wired please NEVER stop making these - specifically the ones about ancient civilizations and scientific experts. i'm OBSESSED and have learned so much edit: wow people are really upset at this comment. i hope you all never feel the joy of wholeheartedly enjoying things, as it appears you hate when others experience it!
@thehobo004 ай бұрын
Same tbh
@khanhvy21104 ай бұрын
Same, i love the Egypt episode
@Fecatah4 ай бұрын
100% agree.
@yayayay37914 ай бұрын
same, i’m so invested in every one of them
@БулатМиннуллин-р8щ4 ай бұрын
If you're so obsessed, go read a book. Maybe 20 minutes youtube video that covers each question in two sentences isn't the best way to learn stuff
@nannerz19944 ай бұрын
The best part of the series is you can tell everyone is so passionate about what their experts in
@onekind31793 ай бұрын
why do you think they’re experts lol
@stereotoned3 ай бұрын
@@onekind3179there experts, ok!
@starcapture30403 ай бұрын
he is telling you 300s is correct u kidding right?
@SourGzGameplay3 ай бұрын
@@starcapture3040he said PARTS were correct and he literally specified which parts bro
@Tazza199313 ай бұрын
@@starcapture3040 He said parts of it were correct, while also acknowledging that it is based on a graphic novel. At no point did he say that it is completely true to how life was then. It ain't hard to understand.
@Roll5874 ай бұрын
"Which we would consider to be a ~*felony*~" LMAO he's great
@vt27883 ай бұрын
Yeah like, so DON'T get any ideas old man..
@christosferizis-synodinos88513 ай бұрын
The only thing i hate about my ancestors
@avni82773 ай бұрын
Came here to write the exact same thing😂
@avni82773 ай бұрын
Good lesson to take away: maintain your local libraries
@mikloskallo90463 ай бұрын
Surprise: moral is more or less arbitrary, different morals are products of times and societies.
@KafshakTashtak4 ай бұрын
Gyms with strict clothing policy are disrespecting their Greek ancestors.
@shaggycan4 ай бұрын
Just yell 'Is this not a gymnasium?!' then drop trow.
@eternyti4 ай бұрын
Don't fret. People on TikTok, OnlyFans and Instagram are working on fixing that 😉
@gabor62594 ай бұрын
Exactly! Let your sausage fly while you're running.
@justsomeofmyfavs4 ай бұрын
@@gabor6259 LOL
@Shifty519914 ай бұрын
well....only if they are owned by a Greek......dumbass
@terfalicious4 ай бұрын
Too short! We need like several hours of this guy!
@matthewsecord76414 ай бұрын
The illiad is about the balance of thinking and acting.
I love that the Greeks started what we now call voting people off the island
@RaphaelJohn3 ай бұрын
Genuinely the first instance of cancel culture 🤣
@NamelessGR3 ай бұрын
Known as "eksostrakismos"
@C_R_O_M________3 ай бұрын
@@NamelessGR in "English" : Ostracism (obviously a Greek word).
@NamelessGR3 ай бұрын
@C_R_O_M________ yeah that's how it's called in Greek
@C_R_O_M________3 ай бұрын
@@NamelessGR That's why I put quotation marks. I'm Greek as well.
@Fubs_the_queen4 ай бұрын
Just a reminder that Assassins Creed is INCREDIBLY well researched and it shows. I had multiple art history professors use it as visual references, and I use it now in my lectures!
@Omnilatent3 ай бұрын
I used the one game in Venice to navigate in real life Venice when I visited it for the first time 😂
@GothPaoki3 ай бұрын
Used to be well researched...
@mrxxin3 ай бұрын
No, the game is loosely based on American/Canadian perception of Ancient Greece, not authentic historical Ancient Greece. The game is full of historical mistakes and “wokeness”.
@Fatipapi3 ай бұрын
@@mrxxinubisoft is a French company…
@cboy03943 ай бұрын
@@mrxxinThe makers of Assassin’s Creed are Canadian not American. Also, obviously the stories themselves aren’t realistic because it’s a game lol.
@JT-nn2fi3 ай бұрын
Christesen was one of my professors in undergrad, he was my favorite! He was such a talented and engaging lecturer and I’m glad that translated well to this KZbin video
@C_R_O_M________3 ай бұрын
A very woke guy!
@DaXurk3 ай бұрын
@@C_R_O_M________ oh boo hoo the Ellinikí Lýsi member doesnt like history
@MarieRieRie2 ай бұрын
What unit was that?
@Chaoskoch26 күн бұрын
Did he also constantly lie during his lessons?
@canadianeh479225 күн бұрын
The Ukrainians would like a word about him calling Crimea and Odessa "Southern Russia"
@haleysneet4 ай бұрын
Request for an ancient Japanese/ samurai expert next.
@ErinNaiker-vj7bj4 ай бұрын
@WIRED please please please could we have an ancient Japanese/ of samurai expert
@appleandonion3 ай бұрын
Up
@elihinze31613 ай бұрын
This is a wonderful suggestion!!
