Sébastien will be in the live chat and answering your questions from 16:00 BST, Thursday 29 August. If you want a notification before the premiere starts just reply to this comment. We'll reply back to each of you 20 mins before we start the Q+A with Seb and you should get a push notification from that (this seemed to work well last time). You can also use the "Notify Me" feature on your screen, but some of you have told us it isn't that reliable a feature. So do that, comment here, whatever you feel like. See you at 4pm tomorrow! The video itself will start playing at 16:30 BST, Thursday 29 August.
@ouse35912 ай бұрын
Yes please!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
@@ouse3591 this is your warning
@JJONNYREPP2 ай бұрын
The 4000-year-old brick that archaeologists keep re-excavating | Curator's Corner S9 Ep6 1637pm 29.8.24 obviously the question remains: imperial or metric measure?
@curiousbystander91932 ай бұрын
this is where it gets interesting....kzbin.info/www/bejne/nJe6c5lmfdKop6M Why? just a few hundred years after construction? People don;t just abandon things they and their ancestors put a bunch of work into.... yah know! Is this the related to the great flood, or one of them? Why is their other data suggesting a reset, so to speak, around this era, 2000bc-17000bc....... what really was reset?
@JJONNYREPP2 ай бұрын
@@curiousbystander9193 The 4000-year-old brick that archaeologists keep re-excavating | Curator's Corner S9 Ep6 2225pm 29.8.24 just go to italy or greece. their own ruins testament to some form of abandonment. not necessarily due to a massive flood....maybe generations of folk just ended up wondering who owned them, daring not to appropriate the temple or the arena...? manners might do for us all... ironic, that. the plague could have run riot.
@dagnolia60042 ай бұрын
people throw the words 'fascinating' and 'mystery' around; but Rarely deliver. this WAS a fascinating mystery! 👍👍👍
@saintbart74082 ай бұрын
True, true 👌🏽
@hashimalzarooni9179Ай бұрын
Britain is full of thieves, taking artifacts through their museums and archives, then offering their own distorted versions of history. The truth is simple: the civilizations of the Middle East and Arabia were Arab, not Jewish, Hebrew, or Aramaic. These labels twist the facts, and it’s time the real narrative is heard. Thanks.
@truemarklander2 ай бұрын
As an archaeologist myself and as someone who teaches university courses in the subject, I think this one of the very best videos I have ever seen that clearly explains how we can reconstruct the cultural chronology of a site. Using effective visuals and imagery and Sébastien's clear and concise narration, the story of this site and the process of archaeology in this specific context, is beautifully conveyed. Thank you for this!! I'm going to assign this video to my intro class. Excellent!!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Hey there, this is Nick (I shot, edited and animated this video). If you're willing, would you be open to having a chat about this? This specific videos was a very concerted effort to try to make archaeological techniques and concepts more accessible to the general public, and I'm starting to draft up a proposal to try and do a joint research project on how to do this best through video? If you're up for it, could you email me at production@britishmuseum.org? I will respond from my personal email from there (just to avoid either of our details being readily available on comments). Thanks so much for taking the time to write your comment, you've made my day. Best, Nick
@hashimalzarooni9179Ай бұрын
Britain is full of thieves, taking artifacts through their museums and archives, then offering their own distorted versions of history. The truth is simple: the civilizations of the Middle East and Arabia were Arab, not Jewish, Hebrew, or Aramaic. These labels twist the facts, and it’s time the real narrative is heard. Thanks.
@hashimalzarooni9179Ай бұрын
British Museum, they are just thieves, taking artifacts from other nations and then giving their own versions of history. But the truth is simple: the civilizations of the Middle East and Arabia were Arab, not Jewish, Hebrew, or Aramaic. These other labels distort the facts, and it’s time the real narrative is heard. Thanks
@hashimalzarooni9179Ай бұрын
British Museum, they are just thieves, taking artifacts from other nations and then giving their own versions of history. But the truth is simple: the civilizations of the Middle East and Arabia were Arab, not Jewish, Hebrew, or Aramaic. These other labels distort the facts, and it’s time the real narrative is heard. Thanks
@hashimalzarooni9179Ай бұрын
British Museum, they are just thieves, taking artifacts from other nations and then giving their own versions of history. But the truth is simple: the civilizations of the Middle East and Arabia were Arab, not Jewish, Hebrew, or Aramaic. These other labels distort the facts, and it’s time the real narrative is heard. Thanks
@TheKubelman2 ай бұрын
In 1958, at 9 years old i read a book called "They Wrote On Clay" from 1939. Hooked and fascinated ever since. THANK YOU for this video.
