An exploration of Elephantine Island with Yousef Awyan, nov 2018.
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@DaveTheTurd4 жыл бұрын
I would never be able to see these places without videos like this. I can't afford to travel, but I can afford internet, lol... Thank you so much for letting us live vicariously through your travels. Yousef seems awesome, I'd like to meet him someday. Thank you both.
@bethbartlett56924 жыл бұрын
Please take some time t9 look up the "Universal Law of Attraction" (it was discovered by Quantum Physics) Universal Laws are *"absolute"* - meaning they always follow the defined process. Each and every Human creates their own reality via their: thoughts, beliefs, feelings - as these have a corresponding vibration and the Universe delivers to us that which matches our vibration - it is also magnetic - so we also draw to us - "likes attract" i.e. "attraction" Change the thoughts - change the reality - (to be consistent, we must reprogram our Subconscious - this requires a Conscious telling the Subconscious to release the inaccurate ideas we have learned through socialization and to validate the facts you have determined to be more accurate. Be certain to use Ethics and Accuracy .) Then you can Obviously redefine what you desire to do for your career and determine the amount of associated gains or income. Literally pick your income bracket and apply the effort of thoughts that align with this. 1. Get the facts 2. Practice the standards of these facts 3. Plan your Travel to Egypt Note: Nothing happens by chance - thus, my reading your comment was in direct response to your thought energy and therefore, you are already on your way ... How it works: 1. Ask 2. God/Source Energy Answers - gives it 3. We get in the vibrational alignment to receive ...when we are - the desire asked for is manifested. This Universal Law was discovered in the 20th Century, yet Jesus was teaching it 2000 years prior. Regardless of ones choice of faith/belief, Jesus and Quantum Physics are 2 solid references. lol - really Go get em!
@davidleomorley8894 жыл бұрын
Many people think you have to spend a lot of money on a tour to see Egypt, or that it’s too hard to do without an organized tour, but it actually costs less than most people realize and is easy to visit. The Egyptian people are really friendly….although you should be aware of strangers trying to befriend you on the street and get you to go out with them somewhere. There are people who will be friendly….just to get you to buy them things like beer or needed cash. You just have to be aware of this and use common sense. This guy talks about the scams you may come across if you are unaware. kzbin.info/www/bejne/imOzl5J3js2kabc This guy has a nice travel video explaining his backpacking trip there. kzbin.info/www/bejne/anelnIunbJajiq8 He even has a video explaining his costs. kzbin.info/www/bejne/fGXHYXxjZ7p1hpY You can actually do a 7-8 day trip to Egypt for less than $1500…and that is including the airfare. Let me know if you want more information. I'm not selling anything...including services or tours.......but I do like helping people who would like to see Egypt, but assume it's too expensive or difficult to visit.
@craigfawcett57454 жыл бұрын
@@davidleomorley889 you have an email address buddy
@davidleomorley8894 жыл бұрын
@@craigfawcett5745 Hi Craig, Roundtrip airfare from any large city in the USA to Egypt costs about $750-900.00 if you buy it at least a month in advance and try a site like kayak.com. Daily costs while visiting Egypt obviously vary greatly but you can get a clean, safe hotel room for very little money. Many of them, you actually book them online before coming and then you pay for it when you are there in person, in cash. When I fly into Cairo, I book a room at the Dahab Hostel. www.dahabhostel.com They pick me up at the Cairo airport for about $7.00 usd and they take me safely to the hotel. I can get my own room there for about $10-12.00 per night and there are lots of others in the area that cost a bit more. The Cairo museum is a 4 minute walk from the hotel and there are many popular and even famous restaurants and cafes to visit and eat at. The famous restaurant Abu Tarek is about two minutes away where you can fill up on the best Koshary in Egypt for about $1.00. The hotel can hook you up with safe taxis, guides and advice if you feel the need. You can get a taxi driver/guide for half or a full day, someone like my good friend Kokee who lives in Giza for about $30-40.00 per day. He knows all of the local places and the people around there. He can take you out riding quads or horses out by the Giza Pyramids. Tickets to temples & pyramids costs about $10-20 per day but when I went Saqqara last time, I spent more than that because I bought a ticket to everything that was open. You can easily go to Dahshur & Saqqara for a whole day on a 7-8 day trip. There are places like the Blue Lotus guesthouse for about $20.00 per night…and that might include breakfast. bluelotusofsakkara.com It’s walking distance to the entrance to Saqqara…and the place seems to be filled with lots of shady date palms and lots of goat herders traversing the rural streets in the area. If you want to spend a couple more days, you can catch a train from Giza to Luxor and back quite easily. Make sure to have someone at your hotel buy you a V.I.P.class ticket, it’s similar to Amtrak style service. They usually won’t let you buy V.I.P. class tickets at the ticket counter at the train station as a tourist. They have sleeping cars for night travel and if you try to buy a ticket yourself they will try to sell you a sleeping car. www.wataniasleepingtrains.com If the hotel you are staying at gets a