Villa of the Mysteries | Pompeii | 4K
20:24
Doune Castle History | Scotland | 4K
15:13
Пікірлер
@user975bg
@user975bg Сағат бұрын
Well made and excellently narrated!
@thomasgansevoort929
@thomasgansevoort929 8 сағат бұрын
Excellent! All kinds of new information well presented.
@Shitendo376
@Shitendo376 Күн бұрын
Only real ones remember this from Minecraft
@cougar2013
@cougar2013 Күн бұрын
My uncle was an ancient Roman, and he said all of these clubs and sh!t were basically elaborate ways to get chicks to party and sleep with them. Hmm, “trust me my dear, the revealing of the phallus from under the cloth is a sacred good luck ritual that drives off spirits”. Then my uncle winked at me, and disappeared…
@EverybodySucksAtSomething
@EverybodySucksAtSomething Күн бұрын
Imagine having your family castle - not home, CASTLE - not only in a play by Shakespeare, but also by a famous movie series, Harry Potter.
@CuriosityTheorist
@CuriosityTheorist 4 күн бұрын
There are Greco roman buildings all over the world with the same high quality, yet we are told the others are built in the 1800s, and before you use the excuse "they were colonized/influenced by Rome" that excuse stretches thin when you see them in Russia, China, New Zealand, Japan, South Africa, Argentina, all over. Use discernment and research it 🤝
@HistorywithCy
@HistorywithCy 5 күн бұрын
So incredible! I hope to visit the Serapeum one day, thanks for showing us this amazing site!
@woogle23
@woogle23 5 күн бұрын
Mary landed in my home town of Workington (30 miles west of Carlisle), she spent the night at Workington (Curwen) hall before being transported to Carlisle.
@Sargis-tq5hz
@Sargis-tq5hz 9 күн бұрын
Великая Киликия Арарата
@jamessegarra3291
@jamessegarra3291 9 күн бұрын
That volcano could erupt anytime.
@nupurdasgupta3881
@nupurdasgupta3881 9 күн бұрын
This video is really excellent and gives some comfort to me!
@nupurdasgupta3881
@nupurdasgupta3881 9 күн бұрын
Awesome! Been to Santorini but missed the site. It was closed the day we went. It is our sad luck!
@user-bw9ez2ij7o
@user-bw9ez2ij7o 11 күн бұрын
this is a must see if you come in athens
@sharonwright7932
@sharonwright7932 14 күн бұрын
Fascinating!
@reachme1609
@reachme1609 14 күн бұрын
Marvelous. Thank you.
@quirkygreece
@quirkygreece 15 күн бұрын
An excellent explanatory video, thank you.
@tavissmith8112
@tavissmith8112 16 күн бұрын
I like how you said "Hercules also known as Heracles". Dude....that's weirdly lazy. Heracles is also known as Hercules🎉
@marykeough9136
@marykeough9136 16 күн бұрын
Since the upstairs walls are consistently missing, could they have used curtains instead of walls to keep it cooler?