@bethbartlett56922 ай бұрын
1958? ... I arrived in December that year. 😁 11 days before 1959 🏹
@Limastudent2 ай бұрын
I owned that book as well and was fascinated
@hashimalzarooni9179Ай бұрын
Britain is full of thieves, taking artifacts through their museums and archives, then offering their own distorted versions of history. The truth is simple: the civilizations of the Middle East and Arabia were Arab, not Jewish, Hebrew, or Aramaic. These labels twist the facts, and it’s time the real narrative is heard. Thanks.
@TheAlchaemist2 ай бұрын
So.... a Sumerian worker 4100 years ago not properly aligning the seal with the mud brick before letting it in the sun to bake, is triggering my OCD... great... the butterfly effect at its finest
@censusgary2 ай бұрын
Try to relax, my friend. Even with this flaw, that brick is in nearly perfect condition after 2300 years.
@piccalillipit92112 ай бұрын
HAHAHAHA
@francesconicoletti2547Ай бұрын
The worker would not have and might have not seen a right angle marker. Wood was expensive and metal was even more expensive,nothing else was going to take a straight edge, a brick stamper would be doing their job by eye. Presumably the presentation bricks would be just awesome the rest of the temple would have to do with a human worker doing human stuff.
@Xynic48Ай бұрын
To be fair, if you were the tasked to make thousands of those bricks, by the time you reach 100, you'd probably stop caring about small details as well
@robbannstromАй бұрын
What really gets me is that the rectangles containing the texts on the two bricks are rotated by different angles. That hurts!
@Rain-Dirt2 ай бұрын
It never crossed my mind an artifact could have been re-excavated/rediscovered multiple times. I love this new knowledge!
@ignagalindo2 ай бұрын
This video is a perfect demonstration of the rich palimpsestic quality of the history of civilizations and the delicate work of archaeology (and museums!) to unravel it without fragmenting it. Thank you for such rigorous and stimulating content!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
That is bang on. Cheers for your nuanced appreciation. Hope you have a great day
@hashimalzarooni9179Ай бұрын
Britain is full of thieves, taking artifacts through their museums and archives, then offering their own distorted versions of history. The truth is simple: the civilizations of the Middle East and Arabia were Arab, not Jewish, Hebrew, or Aramaic. These labels twist the facts, and it’s time the real narrative is heard. Thanks.
@GnomaPhobic2 ай бұрын
Man that's a cool story! It's easy to forget just how old human civilization in Mesopotamia really is.
@glenthemann2 ай бұрын
I mean it's really not
@aegresen2 ай бұрын
@@glenthemann Sure, what's 5000 years of human development for Glen?
@bozomori22872 ай бұрын
@@aegresen Its was just yesterday. People didnt change much. The mesopotamian goatherder mindset is still going strong.
@qrco163Ай бұрын
@@aegresenmore like 10.000 the Ancient Greek were in their 6000 and it was 2500 years ago
@freshrot42020 күн бұрын
@@bozomori2287 Buncha goatherders.
@MGf-y3u2 ай бұрын
هلاو دكتور سبستيان العراق عراقك واهلا وسهلا بيك وكل أعضاء البعثه احسنت علا هذا العمل الممتاز وشكرا علا هذا العمل الممتاز الذي أبهر لا وأولهم بلدنا العراق Hello Dr. Sebastian, Iraq is your Iraq and welcome to you and all the members of the mission. Well done for this excellent work and thank you for this excellent work that has amazed the whole world. From Nasiriyah, our hearts are with you ❤️
@Dayanto2 ай бұрын
It's crazy that the original temple was almost as old to Alexander the Great as he is to us.
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
That's a really good point.
@Poetry4UsАй бұрын
its like when i think about cleopatra of egypt , and i think about how long ago that was , but in reality ancient Egypt is another 3000 years on top of that making cleopatra ancient
@didntknoicouldchangethisАй бұрын
You think like me, friend
@erictaylor54622 ай бұрын
I like thinking about the workers and craftsmen who made these artifacts, and how they might respond if told, "That thing you just made, it will be very important to telling people thousands of years from now for learning about your society. Also, I find it interesting that one man considers an artifact worthless trash, then later ot is found to be something of great value.