V.I.P class ticket for you….no one will care at the train station or when you get on the train. Riding the trains in Egypt is an adventure in itself. Luxor is hard to do inexpensively on a 7-8 day trip…without being rushed…but it can be done. Once in Egypt though, each day can cost you less than $40-60 per day more if you don’t go too overboard. An inexpensive but clean hotel room in Luxor and in Aswan further south costs me about $20.00 per day, and like I said, they often with a breakfast included. I stay at the Nefertiti hotel in Luxor. nefertitihotel.com It’s clean, friendly and it only costs about $22 for a single room…with a small breakfast included. The rooftop restaurant where I eat my breakfast overlooks Luxor temple….which is open in the evenings. It’s literally across the street. The people at the front desk can get you a taxi to the valley of the kings, a guide, or advice on other things….or you can just go outside and catch a ride yourself. I use the hotel…because my local friend works there and I get him to be my driver for the day…and we get to hang out and go to different temples. Hot air balloon rides are about $100 I am told…although I haven’t ever been on one. You can take a day trip to visit the Dendera Temple complex….and Abydos too if you choose. If you get a taxi to pick you up at 6:00 am, the driver can take the short-cut desert road to Dendera and have you there when it first opens at 7:00. The photos are the best in the early and there aren’t any tourists usually until around 8:00am. After spending about 3 hours or so there, you can have the driver take you to Abydos to see the Osirian and Seti I temple….which has the best bronze age temple art in all of Egypt. Abydos is actually my favorite place in Egypt. It’s a smallish town on the edge of the desert filled with friendly locals. Most people stay at the “House of Life” hotel and it’s because it’s the only one in most guide books. It’s not cheap…but I’ve heard it’s nice. I stay at my best Egyptian friend’s guesthouse called the Flower of Life Guesthouse. It’s right on the edge of the desert and walking distance to the Seti I temple and the Osirian. It’s about $22 night with a breakfast. Here is the website I created for him. I’m still working on it. www.floweroflifeguesthouse.com You can do a day trip to Dendera and Abydos from Luxor in one busy day. But if you want to slow down and see things rarely looked at, stay in Abydos for a night, or two, and visit mysterious places like the 4,700 year old Shunet el Zebib from the 2nd dynasty and Ramese II’s temple right on the edge of the desert where the first kings had ritual structures and are buried. There is also the new museum in Sohag you can be brought to and with a couple of more days, you could take a private trip with my friend to the Pharaoh Akhenaten and Queen Nerfertiti's city Amarna. Ameer, the owner of the guesthouse is a great and gentle man and will take care of you and make sure you are safely transported back to Luxor if you decide to stay. Sometimes the local police like to escort you around middle Egypt with a Toyota pick-up truck leading the way. That’s just how it is…but the experience will exceed your expectations. I like eating the local food which is easy to find anywhere, even on the street sidewalks. If I eat falafels, breads, Kofta, Ful (beans), dates, cheeses, Koshary, sandwiches etc, it will cost me about $10-13.00 per day for food no matter where I am. Meat dishes cost a bit more. I taped this the last time I was in Cairo: vimeo.com/210837790 Going to Aswan from Luxor is easy. You can take a train, a taxi or even cheap 2-3 day cruises upstream from Luxor. I’ve never taken one, but they do stop at the three temples along the way, Esna, Kom Ombo and Edfu. Aswan is like a whole other place. I stay at the same guesthouse the guy Karl Watson stayed at in the video above. Catching a Nile cruise on a felucca is easy. They are right there on the waterfront. If you walk along the sidewalk in Aswan that runs along the Nile,…you might be approached to the point of frustration. I walk on the other side of the street. I also stay at the Orchida St. George Hotel sometimes which is just up the alley from my friends store, the Patience and Faith Bazaar. You can take a 5 cent water taxi over to Elephantine Island, walk through the alleys and go to the temple at the south end. There are no cars. People are friendly. Most are Nubian people. You can take another 5 cent ferry back to the west side of the Nile and walk in 1about 0 minutes over to the Unfinished Obelisk. Most of the trips to Abu Simbel leave at about 3:45 AM. It takes more than three hours to get there…and then you stay for maybe three more, and then drive back. It’s most of a day…but if you go you Aswan you shouldn’t miss it. You can walk around safely in downtown Cairo, Luxor or Aswan during the day or even during the evening and you won’t feel unsafe. They are quite religious people, especially in the southern areas, and so I never feel like someone is going to mug me or hold me up when a stranger approaches. I'm not interested in publicly posting my email address here, but if you need more information or want to contact me privately, you can use my Facebook page (same name) and send me a message on messenger. Thanks.
@craigfawcett57454 жыл бұрын
@@davidleomorley889 youda man!! Thank you so much
@samyabdelsalam11312 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for posting this! People don't realize how important this video is I just downloaded it so I can never lose it. This is important.
@camielkotte4 жыл бұрын
I paused the vid to subscribe and like. Matt send me here. This is great, a joy to listen and watch. Bam! Jaw dropping footage.