@WilliamLaurenson3 ай бұрын
Please no. We have enough of this already…. Why not ancient China?
Hello there, im greek and id like to share an experience i had three months ago. So, my family is orthodox (im an atheist) and we had a very traditional funeral for my beloved grandmother. In the middle of the ceremony I saw my aunt (her daughter) putting a coin inside her clothes. I was really amazed about the action so i asked why she gave her money since she is dead. Then, she looks at me and says "when she is in the underworld she has to pay God Hades to open the Heave's doors". Im not gonna lie, i completely freaked out. Its actually amazing how the modern greek traditions are a combination of ancient greek culture and orthodoxy. Especially, in big traditional events, we still have kept a lot of paganistic elements. Greek culture will always amaze me.
@mrawesome16883 ай бұрын
My dude... you have no idea how many paganistic elements Christianity as a whole has adopted. Christianity today is deffinetly not the same Christianity jesus was preaching about.
@TH-si2dn3 ай бұрын
the christians destroy Hellas. Hellas and christianism dont go together
@lm7_gio3 ай бұрын
Μου θυμισες το ανεκδοτο με το Χριστιανο που πεφτει απο το αεροπλανο και προσευχεται στο Χριστο να τον σωσει και 10 μετρα πριν το εδαφος αρχιζει να προσευχεται στο Βουδα.
@ghakim93 ай бұрын
Is it not based more on Charon having to ferry you to the other side?
@mrawesome16883 ай бұрын
@@ghakim9 yes that's exactly why they place drachmas on the eyes of the dead.
@ella177344 ай бұрын
Professor Christesen is an engaging and detailed speaker and educator. I really enjoyed listening~ Greek history is so rich.
@supermavro60723 ай бұрын
Nope , Greece is the poorest country in EU
@kosmasgvl16153 ай бұрын
@@supermavro6072 jealous bulgarian 🤣🤣🤣
@ellinmakedon12163 ай бұрын
@@supermavro6072βρε βρε το αλβανικό τρολάκι 🤣🤣🤣 καλά που ήρθες στην Ελλάδα και χόρτασες ψωμάκι βρε.🤣🤣🤣
@seigeengine3 ай бұрын
@@supermavro6072 Greek HISTORY is rich. Greece presently is poor.
@mariammariam6603 ай бұрын
@@supermavro6072money can be acquired by culture and how much more likely is the culture of Greece when other countries are poor
@hmunoz3143 ай бұрын
Under my study abroad program last year, I went to Greece (Athens, Delphi, Nafplion, Olympia) where we all learned the history of ancient sport and culture in Greece, as well as the history of the ancient Greek Olympics. I have gained such a monumental and insightful perspective on what it means to play and compete in sport as a collective narrative with humans. There is so much to know about the ancient Greek Olympics, and the history of the modern Olymics!
@j_fenrir3 ай бұрын
thats so cool! im looking to do a year abroad in greece at uni and i cant wait
@06alymay4 ай бұрын
I love how the “exact details” are unclear around one of the most important libraries in history. Just blows my mind!
@LuDux4 ай бұрын
There were quite a few libraries, some had better PR than others
@frankzeppelin3 ай бұрын
It's not so much the library as in the structure, but the contents. Papyrus only lasts so long, especially since Alexandria is port city, so it takes a lot of material and labor to preserve works through constant copying. I read years ago that even the Library of Congress with its enormous budget and resources is still limited in what it can preserve, with some works at risk of being lost media. You can't keep everything forever. A generation or so without maintenance in ancient times could be the end of the collection.
@debbylou57293 ай бұрын
@@LuDuxwhy haven’t we heard of them?
3 ай бұрын
Well, if we don't know much about the library its hard to say its the most important
@heloxiii88942 ай бұрын
you mean, pirate bay ?
@dylangreg40514 ай бұрын
Paul looks like a modern Julius Caesar
@alicia27ish4 ай бұрын
Hilarious 😂
@nikoochuu4 ай бұрын
he looks like a young michael j fox lol
@notavailable52164 ай бұрын
Lol
@Chino-Kafu4 ай бұрын
Plot twist. He is Julius' decendent.
@pup8384 ай бұрын
@@Chino-Kafuascendent?
@DioneN4 ай бұрын
“Don’t pay the Ferryman Until he gets you to the other side!”
@Chris-ut6eq4 ай бұрын
Charon is like uber, pay upfront or no pickup. Unlike uber, he did have a no tip policy so that balanced things out. Also, you were dead so he did not care if you liked the service.
@WatchKek4 ай бұрын
Should I fix a price?
@DioneN4 ай бұрын
@@WatchKek not until he gets you to the other side! (Don’t do it!)
