Hadrian's palace / villa near Rome is probably worthy of its own video. Not only was it an architectural feat of its own right, but it's an order of magnitude larger than already astounding sites like Diocletian's retirement home at modern-day Split. The substructure of vaulting arches alone would rival the Colosseum, let alone the temples and theatres suspended above it. By either size or magnificence, it would probably dwarf most ancient cities.
@toldinstone3 ай бұрын
It's an astonishing place. I've been thinking about making a Hadrian's Villa video for years. Perhaps next spring, when I plan to visit Tivoli...
@Momruoy-v5j3 ай бұрын
@@toldinstone you pos stop deleting my comments.
@WinstonSmithGPT3 ай бұрын
@@toldinstoneDo you know the hack for visiting the Villa d’Este? A lot of people prefer to scoot to the bottom where the original entrance was and the fountains are low. This way as you enter the garden further, fountains get higher and higher, as they were intended. I tried it that way and liked it, just don’t look around much heading down. If you take the bus it goes through some crappy suburbs and abruptly you’re in tiny towns with old ladies who want to sit right next to you and discuss your shirt among themselves. 😂😂😂
@CentralStoriesforboredom3 ай бұрын
Roman architecture is so classy and mesmerizing
@obsidianjane44133 ай бұрын
Until you remember it was built slavery and misery.
@QuantumHistorian3 ай бұрын
@@obsidianjane4413 eh, the slaves were more likely to be the overseers or skilled master masons than the brick layers sweating in the Sun. But yes, you are right that any grand outcome in a preindustrial society is based on the exploitation of someone down the supply chain. But why does that mean we shouldn't appreciate the grandeur of the outcome anyway? We need not agree with the socioeconomic methods of construction to be awestruck by the outcome. To not be able to distinguish between the two is a common cognitive muddle.
@obsidianjane44133 ай бұрын
@@QuantumHistorian Because of the reality of what the grand monuments represent. The first organized, industrial oppression in human history. To not be able to recognize such is a cognitive failure.
@genoallmond99363 ай бұрын
@@QuantumHistorian Your statement was fine until that last sentence lol, no need to insult the person.
@zinckensteel3 ай бұрын
I have often been amazed at how much modern western architectural styling copies ancient designs almost verbatim - sometimes almost like they started with moldings of the originals.
@pablomerayomontes19443 ай бұрын
You can actually walk all around las Medulas and go into the tunnels, before mass tourism my dad used to freely go inside, now you need a tour. It is still very nice :)
@Michigander2693 ай бұрын
The hexagonal basin really blows my mind and I'm not even sure why to be honest, lol. It's not the grandest or most beautiful but for some reason that is captivating... Great video, thanks!
@barath45453 ай бұрын
Yeah looks like some god was playing Settlers when creating the world and then got back to work :)
@cmbaz11403 ай бұрын
Its the size and angles... It blows my mind.
@bobfrog48363 ай бұрын
It's also impressively easy to find on Goggle Maps.
@QuantumHistorian3 ай бұрын
@@barath4545 you should check out the hexagon on Saturn for more divine hexagons
@roderickvannoorloos19673 ай бұрын
Probably because Hexagons are the Bestagons!
@marcodeangelis83273 ай бұрын
The construction of Portus was an awe inspiring feat. The construction of the port itself was impractical, but they did it nontheless. The canal bypassed some miles of navigation along the river, skipping a lenghty meander. What strikes me the most: they build a new road from Rome to Portus on the right bank, which is riddled with hills. They made it straight, ignoring and overcoming the terrain features (present day Via Portuense). In doing so, they discarded Via Ostiense, which went to old port of Ostia on the left bank, and was much easier to build, running through the bottom of the valley. They could avoid that with a simple bridge, but went for a whole new road.
@uncletiggermclaren75923 ай бұрын
When they were finished, they had TWO roads, right?. Ostia was eclipsed, but that was more from the utility of the new port, Ostia would have continued to be used.
@marcodeangelis83272 ай бұрын
@@uncletiggermclaren7592 yes, two roads when finished! Both still there: via Ostiense and via Portuense
@DedalusStew3 ай бұрын
Very interesting. In Romania we have quite a few similar walls (Trajan's Wall, Athanaric Wall etc) crossing the country. Although some were hundreds of km long, they were initially just wood and earth fortifications. They're called things like "Valul lui Traian" (Trajan's crest) as there's nothing left of them today besides a few ripples of dirt. I didn't know how widespread these have been.
