When u actually get closer and closer u realize that u are looking at SOMETHING very DIFFERENT from today and if we did not have thousands and thousands of buildings,bridges,infrastructures among many other clues,then I would absolutely say I was looking at something out of a FAIRYTALE fable!!So much so,that it takes awhile to register with me and I've been down with this craving of KNOWLEDGE,TRUTH and WISDOM for about 10 yrs now and even longer as I never believed the 01 event and ALWAYS had feelings of things being off!!
@shaun_sharlev2 жыл бұрын
I'm 10 minutes in and I have to stop and say something. Give me three years, food, shelter, paper, pencils, a feather and ink, and ill draw you a map of any old city in detail. Heck I would draw in a little detailed dog marking a tree. I've studied art and animation and I would consider myself an illustrator of a basic professional level. That map is something I could actually make. That minture detailed ink style is right up my alley! Three years is plenty of time to research and create a map of that size. Without distractions of a modern world like ours people could be a lot more productive. To be honest that could explain a lot of the crazy buildings of "the old world" but I'm not an architect or an engineer, so I can't be sure. But that map right there is not something you would need special tech to create. Love your videos! Keep at it
@TinyApe2 жыл бұрын
REMEMBER...TO "SCALE"...EVERYTHING...EVEN THE DOG MARKING THE "SCALED" TREE....THE ART STYLE SHOWN IS EASY IN ITSELF...BESIDE 30+ YEARS OF ARCHITECTURAL RESIDENTIAL DESIGNS DEALING DAILY WITH SURVEYORS USING COMPUTER SYSTEMS AND SOFTWARE AT ONLY 1:300 SCALE FILLED WITH MISTAKES...I TOO HAVE MASTERED THIS ART TECHNICAL STYLE USED BESIDE OTHERS...prove me wrong by simply just mapping your own block you live on in same detail (dog weeing on tree included)...lets see how you get on...no cameras, gps or high-tech surveyors equipment...just 17th century measuring tools...post when done...I would be very interested in the outcome....cheers
@shaun_sharlev2 жыл бұрын
@@TinyApe If I was unemployed I could do it tomorrow, using today to buy the tools and materials necessary. But I guess I could give it a shot this weekend in-between watching F1 sessions(Go Lando!). I even live in center town Jerusalem near the old city so the drawing that comes out could be pretty sweet. To be clear I'll have to measure everything myself, and then illustrate a map of my block, using this video as a style reference. I have no problem using ink and a tip but that would be something that this measly "dare" does not justify and I will use a regular modern graphic pen on paper. Measurements should take approximately one day and the illustration should be about 2-3 sessions of ass to the chair drawing.
@TinyApe2 жыл бұрын
@@shaun_sharlev very interesting...much respect for your ambition to succeed and certainly don't question your artistry skills but remember the key word is "SCALE"...as an architectural designer the "scale" is very important for proper representation of reality. It will be interesting to see how it compares to the hundreds of surveyor data I have dealt with in 30 years (many mistakes even using high-tech equipment)...any civil engineer dealing with geotechnical, structural or transport data and rest will understand...good luck!
@janhertog6452 жыл бұрын
Notre Dame really stands out here. Completed 400 years prior to this map, it dwarves all of the buildings around it. Paris is so old, there was plenty of time over the millenia to build all of this, but it is still awe-inspiring. Could this map be the work of a savant, an autistic man? I have seen multiple cases of people like that who only have to take one look at a building or city and then produce incredibly detailed, flawless drawings of it.
@stankygeorge2 жыл бұрын
I thought this also, but, maps, portraits etc from around the world look exactly like this map, so I will go on the record and say: "a photograph type machine was used in the production of these works"! A bigger question is; how did they get the areal view!
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
Repopulation started with the Old World and Roman/Babylonian Empires. Notre Dame is thousands of years old. The agenda has been to confuse future peoples from the very beginning, we have no idea how old the map really is, or how many times Paris was demolished and built over. Does this map show the Eiffel tower and the 4 antiquitech conductor towers that were around it? If not, this map is nefarious business.
@anned3722 жыл бұрын
Brings to mind artist Stephen Wiltshire who drew London skyline from memory...
