Hey folks, I had too many sources for this episode for the comment word count so I've put them on a google document linked below: drive.google.com/drive/folders/1BP9kZ9y4dtdB0yy-qXrNzWcVjAYCv6-a?usp=sharing
@Game_Hero5 ай бұрын
Thank you for listing openly your sources, both outside and in the videos themselves (including for each cited moment with a little footnote number)
@r3bs5 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!
@deiansalazar1405 ай бұрын
FINALLY! THANK YOU!
@morphx995 ай бұрын
How could someone be so stupid choosing a title for their video? You can see that coherence and study are not the focus of the "historian", what a waste
@AR-ml9eo4 ай бұрын
It's always so amusing to observe all the contortions and euphemisms used by bourgeois archeologists like "increasing inequality" to avoid the same undeniable truth. Thus was the emergence of CLASS SOCIETY, where a small minority of warriors and priests had seized power by violence, and established slavery on the basis of the development of agriculture. (Can't have slaves in hunter gatherer societies. Can't produce sufficient surplus and it's always a bad idea to give hunting weapons to slaves. Slavery can only emerge based on agriculture.) The primary duty of bourgeois archeology and anthropology is to deny the existence of pre-class matriarchal and fratriarchal egalitarian societies, and to obfuscate the emergence and existence of class societies divided into exploiters and exploited. It's never good for the capitalist rulers who pay the salaries of these so-called archaeologists and anthropologists, to expose the historic roots of the present class society. In particular in the case of anthropology it's really dubious that it should be considered a "science" at all given the amount of absolutely dishonest manipulation. It's more akin to some form of alchemy, for hire to the highest bidder.
@supersunny85 ай бұрын
It's very nice to see Fushanzhuang being mentioned! My dad is from there, and it is nowadays a village of not more than a couple thousand people. Never thought I'd hear it mentioned in any kind of interesting context.
@Game_Hero5 ай бұрын
@@HOXHOXHOX don't confuse it with the fringes of the fringes in Vietnam and what does it have to do with being proud of seing his dad village mentionned?
@ragnarokws26705 ай бұрын
@@HOXHOXHOXyou have to stop racist
@ragnarokws26705 ай бұрын
@@HOXHOXHOXstop being a silly racist
@JohnSmith-mc2zz5 ай бұрын
@@HOXHOXHOX He's sounds several magnitudes more honorable and educated than you.
@GizzyDillespee5 ай бұрын
@@HOXHOXHOXyou must've just passed 23:20🤣 "Please check the original message date before you reply. The comment you responded to is 6000 years old. This topic has now been closed." - the moderator
@abigailsavage74565 ай бұрын
Oh I am so stoked to listen to this later when I'm off doing chores
@Handles-R-Lame5 ай бұрын
Why not do both?... Actually id likely be distracted from the images on the video. So best to wait but then again the narrations are easily understandable. Either way enjoy! 💯
@walksinrain5 ай бұрын
@@Handles-R-Lame "when I'm off doing chores" means "when I am doing chores", so it will be when doing both! :) I'm guessing an Irish or UK dialect typed that one
@joeldavis82343 ай бұрын
@@walksinrainSouthern US as well. Possibly related to a British lingual holdover? Idk.
@hanweiliu88505 ай бұрын
One thing I want to point out is that for some illustrations showing the burial of King (leaders) of Liangzhu or Lingjiatan, the king is shown naked with jade ornaments. This is not likely as there are already evidence showing intricate fabrics can be manufactured at that time. The king should be buried in glossy silk or other kind of fabrics with complex patterns that echo with the jade ornaments.
@gregb64695 ай бұрын
China has a fascinating history. I am enjoying this series of videos.
@carlosfernandez58335 ай бұрын
This is amazing! Would be pretty cool if eventually there was a playlist for each of the cradles of civilization, which I’m addition to Mesopotamia and China would include Egypt, the Indus Valley, the Olmec, and the Norte Chico. Would be cool to learn about my Olmec ancestors, though it would probably be best if it were left for last, along with Norte Chico, so by the time you get to it there will be a bit more information known about these relatively poorly understood civilizations.
@kaoskronostyche99395 ай бұрын
Try Made In History. They seem to have a lot of the kind of thing you are looking for.