@JennySimon2064 жыл бұрын
Yeah thanks to Ancient Architects for sending me here as well. Awesome footage. Can't wait to watch more of your videos and plague you with comments 😁
@enigmasoftheancientworld52454 жыл бұрын
I'll have to buy Matt a beer next time I'm in the UK. He pretty much doubled my small amount of subs in 24 hrs.
@CAMMYSINCLAIR4 жыл бұрын
Your videos are visually and aurally the best. Keep up the good work please.
@gotMylky4 жыл бұрын
Damn dude, how do you only have 1.15 subs? Thanks to Matt from Ancient Architects for letting me know about this channel. Fantastic quality footage and great commentary, the American version of UnchartedX :D I love your friend who tried to get you into places, I hope he didn't face any repercussions from his actions.
@enigmasoftheancientworld52454 жыл бұрын
I have a hard time with self advertising, too much plant medicine maybe 😂.
@julichio62414 жыл бұрын
Same here
@gotMylky4 жыл бұрын
Came back here to say this ^
@devodavis64544 жыл бұрын
@@enigmasoftheancientworld5245 My condition may be chronic, but so is my medicine! I subbed as well, keep the videos coming, man.
@stonefishbob46064 жыл бұрын
Very informative and well done, a pleasure to watch.
@deanhowell67304 жыл бұрын
One of the Best Walk Arounds I've seen on this Forum! Thanks
@rachel_v_k4 жыл бұрын
I found your channel through Ancient Architects. I'm glad that I did, too. This is the first video of yours that I'm watching, but I already subscribed. I enjoy your presentation, your analysis and the fascinating subject matter. Besides, you also have a very nice voice, smooth for easy listening. Lol. I look forward to seeing more of your videos! Thanks! Take care! 😊💕💕💕
@MilciadesAndrion3 жыл бұрын
Great video. I learned a lot while enjoying it. Thanks for sharing your experience.
@surreycpr4 жыл бұрын
Fantastic! Unique footage of areas I've always wondered about.
@heidymarie97154 жыл бұрын
Looove Yousef voice!!❤❤!!!! Great video!!!!
@jacobjohnson81314 жыл бұрын
Great job on these videos..thanks for the info
@mykobe9814 жыл бұрын
Here from Ancient Architects. Subbed.
@williamsknowledgetruth62864 жыл бұрын
Please. Tell Yosef that as an American who’s never been to Egypt, but always wanted to go. I greatly appreciate all of the love and passion he puts into his work. Its very evident he lives and breaths this stuff. I’ve seen him with many different mainstream explorers and theorists. His openness and willingness to share his culture and knowledge truly come across on video. As well his serious nature of the duty to the protection of the public’s interests. While balancing the protection and preservation of the sites historical reverence. Although I don’t personally know him, I’m a scary good judge of character and he’s a good man. Thank you, for what you do as well. I believe only through further investigation, exploration, and less secrecy of these ancient ancestral sites. Can we hope to gleam evidence of, our past. That’s been systematically and wrongly obfuscated, by the powers that be for far to long. We have lost so much history to vandalism, extremism, elitism and alike. Unfortunately, this destruction continues today. On a seemingly never ending path throughout our world. Once these sites are gone. There’s no getting them back. I have great respect for the work of those who seek to safeguard this knowledge, and evidence. Not hide, but share it with any and all. Who are respectful and interested. I can’t remember his name at the moment, but the old Egyptologist. That acted like the pyramids, all of the sacred sites, were his to control as if they were his property. Super arrogant, ignorant, mean, just a spiteful man. Whom is riddled in controversy for potentially looting, and selling Egyptian heritage. I’m sure you know exactly of whom I’m speaking. He was placed in charge by the old guard of Egyptian committee of antiquities. Which always seemed like a political arm who’s self interests outweighed their duty to the average people. Unlike a scientifically based entity interested in doing what’s best to help preserve. The wonders and knowledge of these mystical, world treasures, that need to be available to all people in a safe and responsible manner. Without hiding or robbing them of the truth and information gleamed from these historical monuments. These historical treasures are all we as a world society have left of the time before. Which has been forgotten, when an advanced people, with advanced technology walked the earth. Finally, I’ll end with a couple statements. If we forget our past we’re bound to repeat the mistakes of that past. Without knowing where it is one comes from. How then can one know where their going too. My greatest hope for all of the world is Peace and Love.
@tafinzer4 жыл бұрын
So up close and alive! Fantastic!!!
@lukejerrard6084 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for your videos
@Chefned2 жыл бұрын
This guy knows how to film, document, edit 👏 👌 perfectly well.
@nancyM13133 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. All of my experiences of Egyptian History, excavations, etc. have been thru books & documentaries. Really enjoyed.🤠
@nancyM13133 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I subscribed.👍🙂
@marshalbass70984 жыл бұрын
I like your style of presentation. Subscribed.
@enigmasoftheancientworld52454 жыл бұрын
🙏
@ex-setorwofia3 жыл бұрын
Love your voice!
