 8 лет назад +17

      notbobby125
      >The joke
      >Your head
      >**whoosh**

    • @dhkatz_
      @dhkatz_ 7 лет назад +5

      >Your joke
      -- Trash --
      >Quality of your joke
      >**whoosh**

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 7 лет назад +6

    More like a Rosetta Rock.

    • @felix5445
      @felix5445 6 лет назад

      sarcasmo57 it is made out of stone so they call it Rosetta stone

  • @MultiInko
    @MultiInko 3 года назад +1

    i remember studying about Ancient Egypt and hieroglyphics in Canada (2000s) in elementary school, fun times in the library and we had these scratch books with hidden ancient messages

  • @dorkmax7073
    @dorkmax7073 4 года назад

    Some of the most common Sumerian clay tablets we dig up are about grain levies and taxes. They're among the most common stuff because its what people most cared about: where resources and money were going.

  • @mulls9281
    @mulls9281 8 лет назад +4

    Egyptian made emojis confirmed.

  • @marcvenot5141
    @marcvenot5141 8 лет назад +15

    and not a word about Jean-François Champollion?

    • @DODI88MH
      @DODI88MH 6 лет назад

      champollion attempt was failure, or his real work was cancelled

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 4 года назад +4

      @@DODI88MH Aye, him being recognised by everyone who know anything about the topic as the legitimate decipherer of hieroglyphics is clearly a failure of his work. Makes one wonder what it takes for you to consider something a success

    • @jonathan9wood
      @jonathan9wood 3 года назад

      I wonder if Jean-François could have deciphered Tom Scott's meaningless hand gestures?

  • @artysanmobile
    @artysanmobile 5 лет назад +1

    One of the most important archaeological discoveries of all time. Great gag slapping and rubbing it in the start. 😱

  • @darkflamestudios
    @darkflamestudios 8 лет назад

    Very cool! Thanks for sharing.

  • @violetrose415
    @violetrose415 4 года назад +4

    1:16 "Ancient Greek"
    Coptic:....am I a joke?

  • @CatroiOz
    @CatroiOz 4 года назад +3

    why didn't you mention the fact that the one to break the "code" and actually translate the stone was Champolion ?

  • @joetylerdale
    @joetylerdale 4 года назад +1

    So Brilliant, So Amazing, So over my head... But so cool!

  • @mullarky
    @mullarky 8 лет назад

    dude your vids are so insightful...

  • @sudonim7552
    @sudonim7552 8 лет назад +4

    We should make something like this but hire linguists to write something easy to translate for all languages and make it hard to destroy

  • @RobertoDonatti
    @RobertoDonatti 8 лет назад +4

    You make it sound like English linguists deciphered the stone. You didn't mention Champollion at all.

  • @IYoseff
    @IYoseff 8 лет назад +2

    I'm an Egyptian who almost finished secondary school and never studied anything about how it was translated; and he I am, understanding the way it worked from a RUclips video made by a Brit. I feel quite ashamed, but thank you. Really.

    • @vectoredthrust5214
      @vectoredthrust5214 8 лет назад +5

      That's the beauty of the Internet. We can learn from each other across the world. Sometimes, it takes an outsider explaining us to understand ourselves, I find

  • @metaworld567
    @metaworld567 11 месяцев назад

    “Ancient Egyptian tax paperwork” is a phrase I never thought I would hear someone speak out loud.