@thealmightyaku-41532 ай бұрын
"It involves a number of heroes, and gods, and kings, and archaeologists - but I repeat myself"
@andiemorgan9612 ай бұрын
Fascinating video. Thank you. It never ceases to amaze me how these cuneiforms and other ancient writings are deciphered!
@cowboyhank45610 күн бұрын
Absolutely brilliant piece. Condensing a story as complex as this in a quarter hour while making it easy to follow isn't easy. Documentaries quadruple this length, don't usually contain as much information. Please keep supporting these brilliant people in their passionate, no-nonsense storytelling regarding the very important work which they are doing.
@asztapaszta92 ай бұрын
Amazing story and video production! I can't believe we can watch this for free, thank you for sharing!
@alexanderalexander74042 ай бұрын
This was brilliant thinking. It is marvelously complex and stunningly brilliant. Wow! Thank you for taking the time to explain this to me.
@LordLoki123212 күн бұрын
The description was definitely worth the read and I'm glad i already had tea at the ready.
@meh32472 ай бұрын
Maybe stop burying it?
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
We didn't! Promise!
@Vokabre2 ай бұрын
Were the new bricks for foundation reinforcement square with a square inscription in Arabic and English?
@meh32472 ай бұрын
@@britishmuseum Hehehe... ;-)
@christophersmith1082 ай бұрын
@@VokabreI can just imagine archaeologists in the 36th century, wrestling with the “mystery of QR codes”
@kayleighllyn82532 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@chassmith67782 ай бұрын
In your repairs, when you added new bricks, did they include a note in cuneform explaining what you were doing?
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
This is genuinely brilliant, and not something we considered at all. But the work is ongoing. If we do it, we'll let you know. However, it's not our site, so we need to be respectful and make sure this is something that our Iraqi colleagues are happy with and can contribute to. It is theirs after all.
@magicmurderbag75812 ай бұрын
This could be genuinely important for archeologists in the distant future. I had not thought of that - which shows you how prescient the sumerians, etc. were.
@chassmith67782 ай бұрын
@@britishmuseum, if I could recommend: if you do choose to propose this, suggest that it be bilingual, in Arabic and Sumerian (Akkadian?, Aramaic?, whichever language using cuneiform best fits the site). That, I think, would be most respectful to your hosts.
@sauercrowderАй бұрын
@@magicmurderbag7581 we don't think of it because of hubris, we don't believe our civilization will ever fall.
@HappyBeezerStudios9 күн бұрын
Far in the future when archaeologists excavate the site they'll wonder "Why was this built with bricks 4000 years apart from each other"
@lanhua8102 ай бұрын
Very exciting stream! Wonderful story connecting gods and ancient heroes with us all!
@mustafa.2024Ай бұрын
As a Iraqi citizen I want to thank the British museum for all those information, please make more videos about Mesopotamia
@GardaOrbanАй бұрын
you welcome British museum
@Anubis302242 ай бұрын
It's amazing how long it's been around to be excavated three separate times. Whenever I find a Native American artefact I figure I'm the first person to see it in centuries or millenia. But now I'm not so sure.
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Humans are, and always will be, interested in humans. Most of us are interested in history too, so it's not so weird to think of our ancestors digging up theirs.
@Anubis302242 ай бұрын
@@britishmuseum until there is no one left to dig, I shall be content with this. ... Afterwards I shall become a zombie and keep digging
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Until you're 6ft under?
@Anubis302242 ай бұрын
@@britishmuseum hopefully well into the future when I need excavating, myself, haha
@panzerlieb2 ай бұрын
An interesting story I came across one time was about missionaries first venturing deep into the Amazon jungle. The indigenous people they met were using stone tools. When they asked these people how they made these stone tools, their answer was curious and surprising. The indigenous people said they didn’t make them. They simply found them laying of the jungle floor, picked them up and reused them. This story always reminds me that the things you find may have been found before you (perhaps more than once). And, like these bricks, may have been reused multiple times.