@WatchKek4 ай бұрын
@@DioneN AAAAAAaaaaaaaaaaahahaHHH WOOOOooooooohhh
@Dimpet-xw9gg3 ай бұрын
Chris De Burgh song as well
@clarissakano.62654 ай бұрын
Not enough! I need more historical facts. Egypt, Greece, Rome, Asia... All of it
@SomeoneBeginingWithI3 ай бұрын
they do have an ancient Egypt video
@clarissakano.62653 ай бұрын
@@SomeoneBeginingWithI I already watched it. I need more ☺️
@Hereticbliss3223 ай бұрын
@@clarissakano.6265try the Great Courses on Audible. Many of them are also on KZbin. Free education is incredibly easy to obtain.
@djl3mon5533 ай бұрын
@@clarissakano.6265 so go read some books
@Storygospel5333 ай бұрын
Kings and Generals has a fantastic 3+ hour-long video on Alexander the Great. It's incredible.
@xxTra0rDinaRy3 ай бұрын
as a greek I really appreciate how objective the professor is stating the facts both ways seems a nice guy
@florianfeige63233 ай бұрын
Huh? Since being Greek makes you an expert on ancient Greek history or what?
@xxTra0rDinaRy3 ай бұрын
@@florianfeige6323 there is literally no correlation between your comment and mine
@florianfeige63233 ай бұрын
@@xxTra0rDinaRy I can see why you'd think that.
@xxTra0rDinaRy3 ай бұрын
@@florianfeige6323 no clue brother no clue
@claudia-uy5gk2 ай бұрын
@@xxTra0rDinaRyhahah Jesus
@courtneyboulds3 ай бұрын
Please bring him back! I just went to Greece in May and fell in love with the beauty of the ruins! The Acropolis was gorgeous and hearing his stories brings me back to all of the tours I took!
@kallimaxos47203 ай бұрын
21:00 The ancient Greeks fished in the Aegean which is very rich in fish. they were always fishermen and farmers. They also had herds of animals, sheep, goats, etc.
@TeutonicEmperor11983 ай бұрын
that's true. I guess he meant that the aegean and the mediterranean seas aren't like the open ocean were you can find way more fish.
@faribrathwaite70803 ай бұрын
I’ll believe him before you
@fredericdehohenstaufen78743 ай бұрын
@@faribrathwaite7080 Well technically they are both right: Greeks fished a lot, but at a small and local scale, and had cattle for sure, like when they sacrifice 100 ox for rituals. Now if you compare the Greeks to western Europe in the middle ages, Greeks were not big fishermen and didn't have massive cattle. So fish and meat where common in Greece, but not predominent in the everyday food
@Mr.Verethron3 ай бұрын
@@fredericdehohenstaufen7874 that
@AdamGee8Ай бұрын
He never said they did no fishing or had no livestock, he simply said it made up a small amount of their consumption
@altrogeruvah3 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Greece and my favorite philosopher is Anaximander, known for illustrating very abstract (for the time) concepts like infinity and "nothing" as the world's 5th classical element (later to become "aether"). Pythagoras was also his most prominent student. I also love Epicurus, mostly known for his school of thought based on moderation / avoidance of overindulgence of worldly pleasures in order to achieve peak happiness
@estherclawson6876Ай бұрын
I just love the name Anaximander. Ancient Greeks had some cool names.
@dorianphilotheates376920 күн бұрын
I have an uncle (my dad’s second cousin, “Max”) named Anaximander - ΑΝΑΞΙΜΑΝΔΡΟΣ: it literally means, “Lord-of-Men”.
@Roeinesmati3 ай бұрын
I could listen to him explain Greece for hours
@freakingriddle4 ай бұрын
On the top of mount Olympus, in the peak theres "the throne of Zeus", it has a shape like the letter C and in the center theres the "seat" and even has a headrest, it actually looks like a throne on the highest altitude of Greece.
@RevoltOfAges3 ай бұрын
If Zeus used that as a throne, that dude was MASSIVE
@brandond81974 ай бұрын
When I was playing AC odyssey I loved exploring all the building and statutes. Watching the behind the scenes video you saw they really tried to replicate all the buildings.
@skanderbeg1523 ай бұрын
Ubisoft actually does a great job with the historical world building in their games, they try hard to keep it as accurate and historical as possible.
@joocleary45763 ай бұрын
@@skanderbeg152 They actually helped out with the reconstruction of Notre Dame after the fire a couple of years ago! They'd mapped it out in a lot of detail for one of their games and sent the documents to the teams figuring out how to make the roof again. I thought that was super cool when I found out and makes me respect the team way more (not that I didn't already)
@tams8053 ай бұрын
@@skanderbeg152 That is until their latest game: AC: Shadows.
@FreshHatToday3 ай бұрын
@@joocleary4576 that's pretty cool
@JosephineSheesley3 ай бұрын
@@tams805No. Accuracy died with Valhalla. They brought it back a bit with Mirage. Shadows, we’ll see.