@enrixosjjdjd1875 ай бұрын
Ancient americas made a video about the Olmecs I believe
@theelittlestbird4 ай бұрын
seriously doubt this guy would put a serious effort into natives of the americas. he seems to lack the sensitivity to appreciate races outside of his own
@amelialonelyfart88484 ай бұрын
Norte Chico is so tragically undertalked about! Not many people no civilization in South America is nearly as old as Sumer and Egypt.
@GL-iv4rw4 ай бұрын
You forgot to mention Minoan/Greece
@Lwilight5 ай бұрын
Just one more video before I start studying
@Exit3115 ай бұрын
I vaguely remember saying the same thing a few years ago. Now I have a doctorate in KZbin
@Lwilight5 ай бұрын
@@Exit311 You’re me….but from the future :0
@LiftandCoa5 ай бұрын
studying is so much more fun if you actually care about the topic :D
@Lwilight5 ай бұрын
@@LiftandCoa I dunno man, Histocrat dropping a video covering 2000 years of history…..versus looking at some teeth….y’know what…. The video’s better haha
@HansWurst15695 ай бұрын
Good luck!
@HenryElfin5 ай бұрын
I was fortunate enough to see one of those "pig dragons" of Hongshan culture in a museum when visiting China. They claimed it to be the "first dragon of China" which simply went over my head. Didn't realize it was that far back in human history
@林木老寄卖3 ай бұрын
三星堆去过吗?那是一个未知文明 非常震撼
@mitchyG902105 ай бұрын
Incredibly detailed, hats off to all the research and work done!
@ficklefingeroffate5 ай бұрын
A new Histocrat, this has turned into a great Sunday.
@addisonfidler9594 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@msteffphoto57265 ай бұрын
This channel has quickly become one of my favorites ever
@ahumpierrogue1375 ай бұрын
Im really loving this birth of china series! I hope it continues for a long time to come. Curious about 2 main things, A) how much "traditional historiography" will be covered going forward. Im hoping very little personally. I hope/expect this video series to stick purely to the archaeology. And B) how the next video(s) will be divided in terms of years covered. Will this next video cover the pre-erlitou culture or cover it itself? Personally, I think an entire video on the 3000BC-2000BC period is very possible, so I hope it takes that narrower focus. Leave the Erlitou culture for a video further down.
@AlexVictorianus4 ай бұрын
Wow! Xian has a really rich (pre) history. It was not only a site from the earliest Chinese states, but even from the time before the states
@imperfectclark5 ай бұрын
Perfect for my Sunday night chilldown -- thanks man!
@Game_Hero5 ай бұрын
Neolithic history is the best and the music is just plain amazing!
@jonny-b49545 ай бұрын
It's wild to think how "small" their world's were. Their entire lives. So simple, yet complicated, the same emotions and what not. But just so much smaller in terms of perspective.
@incurvatusАй бұрын
I envy them.
@gumbyforrealАй бұрын
they didn’t know about cells, or atoms, or what lay outside their village, but they knew how to weave and sew and create all sorts of intricate things that have since been lost to time. sure, i know all sorts of trivia about history, but i don’t know how to cultivate the earth.
@chupapi-o5u6 күн бұрын
I cant imagine living at that time. Not knowing anything. Yet everything is so unbelievable. The bright stars in the sky, huge mountains, lightning, storms. Life itself. I wish I could experience what they felt
@RangerGucci5 ай бұрын
Cant wait to listen to this later today man im looking forward to it
@patrickotis38845 ай бұрын
Thank you for the new vid! Glad to see more East Asian history out there.
@Replicaate5 ай бұрын
The more things changes, the more they've stayed the same...a fantastic video as ever!
@TomMorrison-cc6xw5 ай бұрын
Extraordinary contribution to what we currently know about early pre-Chinese culture. Really appreciate the various sources you quote, including Chinese archeologists. I'm always surprised when I start comparing dates between proto-China & the world's other river cultures. I need to remind myself that the climatic conditions in the Far East are NOT conducive to preservation of materials. The Nile Valley & even the land between 2 rivers with their unpredictable flooding are much drier -- bordering on desert. So knowing, for example that Egyptian Dynasties had come & gone long before what could be called "China" existed, or other aspects of the timeline have to be viewed in that context. We'll have a HUGE amount of re-evaluation to do as more evidence arises -- from Paleolithic to some of the well-known eras. Thanks for giving such detail & I'm eager to see what's next.