@QuantumHistorian3 ай бұрын
It's not that I have a Pavlovian response to that rising beat and chisel sound, its just that I feel compelled to pour myself a glass of port and find the most comfortable armchair around as soon as I hear it
@obsidianjane44133 ай бұрын
You are not alone.
@jonnymmac3 ай бұрын
Agreed. Opened up my 1st tall boy of the evening wondering about next months dig location.❤
@TaeSunWoo3 ай бұрын
This but with the bong
@jonnymmac3 ай бұрын
@@TaeSunWoo go light. Have to smoke it just right
@talljohn53503 ай бұрын
How weird that I’m already drinking port when I came across this video and see this comment.
@hansnelsen39603 ай бұрын
Canteras Industriales de Beirzo is just down the road. Las Medulas is a half mile across I guess. I was amazed at the difference in scale between modern and ancient, a rather ordinary local quarry rivaling the biggest of the ancients. Not that the Romans did not create much of enormous scale, but of course ancient large scale and modern are of different orders, despite examples like the Pyramids. Modern infrastructure, just the sheer volume of concrete for example, so so much. It is the incredible design of the ancients that gets me
@fuoridalsentieroАй бұрын
What an incredible video! The forgotten Roman megaprojects you highlighted are a fascinating reminder of the sheer ambition of ancient engineering. The detail you provided, along with the rich historical context, really brought these monumental achievements to life. It’s amazing to think how these structures shaped the ancient world and still leave their mark today. Thank you for shedding light on these hidden gems of history-this was an absolute pleasure to watch! We join your channel! Thumb up 👍
@VLSG3 ай бұрын
Rest in peace to the great academic, scholar and archaeologist Simon Keay, who dedicated much of his life and passion to uncovering the secrets of Portus Romae. For decades he has been the driving force behind the “Portus Project” aimed at revealing more of this incredible site. Been following his work for years until he passed away in 2021.
@eclecticx2 ай бұрын
Las Medulas is incredible, utterly awing to see in person. Just unbelievable how the Romans managed to do what they did.
@diegoferreiro94783 ай бұрын
Las Médulas is not the only example of Roman large mining projects in North West Spain. Not very far, about 50 km to the West, in the Lugo province, there is the Montefurado tunnel (literally 'drilled mountain'). This tunnel was originally 120 m long and had a huge 20m x 20m section (with 8 m below water level in normal condition); it was used to detour the Sil river, also with gold mining in mind. Sadly, it partially collapsed in 1934 and today remains about 50 m of tunnel. With the collapse of the mountain above off it went an eighteenth century fort that was built in top of it. The tunnel is in the Quiroga municipality while las Médulas are close to the town of Ponferrada, in the province of León, so a well planned visit could include both sites.
@curtiswilson8593 ай бұрын
Between this and Goldsworthy’s channel, we are entering a golden age of Roman KZbin content!
@larsrons79373 ай бұрын
Very informative. I did know of all three megaprojects, but they are all indeed worth mentioning.
@bamibrick65753 ай бұрын
Your intro is just perfect. Please never change it
@peterhutley4254Ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating. When I was young it would’ve been great to have known about some of these megaprojects , regards Pete
@arjenh72143 ай бұрын
Watching 15 seconds after upload, that's a record for me
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
What an incredible achievement. Doubtless, the culmination of years of hard work. ;-)
@arjenh72143 ай бұрын
@@Martial-Mat It has taken me a lot of sacrifice, hard work, and having no life
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
@@arjenh7214 😁 Bravo - Rome salutes you!
@cristhianramirez69393 ай бұрын
You surpass me as a romaboo, i admit it
@sebastiamarques32743 ай бұрын
The name Las Médulas means literally "the bone marrows" in Spanish, which is quite fittingm since they crushed the mountains to extract the gold just like scavengers break bones to eat the marrow, although the real origin of the name is uncertain.
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this episode. The first segment really adds colour to the chapter in your book about gold in the Roman world.
@kyk16823 ай бұрын
Love your shit man. Thanks for everything you do, and thanks for putting in the effort to make this channel happen. Hope you have a great day!
@cougar20133 ай бұрын
Walls worked then and they work now. Love the channel Dr. Garrett!
@CraftClash3 ай бұрын
Great video, didn't know about any of these.