@mocha13024 ай бұрын
As a person who is interested in history, I love those videos about ancient civilization so much
@robertsimion03603 ай бұрын
5:05 this one hurt me😭..... in Italy they use to teach us about Iliad and Odyssey when we are toddlers making us read kid versions of them and later on in middle school we also have an entire subject about ancient greek epics to better understand western civilization and its origins
@TheGodEmperorOfMankind_4 ай бұрын
08:32 Yeah, well they were right.
@christinedunwoody18544 ай бұрын
Yeah, I felt called out 😬
@Ianiraklis3 ай бұрын
Realy well done . He knows what he is speaking about and use facts only . As a Greek realy i want to see a part two with this professor
@jaydoggy90434 ай бұрын
20:17 The page has five pillars but he only points out three. The other two specifically are Roman: The Tuscan is made plainer than the Doric (but incidentally more stable), and the Composite which is a mix of Ionic and Corinthian. But the Greeks should definitely get credit for the main three. Shout out to any fellow travelers who have to learn that to the right of the east.
@daltongalloway3 ай бұрын
That’s because Roman adopted most of Greek culture
@johnstuff20003 ай бұрын
Because the Romans entire world is influenced by Greece lol
@ChocolatTherapy26 күн бұрын
how did i end up here and why am i watching all of these in a row?? im obsessed, i love these people being so knowledgeable and passionate about a certain subject and im learning so much!!
@TheNarutoUzumaki074 ай бұрын
i just binged all the history videos and you give me this, thank you
@ingGS4 ай бұрын
What he mentioned about killing 100 cows made its way to Romance languages as HECATOMBE, with the meaning of “tragedy” or large loss of life. Not very common in English apparently.
@mikegolfi3 ай бұрын
In greek the word εκατομβη means 100 cows. Εκατο is a hundred and βους is cows which became is speaking language with an m - μ in between.
@Filonikis3 ай бұрын
We don't know for sure whether the Minoans spoke Greek or not. Their language isn't deciphered. The ancient Greeks did not consider Minoans as something foreign to them. There are plenty of myths about king Minos and Zeus. If i am not mistaken, Minos and his brother became the judges of the Greek Hades. Once upon a time, we thought the same about Myceneans, until the Linear B script got deciphered and it was proven that their language was indeed Greek.
@nerevarlambo3 ай бұрын
The guy either doesnt know Greek history and culture or he does that on purpose. Propaganda.
@13tuyuti3 ай бұрын
We also don't know if Minos was a Minoan. That is: we don't know if the guy on whom the legends about Minos were based, spoke Mycenean Greek or whatever language that was written with Linear A.
@Ideatheke-wordpress-com3 ай бұрын
@@nerevarlambo You mean @Filonikis? If yes, sorry you're wrong. First if all he is Greek so he knows better than you. Secondly, I agree with him. I'm Greek as well and also a history and linguistics nut. No offence but we know better than you since you don't seem to be Greek.
@ulrike99783 ай бұрын
That´s true! As far as I´m aware the argument usually goes soemthing like this: if we assume that the signs in Linear A stand for the same sounds as in Linear B, we get something that is definitely not a known language. Greek is also, let´s be honest, not a language that is well suited to be written in Linear B, and there are signs that when people started to do that, they needed to adjust somewhat, so once again, this would point to the older of the two systems to have been developed for a language that wasn´t Greek. Or at least that was the scholarly consensus, when I last had anything to do with the field, five to ten years ago. But you are right, the matter isn´t finally settled, and people were indeed spectacularly wrong about Linear B!
@gudea52073 ай бұрын
The current consensus does not support the Minoan Language being Greek. Using mythology as a evidence for Greek language is a laughable method. The Iliad portrays the Achaean and Trojan sides as speaking a mutually intelligible language when LBA Wilusa (Troy) most likely spoke Luwian. The story of King Midas is about a Phrygian king that would have spoken Phrygian.
@Yaro795143 ай бұрын
This guy is wonderful, he has a great sense of humour but also gives really clear and concise answers
@road_to_rage_5594 ай бұрын
Was waiting for ancient greece. Now i got it. Thanks Wired❤️ Keep going
@burakucak3 ай бұрын
"If Alexander was great, why did he die at 32?" Dude achieving so much at such a young age is the real deal.
@marama6194 ай бұрын
You guys should do ancient China next!
@SolracCAP4 ай бұрын
I'm a big ancient history buff and learned so much. I hope there's more!
@saint-naive4 ай бұрын
as soon as he was asked what event in ancient Greece he'd most like to take part in, I was hoping he'd say theaters. I love Aristophanes and also Euripides especially so to hear Aristophanes name dropped in such an all audiences kind of setting was a real delight. :) brekekekex koax koax 🐸
@BurttheBard4 ай бұрын
Love this!! More Ancient Greek questions please!
@FormulaZR4 ай бұрын
Man these are just never boring!
@CareyTisdal3 ай бұрын
Thank you! You are good at this!--good sense of humor and clear delivery! I learned three things I wasn't clear about: Greece's not having an empire, how ostracism worked, and about the statue in Assassins Creed. The timeline was also helpful. Trying to get the ancient civilizations into a timeframe has always been hard for me. That was a great map too--helped me see where the Greek influence was strong!