@Seisoks4 ай бұрын
Once, some guy in Reddit argued that Shang Dynasty was some fishing villages and Xia is imaginary. I'm not Chinese but it it's just so insulting to all of Asia . I didn't know that archaeology can be racist.
@danielzhang19162 ай бұрын
@@Seisoks Western archeologists always downplay Chinese civilization, Shang didn't just pop out of nowhere, there had to be a "Xia culture" there before that, some people even claim "Chinese" never existed and were all "northern peoples" from Mongolia/Siberia which is nonsense, it is definitely insulting
@Seisoks2 ай бұрын
@@danielzhang1916 Fyi I'm from ASEAN. Tell me about it, bro. There is some political propaganda bs on going inside the western archaeology school of thought. Like glazing Roman as the center of the world, and blatantly disregarding Indian and Chinese civilizations of the time.
@The_Sword_saint2.05 ай бұрын
Great work man. I've been waiting for this for a long time.
@GL-iv4rw4 ай бұрын
You should have mentioned the identities of each culture, for instance Daxi being associated with the ancestors of the Miao, Dapenkeng being associated with the early Austronesians and Yangshao often associated with the long process of partition into the proto-Tibetics and proto-Sinitics.
@jabrowski_4 ай бұрын
This is really well made. Ur voice is great, man. Liked and subbed
@matoCC145 ай бұрын
loved it! thanks for the great work, as per usual :D
@AdalbertPtak5 ай бұрын
Contemplating human nature, one is forced to conclude, that inequality appeared with the appearance of more than on person in one place.
@danielzhang19165 ай бұрын
those who had more have always risen above others, that's human history, from lords to kings to emperors
@garyoakham97234 ай бұрын
If you took all the worlds wealth and distributed equally to everyone on earth within 5 minutes there would be inequality
@ahumpierrogue1374 ай бұрын
No shit sherlock. It's the dawn of inequality(In china).
@LarryWater4 ай бұрын
Society naturally panders to the male.
@danielzhang19164 ай бұрын
@@ooOPizzaHeadOoo you're comparing to recent times, we're talking about the course of human history, every noble and royal started off like this, that's the point I was making here, not talking about billionaires
@weok-doing-things4 ай бұрын
The artworks in the video is really beautiful and immersive
@Vic7_MvVzNZGzH4rqrp3urTEАй бұрын
Excellent series! When is the next video on China going to be released?!
@Knower-of-all-things5 күн бұрын
Good stuff. Many thanks.
@KraftBrotHD5 ай бұрын
I've been curious since the last video in this series, but this title makes me even more so. Have you read David Graeber and David Wengrow's 'the dawn of everything: A new history of humanity'? I'd love to get your perspective on it. I found it a fascinating and uplifting read, but I don't really have the background to judge the validity of it's arguments as a law student.
@marcomazzi35372 ай бұрын
Looking forward to listening to the next episode of "The Birth of China"!
@BolocomcafeАй бұрын
Great that you post sources, comrade.
@aldreymenezes76525 ай бұрын
Thank you, cant wait for the next video
@BlindWillieJacksonАй бұрын
I highly recommend reading ""The Good Earth".
@NettiGaming5 ай бұрын
Thank the old gods and new for a new histocrat documentary❤
@Game_Hero5 ай бұрын
51:26 Good bear boi taking a nice bath🐻
@YouTubdotCub5 ай бұрын
So excited for this one!
@jessie987315 күн бұрын
Love these! I'm currently doing an art project on the Xia Dynasty, got here just a little too early :(
@malcolmlewis58605 ай бұрын
Farming makes valuable places and piles of stored energy. These places can be attacked, raided and occupied with the locals enslaved and killed. The enslaved can be put to work on agriculture. This drives the emergence of a warrior class who tend to be male and who tend to take over. If women are used as warriors, the side thauses them will have more warriors at first, but as reproductive rates fall, there are less warriors. He male warriors form alliances with shamens to control the underlings better with fantastic narratives. And so here are today.
@HondredTV5 ай бұрын
Guess I know what I'm going to do for the next hour five mins and 39 secs
@KonyCurrentYear5 ай бұрын
The Dawn of Heirarchy might have been a better tagline.
