This is awesome! No pseudo-intellectual blabbing about how he "knows" it was built! Left to our own imaginations!! Thank-You for this video and the background music as well!
I visited Balbeck in 1991,just after the ceasefire,we were welcomed with open arms,what a country,love it,Balbeck was magnificent,the hospitality even better….thank you so much to Mohammed and family,luckily my friend was fluent in French,so we could chat about everything. ❤️ 🇱🇧
Sometimes life presents humans with some things that are so aesthetically beautiful that they defy words. This video was such a case. I am truly thankful to you for making this.
Krásné poznávací video , úžasné záběry včetně přibližujících detailů , citlivě promyšlené , vše ladí , navazuje , stále nový a nový pohled .....divák se ani vteřinu neodvrátí protože ví , že by o něco přišel , skvělá všechna vaše videa ...👏👍👍♥️ Díky za ně ! 💐🙂
Wow. I'm blown away. I never knew all of that existed. How in the world did they build that? That's what I said during the entire video. The build is astonishing.
@@28Justchecking Exactly. The so-called roman period of human civilization was about one and a half thousand years BC up to christ. While these buildings where built before the flood more than 10,000 years ago or right after the flood.
Navštíviť Libanon, je veľký zážitok, ktorý má bohatú históriu a úžasné pamiatky UNESCO. Baalbec - pamiatky z rímskeho impéria, Bejrut, Byblos ,Tripolis, Doporučujem, je to nádhera a úžasné zážitky. SLOVAKIA ♥️🇸🇰
Quel nombre insensé de colonnes avec leurs magnifiques chapiteaux devait il y avoir dans cette très belle ville. Les tailleurs de pierres étaient pleins de courage pour élever de si beaux ouvrages. Comme d’habitude, splendide vidéo.
Really really it's an amazing video... you took me to an another word through your video ... awesome music.... stunning videography...as always...i enjoyed the video... thank you so much sir... may god bless you and your team... have a great weekend sir 👍👍
No modern structure in our world today impresses me even 1/10 as much as these buildings. I wish that one day we could know how these were built, but we will never know. Thank you for this video.
OMG I've never seen anything like this, it took my breath away I'm in love with this place and the music it's all so beautiful many many thanks for this it almost leaves me speechless ❤
Thanks to the modern innovation of human, what brought us to know about our ancestors skills so elegantly ! You deserve all appreciation for creation of this audiovisual walk for us. 🎉😊🎉
A small correction Baalbek existed before Roman was made and built by Phoenicians for their gods Therefore when roman conquered the land they added a bit to match their history as well
Que lugar espetacular, que vídeo maravilhoso 😍 Meu amigo,essas ruínas nos mostram que o poder de um povo não é eterno,e que por algum motivo,esse poder se acaba,tem um fim! Seu trabalho é incrível, muito obrigada por nos mostrar essas imagens maravilhosas 😍 Saudações aqui do Brasil 😊🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Years ago, when I was praying a lot and having a lot of spiritual experiences, I had a dream one night where I saw myself in a very hot place surrounded by lion statues. I remember a woman in a blue veil holding up her hand and counting "one for the Father, two for the Enchantress, three for the Secret Son". Years later, I heard of Baalbek for the first time and it was exactly what I dreamt of and the three temples were those of the gods from my dream (Jupiter, Venus, Bacchus). No explanation for it. Maybe I'd watched some TV show or something as a child and remembered it in my dream later but it felt different and very, very intense. No Phoenician/Lebanese blood that I know of either, though I've always felt a connection with these people. Praying for them.
when you see these enormous buildings constructed 2000 years ago without any cranes, you wonder if we made any progress. A 50 year old school had to be demolished a few years ago because it was in such a bad shape.
Good accompanying music, it reminds you that once upon a time the place was new and people lived there. If only we had a better time machine, but for now this video will have to do! It also amazes me how humans built these massive structures through time to have some permanence while human life itself is so fleeting and brief. On a positive note for two thousand years despite many wars and groups of people moving in and out of the region they're still standing only withered by time, earthquakes and the weather. And if you have faith in humanity they will likely be there in two thousand years.
Wspaniałe są. Budzą respekt i podziw. Jakie uczucia musiało to miejsce wywoływać w czasach swojej świetności?🤔 Ciekawy film, działa na wyobraźnię. Dziękuję 🌷
I always find incredibly amazing how the Romans were able to design, build and maintain their infrastructure, from roads, to aqueducts, cisterns, buildings, grand arenas, communal bathhouses, to statues and frescoes They also had a government from the emperor, to senators, to governors to tribunes and down through their modern military who effectively concord so much land and spread their empire throughout the world. Then the Romans were suddenly gone, and the world was basically thrown back into the dark ages, and were forced to build houses, halls and military forts from with tree trunks and branches, rocks, mud, straw and dirt because they had little to no knowledge of Roman construction. How can that be? What happened from one generation to the next where so much building knowledge was lost?
