Thank you for sharing. Just saw the castle from the train’s window from Warszawa to Gdansk (Danzig) to depart to Copenhagen. Need to return with my young teenagers to see this impressive castle and the interesting history of the region.
@PravdaSeed5 күн бұрын
🇰🇵 Thanks 🇰🇷 Because of your Beautiful 🌻and ☸️MagnificenT Heritage ☯️🦋 "Jikji Tripitaka " Everyone on this Planet 🌍💚🌎 Learned the Art Of making paper, ink , and PRINTING = Book 💚🇰🇷🇨🇳🇰🇵💚 Wishing you all MagnificenT & Beautiful people Health and vitality Thanks again 💞.
@donnamarsh347410 күн бұрын
Was there a couple of weeks ago. Interesting place.
@ultraali45316 күн бұрын
Great video as always 👍👍
@ultraali45316 күн бұрын
Excellent content!
@navyouk663917 күн бұрын
Please do more of your video on Phnom Chiso😊
@schoolofalchemy19 күн бұрын
Thanks for giving us a tour :)
@mitchellsouphasith376319 күн бұрын
The masonry of that ruin is really advanced.
@MarcusJeromeMiles23 күн бұрын
Je reviens à Versailles avec mon neuvième prix MVP des World Series pour manger nu à l'Eiffel et gouverner la France et rétablir la monarchie française. Je t'aime, la France aime Soleil ROI De Cœur Ton roi de Normandie 🇨🇵
@abhishekmhatre155425 күн бұрын
Unfortunately, very few Hindus in India know about this. But thanks for making a video about this.
@m_m36927 күн бұрын
First view is not Prambanan its sewu temple
@the_niklakis28 күн бұрын
I saw this bridge in another video and wondered why they didn't choose another design but after I saw the lack of space at each end it makes sense.
@artrider9866Ай бұрын
when you show the beautiful forest - show it - not yourself
@dynamicconceptjbАй бұрын
Beautiful scenery of rock formation, but not my type of cave exploration.
@noahibne8024Ай бұрын
The end of it is 1500 Km!! at Hangzhou
@EdT.-xt6yvАй бұрын
Flocking was what is the Internet today,,,
@ultraali453Ай бұрын
Thank You Sir!
@tru_710Ай бұрын
Him Ei Fell.
@AndriyValdensius-wi8gwАй бұрын
These were painted biblical scenes. In those days the peasant population was largely illiterate but their visual sense was highly developed. The people could understand (most of) the stories by studying the pictures.
@laluranukurniawan6854Ай бұрын
Khmer ❤ sriwijaya majapahit
@SA-xf1ebАй бұрын
Very interesting
@user-jd9cb1vz6mАй бұрын
Bonito vídeo de la ciudad que me vio nacer. Me suscribo y pulgar arriba. Saludos cordiales desde Barcelona.
@DIS6103Ай бұрын
❤🕊
@swiftcee266Ай бұрын
In Christian Europe the spirit of initiation was kept alive throughout the Dark Ages and the medieval period by several initiatory orders of people who the church even today, described as illiterate workmen. Illiterate workmen my backside! they were highly skilled people, these were the craft masons who built the glories of Chartres Cathedral, who built Cologne Cathedral, who built Amien, and who built every major church building in Europe. They had no architects, they worked as teams, now Chartres Cathedral was built in the unbelievable time of 30 years. It was built by five separate craft masonic teams, all working seemingly independent of one another, to it well enough there is no existing overall plan for the place and yet the whole thing comes together as a harmonious whole which baffles description. It enhances the powerful earth energies that are already there, it is acoustically perfect and it is a place of incredible beauty. _Now these craft mason's were divided into four main groups, they are known today collectively as The Compagnonnage, and they were the Compagnons Passant who built bridges, made road structures and built castles. The Children of Maitre Soubise who mainly worked in the romanesque style with rounded arches, thick walled buildings, that couldn't rise very high because of the structural problems with them. Then there were the Children of Solomon, and this is a very disputed group. It's very difficult to discern whether they actually were part of the Templar order or were they merely affiliated to them or were they employed by them. The Templar certainly gave them their rule. They built in the new style that the Templars had brought back the secret from the holy land, how to build with the pointed arch. They got that from their Sufi brethren in Jerusalem, and the first pointed arches that the Templars commissioned are still there to this day on Temple Mount. They were replicated at Chartres Cathedral in France_
@VIGOUROSO2024Ай бұрын
Oh how awkward - what with the Ukraine War to be so close to Russia! I'm a bit wary of the fishing industry because in South England they've had to ban Trawling because it was being done at such an unsustainable level as to decimate the Kelp Forests - and that's probably the same reason why Canada's Maritime fisheries collapsed in the early 90s.