@1889michaelcraig4 жыл бұрын
This video is why I subscribed to your channel. Great job Sir! Also. If you crush that quartz it doesnt mean youll get gold out of it. If your prospecting for gold, look for quartz. The pinker it is the more likely youll find gold.
@AncientHistoryCriticisms4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Luke, I appreciate the look. Love this site, I have a video on it too, Elephant in the Room. The Nileometers are really cool. Keystone cuts and clamps, blocks with bevels, and precisely carved gauges / level markers.
@enigmasoftheancientworld52454 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the amount of keystone cuts there is amazing. I'll have to check out your channel, I've been holding off watching other channels to try and keep my thoughts mine at the moment, but it's good to see as many angles as possible too.
@AncientHistoryCriticisms4 жыл бұрын
@@enigmasoftheancientworld5245 No worries, I just made a short 1000 sub thank you video and I talk about what my channel is about. Hope I can be of help to you guys.
@periurban4 жыл бұрын
That "pyramid" contains a reaction vessel set into the floor, and it looks like it may have exploded from the inside. These guys were chemists, making the acids that allowed them to soften, melt and shape stone.
@debrichardson77724 жыл бұрын
Truly amazing thank you.
@AncientArchitects4 жыл бұрын
This video was fantastic. Thank you.
@enigmasoftheancientworld52454 жыл бұрын
Muchas gracias amigo.
@rdooski4 жыл бұрын
You must not sleep. Not only have you already seen just about every related video I watch, you make your own detailed videos on top of it.
@AncientArchitects4 жыл бұрын
@@enigmasoftheancientworld5245 When you are looking through the iron door at around 6 minutes, you are looking into the most ancient part of the site, the early dynastic original shrine. Pre-dynastic pottery was found there too. When the 18th dynasty built over it, they incorporated a shaft from their temple down into the niche at the very back of this room you are looking into. This could be one of the most important sites in Egyptian history. Take a high powered torch with you next year!
@enigmasoftheancientworld52454 жыл бұрын
@@AncientArchitects that's interesting and unsurprising. I actually have an 11000 lumens flashlight, but getting both hands through the hole wasn't really possible. I don't think we would have seen the shaft even with the flashlight, but I'm going to see if we can ask ahead of time to take a look inside before the next tour.
@AncientArchitects4 жыл бұрын
Enigmas of the Ancient World great! It’s it’s ok with you, I’m going to mention this video in my next one as it’s the best I’ve seen on elephantine. Incredible.
@rdooski4 жыл бұрын
Great video and beautiful footage! Its a bummer I have everything needed to view it in 4k but my internet it to slow to even stream 2k. I let it load for a good 20 minutes just so I could get a little 1 minute taste of the video in 4k and man was it nice.
@hera864683 жыл бұрын
Telcos are talking about 5G when they can't keep the bandwidth promise of 4 G or even 3.5G. All for show, and boasting. Service sucks as usual!
@alphalunamare4 жыл бұрын
Sorry for all my comment's, I speak as I see it .. an old habit. But that was bloody brilliant :-) Well Done!.
@bethbartlett56924 жыл бұрын
Those cats are Boss! Perfect Egyptian Hosts to welcome the Tourists.
@JW-yt7lr4 жыл бұрын
Those cats could have ringworm or rabies . Cannot believe you were touching them !
@dogdooish3 жыл бұрын
Mike MacDonald Mike MacDonald 0 seconds ago I'd be highly interested if you did a reading from within one of the boxes, I imagine you would be able to gather much from the beyond, you seem to be an adept medium. Cheers!
@alphalunamare4 жыл бұрын
4:15 is probably the best guide you are going to get in Egypt . You struck lucky! :-)
@bethbartlett56924 жыл бұрын
BTW, I was referred to your Channel by the "Ancient Architects Channel" and used his provided link. I appreciate these sort of recommendations and I'm sure you appreciate the recommendation and respect. Enjoying your detail and the shared Video. ...and - Your host was really a valued find. I am so surprised by his candid honesty, i.e. his comment in how they achieved such refined outcomes - given the tools. (I gathered he doubted the accuracy of the theory of what tools were used.) Just a couple minutes later, you comment on the precision and mention "machined tooling". The subject of *Collective Consciousness* comes to mind - and I smile, as we are helping along, the emerging truths. (The granite that looks like its embedded: I first thought of a piece of brick wwith Not at that one would see on a demolition site. I can't help but go, in my mind, to the French Scientist's research and proving that the (I believe it was the blocks of what appear as Sandstone) are *"poured, not pulled"* - I believe that was a 2009 study. I envy your tour with Graham Hancock, I have great admiration of Graham and his works, more as time evolves. I would love to take this tour with Robert Schoch in my tour group - having the personal opp for genius GeoPhysicist at my side - ahhhhh - pleasant thought. I truly like him and his peers - *"the non-Mainstream Academics"* (I feel that the number of individuals researching the relative topics are actually growing and the number that would recognize the greater value of non-MS is, as well.) I am curious, and it might be a good topic for you to do another video on this, your past trips/tours of Egypt. Number of visits and the subject focus of each? The current requirements of a tour for those whom are touring for study/research purposes. How many staff are with the group touring, and do they have security on site or do they actually travel with the group? What variances are you noticing? There's a noticeable undesirable element energies that one can only assume are of elite and/or fascist governmental type power forces that hovers over the whole of Egypt/Egyptology subjects. Your descriptions of these and related content could offer a very welcomed and informative video. Really worthy Video and Narrative. PS - that's a true bait to a tour! Under 20 and off the beaten path! You must consider the video I suggested - as it would offer both a value of info and a Marketing opportunity for your next tour - awareness and details. Really interesting - and the Quartz has My Address - 😉
@al22074 жыл бұрын
like your comments , did you see the LAH report very interesting by real Russian scientist kzbin.info/www/bejne/sKaki2V-pM-sgLs
@alphalunamare4 жыл бұрын
13:25 exemplifies the beauty of this video ... it is so relaxed folks can take it all in and think out of the box because it hasn't a driving agenda focussing mind's on the producer's intent, instead it is an exposition of what is. It is enabling :-)
@minnesotasmith844 жыл бұрын
1:48...come prepared to feed our fuzzy friends 🐱...subscribed for that alone..looking forward to learnin stuff 👍
@beachbarlouie3 жыл бұрын
Nice quality video bro. Its an Enigma why others who paid for tours and have their own KZbin channels can't keep the camera stable!