@Svevsky5 ай бұрын
Yea. Inequality implies a negative value. Hierarchy is a good thing and the only reason humans progressed from primate to astronaut.
@K-Hsueh5 ай бұрын
Indeed. It is poor anthropology to ignore that fact that we are hierarchical beings. It has been the role of higher religion to introduce and press the case for the values of accountability and social responsibility as obligations for those with power. Of course human pagan tendencies keep raising the ugly head of the will power in order to try to corrupt religion for self-serving ends. Hence, demagogues from Robespierre to Hitler to Mao to Trump all promote idolatry.
@ahumpierrogue1375 ай бұрын
@@Svevsky cool story, still inequality. Speaking less jokingly, do you not see how these are just inverse views on the same thing? You should not take it as a personal attack, but it's undeniable that the societies examined in this video are showing clearer and clearer signs of having haves and have-nots.
@PorkChopAChunky5 ай бұрын
Hierarchy developed immediately upon communities being formed.
@PorkChopAChunky5 ай бұрын
@ahumpierrogue137 True equality is a fairy tale though. Like it or not people aren't equal. So saying a society has inequality isn't really saying anything. They all do and always will.
@paulmanners53825 ай бұрын
Perfect timing
@rogerhagger4 ай бұрын
. some references to possible human/child sacrifices were made and I wonder whether these were not specifically referred to due to accusations of "poor anthropology" - see below for some commentators preferring the term "heirarchy" to "inequality" - although even "slavory/castism" would have been ok for me!!
@SammieMikros21 сағат бұрын
Love the topics on this channel, but I have to admit I fall asleep every time I watch a vid 😅😴. Maybe a bit more energy or engagement would help! 💡❤
@tomsaltner30113 ай бұрын
Very interesting! Unfortunately, to me the monotone emphasis sounds a bit off…
@ziggytheassassin58353 ай бұрын
Nooooooo. This series is so good but its not all out yet!!!
@Neurotypique4 ай бұрын
I hope you understand this is not to mock or anything, but I couldn't keep on watching the videos because of the repetitiveness of your voice inflexions :/ once I started hearing the pattern of your sentences I couldn't make sense of the words anymore. I wouldn't have commented but I feel maybe it can be a useful feedback? Thanks for sharing and creating this content!
@xlr555usa4 ай бұрын
So his voice doesn't float your boat? Maybe he should use an AI generated voice or modify his voice with AI.
@jackrabbit77894 ай бұрын
He's english what are you on about
@tomsaltner30113 ай бұрын
Very true, can't listen to that very long.
@tomsaltner30113 ай бұрын
@@xlr555usa ...or just speak like a normal person would do. It is not the voice but an unreasonable way of emphasizing sentences that is disturbing. One indeed gets the impression that it is just read from a prompter, without reflecting the content while reading...
@hisdarksecretАй бұрын
Yeah, it was very noticeable and quite distracting at times.
@Afronautsays5 ай бұрын
Chinese history is becoming my Roman Empire
@JeffBilkins5 ай бұрын
It is a shame it isn't more accessible, because there is tons of good stuff in there. Also the politics don't help, the comments here will be spicy.
@1000Ducks3 ай бұрын
Yuck
@kluafoz5 ай бұрын
We're not worthy we're not worthy❤❤❤❤
@NotoriousSRG5 ай бұрын
We are tho
@Poohze015 ай бұрын
SO very good!
@FacesintheStone4 ай бұрын
Thanks ❤
@FacesintheStone4 ай бұрын
It’s hard to believe that China’s archaeology is better than United States. As a matter of fact the United States archaeology is the laughing stock of the archaeological world. We are still covering up a genocide so we don’t really talk about what’s in the ground. .
@Nobody-s8245 ай бұрын
Histocrat = the cure for insomnia. In a good way!!
@theloyalistspeaks4 ай бұрын
The narration is very sing song
@denaisaacthiswasgreat.thum75983 ай бұрын
So good😊
@user-zcm379RenJiTang4 ай бұрын
The title of this piece, in light of recent years of China bashing, may feed into this bias. Inequality, in this world where most people would have difficulty making sense of things without relativity, is merely the condition of how things are. Imagine in the ancient time, a group of people surviving in the wild, someone wiser understand how to utilize the resources, not only help ensure the group's survival but enable them to thrive, thus not only earning appreciation from the people maybe respect or reverance even. An inequality resulting from such, would it be not natural? Not to mention someone put in more work reaping better results.