@atlantic_love Жыл бұрын
@@stankygeorge very likely a balloon
@lucasbello6949 Жыл бұрын
Even if it’s a drawing is still destroyed your narrative you tell us
@loicrodriguez25322 жыл бұрын
9:56 Turgot did not design the map: he was just a nobleman-politician. He only ORDERED the map to Louis Bretez, who was the professional here (architect & cartographer). 10:11 Not having an ENGLISH Wikipedia page is not the same as not having anything at all: when you see (on Turgot map of Paris' wikipedia) "Louis Bretez [fr]", by clicking on the [fr] you get redirected to French Wikipedia. Here's what the french article has to say about him: « Louis Bretez (????-Paris, June 1737) is a French architect & cartographer. Without the titanic work entrusted to him by the city under the initiative of Michel-Etienne Turgot to build a NEW plan of Paris called Plan de Turgot, Louis Bretez would be a complete stranger. A member of the Academy of Saint-Luc, heiress of the community of master painters & rival of the Royal Academy of Painting & Sculpture, Louis Bretez had self-published in 1706 a treatise entitled "The Practical Perspective of architecture containing lessons in a new, short & easy way to represent architectural orders & fortified places in perspective, a work very useful to painters, architects, engineers & other draftsmen" whose main principles he applied to cartography. Historians assume that his knowledge is at the origin of his recruitment by Turgot, but ultimately, we do not know about the old contacts between the two men. The mystery that surrounded the choice of the provost is not completely lifted. A man of experience, probably in his sixties, Bretez was however the specialist of the moment in terms of PERSPECTIVE. From 1734 to 1736, he therefore walked the streets of Paris, entered, armed with a pass, the courtyards of private properties, designed, block after block, facades, gardens & streets. This survey work was certainly not carried out solo. Bretez had to benefit from the help of several apprentices divided into teams of two. He is nevertheless credited with drawing the 20 plates in pencil & we know that he was helped by Saury for a time to put them in line with Indian ink. The drawing being still unfinished, Antoine Coquart, who had participated in the engraving of the large plan of Paris surveyed by Roussel from 1729 to 1730, was chosen with Claude Lucas to transcribe the handwritten sheets onto copper. After six planks, he handed over his business to Claude Lucas, his partner. A member of the Royal Academy of Painting & Sculpture, he completed the last of the engravings in 21 months, the reception of the engraving by the city office in December 1739. »
@Windwalker6652 жыл бұрын
How green the city must have been with this amount of gardens and trees everywhere…!
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
Its incredible. Paris still has much green but here its almost one big parc! And how.. im intrigued its very interesting
@danwilson10402 жыл бұрын
And horses not modern traffic ❤
@theresultof7772 жыл бұрын
From a builder's perspective, the unnamed buildings with all their windows resemble residential apartment structures, with atrium courtyards. This city was magnificent.
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
@EJ Doyle good point
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
I still love that about Paris but it did catch my eye to. So much detail in everything. For the purpose of beauty and health probably. But you can walk on a busy street in Paris, u push open a big door and the city is gone where some innergarden is there in some courtyard its great
@jradddsr54442 жыл бұрын
Awesome to see the old world we were never taught!
@oldworldex2 жыл бұрын
I really admire the work you do Jarid. It has helped me start my own channel on similar topics...Thank you for your contribution in the search for truth!
@mickguadagnoli87792 жыл бұрын
Nice! I just subscribed
@mudphloodphilly24562 жыл бұрын
What's your channel bud?
@mudphloodphilly24562 жыл бұрын
Got it 👍
@oldworldex2 жыл бұрын
@@mudphloodphilly2456 kzbin.info/www/bejne/fHK1knibodGqj6s&ab_channel=OldWorldExploration here's a link
@oldworldex2 жыл бұрын
@@mickguadagnoli8779 Thank you!
@ryans21182 жыл бұрын
To me, is a concept ive been thinking about for many years. Even drew plans for a community like what im seeing. France map looks like everyone grows their own food. Self sufficient. Greed took over along the way and has been rewriting history ever since!
@ryans21182 жыл бұрын
Ps. Thats an amazing map to see. Thank you for share!
@DTR892 жыл бұрын
It wasn't greed, it was called the industrial revolution.
@canusamedia21522 жыл бұрын
Very good catch, @Ryan S. The original and only sustainable cities...so do we begin to comprehend where that wonderful concept came from....
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
Yes you can see placement of windmills, even though they used many different fuels still were happy to use wind and hydro power, the whole world was built around both. The original Fire Engines were useful for any kind of emergency with a beautiful spark advance and could power anything. Almost all melted down during the wars.
@Frenchy78ify2 жыл бұрын
i think earth was repurposed bc it looked perfect before
@JonathanHallOverAllen2 жыл бұрын
If you use Google Earth you can sometimes see aerial photos that are old. I found Aerial photos of the Houston area going back before WW2.
@alabamaheartbreaker79182 жыл бұрын
Thats weird. Id like to see that aslo
@JonathanHallOverAllen2 жыл бұрын
For real though, you go look at the southeast corner of Texas on Google Earth Pro and click the the little time icon it will have dates going back to before WW2 for that area. Some areas are still not completely captured. Look for a Pecan Orchard on Maxey drive before 1955. Just north of Greens Bayou Assembly of God Church.