As another poster replied here, the “technical knowledge” wasn’t necessarily always lost as the incredible infrastructure required to manufacture all the various components needed, and all the disparate engineers and planners who needed technical schools and vocational universities in cities to learn the intricacies were broken down as civilization fractured into smaller in-fighting city states. Regional powers like the ‘Venetian Republic’ or ‘Genova’ at their height no where near reached the dizzying technical heights of the ancient _Pax_ _Romana_ . We in the modern world, just like the ancient Roman Empire are only able to build massive interstate systems because our ‘empire’ has progressed to the point where all the little pieces needed evolved in a complex modern civilization. HOWEVER, you’re 100% not wrong in that some knowledge absolutely was lost! ‘ _Roman_ _Concrete_ ’ which was able to build the beautiful engineering marvel’s like Roman aqueducts and viaducts, the Pantheon’s dome and the Colosseum had a special mixture with ingredients that was unable to be mined, brought in through elaborate global trade networks, and aggregated in just the right amounts at just the right temperatures in their respective facilities, that the specifics to how that concrete was made, became lost for many centuries. I oddly enough had to read a book back in college for a civil engineer course titled “The Big Roads” by Earl Swift detailing how the U.S. pioneered modern road networks in the 20th century for the automobile and it literally took an emigrant from the U.K named Joseph Aspdin in the 19th century reverse-engineering Roman concrete for DECADES to figure out how to make something similar which he called “Portland Concrete”. Portland Concrete’s old abandoned mining and manufacturing locations are all over the PNW, which is kind of a testament to how incredibly practical the rediscovery of ancient Roman concrete was for automobile traffic. Prior to that discovery, roads here in the U.S. were being constructed in many different types of compacted gravel and experimental asphalt’s based on available materials that could be mined locally to each road. It was a real mess and the roads would fall into disrepair within months of truck traffic. For all our shortcomings in modern roadway construction, we really have come so far in our ability to pave a nation from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Also fun fact: during the first 400 years of the ‘Freemasons’, they were essentially a trade guild “protecting” the secrets of the craft for job security. The more people could construct the stone buildings of 13th & 14th Europe, the lower the price their specialized labor could fetch on the open market, hence the original “secret nature” of that particular union (guild). So even in cases where old techniques were preserved, the transmission of the exact methods were still restricted. This is still done today in multinational corporations who purchase in bulk very old patents of extremely capable technology, then bury them to mitigate competition to their profit drivers.
You should keep reading. History is wonderful and answers most of your questions. Many parts of Roman construction carried on and were surpassed later.
Very easy to answer that question about what happened to the Romans , German invasions , look at the carnage murder and destruction wherever they conquered in WW2 , at this stage in their history they were actually civilised , they are very fortunate that one of their WW2 conquerors were the Anglo World or they would have been exterminated off the face of the earth like they intended to do to all other people's under their Jackboot .
Good morning Milosh I am blown away by the views of this place 😮 but also by the quality of your filming and editing which are both top notch 👌 When I look at all these ruins and think of how all these were built I am amazed …I also wonder what it will be in 2000 years from now when the people will look at the construction of our days …will they be amazed as much as we are now looking at these ? Thanks for sharing so well these beautiful places 😉👍 I wish you a lot of success in 2023 my friends 👩❤️👨and a wonderful weekend Hélène & Serge 👩❤️👨🌈🇨🇦
That's not a Roman ruin the jnfo is faulty that a Phoenician, it was built for their gods Yet when Roman conquered the land they named it for them And that's only a small portion of what we have in Lebnaon But media is way busy showing fake news ( destruction not safe blabla )
Единственное что порождает как все монументы сохранились в жарком континенте и руины сохранили свои орнаменты...и поражает население живущее рядом...это героизм!!! Спасибо МИЛОШ озвучка показывает неминуемость бытия!!!👍👍👍👍👍
Жаркий климат без перепада температур - нормально Когда влажность и перепад температур гораздо хуже Здесь только если песчаные бури , но что то говорит , что или они редки или не сильны
Lebanon has a Mediterranean-type climate characterized by hot and dry summers (June to September) and cool and rainy winters (December to mid-March), with an average annual temperature of 15˚C.