@oscarmora46025 ай бұрын
Informative
@richardcook591921 күн бұрын
Any news on the forthcoming video in this series?
@landon63393 ай бұрын
What's with the constant upward inflection for the whole reading?
@chillyavian77182 ай бұрын
It’s just how the guy reads
@Dedog05 ай бұрын
fantastically high quality video, but please invest in a better mic. a lot of words just fade into nothing and it makes it really hard to follow along! good job tho on everything else
@tomsaltner30113 ай бұрын
@@Dedog0 It is the narrator, not the tech.
@loopgru3 ай бұрын
Reasonably sure this is an AI / TTS narrator. Every sentence follows the exact same tonal pattern- low, high until the last word, low- and every single one is in the exact same tones. If you listen at higher speed it's inhumanly uniform.
@josecarlosmoreno97315 ай бұрын
One thing I'd like to understand is how the very initial inequality begins in human history. Is it that one farmer has a slightly more productive plot of land or a significantly more productive plot of land? Is it that some families engage in violence against others to secure larger plots of land for themselves? As I understand it, plots tended to both become subdivided for inheritance as well as families growing as large as the plot could support. How then did the initial wealthier farmers manage to have larger plots and less family members per area? Did they simply refuse to subdivide at inheritance or refuse to have more children? What about sedentary foragers who developed inequality, how was that process similar or different? Was it partially a social thing where socially influential people due to charisma, skill or connections were able to extract more gifts and loyalty to amass wealth? There is both the question of what the process of initial accumulation was and also the question of how it was preserved, as in why didn't others through pressure or violence maintain a more equal society in reaction to the threat of another gaining an advantage.
@JohnSmith-mc2zz5 ай бұрын
I imagine they were more sophisticated than we would assume. Many of the things they had to do to be successful are more impressive than what a modern person does.
@lboard30005 ай бұрын
The violent and ambitious acquire more land and pay people to be in their circle and defend them
@erlinacobrado79475 ай бұрын
This is essentially unanswerable. Since all people have already natural variation in ability and capacity, to add also that one's own children and relatives are a kind of property and capital in primitive societies insofar as they can perform labour. Also, gratitude in modern sensibilities is nearly non-existent: gift giving and acts of kindness always carried the weight of moral obligation and debt in small tight-knit groups, making "the generous" people sort of wealthy by being able to expect help in the future. This is not even to add religious-shaman minorities, otherwise "worthless", except for service remembrance of past generations and epic poetic recitations, making them prestigious in the group. These don't map well at all with modern quantitative analyses of wealth per capita at all. Good question, but I think it's basically impossible to answer.
@PaulSpades5 ай бұрын
Most social mammals are hierarchical. We were too, before the start of "history", before homo sapiens was sapiens.
@stevencooper44225 ай бұрын
@@erlinacobrado7947You are correct. One was "wealthy" in tribal economies by the amount of respect he had by the others in the tribe. Naturally, leadership tended to go hand in hand with wealth in the form of reciprocity.
@annemaria51265 ай бұрын
No...agriculture has not too much to do with it. When a tribe grows too large and so ruling/solving problems becomes more difficult and time-consuming and demanding different skills, then a 'prime leader/premier/prime-minister/king/chef=sheriff=shariff-chief/boss, etc.. first chosen but soon (the family is used to special treatments and wealth) became a heriditary lucrative job. Working/fighting was no longer needed. 24hours protection was requiered. In no time an 'elite-group' with special treatment and beneficials was established. In my opinion, an automatic irreversable mechanisme. Also...after wars, the captured 'non-humans' served as dispensable slaves. The lowest 'class', the 'dalith's', the deplorables.
@annemaria51265 ай бұрын
The reason for growth might have been 1)fertile population 2)fertile soil and nature 3)an agressive attitude and hunger for wealth and power 4)'sharing' goods and food was not a cherished lifestyle, certainly not with foreigners. Anything changed in our attitude?
@JuliaZuckerberg5 ай бұрын
Yes or just foreign invaders
@annemaria51265 ай бұрын
@@JuliaZuckerberg possible....we will never know 2hat really halsppened. That is the beauty of it: we all can assume, think, learn, associate... but the truth lies in the faraway past and even then....Who knows exactly what is going on right now on all fronts and behind the scenes? Noone!