@JonathanHallOverAllen2 жыл бұрын
@@alabamaheartbreaker7918 I could not help but notice your name contains "Alabama". Are you familiar with James Madison Hall?
@mariaaboriginefidelis65582 жыл бұрын
We are told that in just two years from 1734 to 1736, Louis Bretez walked the streets of Paris, entered, with a pass, the courtyards of private properties, designed, block after block, facades, gardens and streets. The Eiffel Tower would be towards "le bac invalides" and "île aux cignes". It's strange that the word "Patache" names of the boats on the Seine, is written on the map. The names of the great buildings are not mentioned.
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
the map is written up in the same style as the Old Patents. Probably the genuine article but stored in technical form. Combination of English / Greek.
@jrgmty76852 жыл бұрын
Minute 29:00 the big dome building, that's where Napoleon's tomb allegedly is. One block to the left of that is the statue of The Thinker, but that C shape building is missing now where the statue is today.
@KiltedDaddyBear2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this work (and those others too) as I have never seen so much detail in this work, and it is wonderful!
@6079.Smith.W2 жыл бұрын
I love the work you do have you overlaid it to the current Paris map
@chrisjenkins40942 жыл бұрын
Thank you sir...I had never heard of this map it's wonderful to learn something new thank you again brilliant work
@scottbing82012 жыл бұрын
It pretty much boils down to one thing. They had a means of a type of photography. Like some of those impossible paintings from the middle ages.
@MickGatting2 жыл бұрын
This Turgot map rings true beautiful art not fiction.Looking at this map reminds me of Copenhagen today - neighborhoods laid out like this with 4 or 5 floor buildings with pitched roof & steeples/turrets. The large food gardens attached have gone but street blocks have been completed to replace the gardens with newer constructions from around 1900.
@davidwyatt3972 жыл бұрын
Always reminds me of circuit boards even back then. Especially including the plants and their color and shape, frequency, acting as transistors diodes potentiometer e.t.c seen it on an old map of Zion and the fountains of France. Was Louis the 14th black? I wonder... seen a painting that he was. Just side note
@davidwyatt3972 жыл бұрын
I think people aren't getting the idea there's a trap keeping us here but we aren't all ghosts because these controllers upload us already into loops we think are heaven or hell while our energy from the emotions powers this place. There are souls in the electricity. Ghostbusters. When the fire station got shut down it powered down the whole city. G is the aura rainbow. Energy that comes in a spiral. Why a unicorn has one horn over its third eye that looks like it turns like a vortex spun by red electricity blue magnetism. Male female, white black, sun moon. That order. 10. Computer code
@brian-te4xs2 жыл бұрын
I think it’s cool when someone brings up “pcb’s”.
@flatplaneoregon46052 жыл бұрын
Even in their false narrative they tell us the Moors controlled the Iberian peninsula or old Gaul for either 700 some years or possibly nearly a 1000 years like 904 or something, it's been a minute, don't @ me to math it up. I think Paris was home to one of the first free to all universities. And the invasion of the so called 'new world' couldn't happen until the church controlled that peninsula.. hense several 'crusades' later they finally annoyed and disgusted the Moors enough with their blind zealotry and ruthless genocidal atrocities, they left the peninsula and decided to stay across the Mediterranean in north Africa and expanded east instead. Add the lost history of Tartary to that mix and your guess is as good as mine how that adds to or fits the overall preponderance of evidence for a history of obfuscation. But this is possibly a fantastic piece to the elusive puzzle.
@davidwyatt3972 жыл бұрын
@@flatplaneoregon4605 I try and ignore what they say. Irish legends tell of the most magical white aryan hyperborean king marrying the prettiest most Nobel aryan lumerian black queen and sailing the world spreading knowledge of the sun and moon. Rainbow warriors. Think maybe I need to take a trip to the most magical place in south America to be inspired in spired to know more. Incidentally the females of my family talk of an island they go to at certain times off the coast of Ireland. Those who know, know
@joeclarke67562 жыл бұрын
Paris is magnificent and old but pre WW II Warsaw was laid out in a genius manner much earlier than most folks can comprehend boasting universities factories parks and art.
@faithworks2172 жыл бұрын
Terrific video. What about the buildings from the Paris World's Fair along the Seine that were allegedly only temporary? Do they show up on this map?
@_trismegistus2 жыл бұрын
Asking the real questions... And where is the answer?
@DaemonZodiac2 жыл бұрын
exaclty.
@gargoyle25852 жыл бұрын
Oh C'mon,, worlds fairs are a New World exhibit.. This map is 18th century. A simple search would have saved us having to read your nonsense, good day.....
@daisu98182 жыл бұрын
@@gargoyle2585 The great plot is that fairs have been used as an excuse to explain much older buildings, calling them ''temporary'' cause fairs. If the plot is right tho, those much older buildings should be in that map.