@supershy07223 ай бұрын
As a history major we need more of this please 😭😭😭
@kacangajaib15634 ай бұрын
50.000 people is wild considering, average Football stadiums in Europe usually around 30k to 40k
@benn4544 ай бұрын
Dodger Stadium in LA seats about 55,000. And that's the largest baseball stadium in the US.
@jakestolar84573 ай бұрын
Probably didn't meet modern fire codes.
@seigeengine3 ай бұрын
Absolutely. The Colosseum is also estimated at being able to house 50-80k people. Currently there are eleven stadiums in the world with a capacity of 100k, eight of which are in the USA, but the largest is in India with a capacity of 132k. The Wiki page on largest stadiums lists 313 stadiums over 50k in capacity.
@einundsiebenziger54883 ай бұрын
... average seating capacity that is. Quite a few can accommodate much more, some over 100,000 for special events.
@ananket.35183 ай бұрын
Not that surprising, 40,000 were killed in palestine
@unicatsrdabest3 ай бұрын
I WANT MORE!!!! WIRED PLEASE BRING HIM BACK FOR PART 2!!!!!
@3WDon4 ай бұрын
YES!!! Instead of sleeping at 3:41AM, why not watch something about Ancient Greece?
@cyancyborg1477Ай бұрын
Omg yes same.
@sharonkaczorowski86903 ай бұрын
The loss of the library at Alexandria still makes my scholar’s heart ache. My specialization is the human drive to oppress, but as a kid and adolescent I was addicted to the Greeks and Romans (not quite as much). I even took 5 years of Latin…Greek wasn’t offered in my then excellent public high school…in part because I wanted to become a physician. i even won a national competition in Greek and Roman mythology…that was many decades ago and adults involved expressed amazement that a “girl” won. I was not amused but also very pleased to upend their biases. I really enjoy these episodes…I learn something every time and it brings back happy memories. BTW Minoan art is wonderful if you haven’t seen it.
@Breznak3 ай бұрын
Greek building vocabulary maybe became popular in the 1800s in the USA, but in Europe we have been returning to Ancient Greece and Rome since forever (most notably since the renaissance - hence the name).
@peculiarpig4 ай бұрын
we need more videos on ancient western civilizations!!!
@Sharrrian4 ай бұрын
Diogenes is definitely the most goated Greek philosopher
@AcesandArmour3 ай бұрын
Highly debatable. His ideas and moral standards might fit more neatly into the modern West, but that by no means he was the best, and virtually no philosophers consider him as such. Aristotle is considered by most to be a much more substantial thinker.
@RevoltOfAges3 ай бұрын
Yeah but where is Aristotle’s meme potential huh
@clowyhills18703 ай бұрын
Him believing the highest form of human is a hairless chicken is funny ngl
@DecentSilver3 ай бұрын
@@clowyhills1870I dont believe thats what he said. It was brought up that humans were featherless, furless bipeds so he brought in a plucked chicken and presented as a human under that defintion as a joke. To the best of my understanding.
@clowyhills18703 ай бұрын
@@DecentSilver calm down it is indeed a joke
@quinntessentiallyme98944 ай бұрын
BIG FAN of these videos!! Professor Christesen makes it very interesting. 🙂
@armita15013 ай бұрын
One for Ancient Persia please
@seyeruoynepotsuj3 ай бұрын
I love that people religiously refuse to call Twitter by its slave name.
@blazer95473 ай бұрын
It's a slow process
@debbylou57293 ай бұрын
‘Slave name’ ? Remember Malcom X?
@ModernCowboy783 ай бұрын
Xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxs
@markwilson36973 ай бұрын
The name of that company is now "X" like it or not, it is what it's new owner decided to rebrand it
@jackietreehorn3 ай бұрын
@markwilson3697 thanks for explaining the joke and not understanding it at the same time. 😂
@Pro-kesh4 ай бұрын
Hades, Percy Jackson, and Assassin's Creed Odyssey are my GOATS. I love Ancient Greece!
@seansilence26973 ай бұрын
Just to add on a bit to the part about Assassin's Creed: The city of Athens was so well constructed in the game that historians have actually used it for research purposes.
@kasp51523 ай бұрын
The Greeks had an empire , the Greek Macedonian empire of Alexander and then for 300 years the empires of his succesors
@Aristonika99993 ай бұрын
Alexander was never a greek, he was macedonian. Macedonians were never greeks. Macedonians were hated and despised. Alexander 3 was a foreign invader for the greeks.
@kasp51523 ай бұрын
@@Aristonika9999 yeah ok....
@ΒασιληςΜολακιδης3 ай бұрын
@@Aristonika9999 He had a Greek name, spoke Greek, campained FOR Greece against the Persians, spread the Greek culture, wrote in Greek, his name means NOTHING to you as it is a Greek word. Just like Alexander the 1st and 2nd....You were just fed a story and its ok. Just like flat earthers...