@gsalien22924 жыл бұрын
Any chance that Thermoluminescence method could be utilized on some of the heat damaged pieces to gain a rough determination as to when that damage occurred?
@SassyShay7 Жыл бұрын
That black broken piece he slapped. The inner part of that piece was crystallized
@signalfire64 жыл бұрын
You need to take a bunch of remote viewers with you to these sites (or just assign them as blind taskings) and see what they come up with; I'm dying to be able to touch some of these stones; the residual energies of the makers must be immense.
@durantritchie44104 жыл бұрын
Wow great video Luke I hope you will pick up more subs it would help with you and Yousef do more tours.Maybe Ben will give your page more exposure if he linked you in his videos.
@AncientHistoryCriticisms4 жыл бұрын
I feel like the big box was once set up like the tomb of Cyrus the Great. A stepped platform... or maybe it was surrounded by columns and lintels, like the valley temple.
@JdubU4 жыл бұрын
I may be naïve, but I feel that so many of us across the world that search for truth our brothers and sisters regardless of our origins we all inhabit this great planet. May we continue to find the truth in seeking
@jhnndrs88324 жыл бұрын
Can anyone imagine what forces it would take to ruin this whole granite stucture with massive blocks of stones?? That building seems to have been completely destroyed!
@alphalunamare4 жыл бұрын
17:58 ..the image at that second shows 'a chip off the old block' It originally fit about 4ft to the left underneath ... it was broken when it all fell.
@nikkola464 жыл бұрын
I would love to be there with you all!! New subscriber!:)
@delboytrotter88064 жыл бұрын
Me too.........
@kigerkarlzeberedi18004 жыл бұрын
The columns on the left are blocking the entrance under the Paving blocks do u see that?11:03
@jpse29593 жыл бұрын
At 29:48 where you are looking at the Khufu hieroglyph just up on that rock on the left side there's one of those white stones in bed in the granite what is that
@ZiggyDan4 жыл бұрын
Top class and quality footage!
@gruboniell41894 жыл бұрын
In Australia (aboriginal heritage) holes like that in bedrock were meeting points or water holes for travelers. Made by hand and normally over a few hundred years made bigger just from use. Hunters grooves from spears and axes are normally next to them. I’m sure Egyptians go back that far too and would have similar sights that go back a long time. That could be that same hole under that pyramid but then used as a grave in pre dynastic times then built on in the 3-6 dynasties
@ThomiX0.04 жыл бұрын
@Enigmas of the Ancient World, at 22:30 you've shown us the piece of 'granite imbedded in stone' as mentioned here, but do you have any other footage of this piece? It's really an enigmatic piece. Without making any presumption, of how they did it and when, it makes us humble towards these ancient people, by just looking at the FACTS itself.. Like the squared box and it's fine finish, these straight rims and beveled edges, they do not need any writing, the FACT speaks for itself.. It makes one breathless..seeing it. In sense of showing the beauty they where, way ahead of our time.. No need for mainstream footage, empty texts or flickering pictures, no need for explanation of what you should believe.. Even hieroglyphics does not fit the bill..it all must have come way later, to make this beauty fit the religious ideas. Beauty comes in silence, as it always do. Thanks for sharing the video to us, this way, much appreciated. And enjoy making the next one if you do!
@Azeraph4 жыл бұрын
Very tricky to get an external mitered cove angle right on one piece of stone and there's 4 of them. I mean it's easy on wood and other products but that box is a single piece. Only a master would carve that out.