@gargoyle25852 жыл бұрын
@@daisu9818 Point taken.. let me know how your search goes! 👍
@beckydorius2512 жыл бұрын
WOW so insane!! LoveThis so much! Thank you!
@keeblah1111 Жыл бұрын
The amount of elaborate gardens is unreal
@someoneoutthere18662 жыл бұрын
One of the best videos yet!
@educatedgypsee23512 жыл бұрын
Each structure had a garden. I hope the future is as bright as that one way of living that literally effects every other aspect of life
@lissj56302 жыл бұрын
Looking at the map in a whole without boarders it looks very much like a black and white photo. It looks incredibly real. Almost as if it was a photo then they mass produced a print and that gave it a drawn look
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
Exactly its like that app that changes your pic in a cartoon
@lissj56302 жыл бұрын
@@lily6246 yes exactly!
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
Two minds alike: )
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
@@lily6246 they had the tech check out the quality of the Donald/ Daffy Duck cartoons of the 1920, advanced analog filters, possibly analog animation computer.
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
@@togowack thank u I'll check it out but I think I already know what you mean:)
@naturegazer6749 Жыл бұрын
My husband and daughter will be at the Louvre tomorrow! Ive asked him to sneak pics of it for me. This is incredible! Im so confused as to where regular homes were or did they all live in these large buildings? We're so accustomed to single family residence. Perhaps they did live in more common arras. Fabulous video Jarid and incredible dig.
@DTR892 жыл бұрын
Imagine drawing a map so good that future generations questioned if it could be achieved without the use of lost technology
@labbeaj2 жыл бұрын
Wow! What a great point!
@buzznitnation13052 жыл бұрын
you're new here aren't you.
@naturegazer6749 Жыл бұрын
May the two people supposedly responsible be feeling the appreciation. I'm sure they've passed long ago,but this is phenomenal for era.
@drumstick742 жыл бұрын
Hi Jarid. Fascinating map! Try freezing at 15:15 and look at those buildings(!) They look like modern apartment blocks (concrete) that are in ruins, with vegetation overgrowing the roofs...! I don't think it was impossible to draw this by hand, although I think it is an engraving (for printing). What puzzles me is how they got a clear enough view of all the details from an air balloon. It doesn't make sense. Especially when you freeze again at the overview at 37:55 - that, I will grant you Jarid, looks like a photo. The perspective is perfect. Edit: Another thing to notice is the 3 story buildings built straight on to the bridge over the river Seine (at 23:35).
@dirtygene2 жыл бұрын
Those aren't buildings. Those are large open containers that seem to contain logs or lumber or coal or other types of materials - maybe even garbage. You can see it poke thru the sides of the open fence-like container. The questions really are, how do they pile it so high without machinery, how many hundreds of thousands, possibly millions of people over how many centuries does it take to quarry, cut & transport stones and other materials with just horse & carriage to build everything we see in that map - especially anything over 1 story high? Did those necessary capabilities, technologies, advanced education and detailed language exist going back additional multiple centuries according to our current official narrative of history? I think not.
@drumstick742 жыл бұрын
@@dirtygene I took another look. You might be right; huge open containing (I think) logs... but they would be about five stories high. You ask some very good questions, which I don't have an answer for. How they did it is beyond me. I took a look at Wikipedia's history of Paris, they say in the mid 1640s the city had 400K inhabitants, rising to 550K in the late 1700s. So that's right around when this map was made, 1739, and it would fit with a town of the size shown. But I am still intrigued about *how* the map was made...Wiki just says Louis Bretez (the artist Turgot hired) went from door to door, drawing courtyards on ground level, measured, and that the map was complete in just 2 years. Bogus. He must have had some sort of aerial view.
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
@@drumstick74 the answer is giants, made construction of the great buildings totally different, actually they were built at a central location and carried into position like tinker toys. The river and lake canal system also product of the giants. Prefab and precast concrete works observed all throughout, in great numbers and with apparent ease, point to a short construction period and on this map showing how the natural resources of the world were stored for continuous transportation.
@cognitivedissonancecamp63262 жыл бұрын
Anyone notice how the boats are massive by scale? Like the length of a city block? Where are the individual boats and porters?
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
In the video on new york there are some really odd boats too, they were on the left of some weird brick tower/wall
@suzettepurser74132 жыл бұрын
Wow 🤩 let me say thank you for your work! I just came across your channel and I love it!! Currently bingeing lol ..your voice is amazing!