@Aristonika99993 ай бұрын
@@ΒασιληςΜολακιδης The Greeks had trading colonies in Macedonia on the coast. They also had coastal colonies in Thrace, Illyria and Epirus. But none of these countries were Greek and the people who lived there were not Greek. They were greatly influenced by Greek culture. Some of them took some elements of Greek culture, some more, some less. And someone took everything, like Epirus and Macedonia. Macedonia was influenced by the Dorian Greek culture. The kings of Macedonia, the royal dynasty adopted Greek culture. They imposed this culture on their population. And the language too, the Dorian dialect of the Greek language. For the Greeks, the Macedonians were barbarians, since the purpose of Macedonian life was war, hunting and military campaigns. And not agriculture, trade, various crafts, culture, and so on. Their mentality, way of thinking and way of life were barbaric for the Greeks. The Greeks also considered the Macedonians barbarians because of their drunkenness and because they drank unmixed wine in large quantities. The Greeks drank only wine mixed with water and drank it in such quantities so as not to lose control over themselves. For the Greeks, it was very important to have a sense of proportion in everything they did. The Macedonians didn't have that. The Macedonians took advantage of the weakness of the Greeks due to the Peloponnesian War and captured the Greek states. The Greeks did not ask the Macedonians to spread their culture. They themselves successfully did it in various ways without any Macedonian barbarians and without wars. The influence of Greek culture on different states, peoples and tribes, as well as the influence of all these people and cultures on the Greeks themselves, can be talked about for a very long time, this is a topic for dissertation. The main thing is that all this was without any participation of the Macedonians. They weren't needed for that. And they did not force anything on anyone. And they didn't want any war with Persia. They made peace with her several times.The ancient Macedonians were foreigners and stupid barbarian idiots who led the Hellenic civilization to ruin and destruction and to roman slavery. Alexander III of Macedon was an absolute idiot. He was too young, reckless and without life experience and did not understand all the consequences of his actions. And he was never a Greek, but a barbarian foreigner. I said the rest in my other two comments here. You can read them if you want.
@Aristonika99993 ай бұрын
@@ΒασιληςΜολακιδης They were hellenised. Macedonians were influenced by Dorian culture and borrowed the Dorian dialect of the Greek language and part of the Dorian culture. Native macedonian language was not greek. The Macedonian kings imposed Hellenization on their population. Most of the Macedonian nobility were of Thracian origin, as was most of the population. The capital of Macedonia, Pella, used to be the Thracian city of Bottia. Alexander's grandmother was a Thracian. His mother was an epirote. The Epirotes, by the way, were not Greeks either. They, too, were another people who voluntarily adopted Hellenic culture almost entirely. The Greeks did not want a war with the Persians. They made an alliance with them. They didn't need this war. And they spread their own culture, without the Macedonians. They formed their own trading colonies. They influenced many countries and peoples. And they did it without the Macedonians.
@tedijevtic67563 ай бұрын
just arrived in Greece and this popped up! THANK YOU
@ixxchelabril4 ай бұрын
omggg, I loveeee these videos. Please don't stop making them. I feel that I learn so much. I wish teachers could be this interesting.
@bobdog904 ай бұрын
Most probably are, so long as you're talking to them about the thing they care about most and they feel comfortable enough discussing it with you.
@kepspark33623 ай бұрын
Well, they do have a syllabus to cover & limited period to get it finished. That's why they have to hustle & cover everything.
@marcobattistone25743 ай бұрын
I study these subjects full time and have heard most of this over and over, but just couldn't stop watching. Kudos
@KimberlyGreen4 ай бұрын
The constant camera zoom in / pull out is distracting. The content was, as usual for 'Tech Support', excellent.
@Berethoris4 ай бұрын
Iliad and odyssey are great documents to see a glimpse of the past and day to day life, tradition, etc
@kassios3 ай бұрын
Also exquisite pieces of art. They were the go to school material for centuries
@thanhle-sz6cr4 ай бұрын
You all are spreading so much love. It’s truly heartwarming. Thank you!
@gibrevik3 ай бұрын
I didn’t know the origins of the word gymnasium. I think is funny because in Denmark and Norway they call high school exactly that; gymnasium (or more commonly gymnas)
@giorgosstamatopoulos81153 ай бұрын
Gymnos = naket in Greek , litle viking ha ha . It is simple brother , vikings speak some Greek like all , not bad
@coltcalderock32783 ай бұрын
In Greece what's called gymnasium is middle-school and we call the gym gymnasterium, kinda similar.
@grioulaloula85944 ай бұрын
Thank you! Very informative.
@uToobeDАй бұрын
I've seen perhaps 5 historians talk about ancient civilisations like Rome, Egypt, Alexander the Great, etc, etc and this guy is by far the most knowledgable and best explainer of concepts. He seems to genuinely like the culture. I've felt that many of the other historians barely like the people they are talking about and are kind of just regurgitating facts, this guy is awesome.