@al22074 жыл бұрын
agree , not that easy with wood but it is granite and even today we cannot do that , just think of aliens technologies to extract shape and beautifully carve , the most difficult are all inner corner and angle
@Azeraph4 жыл бұрын
@@al2207 Well it's resonant, so it's devoid of moisture but the resonance helps the carver. You don't need to know the physics and science of why if you can leap to " Sounds right. " In this day and age we would have the top called a cap done separately. They weren't primitives where they constructed everything with mud brick, the square and plum was used by them as well as frames for squaring up. Trade was brisk. They put an ocd level of detail into only a few structures. Now take that over a period of a few thousand years and you have quite a lot of structures. Our mind set is thought in months and 5 year stints at the most. These guys thought in decades. In todays world, that is preposterous.
@CarolsCurrentObsession4 жыл бұрын
Azeraph you are right they thought in decades ~ possibly even centuries. 700 or 800 years was the lifespan of man at that time. And as the wife of a master wood carver, I also Completely agree, a master carved those pieces!
@MrFreezook4 жыл бұрын
Yousef Awiyan is a great guide :) HAHAHA Khufu Built this city on Rock & Roll
@scottleft36724 жыл бұрын
The boxes are like in Suqquara only without the pyramid built around yet....they must have had A LOT of spare time.
@christopherbatty38374 жыл бұрын
Never realised how extensive buildings were - is there a plan/CAD reconstruction? ?
@unenslaver13334 жыл бұрын
They blowed up real good. Who devastated that essential history?
@hazrobson23052 жыл бұрын
Could that hole in the Pyramid be the top of a well? It needs more investigation?
@jasonkoutz70864 жыл бұрын
Dave Wagner i will be 50 in January. I believe before i am 65 that traveling will be much different. At the very least you will be able to walk anywhere in the world and maybe interact with the surroundings from your own home. Making journeys is the reason we have great mysteries. We must make our own to solve them
@AncientHistoryCriticisms4 жыл бұрын
I bet those holes are back filled just like the bottom of the well shaft in the great pyramid
@tpxchallenger2 жыл бұрын
Hey, does anyone know what happened to this guy? All his uploads are 2 or 3 years old. I think he is excellent. He's really does his homework, he holds the camera steady, he points the camera at extremely interesting details and he knows when to shut up. I can't stomach Uncharted X, Bright Ideas, Foerster, or Hancock or any of those shrill and overbearing conspiracy ideologues. This guy is the only one "questioning the official narrative" that I like. Hope he's okay and just moved on to bigger and better.
@ianc49014 жыл бұрын
I wish you had a closer image of the wall @ 10:30 some of those images look like they are out of place. I can see an Egyptian Cartouche type carving next to what appeared to be an Aztec or Mayan carving but none of it is in the Egyptian style which is odd. Do you know where I can see pictures from that wall ?
@JohnMarshall-NI3 жыл бұрын
The pyramid you snuck a look at looked pretty rough in terms of work, compared to most of the other I have seen. Relatively small blocks as well. If I had to guess, I would say it was one of the least ancient.
@TerribleShmeltingAccident4 жыл бұрын
I’d wager they used some type of water jet to cut and shape those precision granite altars. They were masters of water... As we learn more in modern times we have built water jet cutting machines and routers that can make quick work of thick steel, granite would certainly be mailable to the water pressure if directed properly. Also one could lift and place such heavy stones using float bags if your building site was submerged during construction. Could explain the walls that egyptologists suggest retained water around many of these sites like the pyramids. Build a wall around your site, float your pieces into place, drain the water
@caseyalexander17054 жыл бұрын
The box at 18:57 is not one of a kind... it’s twin can be found at the Temple of Edfu in the Sanctuary of Horus. Best Regards.
@ElizabethNightingale4 жыл бұрын
I would kill to go on a tour like this....
@alphalunamare4 жыл бұрын
28:55 the glyphs? Is that a boat at the bottom or just my poor eyesight?
@Chicosfinest4204 жыл бұрын
So do you and Brien ever hangout? Or you guys competition? Who’s tour is better? Great video though! Thank you! From Northern Cali, BIG D
@enigmasoftheancientworld52454 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I know Brien, he's a lovely guy. He's been very generous with his time with me. His tours tend to be much larger and more frequent, but generally don't have the amount of permissions that my tours have. Depending on what you want from a tour either could be preferable. I don't consider myself to be in competition with anyone, and I probably won't do too many more tours. After our October 2020 Egypt tour, Yousef and I are looking into setting up a Mexico tour in 2021, and I'd like to possibly do one more Peru/Bolivia tour after that. At that point I'll decide if I want to do anymore tours.
@truthcrusader68704 жыл бұрын
That granite box is definitely made using a machine. That means thousands of years ago there was advance civilization and technology. Cataclism destroyed it and so we started from scratch once more.
@nobbystyles48074 жыл бұрын
why are there bits of audio edited out?
@josephmills90314 жыл бұрын
why was parts of the audio cut out? is there a version not edited of this video?
@thesilentfist53924 жыл бұрын
replica of jerusalem temple or shud say vice versa?