@marykeough9136
@marykeough9136 16 күн бұрын
Those mosaics are amazing! ❤
@keikairin2038
@keikairin2038 16 күн бұрын
So Heracles is the 'larger' panel and more important then the lower panel about Achilles and the war at Troy? But both stories depict the war against Troy. That's interesting. What would the story have been if you played it in order it was painted? In the upper panel West Wall its about the death of Heracles. In the story he takes 'Deianira' from a river god and she poisons him. They place him on a funeral pyre. In the upper panel North Wall we see the first panel a naked man is pointing. Hermes is frequently depicted as naked with a 'scarf' over one shoulder. He conducted souls to the afterlife. In the upper panel East Wall from Left to Right we've got Hercules arrive at Troy, get into a fight with many more troops then himself, sees the woman returned to another man In the upper panel South Wall we see the thinner naked man (Hermes again?) crowns a child with a Phryigian Cap. If you follow Phyrigian mythology and the Cybele fertility cult you'd know that this order events is what they'd expect when dealing with an 'afterlife myth'. Great heroes when they were grievously injured, went to the fertility goddesses at Cybele's temple to access their afterlife. They did this by proving their worth (Heracles would have done the 'test of strength'), then earning the right to mate with a woman. They would create a new child who would be educated by the Phrygians as a member of their community in their youth. They were sent out to be new rulers of kingdoms (typically from the lands of their fathers). Cybelle's cult was at Pessinus in Ballihisar Turkey. Same 'region' as Troy. This panel sequence implies that Heracles followed the Phyrigian rites. He offended a river god, took a nymph, got poisoned by that nymph. Hermes sent him to Troy for his afterlife. He probably brought Deianira with him. He passed his 'test of strength', to get his afterlife reward. He was also required to return Deianira (notice the woman wears yellow on the West wall too). His CHILDREN were raised up a caste by the Phyrigians to became rulers. In myth Alexiares and Anicetus were his immortal sons to the goddess Hebe. Their birth occurred after Heracles' mortal death and subsequent ascent to Olympus. Now in the LOWER panels on the West wall from left to right. 'a Plague'. On the North Wall: The Trojans are on the offensive. Someone dies. Protesilaus probably (first greek to die at Troy). Then a charioted man in armor. Then Thetis (Achilles' mother) urged him NOT to fight. But then someone is killed (dragged by a chariot). Probably Troilus (last man killed by Achilles before he pulled out). They brought his body back to Troy. IN the lower panels on the east wall from Left to Right we've got a funeral with funerary games. Agamemnon begging Achilles to return to the fight offering gifts (the horse cart). Two people sitting in a cave (an image of Breiseis being returned?). Another begging scene (Patrocles asking to go to war in his place?) Achilles now armorless refuses to fight. In the South wall we see Odysseus, Ajax and Pheonix try to talk him back into the fight. I think you've got the right 'event' here but you are reading the frescos wrong. They are placing emphasis on Achilles refusal to fight until the very end. I wonder if the owner of this house was a 'secret follower of Phyrigian/Phoenician mysteries'...
@MEitniear111
@MEitniear111 18 күн бұрын
This is an amazing video. You put in wonderful effort. Made me really appreciate this.
@leoncChannel
@leoncChannel 18 күн бұрын
Queen of scots was a prisoner
@juelbriggs447
@juelbriggs447 18 күн бұрын
Wow. I didn't know this existed. Thank you!
@stevenmillano1880
@stevenmillano1880 20 күн бұрын
Im here because of reels in IG hehehe ❤
@juelbriggs447
@juelbriggs447 22 күн бұрын
Very interesting, you transported me back more than 2,000 years.
@orlaithchops
@orlaithchops 24 күн бұрын
This is an absolute masterpiece my Mum, Sister, Auntie and I visited April 2023, Pompeii was jaw dropping but Herculaneum was so much quieter and so we got to see quite a lot more. The amount of carbonised wood was fascinating and this mosaic is so vivid and rich in colour. I’d recommend Herculaneum to anybody and I’d go again today if I didn’t live in the UK 😂❤️🇮🇹
@sammyspaniel6054
@sammyspaniel6054 26 күн бұрын
They would quickly learn thrive in our world but we would struggle in theirs.
@marialuizasaboiasaddi2160
@marialuizasaboiasaddi2160 27 күн бұрын
Herculano e Pompeia
@AI-wj5hj
@AI-wj5hj 28 күн бұрын
temple of sport shoes..
@NelsonClick
@NelsonClick 29 күн бұрын
Us modern people would not be comfortable in Ancient Roman houses no matter how luxurious they were. To us it would be exactly like living in a barn. I mention this because this house makes this point clearly. I'm not being cynical about this at all but it helps us to visualize the true reality of what these homes were like. The Romans didn't know any better. We do. Lastly, there is no doubt in my mind that Roman homes smelled terribly by our standards. The Romans had no concept of bacteria or germs and water in pools and baths doesn't stay fresh. Moisture and stone make mold and mildew.