Судя по заснеженным вершинам гор, на фоне которых происходит съёмка, а также хвойной растительности, то зимой там довольно прохладно. На некоторых кадрах 6:52 - как Греция на фоне швейцарских гор 🙂 Касательно ливанцев Вы совершенно правы - удивительный народ с тяжелой судьбой и героической историей.
Bože to je nádhera. Egypt, Řecko, Řím jsou mé velké srdcové záležitosti.. úplně při sledování videa a poslechu té silně relaxační hudby jsem si představovala,jak tato místa musela být krásná v minulosti, co tam asi lidé dělali?na co mysleli. Video ve mně vyvolalo obrovský klid .. děkuji za krásné video
Baalbek is a very important site and fortunately it has not been trashed by groups like IS. I know that Lebanon is in financial trouble at the moment but it has many important sites that must be preserved. Thanks for doing this video, a really good look at the site, even down to the "Pregnant Woman" stone block. Compliments as usual for excellent work. 👀👍
A group of robust ruins that can remind you of the past even after a daunting amount of time, and they are beautiful. I am delighted to be able to join you on another wonderful video journey this year. Take care of your health❣✨
What you just said explains why the longer I stared my emotions began stirring, feeling sadness the the past is over, trying to imagine how beautiful this location must have been so long ago..then feeling fearful that one day we will also be gone 😢
@@mariecolette170Marie, you will be gone and likely all the buildings you lived in, but those Roman ruins will still be there. Meanwhile...Carpe Diem!
Beautiful site. The gorgeous ruins against the backdrop of that lovely mountain range is a sight to behold! I hope I'll get the chance to go there once myself. I did notice that several of the ruins had been defaced with graffitti, such as the column at 4:38, but hopefully since it's a world heritage site it will be prevented from happening again. Thank you for the video!
@@doctorb4896 What an odd comment to paste over and over... it was a Levantine city, for sure, but the ruins that are a World Heritage Site, were in fact built by the Romans.
Incredible place! In the past people were more intelligent than now... I'm sure about that...this magnificent place showed us the truth ...! Today people don't like working hard anymore.
Not just the location of your videos are amazing selection of music is mesmerizing especially..... Petra jordan......... Nature clock all time fav video and music....... Your content is next level ..... Keep it up....
This is awesome! No pseudo-intellectual blabbing about how he "knows" it was built! Left to our own imaginations!! Thank-You for this video and the background music as well!
I visited Balbeck in 1991,just after the ceasefire,we were welcomed with open arms,what a country,love it,Balbeck was magnificent,the hospitality even better….thank you so much to Mohammed and family,luckily my friend was fluent in French,so we could chat about everything. ❤️ 🇱🇧
Sometimes life presents humans with some things that are so aesthetically beautiful that they defy words. This video was such a case. I am truly thankful to you for making this.
Thank you for taking me there...
A stunning site, was a real privilege to visit Baalbek in October.
Que sorte ter podido ir ao Líbano e ter filmado estas ruínas maravilhosas. Obrigada 🧡
Incredible ruins. It's amaazing. Thank you for sharing.
Beautiful video, the music is perfect too, 10/10.
Super amazing place. Thank you for sharing.
Omg just blown me Away again your so good stunning music
Match's the storms surge in the night done a short on it Thks 🤗🇬🇧
Krásné poznávací video , úžasné záběry včetně přibližujících detailů , citlivě promyšlené , vše ladí , navazuje , stále nový a nový pohled .....divák se ani vteřinu neodvrátí protože ví , že by o něco přišel , skvělá všechna vaše videa ...👏👍👍♥️ Díky za ně ! 💐🙂
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
Excellent, thanks for the hard work
The beauty about this place always going to be mysterious ❤️🇱🇧
Wow. I'm blown away. I never knew all of that existed. How in the world did they build that? That's what I said during the entire video. The build is astonishing.
@@doctorb4896 Great info.
This was built before Roman
Scientific said this can't be done by regular humans
So they suggested that this confirmed that Geants existed
read graham hancock ;-)
It wasn't built by humans. It was built by previous civilization. How they built it - they had advanced knowledge and technology.
@@28Justchecking Exactly. The so-called roman period of human civilization was about one and a half thousand years BC up to christ. While these buildings where built before the flood more than 10,000 years ago or right after the flood.
Wow the mastery of presentation.. BRAVO Brother
Amazing place! Thank you.
Navštíviť Libanon, je veľký
zážitok, ktorý má bohatú históriu a úžasné pamiatky UNESCO.
Baalbec - pamiatky z rímskeho impéria,
Bejrut, Byblos ,Tripolis,
Doporučujem, je to
nádhera a úžasné zážitky.
SLOVAKIA ♥️🇸🇰
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
Thank you....