@pymusmaximus3 ай бұрын
J attends avec impatience l'épisode sur Le Pont du Gard, que j ai reconnu à la fin. J habite à côté et c est vraiment un ouvrage très " puissant ", quand on se trouve à son pied, la puissance de Rome vous écrase. Merci pour votre travail.
@krasberg3 ай бұрын
Glad to see wiki helped you with pictures.
@alpaktuna3 ай бұрын
Really beautiful episode! Thank you.
@hanzzarkov76903 ай бұрын
I'm in constant wonder of where we'd be with without someone ensuring we remained capable of referring to the works of Pliny the elder. Among others of course. I cant imagine how much has just ceased to be.
@geolauf3 ай бұрын
My family is from ponferrada, near las medulas. A flabergasting place. Much recommended
@jeraldbaxter35323 ай бұрын
Thank you.😊
@kimberlyperrotis89623 ай бұрын
Those mines in the Rio Tinto district (Spain) have been worked more or less continuously since at least the Early Bronze Age. Perhaps even earlier, as we keeping finding older archaeological sites, gold seems to have been present very far back in human history. In addition to its rarity and beauty, it’s soft and very easy to work, even with the most primitive tools. And, of course, being a noble, inert, element, it lasts forever, buried underground or beneath the sea. The landscapes in this region might look like our natural rocky Western deserts, but really, they’re completely modified by human activities, mostly hydraulic mining.
@whyjnot4203 ай бұрын
It never ceases to amaze me how often people seemingly ignore Portus while focusing on Ostia. It is one thing if someone is talking about Caesarea Maritima and doesn't mention Portus, but with Ostia... Its right there a stones throw away.
@barath45453 ай бұрын
Yeah and someone back then missed the marketing ball on branding it as well - Why not Portus Maximus? :)
@whyjnot4203 ай бұрын
@@barath4545 Food for thought: Being able to leave things out, e.g. the country name on postage stamps, is more of a assertion of dominance than saying you the superduperuberturbo revision 1 mk. A version. If you can get away without using a definite article, all the better. Though both this and the first thing I said rely on other people agreeing with you and going along with it. addendum: The Brits invented postage stamps, thus the only country that doesn't need to include the nations name, is the UK.
@donde2k3 ай бұрын
That hexagonal basin is quite aways inland now, eh?
@Atrahasis720 күн бұрын
Land reclamation tech came a long way I guess, I was reading Caesar first Britain expeditions to Britain last year and Thanet was actually an island back in the day.
@brettk93163 ай бұрын
The Romans were incredible will never see another empire like them ever again! Even the British empire couldn't hold a candle to them!
@kimberlyperrotis89623 ай бұрын
Roman engineering always amazes me, they didn’t even have calculus yet. Most of it wasn’t re-discovered, or re-invented, until the Industrial Revolution was well underway. They even used metal-reinforced concrete, as we do today. Their surveying and hydraulic engineering knowledge was incredible, too. A model steam engine was actually made by an Alexandrian Greek (Heroon, I think?) during this period, if the Romans had realized its full potential, the Industrial Revolution would likely have begun in Classical times. The world would have been so different today!
@jinsai80643 ай бұрын
It seriously hurts every time i hear an ancient ruin was destroyed to have something built there or to make room or just for shits and giggles
@blacksage23753 ай бұрын
When it comes to Rome most of the destruction was completed centuries ago if not a 1000 years or more. By the same token you can't build a damn flower garden without hitting three ancient villas and two tons of potsherds (and maybe a few denarri if you're lucky) which has played all sorts of havoc with say building a subway. So unless you serious want to argue a place real people still live should be abandoned... something gotta give.
@earlysda3 ай бұрын
I'm grateful for progress. Who knows, the Romans may have destroyed old Estruscan sites?
@TheHylianBatman3 ай бұрын
I half-expected you to say that the port at Portus was still in use!
@Gersemi_Trader3 ай бұрын
What about Tomis, modern day Romania. Two or three layers of long walls from coast to the danube river. This area had many long walls
@diannewheatleygiliotti85133 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@EmporerBlock3 ай бұрын
More like this
@elliottferris59293 ай бұрын
The exact location and what happened to the lighthouse of Portus it is still a mystery today.
@codymoon75523 ай бұрын
It was probably taken apart in the middle ages
@elliottferris59293 ай бұрын
@@codymoon7552 historians would have known..taking apart such a landmark would have been impossible without the consent of a very important one like a bishop or a pope...