@thingsofsuch2 жыл бұрын
Jar jar! The ONLY THING TO KNOW about the photo taken form the hot air balloon is this: They had to develope the negative (at this point likely glass with silver nitrate etc) while also AIRBORN! To get a decent negative there would have to have been a dark room setup on the craft while airborne, as the time from exposure to development had to be almost instant in those times otherwise the image would darken to an unusable amount.
@scottbing82012 жыл бұрын
How do you know? According to the mainstream history of photography, there was no photography
@thingsofsuch2 жыл бұрын
@@scottbing8201 Scott Bingo, WHAT A nice reply, thank you for the value that you add when bringing to attention the fact you have nothing to offer in a positive manner nor the ability to climb up out of the severe crippling depression of that mundane futile broken mindset barely aware that NOT one besides your self deluded ego could possibly give a FUCK about your braindead concepts of what is or is not fact, opinion, truth, or an answer. Do I KNOW anything? I don't know. Do I strive toward an answer? Yup. I don't care about that answer. What I find value in is the SEEKING. Give up and bow to an answer, then become slave to is and the cognitive dissonance & bias that yoke will hitch onto you, bovine to the ANSWERS, it is ... ahem ... an utter (...) disappointment.
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
That's a nice detail
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
@@scottbing8201 lop
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
they had airborne HD cameras early in the 1800s they were using them for documentation of empty cities before repopulation each time they did a reset, and prior to 1800
@laurencefollis82012 жыл бұрын
I am french ,parisian First thank you for your vidéo. Amazing vidéo job ......this is un crédible. There are 2 différent parts in Paris + (the isle of Notre Dame ) in between .Rive gauche is the left side of the river seine( Saint Germain des prés, observatoire , hôpital de la salpetriere , Louis le Grand famous high school etc and Rive Droite faubourg montmartre , champs elysees , rue du temple, hôtel de ville , place royale now called place des Vosges palais du Louvre and the jardin des Tuileries exactly the same .... etc etc ...those two old parts are just identical now. Then Paris was extended and some areas just did not exist at that time . The fort Bastille was a prison and was destroyed on the 14h of jury 1789....révolution française .My conclusion is that Paris was already a wonderfull city ,even nicer , green and well organized...supplies , boats , trees, orchards and garden , hospitals, same bridges to cross from one part to another.... Saint Lazare was an hospital. Now it is a train station... Louis XIV was king at that time leaving in Versailles 30 km from Paris ..not in the Louvre like his father. The révolution did not destroyed that much in the .Paris was already designed as it is now.....i am speechless. At school we were told that Paris was durty, dark .People were struggling. Building were tiny and unsanitary..the best was to leave in Versailles ....
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
Exactement!
@jetsons1012 жыл бұрын
I was so amazed that I had to check to make sure that it wasn't April First..... Thanks for posting.....
@jimdillinger77572 жыл бұрын
Great vid, the damage was done during the "Franco-Prussian war of 1871, using weird weapons, there are 6 million skeletons under the city, so far.
@jimdillinger77572 жыл бұрын
@Beaudile so they say.
@thingsofsuch2 жыл бұрын
Jared, found a website which is free to use with a upgrade pay option I think we all could find value looking over. Forgotten books (all one word) is the site and has many publication of outdated and out of print fiction and NON-Fiction. I chose the category of archeology, found a book titled "Relics of Ancient AmericA" compiled by Iner Lamb of older publications who began writing the book in 1869 with a print date of 1908 (I think that is the print date). Only been able to go over a bit and already it alluded to Tartars in North America known as fact before Columbus made his Converso escape and Jew relocation deal with those inbred Hapsburg fools wearing jewels. Much more on that site which... I may use to actually get making videos too. Once I get a start and some good content (not the frap I have now people, don't check it out) might reach out to you for collaboration or to lighten your load by adding to your research topic. Will reach out then, hope all is well, great content that has only gotten better!
@shaun_sharlev2 жыл бұрын
16 minutes in... You seem to underestimate TIME. The amount of work you could achieve in one day of research to map out parts of the city is immense! 3 years is a long time. The city shown in the map is very impressive and pretty unbelievable and the map is a piece of art 👌 but totally doable if a rich lord is paying you to do one. Or perhaps your life depends on creating the map and only your illustrations skills can keep you alive..
@jayrobelo9877 Жыл бұрын
From a building and architect viewpoint its actually marvelous what man can create and what man can forget.. seems like were developing as a species and we're super curious as to how life works and what came before us. Sometimes naive other times skeptical but atlas we're growing. Love you deep divers! keep searching til you find your treasure
@Seancloudsss2 жыл бұрын
Great work :) Incredible insight :)
@an_undestroyer2 жыл бұрын
During the early 1600's Claude Perrault, brother of Charles Perrault who created the glass slipper in cinderella made changes to the Louvre, some of which are not standing today. I wonder what this map has to say about Perrault's additions/remodels.