Thank you for a visit back to Baalbek, Lebannon.
Quel nombre insensé de colonnes avec leurs magnifiques chapiteaux devait il y avoir dans cette très belle ville. Les tailleurs de pierres étaient pleins de courage pour élever de si beaux ouvrages. Comme d’habitude, splendide vidéo.
Absolutely amazing!!
Really really it's an amazing video... you took me to an another word through your video ... awesome music.... stunning videography...as always...i enjoyed the video... thank you so much sir... may god bless you and your team... have a great weekend sir 👍👍
❤ Thank you very much 😊 Biutiful 😊
Astonishing. Thankyou
OUTSTANDING video and historical significance. Thanks again for your service!
God bless you! 🙏😎
Wow! It's a mesmerizing video and the music matches this majestic site! Thanks for sharing😍
No modern structure in our world today impresses me even 1/10 as much as these buildings. I wish that one day we could know how these were built, but we will never know. Thank you for this video.
I thought I saw everything after Pompeii, but this is amazing.
Nice work Milosh, your dedication and quality editing skills deserve a shoutout. ... Kudos to you.
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
OMG I've never seen anything like this, it took my breath away I'm in love with this place and the music it's all so beautiful many many thanks for this it almost leaves me speechless ❤
Wonderful W🌍rld ✨
Oh my lovely planet!! Realy amazing😍
Thanks to the modern innovation of human, what brought us to know about our ancestors skills
so elegantly ! You deserve all appreciation for creation of this audiovisual walk for us. 🎉😊🎉
Interesting History of this Place . Thank you Milosh . Have a wonderful time 🤗
Am fost aici! Am văzut! Mi a plăcut mult!
❤️
Nemaipomenit, fantastic...
Absolutely unbelievable! I honestly believe this site is better than any I have seen. The quality of the video brings it to life. Fantastic!
Amazing 😍
Wow, that’s incredible. I am in awe.
Amazing. Hope to visit some peaceful day
И видео,и музыка,-просто супер!!! Благодарю,Милош!!Очень воздушно,красиво,и талантливо!! Само место-шедевр зодчества!!..Хочу туда!!..👍👍😀😘🌸🎄🌸🎄🌸🌷❄️🌷❄️🌷❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Que beleza de ruínas, mostram bem a natureza da arquitetura original.
Encantam-me as ruínas pois temos a liberdade de imaginar como seriam. 🧡
A small correction Baalbek existed before Roman was made and built by Phoenicians for their gods
Therefore when roman conquered the land they added a bit to match their history as well
This is ancient city existed before Romans. Existed before human existence. It was made by gold explorers.
breathtaking! much appreciated brother.
Nice 👍
Wow ♥
I've been there and suggest going. Really incredible place, same Beirut and Byblos
Great video
Congratulations
Rio-Brazil
BEAUTIFUL❤
Stunning
J'ai adoré cet endroit, massif, vaste, imposant et délicat à la fois
OMG.
It is huge. Rome was indeed great in engineering.
Same structure in India also u can see❤❤❤ lovely nice work
Amazing
Que lugar espetacular, que vídeo maravilhoso 😍
Meu amigo,essas ruínas nos mostram que o poder de um povo não é eterno,e que por algum motivo,esse poder se acaba,tem um fim!
Seu trabalho é incrível, muito obrigada por nos mostrar essas imagens maravilhosas 😍
Saudações aqui do Brasil 😊🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
The detail is mind blowing ! The humans walking around look like ants. Phenomenal!!
Years ago, when I was praying a lot and having a lot of spiritual experiences, I had a dream one night where I saw myself in a very hot place surrounded by lion statues. I remember a woman in a blue veil holding up her hand and counting "one for the Father, two for the Enchantress, three for the Secret Son". Years later, I heard of Baalbek for the first time and it was exactly what I dreamt of and the three temples were those of the gods from my dream (Jupiter, Venus, Bacchus). No explanation for it. Maybe I'd watched some TV show or something as a child and remembered it in my dream later but it felt different and very, very intense. No Phoenician/Lebanese blood that I know of either, though I've always felt a connection with these people. Praying for them.
This are no Roman! They found it… Romans were smart, they use a lots of little bricks instead of moving 2Tons rock around… 😅
Beautiful Lebanon ❤
when you see these enormous buildings constructed 2000 years ago without any cranes, you wonder if we made any progress. A 50 year old school had to be demolished a few years ago because it was in such a bad shape.