@alexanderdavid84413 ай бұрын
Incredible content
@VINTERIUM..EXPLORIUM.13 ай бұрын
Nice Work & Video 👍
@Sarnarath3 ай бұрын
You forgot the Roman Space program.
@cjthebeesknees3 ай бұрын
One patrician on an extra large ballista?
@ancsi74743 ай бұрын
Do you know about the Devil's ditch / Csörsz árok on the Pannonian plains? Ok it's only a ditch but it's 1200 km long section of the Roman limes.
@transideo3 ай бұрын
i love this channel sm
@RevisitingHistoryChannel3 ай бұрын
Super interesting!
@fanroche85733 ай бұрын
Went to Portus a couple of years ago, Now you have to purchase a ticket on line - we got in free as it was a hassle. Unfortunately the basin is privately owned
@cjthebeesknees3 ай бұрын
The basin, privately owned. Rolls foul off the tongue. Same sh*t, different millennia.
@andyburgess23813 ай бұрын
Great video
@plumtree18463 ай бұрын
I wonder what type of labor force was used on these megaprojects? Was it slave, conscripted, skilled or a mixture? The gold mines must have been brutal.
@QuantumHistorian3 ай бұрын
A very good question, that digs deep into rather uniquely Roman social structures. Risky labour would be slaves, quite literally worked to the death in ways not dissimilar to the worse caribbean plantations of the 18th century. But the most skilled workers were also slaves or freedman - it was the in between layer that was free labour (day labourers at the lower end, well paid contractors at the higher end). This apparent contradiction makes sense if you forget about American slavery for a second and place yourself as a Roman aristocrat with access to a large supply of both slave and free labour. Who do you use for the terrible, dangerous jobs nobody wants? The slaves of course! But who do you invest years of training and technical skill into? The free labourers who might switch employers at any time, or the slaves (and freedman) who are (duty) bound to keep working for you for the rest of their lives? Obviously, the latter offers a better guaranteed return on investment over the long time. Hence the sandwich structure of slaves being right at the bottom, free labour doing the temporary menial work, and slaves (and freedman) doing the high level overseeing.
@hamaljay3 ай бұрын
I wonder how many nobles lived vicariously in these mines.
@Momruoy-v5j3 ай бұрын
@@QuantumHistorianthat's a myth about 18th century plantations... they cost alot of money to own so they wouldn't be worked how you described.... its very basic history and very obvious to people with higher than double digit iq.
@QuantumHistorian3 ай бұрын
@@Momruoy-v5j Lol, go read something about, eg, the French sugar plantations in that Caribbean and the death rate amongst the slaves there, then you can come back and apologise for being so aggressively wrong. It's ok, I'll wait for you to learn how to read first.
@Momruoy-v5j3 ай бұрын
@@QuantumHistorian wow how convenient that my comments keep getting deleted... well done your myths and propaganda will go further than the truth.
@Chuck85413 ай бұрын
FYI, you can watch this channels vids at 1.8x speed, and it sounds like a normal speaking voice.
@kaloarepo2883 ай бұрын
There is a proposal to build a canal near where that Thracian Wall was that would bi-pass the port of Istanbul and shorten the route through the Dardanelles and Bosphorous and free up that whole congested sea-lane.
@MoonThuli3 ай бұрын
I'm not sure that will ever actually go ahead. There were some serious concerns that it could contaminate Istanbul's freshwater supply, and also making your largest city into an island is just going to make it a logistical nightmare for all the utilities and infrastructure.
@remko23 ай бұрын
From what I've understood Hadrian's wall was more about border control then about defence, I mean, they would not man the wall as shown in the pic you showed, the garrisons of the forts would go out and meet and destroy any threat in the field. The wall is too narrow to have a fighting space along the top, and mosts forts are located behind it, not on it The fortlets, some of which have their gates opening upon a cliff side seem to have been mostly there to regulate traffic through the wall, with the turrets warning the forts behind of any threat approaching. The wall of course would slow down any incursion by just being there
@Garris_Shrike3 ай бұрын
Las médulas is not "forgotten" at all tho. It is a major touristic destionation and a source of pride for the inhabitants of the area.
@teslaoliveira21953 ай бұрын
Super!
@RolloTonéBrownTown2 ай бұрын
7:21 does anyone know if this is how it possibly looked, or is this just fanciful? The idea of a tower/column thing standing boldly at the mouth of the harbour is, frankly romantic.