@MackerelCat5 ай бұрын
We see in written records that often aristocracy formed from warriors. As victorious warriors, these families were honoured with lands and authority, which led to the development of a warrior caste as father passed this warrior expectation onto sons.
@annemaria51265 ай бұрын
@@MackerelCat obvious and logical. Even within animal packs. This is an automatical procedure. But terrible for the great majority, enduring their enslavement under that 'nobility. And we...the deplorables....admire them, obey them, serve them from early in the morning till early in the morning. From being born till death comes to take them away.
@nobody6875 ай бұрын
Protection from other groups is what lead to rulers. Just like it always does
@rhodju1815 ай бұрын
所以當人類能把人類視為一個整體的時候,就沒有藉口了。
@tomsaltner30113 ай бұрын
@@nobody687 I think it is rather connected to a surplus of food and with that the possibility for individuals to specialize. This started the structuring of society and introduced roles - such as leaders.
@nobody6873 ай бұрын
@tomsaltner3011 Even hunter gathers have a leader. All groups of humans have leaders. What led to civilization was when someone produced beer in high amounts and set up a place to trade it. That's my theory. It's logical,
@kobil316SH4 ай бұрын
That's a crazy title
@DASRH3 ай бұрын
More like the dawn of WINNERS. 🫠🥳😎
@Odith-t8s3 ай бұрын
Creator of video is probably anti china white boi
@RedEyesBDC5 ай бұрын
Walter! This isn't a guy who built the railroads here...
@sonofsophia5 ай бұрын
I am the walrus?
@EGSBiographies-om1wb5 ай бұрын
Mr Beat recommended this channel.
@TDroid-02085 ай бұрын
After you finish this series, you should go on to mesoamerica, after a well deserved break of course
@colintilbrook5 ай бұрын
Just the title suggests you're taking a lot of points from "The Dawn of Everything by David Graeber and David Wengrow review - inequality is not the price of civilisation" i hope you are because its a bloody masterpiece of a book.
@curvy46555 ай бұрын
Whats with this video being unavailable to download?
@carlosfernandez58335 ай бұрын
Probably because it just got uploaded.
@LordWaterBottle4 ай бұрын
I can download now, it was probably just the video still processing on KZbin's end. For example it's been a recent trend that videos on some channels have no audio for the first few minutes. I'm not sure if that got fixed or not, haven't been early enough in a while.
@cyxixi83124 ай бұрын
When do we get the next episode! ❤❤❤
@zipperpillow5 ай бұрын
This progression of development and their telltale material culture items and emerging social hierarchy, is typical for all societies everywhere.
@limelightraver56904 ай бұрын
The “sequel” to 9 Sols.
@whatevertheheckjessieuploads5 ай бұрын
Is there anywhere where people could purchase some of the illustrations?
@samuelleandro2275Ай бұрын
Look in the description for the name of the artist
@allones3078Ай бұрын
how did i miss this video?
@Abdal-RahmanI5 ай бұрын
Ayoooooo HISTOCRAT DROPPED 🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥
@Votrae5 ай бұрын
You had me at bone & stone items 😫
@sebastianguntherasticawhit85912 ай бұрын
Wait a minute… WHAT IT’S THIS A CHINESE SHOE ON DIRT WTH??? 17:35
@kindGSL5 ай бұрын
18:00 I thought dragons were mythical, but this made me curious so I looked it up. It turns out there is a real animal called a Chinese dragon, it is a local alligator species. It is endangered now, but at that time it would have been common. Look up Chinese alligator to see pictures of the real thing. They get to be about 5 to 7 feet in length and up to 80 to 100 lb. Not mythical after all! No wonder dragons are considered water animals. They are real live alligators. LOL
@cutefidgety5 ай бұрын
Doubt it. 1. Chinese alligators are mentioned from 3000 years ago, while the individual buried with the dragon dates to more than 4000 years ago 2. You can’t look at the dragon mosaic and honestly state that it looks like an alligator 3. The earliest chinese settlements started much more north than the Yangtze where the crocodile is from 4. Where do you find that the chinese alligator is called a chinese dragon? Would like to see that source Much more likely, the association is made when people catch an unusual animal (in this case an alligator) and then claim to have caught a “dragon” in order to rake in the big bucks
@fabianmok22065 ай бұрын
dragons are mythical. It was probably a totem animal spirit to protect a village or area like those you in native america. some tribes will take over other totems over time and add to their totem, which is probably why the dragon had hybrid features from other animals. and ancient depictions of dragons are very abstract slithe creatures. the current version is mainly from the Ming dynasty where they are potrayed in a very aggressive pose.