@feffe40362 ай бұрын
Fascinating. This is what i love with archeology and history
@kidmohair81512 ай бұрын
fascinating! keep these coming, please. ps: that's quite a big corner you've got there Mr Rey. more of a field. of rubble.
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Hey now. Technically, _technically_ there's a corner cut into the spoil heap behind Sébastien. 😝
@stevedrane23642 ай бұрын
What a job . . . 👍👍 Brilliant work great video. . Thank you .
@SamCyanideАй бұрын
This is an awesome video. This man should be a role model for scholars. He explained everything clearly. Even though my exposure to archaeology is extremely limited, i didn't have to look up any terms or dates because everything was well contained within the video. Bravo.
@Vokabre2 ай бұрын
Great video! For me personally it's always impressive to see parallels between ancient Mesopotamian cultures, and Jewish culture, and here there are two things that immediately caught my attention. 7:40 "for the Sumerians there are no distinctions between the house and the temple" and similarly in Hebrew the Jewish Temple is literally "House Sanctuary" or "House Holy". 9:09: "to make things function as they should" also immediately made me think of a Jewish concept of "repairing of the world" "Tikkun olam". 07:59 "50 is a sacred symbolic number for the Sumerians" and in Jewish tradition a mystical meaning is attached to the number 60, i.e. "sleep is 1/60 of death", "dreams is 1/60 of prophecy".
@Egilhelmson2 ай бұрын
Given that the Hebrews claimed to be descendants of sheep herders who lived in the vicinity of Ur Of The Chaldeans, an Akkadian city originally a Sumerian one, one should expect some exchange.
@kagyu12 ай бұрын
And also incorporated ancient myths like the Tale of Gilgamesh which became the Story of Moses.
@bozomori22872 ай бұрын
Jewish culture is a branch that entirely descends from a tiny household of two civilized mesopotamian immigrants among canaanite society: mr. Aberaham & mrs. Sarah That branch of the household stayed tiny but gathered everything it needed from around the worlds it came in contact with.
@bozomori22872 ай бұрын
@@Egilhelmsonexchange? No it is more like total dependance and belonging, with dgrees of indpendence acheived organically through time and its events.
@suecox23082 ай бұрын
That was fascinating--genuinely enthralling.
@paulatreides67792 ай бұрын
What a fascinating story, thank you!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Can't wait for the video to start? Here's a playlist of all our previous videos from Girsu: kzbin.info/aero/PL0LQM0SAx600JT-PHraOAwBo2pG1PzGXM Yes we are setting you prep-work!
@preservethings2 ай бұрын
I genuinely recommend watching the videos in the playlist ahead of time if you're really interested in Mesopotamian archaeology (and not just to get more views 🤪). This is one of the most interesting stories I've ever had the pleasure to edit, BUT it is without a doubt the hardest, and most dense thing I've ever had to edit. The other videos we've made should be an easier way into the subject content, should that be your thing.
@iandonnelly6684Ай бұрын
when will The museum return all of its looted treasures?
I am happy to have discovered this channel. It is not easy to find good and interesting material about archeology. Congratulations!!!
@549RR2 ай бұрын
Love the Finkle Fun Fact and all the timestamps in general
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Love it when people dive in to the description. I never know if it's worth putting the effort in to make, let's face it, dad-level jokes there. But it's fun regardless.
@kennyofbaja2 ай бұрын
This is extremely fascinating. Keep up the good work!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Thanks, will do!
@MrHichammohsen12 ай бұрын
To be honest, this is the most interesting archeology story i have ever heard in my life!
@missawady96932 ай бұрын
Although I was born in the same region as the temples, I had never heard of them before. I'm grateful for this interesting video.
@ajkaajka25122 ай бұрын
Thank you for explaining so nicely with interesting pictures and animations. More like this please 😍
@nrschicago2 ай бұрын
Well explained. Thank you
@kristiangustafson41302 ай бұрын
Fascinating layering of history & traditions. That Alexander, what a card.
@CynthiaPereira-g1d2 ай бұрын
Just mind blowing! Amazing archaeological detective work, although my brain hurt trying to keep up with the twists and turns.
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
You and me both (this is Nick who shot and edited it) - genuinely the hardest thing I've ever edited. It's an amazing story, but so much of it relies on having the context first. And the context is only a humble 4000 years of history.