@Thex-W.I.T.C.H.-xMaster7 ай бұрын
No tour... after 4 years. So I guess the tour he keeps talking about in this video never happens or their would be footage of it 🤔. O well.
@kigerkarlzeberedi18004 жыл бұрын
look at the lazer straight line that runs through the column and the blocks. 11:21
@kateemma-3 жыл бұрын
I have commented on your other previous videos and am wondering if anyone has carried out radiation tests on the areas and they may be why certain places are hidden and maybe the big holes in the black pyramid are for granite boxes but round ones this time, it is very odd!
@enigmasoftheancientworld52453 жыл бұрын
I actually met a guy with a geiger counter and went into the Osiris Tomb with him and we took readings on those boxes. There was no significant radiation. I now have a very small geiger counter i will use in the future at all sites, along with a small emf meter.
@al22073 жыл бұрын
@@enigmasoftheancientworld5245 with granite rock there are always some level of radiation due to random uranium atom disintegration you will have to take radiation sample around and take some more reading near the rock
@alphalunamare4 жыл бұрын
25:24 ..feeling the conductivity! Most folks would say bollux, but that is just because of what is taught in schools. The simple fact is that it is a very true fact that one can feel such. It's why I, say, can tell if a battery I am familiar with needs charging or not, it feel heavier when charged .. but you try and tell a school teacher that!. Fair does though, teacher's only learn off University professors on a salary to be maintained.
@MrGOTAMA4204 жыл бұрын
GOOD STUFF
@lawrencedgriffin2 жыл бұрын
No time to read all comments so not sure if this has already been said but could this have been a trade school for students before they actually did any actual “work”?
@joshjarrett88964 жыл бұрын
The guide you have works with Brian Forester and Graham Hancock a lot in fact I think he is their go to guy
@kemico12722 жыл бұрын
Has anyone tried tying in the old Hindu vimana battles into the vitrification events in Egypt? Both occurred prehistorically. In a way, the technologies spoken of in the Sanskrit texts may help explain a lot of the confounding constructs found in Egypt and other megolithic sites
@MrGOTAMA4204 жыл бұрын
the guy with the do rag is SUPER COOL
@vonscharf4 жыл бұрын
What happened to cause all of this heavy granite to be tipped over and scattered all over ?
@Dreidcs24 жыл бұрын
They were destroyed by the Babylonians during the invasion when they took all over Mesopotamia and surroundings
@taborturtle3 жыл бұрын
Great video! Thanks for posting! Did anyone else catch the UFO orbs that fly by right around 28:14? There are a few of them. I watched it a couple of times and I didn't see any flapping or erratic bird motions at all, so I'd say they are either UFOs or orbs. Cool!
@andym68662 жыл бұрын
I know this is late but I looked and I think it’s two birds.
@zacharyphillips9294 Жыл бұрын
What I find extremely weird is the same tour guide in several different places around the world with several other highly regarded archeologists. This is very weird, maybe he’s an important person, do you know that man’s name who’s talking to you at 4:35? I’ve seen him in Brien Foresters Easter Island videos.
@vidb54092 жыл бұрын
Why these sites are so badly damaged?
@Arckitekt4 жыл бұрын
Setting it upright would help
@sakkmatt3 жыл бұрын
You see stones lined up. Then only civilization and culture could get there? Is that really true?
@AncientHistoryCriticisms4 жыл бұрын
22:50 Agreed, those blocks at Menkaure I call "lipped blocks" I did an episode specifically about those. In granite and they even have a couple nub traces.
@whkwole68424 жыл бұрын
The stone at 13:26 should not be ignored. It tells the fact of cement used by ancient people. The entire block might be a product of cement concrete being the crust and something else as the crumb. Then the structure at 14:39 should be suspected so, a product of cement concrete.
@PrivateSi4 жыл бұрын
Might have had animal/man/water powered stone saws but all the high quality stonework looks hand made to me. Certainly matches the quality of known handmade stone pieces... Maybe if you've never watched someone making a statue or posh box by hand you'll believe any old, presumptious conjecture.
@ianc49014 жыл бұрын
Obviously some type of machines but what were they made of ? The materials required to cut stone like that were not available when the stone was cut, it's easy to say 'it must have been done by machine' because that's how we do it today but think about what makes the machines. We use iron and steel, we can harden and temper steel to change it's properties and we can make tools from other materials such as cobalt, titanium and carbide to cut extremely hard materials. Machines also need bearings, gears and shafts which are made by other machines. We have built up the technology and knowledge over the past few centuries to get to where we are now but we cannot reproduce some of the things the ancients have made.