@adamtheduell3 ай бұрын
Dragons are real
@davidfirmino38295 ай бұрын
Was the title written by US state department? Certainly inequality did not start in China, or better it would be impossible to know but we can guess it started in tbe first human community. Did China have the first human community?
@SarahTheRebelOfficial5 ай бұрын
The name makes more sense if you watched the previous video. He is saying that in the context of the more egalitarian culture that this culture supplanted.
@davidfirmino38295 ай бұрын
@@SarahTheRebelOfficial that makes more sense. thanks for the reply
the video is well made, but as a Sinologist I always get weird vibes when the word China is used for a political construct that early in history. It plays into the myth of the eternal nation state and is more ideological than historical. I think it would be better to stick to China as a geographical and not political entity
Wow weird thing flying in the sky starting around 18:30. Looks like a plane?
@dfgdfg_5 ай бұрын
Is millet different to wheat? Do we still eat it?
@agnelomascarenhas89904 ай бұрын
Millets are many species. They are drought resistant and hardy. Growing in cold, hot climates and probably climates with diurnal temperature variations. They were independently domesticated in different parts of the world. China, Africa and perhaps other locations. Yes, it is still consumed. Gluten free.
@agnelomascarenhas89904 ай бұрын
It is sold on stalk for bird feed. Check it.
@twq3188 күн бұрын
Given the temperate cold climate, the clothing / coverage depicted of the Neolithic people in the illustrations seems unrealistic. The attire appears more suited for rainforest tropical, Desert and Semi-Arid Climates or savannah climates.
@pijn23705 ай бұрын
amazing video! however i think it'd be very helpful to include the corresponding Chinese characters of the proper names in the subtitles :D
@ARTiculations5 ай бұрын
10:02 Hey hey it's my hometown Xi'an! Wooooo!
@HailEarendil29 күн бұрын
Inequality has always existed. Nothing can ever be truly equal to all. Inequality is a product of nature not humanity.
@0ldarАй бұрын
"Dawn of Inequality" applies to literally all civilizations.
@daleu68484 ай бұрын
I’ve never seen a doc on a culture with a title that includes inequality. f the west and these people with these micro aggression titles.
@jlb80942 ай бұрын
KZbin is filled with these frauds who like to brand them self as "educational channel." Its all a fucking psyop.
@dfgdfg_5 ай бұрын
Reject civilization. Return to monke.
@yewtoob20075 ай бұрын
The accent is fine. The chant-like delivery could use some variation.
@gasfrommyanusi0i594Ай бұрын
did you speak about the scythians because they played big part in Chinese culture and tech advancement.
@PaulThronson5 ай бұрын
I don't disagree with what's being said, but other prehistoric societies are never framed this way.
@batman70085 ай бұрын
Facts, can you be more specific so I understand you better though?
@thecollierreport5 ай бұрын
What do you mean?
@spacelemur79555 ай бұрын
Try Wikipedia List of kingdoms and royal dynasties The list is so long that they break it up by Continent.
@RomanVarl5 ай бұрын
Amazing how many things in this video can be applied to modern "developed" societies
@Game_Hero5 ай бұрын
they are the same homo sapiens than in our contemporary societies
@JohnSmith-mc2zz5 ай бұрын
It's a shame there are words like developed that can't be detached from their value judgement connotations. There's almost no way to refer to the less developed world that isn't insulting and confusing.
@danielzhang19165 ай бұрын
because the foundation is still the same, human society basically hasn't changed in thousands of years
@seanb3255 ай бұрын
Wove twu wove
@Pretermit_SoundАй бұрын
Lots of people in the comments uncomfortable with the word “inequality” apparently 🙄 great video as usual 👍
@333f_ran4 ай бұрын
woa this is just like Skyrim
@pinkyring15875 ай бұрын
2:39
@BlastinRope5 ай бұрын
prehistoric celts: chalcolothic shenanignans prehistoric asians: sociological stratification, dawn of inequality looool nice video dude