@kathyallman61782 жыл бұрын
Would love to see a copy of the Peri Reese Map! Love your work! ❤️
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
@@kathyallman6178 peri reese, u mean paris phonetically? Haha
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
Ah true glass shoe in 1600 sounds already interesting enough but your second comment is even better. I wonder if this map exists about Paris and Rome, u would guess that there are many more
@kathyallman61782 жыл бұрын
Peri Reese was a map of Antartica!
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
@@kathyallman6178 lol thnx for pointing that out. I'm oblivious lol I thought u tried to be funny and meant paris in a funny way. Thnx! Spoken as Pari in French and Paris in English.(:
@chess2u2 жыл бұрын
Either that draw was made from a huge super HD photo taken from aerial view or what else could be reasonable ,and I see old HD cameras of 1800 that someone spoke on KZbin when mentioning the Tartarian civilization
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
the HD photos from early 1800s are what set me off originally, photos of desolate cities fully built out, post reset/quarantine (Chicago), you don't start out with the best tech they were obviously documenting the cities before their next moves.
@trevorharildstad2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating.
@machinehead69612 жыл бұрын
I'm on the trail of paintings from 1893,not cheap to even view these paintings that may not even be authentic, still diving in tho,family history.
@mancamiatipoola2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting map. I had not known of it before. This map was made before the spiritual awakening of the previous cycle. In order to understand when this 1739 took place we must understand that all the info we get of the middle-age history up to 1900 is in fact from the Arien age (4000-2000 years ago). The controllers have hidden the history of the last 2000 years, which is the Piscean golden age (aka tartarian age). This map was made toward the end of the arien middle ages and is still quite a "small" Paris, compared to how it became during the golden age renaissance. This map does not have the Arc de Triomphe, Palais Garnier, Grand Palais, Tour Eiffel, Pantheon and many other buildings that were added later. Basically only the center of Paris was built at that time. Other details that we notice is that the Seine was a natural river with very few cement or stone embankments. My favorite parts were the ancient bridges that had apartment buildings built on them, on both sides of the bridge. I wonder how life on a bridge was like. Anyway for people who want a very nice composite Turgot map, there is an excellent one on David Rumsey's site, the best place for HD large old maps. www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~327588~90096204:Composite--Paris--Plan-de-Turgot?sort=Pub_List_No_InitialSort%2CPub_Date%2CPub_List_No%2CSeries_No&qvq=q:turgot%20map;sort:Pub_List_No_InitialSort%2CPub_Date%2CPub_List_No%2CSeries_No;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&mi=12&trs=53
@andromedafree96862 жыл бұрын
Good doubts! These maps from the 15/16-hundreds often are much to accurate for being drawn and curved into plates from only 1 man and one other.... I learned professional drawing of buldings/construcrions in my late teen-years and I can say, a map like that would have been lasting years with a whole team. 🙏🤩😎👍
@ionabarker2 жыл бұрын
There are no basements! Apart from occasional bit of terrain on farm lands, everything seems to be on one level. Almost like this level is the original level 🤔. Can’t believe how built up and established it is. It looks well organised, and there isn’t much development happening. Like it’s all been there for a while. Fascinating.
@music118982 жыл бұрын
This map seems to depict walled communities representing each land owners residential castle and or healing center. Perhaps the land owner was a family of giants and the more sparse structures were for the smaller humans who served them? It also seems the smaller humans which were still quite tall by today’s standards enjoyed working for these giants because “work” was a creative process with abundance for all. Just saying. 👍🏻🇺🇸
@stankygeorge2 жыл бұрын
Good points!
@Ryan-ze9fz2 жыл бұрын
In the 18th century? You think we had giants living among us in... the 18th century??
@skullasylum332 жыл бұрын
incredible finds jarid 😃👍
@raypratt36112 жыл бұрын
With the Turgot map,I cant explain it,but it looks like some kind of digital layout,if u look close it even gives u the slight inclines,but u dont notice it unless u are looking up close!!it is crazy what we are finding out now about our pasts,but it is definate that we've been lied to bout EVERYTHING!!
@GrandmaBev64 Жыл бұрын
Just WOW. Are these little penal colonies? Very strange! Can't stop looking at this map. At 31:26, are those training pens? There are 5 lots with the same weird structures that looks like skateboard ramps, but, placed in a different order. Can't tell if it's in water, because of the little boat looking symbols. There are, more than a few, very interesting lots. Thank You.
@jumpingship30012 жыл бұрын
Sewage system alone would of been an incredible undertaking.