@VIGOUROSO2024Ай бұрын
MMM: very beautiful! [I just hope they clean off that mold or whatever that's making the roof tiles discolour.]
@CiroCozzolino-wx3szАй бұрын
my friend elena didn’t understand, but it is a amazing video 😊
@vanessakler5596Ай бұрын
My Aunt worked at the mill in the 50s my Granny was a postie there ,it's a beautiful place.My mum and family come from Lanark
@homepalacio3566Ай бұрын
Many thanks for that video. It was fascinating and I have learn many things here. I have one comment to do, it would have been great to have a music more aligned with the subject but beside that...I loved it.
@reneekollars6767Ай бұрын
The Roman ruins were the site of horrible Christian torture and persecution. They fed them to animals and burned them in iron chairs. Let's not forget these poor ancestors of France. (See St Blodina)
@user-ro5gq6zs2k2 ай бұрын
Great introduction ❤
@stenka252 ай бұрын
Thank you for introducing me to Gorham's Cave Complex.
@user-ok8oe9ro8f2 ай бұрын
my family originally came from here by major genral jobst conard lemmich
@ThecrazyJH962 ай бұрын
Grateful for how America has protected or preserves its wildlife. This old first just looks like most parks where I live
@liveroonie731629 күн бұрын
america??????????
@lisek_chytrusek10 күн бұрын
This is in Poland, man
@istoppedcaring62092 ай бұрын
the one in Gent is at a similar level
@jacintochua68852 ай бұрын
Summer Paoace was described by western architects as one of the most beautiful grandest complex. Unif8rt7nately French and English trooos were envikusvand set fire to moxt of complrx after looting more than a billions worth of treasures. Victor Hugo mocked these troops as grest exsmples of Christian soldiers. Mos of the loot remain in British Museum and Louvre and nunerous weetern museums, shamelessly on display even today !
@PravdaSeed2 ай бұрын
🇨🇳🇰🇷🇰🇵 ⭐⭐⭐ #1@info.
@Atomiyo2 ай бұрын
gemini (ai) recomended this video so ı am here
@yannicklecam38473 ай бұрын
Jacques Drouhin has just published an exciting guide book "LA MADELEINE DE VEZELAY as you have never seen her" by Entre Deux Mondes - to be published in bookstores on April 9, 2024 with 38 original drawings by Thierry Gaufillet and 55 photos and diagrams. UNAVOIDABLE !...
@joeyp19273 ай бұрын
You should also mention that the original canal had pound and flash locks to raise ships going upstream or lower ships going downstream. Also, the Grand Canal, as a government-led and -built infrastructure project helped inspire the building of the Erie Canal in the US in the early 1800s.
@marekleszkiewicz81043 ай бұрын
nice content! thanx
@samm353933 ай бұрын
Yes Cambodia khmer ancient temples are truly splendidly and wondrously human creations heavenly on earth for God to protect humanity here as beautifully as heavenly....many more Cambodia khmer ancient temples in Thailand or Siam Laos Vietnam too where Cambodia khmer empire were there back then all the way to Burma border what is now Mymnama
@Disanvanhoavietnam3 ай бұрын
Thank you for a great clip about Hue Complex. Could I please have your permission to utilize a few of the images from this clip? I've credited your KZbin channel in the description of my clip. kzbin.info/www/bejne/nIjRnXSugN6JadUsi=mvXaNwqB7moGjXGV I subscribed Your channel and hope to see more wonderful clips.
@natpurr51653 ай бұрын
Can you please let us know your ittinerary for how you saw all of these places in one trip? I’d love to copy you guys :)
@inspiro2454 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video, I'm doing the Grand Canal for a project, nice simple videos that explains pretty well and looks well made!
@joeyp19273 ай бұрын
Fun fact: the Grand Canal, as a government-led and -built infrastructure project, helped inspire the US's first big government-led infrastructure project: the Erie Canal, in the early 1800s. This would be a good fact to put into the backstory for your project. Good luck!