@CynthiaPereira-g1d2 ай бұрын
@@britishmuseum incredible to think it's 4000 years! And yet people haven't changed a bit, rulers as ever out to signal their power and prestige
@jeffnolan20212 ай бұрын
This is FASCINATING
@PrasannaKumar-lf7gl2 ай бұрын
Excellent. Please continue to post like this !
@coyotepous2 ай бұрын
So fascinating!!! Love this part of history!! Congratulations, so well explained!!!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Sébastien is a dingir 🤪
@mobitouchiha2 ай бұрын
I have a strong feeling that no one checked this before release, cause if by bad luck Prof. Finkel had, we’d all enjoy our evening in bed without supper. In col. 1 you make the effort to translate hero under ur-sag and mighty under kalag-ga as if to suggest, that you want to convey the meaning of the signs in the order they are written. Why then, do you abandon that idea as soon as you talk about col. 2? Line 1 you translate: to make things function as they should. This is not what it said literary. It reads: níg-ul-e pa mu-na-è -> the thing-immemorial for him it appear he made -> the thing immemorial he made appear for him, would be the literary meaning. Line 2 you translate: House of 50, anzu, white bird, bird of thunder. The line reads: é-ninnu-d/anzu/muszen-bábbar-ra-nè. muszen=bird. Bábbar(ud.ud)=white. If you want to read the muszen as a noun rather than a determinative and the two ud independently, by your own syntax from col. 1 it would read: bird white white, not white bird bird. Also: what happened to the possessive a-né? Why do you write thunder under it? Line 3 you translate: He this place built. It reads: mu-na-dù. Mu does not mean he, it is a Ventiv. Na refers to an indirect object, not to a Locative, so to Ningirsu. Lit. Translation: For him it build he did -> he build it for him. Line 4 you translate: place proper he this place restored. It reads: ki-bé mu-na-gi4. Ki-bé = its place; mu-na-gi4 for him it return he did -> he returned it for him. To sum up col. 2 reads: 1 níg-ul-e pa mu-na-è 2 é-ninnu-d/anzu/muszen-bábbar-ra-nè 3 mu-na-dù 4 ki-bé mu-na-gi4
@MattRu-k6j2 ай бұрын
So isses
@riccardodinora83202 ай бұрын
❤Hass ist keine Meinung😘
@phsenus2 ай бұрын
🧐
@AntoineLeydier-h4b2 ай бұрын
Philology > Archeology
@jensh.50392 ай бұрын
Die Wahrheit braucht ein schnelles Pferd 🐴
@SpringNotes2 ай бұрын
Love the overall producing and editing of this video ! #Houseofthe50Powers #90YrsOldFrenchUndies #ToMakeThingsFunctionAsTheyShould #LinearTimeIsMeaningless
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Cheers for taking the time to write this. Hardest thing I've ever edited, and I'm still not fully confident in the final product. So this comment meant more than I think you'd be able to realise.
@SpringNotes2 ай бұрын
@@britishmuseumTake heart - you've done a wonderful job ! 🎉 What is your name ? You should be credited for your work. Whoever is in charge of video production @britishmuseum - PLEASE credit all the people involved - in the KZbin description box ! Thank you 😊
@glenm992 ай бұрын
That's a marvellous story. Thank you.
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@lynnblack64932 ай бұрын
You guys are so darn tricky. Love the detective work!
@Merry-i3yАй бұрын
Kindness is the golden chain by which society is bound together.
@debbralehrman59572 ай бұрын
Thanks this was so very interesting. You did a fine job of explaining what happened. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@eds7033Ай бұрын
So well done with great story telling. Could there be anything more insightful about Alexander’s personality?Fascinating!
@nickfosterxxАй бұрын
Nicely done thank you. Well worth all the extra effort of location filming and animation. Edit: I would just add, your Girsu playlist should be included in the description, as well as in the web page you refer to. Will be watching them all tomorrow! I stopped the video as he said 'And that is the magic of archeology' and would have missed them if not spotted elsewhere.
@chrisguest52512 ай бұрын
Just think how many generations prior to even get to the sumarian level of sophistication and organisation. Then what Alexander's army must have thought of these already centuries old abandoned mega structures. Mind blowing.
@walker18122 ай бұрын
Millenia old. The pyramids were older to the Romans than the Romans are to us.