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
except for whatever reason they didn't have bathrooms and toiletry in the Old World but plenty of fountains
@therealitybyjayrocco2 жыл бұрын
Speechless
@raypratt36112 жыл бұрын
So I've often wondered the very same thing,where are all the people LIVING??I'm assuming not EVERY SINGLE PERSON is building a gigantic CASTLE!?only thing I can think of is that people lived in APARTMENT BUILDINGS, they used these buildings as apartments??anything other then that,then we are getting into even stranger areas!!Like,were people living underground??and if they were then WHO or WHAT was occupying land on top??And I'm also very surprised that we dont bring that question up more,Where were the single family homes,with neighbors and neighborhoods??we ALL revel and get so overwhelmed in these buildings that we forget to kind of take it back down a notch and think about us as a people and how we live,it should at least be in the middle somewhere but I dont seem to see that!!🤔🤔😂😂
@DaemonZodiac2 жыл бұрын
amazing.
@vortexmods15232 жыл бұрын
There are good maps like this for Seattle, they show the higher parts of the city getting cleared back year by year reveling old world buildings that are sometimes still there today.
@notthestrawman3005 Жыл бұрын
gardens everywhere in that paris map!
@joecorr18532 жыл бұрын
Thanks Jarid 👍
@nicklall42852 жыл бұрын
Let's be glad we're here right now.
@helencooper15612 жыл бұрын
My husband was a cartographer for the council who required every tree be recorded on the maps...measured exactly
@timothydillow31602 жыл бұрын
Things they say are ancient are not so, things they say are old aren't that old. I don't think it's a coincidence that the official narrative says photography began in France in 1839. The balloon is also said to have been invented in France. Not wanting to give away the age of photography, someone must have been looking at a photograph then Drew this extremely important image. That would be painstaking enough,..That's the only way logically this could have been made.
@Joy-mh9xq2 жыл бұрын
Turgot-- The 't' at the end is silent in French. When doing research, you always have the option of checking how words are pronounced, in the form of short recordings to listen to. Quick and easy.
@jamessmith89032 жыл бұрын
It would be interesting to merge this map with what there is today
@jamessmith89032 жыл бұрын
Truly incredible and mind boggling
@studioduco49682 жыл бұрын
Great video! What stands out is that almost all buildings, cityblocks and gardens have walls around them. These streets must have been creepy. It's obvious there is a "grand design" behind this lay-out. Look at the "Hotel Royal des invalides" (sheet 16) it's an insane building and even the gardens around it look more like a circuit board than a cosy garden. I don't know what the think of it, it looks so well organized that I don't know if this is wonderful or sick. There must have been a lot of "control" to create this. And what are those weird structures that we see at 31:27 in this video?
@canusamedia21522 жыл бұрын
Came back to find this vid, so I could grab that map. TY, @Jarid Boosters. I can partially answer the riddle of this design, after a solid year of research ...be glad to share findings....do you know about Polder Tech?
@RANGY19552 жыл бұрын
Even the smallest part or garden or street is correct with the whole. Humans make little errors and ignore. I have been looking at the screen through a big lense. Can't see any error.!
@Ioannis4182 жыл бұрын
This map would be impossible even from a zeppelin or ballon. They must have had like the greatest 8K camera obscura, with zero blur etc...it will take you more than 10 years to go from house to house and count stuff in the whole Paris area.
@DanielFreeman2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video! However did they get power to those beautiful buildings? I didn’t see any spaghetti power lines anywhere. Do you think they had wireless power? Tesla Tech maybe?
@Elhastezy8882 жыл бұрын
Just go back a few videos on this channel, it's discussed 👍🏻
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
the 'halo' myth comes from the effect observed around the steeples of the buildings that were able to capture power from the ether. Some photos have it check Jarids recent video of NY.
@smileyface31702 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@ASCUMBAGWh0re2 жыл бұрын
Joe, you know what you're doing. Know your stuff
@carlafarigu25032 жыл бұрын
Great video.
@keithhopkins6912 жыл бұрын
Can you overlay this map on the map of Paris of today. Any streets remaining with any residue of former architecture? Great show. Thank you.
@FLATEARTHANDY4202 жыл бұрын
AMAZING!!!!!!!!!!
@mattlag85582 жыл бұрын
Awesome!!!
@katia61902 жыл бұрын
Parabéns pelo seu trabalho!
@maryflower34792 жыл бұрын
Mind Blowing
@whome1636 Жыл бұрын
The boats are huge!!
@cognitivedissonancecamp63262 жыл бұрын
To me, this map is idealistic, not-photo-realistic. I think someone commissioned a Paris map showing no ghettos, no pograms, no blight, no urban rot. It seems that someone wanted an end result that erased the historic urban blight that plagues every city in history.
@lloydlowery94272 жыл бұрын
Any of the street names line up with what’s in Paris now ? Great effort
@MrInfinitefinality2 жыл бұрын
French revolution and then the Communard's later. RIP old world Paris. The detail on the Turgot map is insane ! Definitely click on the link below !