@DrDinoNuggies2 ай бұрын
I don’t have an answer, but yeah, it would literally be *romantic* lol
@RolloTonéBrownTown2 ай бұрын
@@DrDinoNuggies well said Doc! 🤓
@Boydar3 ай бұрын
Humanity is astounding
@cjthebeesknees3 ай бұрын
Glory to Man.
@awogbob3 ай бұрын
Would you ever do a video on this concept: (Its early so I might struggle articulating it clearly) Basically, modern man and society seems to have a strong affinity for the roman empire in terms of its democracy, industrialization, city planning, architecture, etc etc. Before the industrial revolution, how did other societies view or understand themselves in relation to the roman empire? Or has the intertwined nature and legacy of rome always been present in every era? I dont know if this is historically accurate but I get the sense lots of modern people see rome as "almost a modern civilization" and the the dark ages until the industrial revolution as a step backward. I dont personally hold this view, but was there a time when a person living in 1111 for instance may have seen Roman culture as inferior to their society, perhaps on moral, religious or even technical grounds?
@hamarbiljungskile89533 ай бұрын
So, number 2 is Rammas Echor?
@faithlesshound5621Ай бұрын
What we were told about the extensive mining of gold which went on for centuries leads me to doubt the claim that the quantity of gold in human hands has remained the same throughout history. The Law of Conservation of Gold must be a matter of faith, not fact.
@1TakoyakiStore3 ай бұрын
Did I miss something? There's a giant badge preserved in concrete near the mouth of the Tiber to this very day?
@unclerojelio63203 ай бұрын
Please cover Sicily.
@QuantumHistorian3 ай бұрын
That's... kind of vague? What about Sicily? There 10 centuries of Roman presence on that largest and most densely populated of Mediterranean isle
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
With what?
@userequaltoNull3 ай бұрын
@@Martial-MatFettuccini
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
@@userequaltoNull 😁
@cjthebeesknees3 ай бұрын
Anomalous terrain or landmarks/structures that are less known and interesting.
@barath45453 ай бұрын
Whenever people go to Split, Croatia, I usually say, "Oh visiting Diocletian's retirement home, I see?" Most people don't get it but those that do are keepers :)
@avishalom2000lm3 ай бұрын
So the Romans did "mountaintop removal" too. Makes me wonder what future archaeologists will make of Appalachia.
@emil3f3 ай бұрын
Wow
@ingo_86283 ай бұрын
Hinterland! Thats funny!
@markgarrett36473 ай бұрын
How they ran the mine shows you why the Romans had a hard time innovating and industrialising.
@R3TR0J4N3 ай бұрын
i once asked chatgpt for loss historical significance in Spain then recieved thrice that in rome. im like damn
@grumbogee17723 ай бұрын
can you do a video on the beef between nicki and cardi b?
@masterchafer3 ай бұрын
Do you talk like a malfunctioning robot in real life or just on your videos?
@Nickerer3 ай бұрын
Can you do a video or series maybe about how shows like game of thrones basically take a lot of their plots from ancient history? For example the “black watch” and the ice wall = hadrians wall. I think that would be fun.
@redjacc75813 ай бұрын
cool
@j.d.56263 ай бұрын
Romans return all gold and silver to Spain !!. Ridiculous right ?? Now Mexicans/Peruvians apply the same logic please
@TonyBullard3 ай бұрын
4:37 Is this some kind of ancient fist fight?
@1893Mauser2 ай бұрын
Probably guards turning away groups of forign travelers
@Scoupe4003 ай бұрын
AI robot?!
@nc85073 ай бұрын
Damn, never been this early for Toldinstone before.
@apocolypse113 ай бұрын
If the romans would handle the Israelites back then. World peace could actually be a thing.
@lisette20603 ай бұрын
Ever considered which societal step you would have been forced into, by greedy racist muslim slave traders and merciless Romans ? 😂😴
@andydufresne80343 ай бұрын
In historic drawings, the hexagonal harbor is always shown along the coastline. Today, it's a mile or two inland. Can somebody please explain this.
@leonardo.10243 ай бұрын
the hexagonal part was actually set back a little way, and there has been considerable sediment deposition by the Tiber over the last two thousand years and change. in fact, part of the reason for Portus was due to sedimentation, and that was its doom as well.
@jamesMartinelli-x2t2 ай бұрын
46 kilos equal 28 miles.