@jboutame9113Ай бұрын
Your point is interesting and it is mind blowing. So, yes, do think! But focus on how humanity reached this level of sophistication without progressive development. The temples appeared suddenly, and there are no precursor civilizations with a fraction of this sophistication.
@sauercrowderАй бұрын
The oldest story we know is that of Gilgamesh. The opening lines, "In those days, in those distant days In those nights, in those ancient nights In those years, in those distant years"
@HappyBeezerStudios9 күн бұрын
@@jboutame9113 what if they just reused parts of the older structures to build the temples?
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Have a question about excavating at Girsu for Sébastien? Respond with it here to get the ball rolling before the live chat begins.
@JJONNYREPP2 ай бұрын
The 4000-year-old brick that archaeologists keep re-excavating | Curator's Corner S9 Ep6 1638pm 29.8.24 yeah... how come, all of a sudden, the various continents proffering the oldest brick or the oldest known scrawl as to the furtherance of civilisation?
@starlightskyes2 ай бұрын
What kind of rituals did they do in these temples? Would be curious to hear about daily life and special occasions.
@SpringNotes2 ай бұрын
5:37 I mistakenly thought the brick on the left, with the latter 1500 yrs old inscription was the older writing. Why ? Because it looked so primitive. It just reveals to me, the level of skill and artistry involved writing in cuneiform 4000 yrs ago. And looking at it closer, obviously they must've used the best people. Sébastien, do you sometimes stop and admire the cuneiform itself, like how we admire calligraphy or beautiful cursive handwriting ? And can you tell, if another brick/tablet was written by the same person ? Thank you in advance !
@AriesEugeneАй бұрын
If you love someone, set them free. If they come back they're yours; if they don't they never were.
@shannoncult2 ай бұрын
Wow! Simply fascinating! Thank you.
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@Peter-oh3hcАй бұрын
I have just started learning ancient greek and am just learning the alphabet. To be able to recognize the Greek letters was amazing. Thank yoiu
@kimrnhof107Ай бұрын
A really good video - and it emphasises how important writing is, because without the texts on the briks - we would know very little. I'm danish, and we have wonderful archaeological finds in Denmark BUT we really don't have writing before about 700-800 AD (yes a few artefact before). We know of battles that must have rageds over days - with high losses - and we don't know who fought who or why ! Just because no one could write ! -- This video shows how much detective work you still have to do, to get an idea of what happened - even when you have texts.
@peterfireflylundАй бұрын
“Comb” ;)
@susanhuntley92622 ай бұрын
This is wonderful! Amazing!
@eckosters2 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating- thank you
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@Czeckie2 ай бұрын
it's crazy that there were archeologist 2000 years ago
@nettejakobs25012 ай бұрын
Mindblowing 😮 Fascination 😊 Greetings from Denmark
@ΙωάννηςΚήτος2 ай бұрын
Indeed, a fascinating story, thank you!
@tomarnd8724Ай бұрын
Always appreciate a fellow Frenchman who speaks English properly
@joe2mercsАй бұрын
Good to see that in Hellenistic times they were recycling materials. Any builder does the same today so if they have to take down a wall and block up a doorway on the same site they will reuse the bricks as the quickest and cheapest option.
@KF-bj3ce2 ай бұрын
The mysteries of the past to be unraveled by out of the box thinking so very interesting so see the past's imprint.
@CarthagoMikeАй бұрын
What a fascinating story!
@Greg_M12 ай бұрын
Excellent!
@heathervelasquez91082 ай бұрын
Fascinating! Thank you.
@zethijs27242 ай бұрын
That was quite interesting, thanks!
@ljc61812 ай бұрын
Could it not be - he restored the building to it it’s function. He repaired it!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
He might have found it's proper place!
@jdschneider58582 ай бұрын
Oh My Ningirsu! That was breathtaking! Thank you!!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Excellent. Simple, but excllent
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Also we should have 'Oh my Ningirsu' t-shirts in the museum shop
@janinemarsh1082 ай бұрын
Hi guys! It's Janine (from Education). Can't wait to hear all about this new info. Watching from a cottage in the Welsh Peninsular! Bring it on Seb!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Hey Janine (no need for an introduction, but yes from Education)! Come back soon, but not too soon (Wales is lovely).