@Joy-mh9xq2 жыл бұрын
Jarid-- are you familiar with the Savant, Stephen Wiltshire, who can draw entire cities to scale from memory, from flying over them? There are videos online about him and his drawings.
@mariannakuznetcova1059 Жыл бұрын
Good afternoon, Great map, amazing details! but look what I found strange on it ... there are no pipes on the roofs (they didn’t heat the fireplaces, didn’t warm themselves, didn’t cook food ???) it was warm and people didn’t need food? there are practically no lights, was there no night?))) Or did people see in the dark, since during the day? Trees of the same height, it cannot be if they were planted at the same time while still small ... Plants must develop in different ways, one is slightly higher, the other is lower, a different number of branches, this is wildlife! there are no reservoirs where the water in the houses comes from, no aqueducts or pipes with water are visible, there are no fountains, but there are places for shops on the first floors. the impression that this is not a living city made by a computer, on paper, which will be built for people computer, people do not need food, toilets, water, who see in the dark, but breathe air. that is, some ephemeral creations from the ether ... this is my opinion, good luck!
@ireen19622 жыл бұрын
Great video Jarid !! I believe there were already airballoons in the 1700s :-)
@DanielFreeman2 жыл бұрын
Furthermore, I wonder if you could find one building from that map that’s still standing today to prove authenticity 🧐 two or three. How many will it take to authenticate?
@notthisnotnow25682 жыл бұрын
It would make sense to me if this was more of a preliminary set of plans I for a city that hasn’t been built. Instead of a depiction of one that already exists. A lot of the buildings look exactly the same as to m as to fill up space. You’d be surprised to find out that there are other maps of different places before they were built. Example being the different prelim drawings showing different layouts of Washington DC that never made it to the build.
@raypratt36112 жыл бұрын
That pic of Boston at 2 min mark makes me think that if u could see it from above,all of it,it would be a design of something,dk what but it looks like SOMETHING even here with all the different lines!!
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
Like a printplate of a computer like an electronic board
@PqV72MT42 жыл бұрын
Awesome.
@andromedafree96862 жыл бұрын
Especially the 3D-perspective is a way much more Time needing to draw a plan than the on-sight-view from directly above - per hand it is a mess...
@Jayjay-hl4rk2 жыл бұрын
Good video, your always good, excellent research. There is a secret and it's a secret that can't be told, it's because the secret has to be found by anyone who wants to hear the secret
@steveswhirld2 жыл бұрын
lools like a city plan ..note also the tree spacing
@georgeprokopenko30442 жыл бұрын
Cheers.
@stevenconte47142 жыл бұрын
Mind boggling. And no doubt that's a lost technology.
@davidtyson11662 жыл бұрын
Notice sir please notice the streets and the houses are located and positioned in a certain angle they are stars shaped and there are different angles for science of her medics
@n-bynorthwest13472 жыл бұрын
Almost all of the buildings look newer not old world at all🤔 and the Arial view is so detailed
@togowack2 жыл бұрын
Doesn't look Old World
@lighthousecharlie67122 жыл бұрын
Do you come across any prisons ? Because we have a whole lot of them now, did they back then?
@trevorharildstad2 жыл бұрын
Insane asylums . Tons of them.
@ralphabetsoup2 жыл бұрын
Looks like an engraving to me. It's detailed, but not quite photographically detailed.
@cjstarmonkey732 жыл бұрын
Glad we didn't entertain the notion that life was better back then because of impressive architecture. I'm PRETTY SURE it was not, but is slowly working it's way out. Looks more conducive to the HIVE though
@markr.22332 жыл бұрын
It seems to me it would take more than a lifetime to measure to scale such a large city. No doubt this is made from some kind of photography
@rawmilkmike2 жыл бұрын
What happed to the first link? The one now called untitled. Is this the same video?
@shedigs2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for teaching the world what we all lost due to all the billions lies, thanks 👍
@pammi11112 жыл бұрын
Really interesting map, thanks for the video💖... I'd love to see more about the building @ 16:22 or so if you can find anything
@mikejones2152 жыл бұрын
The Reason Why I Think There Weren't Any Small Homes, Only Large Buildings, Is Because They Not Only Lived Much Longer ( Such As Enoch And Noah Ect ) But Tbey Also Had Far More Children Which We're So Much Healthier Then In Modern Day Times. ( I'm Just Guessing, By The Way ) " Definitely Something To Think About Though!"
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
Isn't it exhausting to write like that?
@mikejones2152 жыл бұрын
@@lily6246 Nope!
@lily62462 жыл бұрын
I liked what you wrote but couldn't help mention that is must be difficult to do all the time. It does read very strange imo, is there a reason?