@hdysicjegk3 ай бұрын
Still the loudest intro in KZbin history lol
@andrejdespotovski47883 ай бұрын
Amphitheatre sounds wrong, I keep hearing the P and H.. Isn’t it amfi?
@leonardo.10243 ай бұрын
in italian, yes. In english... sometimes.
@cjthebeesknees3 ай бұрын
An opulent word, rolls off the tongue.
@KoRL122 ай бұрын
is this an AI video?
@gnulinux51082 ай бұрын
La cosa che più da fastidio anche in cultori o ammiratori dell'antica Roma è il fatto che chi faceva lavori sgradevoli come quello che poteva essere il lavorare nelle miniere d'oro non poteva che essere uno schiavo, magari frustato come da copione hollywoodiano. Lei pensa che i minatori attuali che magari estraggono il carbone, che è peggio che estrarre l'oro, siano degli schiavi e non dei lavoratori? Pensa che non gli dessero da mangiare, che fossero debilitati? Probabile che le antiche civiltà erano meno disumane magari della sua bella America democratica.
@maxwalker11593 ай бұрын
!
@spectre-83 ай бұрын
Am I the only one who watches on 1.25x?
@nonyabisness63063 ай бұрын
just stack more bricks bro.
@Youtuber-k2p3 ай бұрын
The AI voiceover is just appalling. The long pause in the middle of sentences makes it so disjointed. A pause should only be at where a comma might go or after a full stop.
@Uruz20123 ай бұрын
It's a live person and that's more or less his normal way of speaking. You're not the first commenter to think this, lol.
@cristhianramirez69393 ай бұрын
That's just his voice
@anonimosu74253 ай бұрын
💀
@ve6pte3 ай бұрын
Did you AI your voice for the voiceover?
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
No.
@innersceptre47863 ай бұрын
It's Mr Peabody
@toldinstone3 ай бұрын
Nope. Even if I wanted to, AI couldn't handle all the Latin words.
@EGSBiographies-om1wb3 ай бұрын
114th
@Hrochnick3 ай бұрын
The, video, is quite interesting, but, your way of, speaking, is quite grating, I'm sorry, to say.
@yikemoo3 ай бұрын
I got it, finally can put into words why I like this channel. There's this weird trend of channels that cover this stuff dipping their toes into the woo-woo. Its crazy to me how these people sitting at their desks, who rely on archaeologists for every single piece of knowledge they have about history, to tell you the second they disagree with a mainstream conclusion that archaeology is some vast conspiracy orchestrated to, I'm not even sure they know.
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
We live in an age when people are crapping on hard-earned knowledge, even while standing on its shoulders to do so. Someone no doubt told them that all opinions are valid, and they mistook it to mean all opinions have equal weight. They disgust me.
@yikemoo3 ай бұрын
@@Martial-Mat When did this all go sideways? I know the public conversation was not like this when I was younger. If you talked like a crazy person, people pointed it out and quietly moved away from you. Getting someone of below-average judgment to realize that that's what they are.... impossible task.
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
@@yikemoo The internet allowed these pigeon shouters to find each other, and when they did, it gave them an elevated sense of their own value.
@suzmaca6503 ай бұрын
Human voice is preferable
@obsidianjane44133 ай бұрын
Garrett does his own audio. Yes. It is a very nice voice.
@Martial-Mat3 ай бұрын
It is a human voice. That's what Garrett sounds like.
@obsidianjane44133 ай бұрын
@@Martial-Mat Sadly, there is AI that can mimic human voice. But it still stumbles upon non-typical words. I think this is still Garrett. For the time being...
@toldinstone3 ай бұрын
Yes, still me - and I have no plans to automate anytime soon
@BalmforthGG3 ай бұрын
Worst narration ever
@justin88943 ай бұрын
Shafts.
@PictishPrince3 ай бұрын
You assume about the wall of hadrian that it was not destroyed by my ancestors because it was well manned. that wall was only allowed to remain because it was below the land of the people. when antoninus tried to place a wall it was destroyed by them. the wall of hadrian was just there so we would know that they were in their land and not ours.
@leonardo.10243 ай бұрын
do you know this from written sources? otherwise it sounds like historical nationalism. Are you sure you aren't the one assuming?
@PictishPrince3 ай бұрын
@@leonardo.1024 what is told down from the ancestors is told, what invaders write down as lies are lies.
@radwulfeboraci75042 ай бұрын
Forgotten ... as they should be. Nothing these psychopaths with engineering skills did is worthy of memory.