@PrivateSi4 жыл бұрын
@@ianc4901 .. You can cut granite with a copper saw, believe it or not... A standard stone saw design, with long, flat, rectangular teeth with small rectangular grooves between them at regular intervals... You need some obsidian or flint to score the initial groove and then use the copper saw to apply pressure to sharp sand that does the actua cutting/grinding, a little water to clean out the dust.. and 2 (wage) slaves.... We can cut stone with water jets, now-a-days, among other methods... You underestimate what many hands and pieces of obsidian can do. You overestimate how hard it is to polish a roughly cut face to perfection using nothing but pieces of wood and damp cloths, course sands and fine powders to finish - we were still doing it that way a century or so ago... Marble Polishers.... All your stoneage 'mysteries' make logical, down to earth sense to me. I see a logical progression, from large stone architecture to small block construction as stone cutting tools and rigs improved and societies and quarries expanded... and one man can move a small house using a few wooden wedges, levers, blocks, a hammer and pebble... He moves 10 ton+ concrete blocks with ease..... 1 MAN!.. too many peope now-a-days have never done a proper day's hard skilled manual work. You are parroting BS, disingenuous memes such as '...we cannot reproduce today'... Sure, technically we can't, because we do not and a can't know EXACTLY how these objects were made, because there are many possible ways using many possible tools and materials..... not because we they were more technicaly advanced than us.. to spout this nonsense is a proposterous lie in the face of obvious reality. I suspect the Copper Age went back further than currently known, for a start... and the Stone Age is a bit misleading, even if it is stone artefacts that survived... The Wood'n'Rope Age perished, rotted away, but there was a lot of architecture, engineering and art tied up with it......
@byfieldmichael19923 жыл бұрын
Those giant boxes could be argone accumulators. They would have known this technology, the stones were not moved by hand but by vibration and sound frequencies. Seems they started forgetting their own technology.
@ancientbuilds37644 жыл бұрын
Top notch stuff. No aliens or bullshit, but observation.
@anthonygriffin50402 жыл бұрын
My dream vacation is to go to Egypt or to anywhere I can see the past for what it was I can't afford to get there but the internet sho broadens my world
@alphalunamare4 жыл бұрын
19:20 .. not being prissy here but that the 'BenBen' ('scuse spellin) is the Pyramid shaped lid on top isn't a well known term .... so 'lol' just add it to the info :-)
@PeterPrism3 жыл бұрын
Welcome to the MACHINE
@robbiegolds12344 жыл бұрын
I wish that there was a way to date the vitrification and compare those to other sites that show the same evidence around the world. It makes me wonder if they are related to an ancient cataclysmic event, and are the remnants of an ancient world-wide and most likely advanced civilization.
@alphalunamare4 жыл бұрын
3:15 Hancock and Forester have different Books to Write is all :-)
@jonashessel4 жыл бұрын
hay so i had a dream, when i think i was making these types of stones. I went in to a little house or tink and wass making them, it was really easy work, and i was just joking with the other dudes there and stuff, and when home, and when ther the next day and so on, but the stone making made no sense to me sadly. So no idea how we actually made them, just that is wass at big production and fast. And that stone was turning on a ting and wass made. like stuff was added on it, while it was turning. sadly i can't remember all of the drime. only notest the secneficents of the dream later the day. (it was a great dream) :)
@jonashessel4 жыл бұрын
The stones with the glossy shain, that is :)
@jlee1117764 жыл бұрын
why are you whispering?
@ppgedez3 жыл бұрын
Highly recommend anyone watching these uploads here to check out the Scientists Against Myths youtube channel. They do show how to cut, drill holes and shape granite blocks even the 90 degree corners with copper, stone and various other items. Blew my mind and really just shows how it was done.
@stickemuppunkitsthefunlovi47333 жыл бұрын
The Persians destroyed all this. Also, I know to the untrained eye and the unskilled hand this stone work is amazing and it is. It was done by true masters who had been carving stone for generations. There are many many videos on KZbin of master stone masons carving granite by hand and it truly is a marvel and when you see then do it you are left in no doubt that that is how they did some of this work. The polygonal walls found in places in Egypt and south America i can not explain a d the scoop marks on the unfinished obelix.
@dazuk19694 жыл бұрын
That wonderful, massive granite box at 14.35 is majestic. That, is a complicated, precision and machined cut object...obviously. When somebody tries to tell that was created with copper hand tools and stone pounders...i just get angry and have to walk away. ....Peace.
@rogerscottcathey4 жыл бұрын
you really should . . . dont get mad . . try to control your temper.
@dazuk19694 жыл бұрын
@@rogerscottcathey Hey there Pockets (great name) Thank you for your wise words....my anger is internal really, and it's because i find it insulting to be told that box was made by some person pounding away with a rock or a copper tool that would melt like butter up against granite..thanks for reply and peace to ya.
@rogerscottcathey4 жыл бұрын
@@dazuk1969 : oh, heh, I was just kidding. Completely understand. That box was not pounded out with stones and copper. haha!
@dazuk19694 жыл бұрын
@@rogerscottcathey Thanks for reply Pockets....peace to ya my friend.
@ghostrider825994 жыл бұрын
Graham Elephantcock was right! Elephants from beyond the ice age had alien technology......paperback fact!
@joshschaufele2083 жыл бұрын
I've seen that same tour guide on a few different videos he seems to know a lot and not follow main stream teachings
@a_lucientes2 жыл бұрын
If there was no Moses how could there have been an ark of the covenant?