@JJONNYREPP2 ай бұрын
The 4000-year-old brick that archaeologists keep re-excavating | Curator's Corner S9 Ep6 1644pm 29.8.24 did they add a quirk to the building... an off kilter brick or plinth re: their acknowledging they, the builders, are not as high and mighty as their particular godhead? bricklayer's, even now, still implement that train of thought in their contemporary endeavours... i was watching them build anew aldi's in bacup...you can all laugh about this. the inner wall had such a quirk which they seem to have removed. they're kindda buggering about with liberal intent... such is life. old liberal clubs in UK and their affiliated pubs still have evidence of this. look up - ie: when you enter through the door....
@jamesallison48752 ай бұрын
Clear as mud. Love everything you guys do. I dig it. Hahaha 😂
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Well someone has puns in spades don't they? 😂
@Desizgirl32 ай бұрын
Wow, I love this stuff!
@olejohn63112 ай бұрын
What’s really impressive is that they managed to keep their brick-making norms the same over at least 1500 years
@censusgary2 ай бұрын
Even now, bricks are made in much the same way they were made in ancient Mesopotamia.
@Zopf-international2 ай бұрын
This was great. Thank you very much.
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@iGame3D13 күн бұрын
Wish the US spent $7 Trillion and 20 years doing archaelogy in Iraq instead of having a war.
@RusspngАй бұрын
What a great presentation. Considering they knew how to build well, why did that rotate the angle of the stamp on the brick rather than cut it square with the edges?
@RealSalica2 ай бұрын
Nice corner Sébastien 😊
@AMCaroM2 ай бұрын
It’s fascinating, thanks a lot!
@BlueBaron33392 ай бұрын
A round-about way of explaining it all, but worth it!
@walker18122 ай бұрын
The difference between giving your maths teacher the answer and showing your work to get the answer.
@BlueBaron33392 ай бұрын
@@walker1812 Excellent point!
@ClockworkChainsaw2 ай бұрын
How would you explain this in a way that /wasnt'/ roundabout? XD
@preservethings2 ай бұрын
@@ClockworkChainsawI tried. Multiple times to find a less round about way to edit this. This isn't even the order it was delivered in. There is no way (at least that I could muster) to linearize the story. It's too timey-wimey
@ancient_Iraqi_Mesopotamian2 ай бұрын
Love this ❤❤❤
2 ай бұрын
Thank you
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Thank you for joining us!
@Tuomas-vf1gy15 күн бұрын
This is mind blowing!
@jeno2642 ай бұрын
So fascinating!
@stephenaltman50542 ай бұрын
Great vid! Thanks
@ethandeuel43132 ай бұрын
Amaizing story
@TheLifeOfKaneАй бұрын
"This is the Magic of Archaeology... Anyway, let's rebury this thing, and keep that magic going!"
@fredwood14902 ай бұрын
It's interesting too to see the politics of the ancient world and how they were willing to mess with actual history in order to create a history they needed to affirm their own power. Not like today at all!!!
@toriwilson69612 ай бұрын
Please make a "short" about the 90 year old french "shorts" !!
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Well we did say we would if you asked nicely. I suppose our hands are tied 😂
@danser_theplayer01Ай бұрын
Yo, you should've inscribed the new bricks you built to support the bridge and consequently "make things work as they should".
@sampuatisamuel97852 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤ Absolutely fascinating
@dukeallen4322 ай бұрын
Very good presenter.
@kingsuperbus46172 ай бұрын
its crazy to think how one day everything will be gone because of archaeology. i like all the old photos better than the new ones.
@AllenPerkinАй бұрын
One may say the eternal mystery of the world is its comprehensibility.
@voster77hh27 күн бұрын
Plain amazing story
@gabriyv2 ай бұрын
Thank you🙋♀️
@britishmuseum2 ай бұрын
Cheers for watching!
@leacipurrАй бұрын
Has some 7 Eleven store vibes with them colors & stripes. 😂
@nicolasduhaut4771Ай бұрын
I'm trying to remember the title of a book I read on a similar topic: ancient people (I think it was Greeks? Or maybe Romans?) who conducted their own excavations and collected ancient artifacts. It also discussed how we discovered some of those proto-cabinets of curiosities. But I can't seem to find it.
@santiagoc932 ай бұрын
The fact that the gob was depicted as a star tell you everything