@cleverusername93693 ай бұрын
I need a Wired interview with the genius who finds the charismatic experts for these videos. They deserve their flowers.
@pacingBlue6 күн бұрын
As a Greek learning all that stuff through school, reading and chatting, he's got a pretty good picture of ancient Greek world there. Well rounded-up, too.
@nicolehandy81704 ай бұрын
Please do pirates!!!
@gna767915 күн бұрын
Easily one of my fave KZbin channels. So interesting and informative. I'm learning and enjoying it.
@kallimaxos47203 ай бұрын
14:50 The Minoans were Greeks and spoke Greek. It has been proven by the clay tablets with writing A and B. The Greeks are the native Mediterranean type of man for thousands of years in the same place.
@The_Lone_Wanderer_101Ай бұрын
2:06 because if he lived any longer he would’ve been known as Alexander the epic
@SKVLE20 күн бұрын
Gigachad
@jocelynllamas66003 ай бұрын
I LOVED learning about ancient Greece and the ancient Egyptians in elementary school (3rd grade). I'm happy that I get to study the two again in college, but in greater detail❤❤❤❤. I'm in my 30s and decided to make a major career change and do something that revolves around what I've always loved, but I have been too scared to pursue ❤
@jwt-nu3ei3 ай бұрын
That's awesome. Good luck!
@jocelynllamas66003 ай бұрын
@@jwt-nu3ei thank you so much!!🥰🥰🥰
@takoneco8 күн бұрын
The shout outs to Diogenes were the best. As a Greek archeology enthusiast I loved this one!
@AndeB12093 ай бұрын
Who knew Will Forte was so knowledgeable about ancient Greece.
@sakurazukamorisubaru2 ай бұрын
About Greek columns. At the art history class we were told that at first people used wood columns (trees) to support the house, somewhere with more wood available. And when they moved to Greece and started to build with stone, they just kept the tradition of using columns. Or something like that.
@tidesonfire10043 ай бұрын
Am i the only one that is seeing a bit of Will Forte? Love it!
@ADDICTED_HYDRA_SPAMMER3 ай бұрын
i grew up in greece i like that our school thought us all this an expert proffesor knows !!! i knew 90 % of the things
@sommelierofstench4 ай бұрын
zoom in, zoom out. zoom in, zoom out. i appreciate the effort of the edit, but doing these quick zooms so often doesn’t make this more interesting when it happens so often to me. just gets kind of annoying. anyways it’s always cool to hear an expert speak on subjects. thank you
@ShaelynnFockler08Ай бұрын
4:32 the way he says it kills me 😭
@readwithrhys3 ай бұрын
I’m such a classical studies nerd that I have a degree and already know all of this but it’s just so FUN to learn about Ancient Greece
@jm01157Ай бұрын
Love the science topics. I know y’all have to interview celebs and politicians, but big fan of the experts y’all have on
@tonygoodwinjr92933 ай бұрын
Why haven't they cashed in on a period piece about the Olympics? Sounds like the whole thing would be fun to watch
@gamingmaniactv50502 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Athena Promachos had a different stance than the one shown in AC... In actuality, she was holding the spear over her head, ready to throw it at the enemies of Athens. You can actually see in Wikipedia how the statue probably looked like.
@kazekirion4 ай бұрын
This guys is honestly so cool 😂😂 the way he's got a great fit AND NOT EVEN BALDING 😂😂 and he's an ancient greek nerd! He's living my dream life!
@efraingonzalez234 ай бұрын
Do one of these things with the aztecs
@ilearncode73653 ай бұрын
Its just like ancient greece, excepct that instead of philosophy, they had human sacrifice, and instead of advanced legal systems involcing courts, they had even more human sacrifice. Science rocks!!
@MysteriousPear8023 ай бұрын
@@ilearncode7365you thought you ate that 😂
@DecentSilver3 ай бұрын
@@ilearncode7365Youre hilariously wrong.
@waldothewalrus2942 ай бұрын
@@ilearncode7365they had human sacrifice and the Greeks had pederasty, no one is innocent. Why don't you mention their engineering feats or their myths?
@ilearncode73652 ай бұрын
@@waldothewalrus294 human sacrifice is inifnitely worse than pederasty. Also, the Astecs ALSO had pederasty lol. They were garbabe. The greeks had contributions that we all enjoy today, and so it doesnt matter what they did, it was worth it, whereas Aztecs were just a horrid race with nothing to redeem their bad behaviour.
@juliusnovachrono43704 ай бұрын
As someone who writes a story including ancient Greek mythology and philosophy, this video is incredible.
@b05ly4 күн бұрын
As a Greek the representation was amazing! Thank you 🩵
@edwardloomis8874 ай бұрын
Best philosopher of the Greek world (7:32): stoic Epictetus, though technically his time as slave and free person was when Rome was dominant.