@MaulanaSalahudinChan-ik9gp
@MaulanaSalahudinChan-ik9gp Ай бұрын
Alexandre The Great is in Al Kahf 83 -99 . Thank you .
@user-jv9qz2bu1r
@user-jv9qz2bu1r Ай бұрын
And here we have in this relief a fragment from the Golden Age, it is believed to be Nike Jordan, step brother to Athena Nike, with wings, now omitted, soaring through the air.
@user-jv9qz2bu1r
@user-jv9qz2bu1r Ай бұрын
Menander's plays were set in Athens. At a coffee shop he would meet his quirky friends, a short bald, highly energetic man with a dishonest streak, a tall awkward man who always said inappropriate things and who wore wacky garb, and finally a short woman who would laugh at sensitive times. All 4 characters had problematic dating lives which were often the plot twists of the plays. Minor characters of these plays included a criminally inclined letter carrier and a midget, or little person.
@deniserussell7498
@deniserussell7498 Ай бұрын
I am of clan Keith hope to visit one day
@toddaulner5393
@toddaulner5393 Ай бұрын
Great artwork!!
@pcka12
@pcka12 Ай бұрын
The theatre masks seem a little like Japanese noa masks.
@jatimmonsjr
@jatimmonsjr Ай бұрын
Well done. Thanks very much.
@jeebusk
@jeebusk Ай бұрын
poor guy, never completed his rehab project and now 2k yrs later guests are still affected 😅
@ginoball3708
@ginoball3708 Ай бұрын
The Pompeii off the north 😮😮😮❤
@normanbrown9225
@normanbrown9225 Ай бұрын
I AM Sure Many of Us Have BEING To these Places in Our PAST INCARNATIONS❤
@lauriesopas
@lauriesopas Ай бұрын
I wonder if the twig held by the figure (with water poured over it in sequential panel) has ever been identified. So many mystery schools/cults/initiation groups are believed to have used psychedelic plants for the mystery experience ritual. Great video and channel! Thank you!
@user-jp8ox9xi2j
@user-jp8ox9xi2j Ай бұрын
Love this type of history and would love going to these places and seeing all of this it would make you feel like you're actually there.
@gra-emed3617
@gra-emed3617 Ай бұрын
Really interesting video. Thanks for sharing :)
@billyboasiako1775
@billyboasiako1775 Ай бұрын
Revelation 22:16 Jesus Christ is EROS Lucifer morningstar POMPEII Roman earthquake plus volcano mountain Vesuvius erupt end, sin City 😮😅😊
@erikmathiesen856
@erikmathiesen856 Ай бұрын
I have been there twice and go back again latere this year. But very thanks for the informativ history videos ❤
@billyboasiako1775
@billyboasiako1775 Ай бұрын
Revelation 22:16 Jesus Christ is EROS Lucifer morningstar POMPEII Roman earthquake plus volcano mountain Vesuvius erupt end,sin City 😮😅😊
@billyboasiako1775
@billyboasiako1775 Ай бұрын
Revelation 22:16 Jesus Christ is EROS Lucifer morningstar POMPEII Roman earthquake plus volcano mountain Vesuvius erupt end, sin City 😮😅😊
@user-xc6co3ur2v
@user-xc6co3ur2v Ай бұрын
5:02 - the new arrivals in the lands of P/B/Elasgians and their Zeus. Why are all the statues with broken heads? Is it not because of the Thracian hats, showing ethnicity?
@kylepiercy7656
@kylepiercy7656 Ай бұрын
@aliannarodriguez1581
@aliannarodriguez1581 Ай бұрын
Thanks for posting this. I have pictures from this basilica and was trying to figure out how they were positioned relative to each other. The layout of the lower basilica in particular is not intuitive. Your video really helped out on that!