@supermavro60723 ай бұрын
he is not greek
@a_kazakis3 ай бұрын
@@supermavro6072 Well, he was born in what is modern day Western Turkey, which was then part of the Greek world at the time. You could argue that he was "Roman", but to say that all the subjects of the Roman empire were true Romans is a pretty weak argument. Back then there weren't nation states like today. If you were born and raised in a Greek city (like he was), you were Greek.
@junba18103 ай бұрын
Agreed!
@elenilepouri72533 ай бұрын
@@supermavro6072Do you know the meaning of his Greek name
@537monster3 ай бұрын
I feel like this guy has dreamed of this moment his entire life. Dude lives to just teach everything he knows about his favorite subject. Got to respect him.
@sammartens10903 ай бұрын
We need more Ancient Greece
@lunganibiyela16906 күн бұрын
Just finished watching the show 'KAOS', this video really help me understand the series more!
@Elemy693 ай бұрын
"The Greeks didn't have an empire" Alexander: "..."
@Вика-з4ь5д3 ай бұрын
He was Macedonian, not Greek. Macedonians were never Greeks. And Greeks did not want to have an empire, they had a polis system which they recreated everywhere. They didn't want to change it to something else because most of their achievements were possible due to the polis system.
@RevoltOfAges3 ай бұрын
He literally explained why that doesn’t count as a unified Greek empire in the video
@BlueLena3 ай бұрын
@@Вика-з4ь5дMacedonians were Greeks and Greeks were imperialists except they were so busy killing each other to spread their own influence that they never managed to unite under one force before Alexander to have any luck building an empire. Even Alexander enforced it rather than earned it.
@Elemy693 ай бұрын
@@RevoltOfAges He didn''t though. He said that there were greeks communities outside of Alexander's empire, but that doesn't nullify the fact that the Macedonian empire was an empire, and that it was greek. To sum up simply, the question was about whether the Greeks had an empire, and the answer he provides is that the all the greeks communities were never unified under a single state, which is irrelevant
@greekmetalhead18053 ай бұрын
@@Вика-з4ь5дSkopjanovski Slavski Alert! 🇲🇰🎪🇲🇰
@perseusarkouda3 ай бұрын
Professor you are very addictive, even though I'm a history geek myself and knew most of the subjects, I was still very captivated.
@coolalvin23 ай бұрын
Wild that people thousands of years ago knew the Earth was round and yet we have people today with all this knowledge at our fingertips thinking it is still flat.
@Karanagi3 ай бұрын
As someone with only a passing interest in history, I really appretiate this video. Very pleasant, informative and interesting!
@katerinanicole4 ай бұрын
Can we get a video about the Minoans?
@supermavro60723 ай бұрын
you have to go to egypt
@brizolidis3 ай бұрын
Honestly you need to find to do something in your life. You've flooded the whole comment section with nonsense. It really shows your poor character and standing. Get a life!@@supermavro6072
@anthosm3 ай бұрын
@@supermavro6072lol.. get real..
@SirDolce3983 ай бұрын
i could genuinely sit through hours of classes with this guy and not get bored.
@TheDylls3 ай бұрын
Didn't Eratosthenes actually "luck out" with his near spot-on estimate of Earth's circumference?? IIRC, all his math was solid except for ONE assumption that he couldn't prove: That Venus was a similar size to Earth. And it turns out it IS! At least close enough that Eratosthenes got a pretty darn accurate estimate
@gekylafas3 ай бұрын
What did Venus have to do with Eratosthenes' calculation of Earth's circumference?
@TheDylls3 ай бұрын
@@gekylafas IIRC, he used the distances between Earth and the Sun and then Venus and the Sun when our three bodies created a 90⁰ angle in space. But the way those calculations worked, he would only get an answer as accurate as the difference in circumferences between Earth and Venus
@gekylafas3 ай бұрын
@@TheDylls That must have been another calculation. For the circumference of the Earth he just used the angle of two shadows on Earth at the same time and the distance between them.
@TheDylls3 ай бұрын
@@gekylafas Gotcha! And, just out of curiosity, one of those shadows WASN'T Venus?
@gekylafas3 ай бұрын
@@TheDylls No. One shadow was actually the absence of a shadow (Sun 's light hitting the bottom of a well) and the other one was the shadow of a rod.
@CondemnedInformer2 ай бұрын
I'd bring back that classical building craze honestly. Pretty rad.
@captainmark42543 ай бұрын
I think the best period to live in Greece was the Hellenistic period of great diadochi empires. All the know world was united under the control of greeks, philosophers, scientists and artists had the chance to have contact with eastern civilizations and have access to their documents, and the riches was at a point that greek world became more and more soft because of peaceful periods that romans defeat them without much effort.
@Aristonika99993 ай бұрын
Macedonians were never greeks. They were heted and despised.
@chrislj20052 күн бұрын
Wow, I was constantly about to leave and got right to the end. Great teacher!