Am vizionat 👌🤝🎩🌐👍
Good accompanying music, it reminds you that once upon a time the place was new and people lived there. If only we had a better time machine, but for now this video will have to do! It also amazes me how humans built these massive structures through time to have some permanence while human life itself is so fleeting and brief. On a positive note for two thousand years despite many wars and groups of people moving in and out of the region they're still standing only withered by time, earthquakes and the weather. And if you have faith in humanity they will likely be there in two thousand years.
Wspaniałe są. Budzą respekt i podziw.
Jakie uczucia musiało to miejsce wywoływać w czasach swojej świetności?🤔
Ciekawy film, działa na wyobraźnię.
Dziękuję 🌷
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
I always find incredibly amazing how the Romans were able to design, build and maintain their infrastructure, from roads, to aqueducts, cisterns, buildings, grand arenas, communal bathhouses, to statues and frescoes They also had a government from the emperor, to senators, to governors to tribunes and down through their modern military who effectively concord so much land and spread their empire throughout the world. Then the Romans were suddenly gone, and the world was basically thrown back into the dark ages, and were forced to build houses, halls and military forts from with tree trunks and branches, rocks, mud, straw and dirt because they had little to no knowledge of Roman construction. How can that be? What happened from one generation to the next where so much building knowledge was lost?
They didn't disappear. The Eastern Roman empire or what we now call Byzantium continued until the 1200s.
We are going to find out when our civilization collapses.
As another poster replied here, the “technical knowledge” wasn’t necessarily always lost as the incredible infrastructure required to manufacture all the various components needed, and all the disparate engineers and planners who needed technical schools and vocational universities in cities to learn the intricacies were broken down as civilization fractured into smaller in-fighting city states. Regional powers like the ‘Venetian Republic’ or ‘Genova’ at their height no where near reached the dizzying technical heights of the ancient _Pax_ _Romana_ . We in the modern world, just like the ancient Roman Empire are only able to build massive interstate systems because our ‘empire’ has progressed to the point where all the little pieces needed evolved in a complex modern civilization.
HOWEVER, you’re 100% not wrong in that some knowledge absolutely was lost! ‘ _Roman_ _Concrete_ ’ which was able to build the beautiful engineering marvel’s like Roman aqueducts and viaducts, the Pantheon’s dome and the Colosseum had a special mixture with ingredients that was unable to be mined, brought in through elaborate global trade networks, and aggregated in just the right amounts at just the right temperatures in their respective facilities, that the specifics to how that concrete was made, became lost for many centuries. I oddly enough had to read a book back in college for a civil engineer course titled “The Big Roads” by Earl Swift detailing how the U.S. pioneered modern road networks in the 20th century for the automobile and it literally took an emigrant from the U.K named Joseph Aspdin in the 19th century reverse-engineering Roman concrete for DECADES to figure out how to make something similar which he called “Portland Concrete”. Portland Concrete’s old abandoned mining and manufacturing locations are all over the PNW, which is kind of a testament to how incredibly practical the rediscovery of ancient Roman concrete was for automobile traffic. Prior to that discovery, roads here in the U.S. were being constructed in many different types of compacted gravel and experimental asphalt’s based on available materials that could be mined locally to each road. It was a real mess and the roads would fall into disrepair within months of truck traffic. For all our shortcomings in modern roadway construction, we really have come so far in our ability to pave a nation from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
Also fun fact: during the first 400 years of the ‘Freemasons’, they were essentially a trade guild “protecting” the secrets of the craft for job security. The more people could construct the stone buildings of 13th & 14th Europe, the lower the price their specialized labor could fetch on the open market, hence the original “secret nature” of that particular union (guild). So even in cases where old techniques were preserved, the transmission of the exact methods were still restricted. This is still done today in multinational corporations who purchase in bulk very old patents of extremely capable technology, then bury them to mitigate competition to their profit drivers.
You should keep reading. History is wonderful and answers most of your questions. Many parts of Roman construction carried on and were surpassed later.
Very easy to answer that question about what happened to the Romans , German invasions , look at the carnage murder and destruction wherever they conquered in WW2 , at this stage in their history they were actually civilised , they are very fortunate that one of their WW2 conquerors were the Anglo World or they would have been exterminated off the face of the earth like they intended to do to all other people's under their Jackboot .
Part of the amazing architectural heritage strewn all over the Levant.
I like ancient old wonderful
My hometown :)
Jeden z cudów, antycznego świata, wspaniały, ponadczasowy symbol dokonań cywilizacji greko- romanskiej.
Good morning Milosh
I am blown away by the views of this place 😮 but also by the quality of your filming and editing which are both top notch 👌 When I look at all these ruins and think of how all these were built I am amazed …I also wonder what it will be in 2000 years from now when the people will look at the construction of our days …will they be amazed as much as we are now looking at these ? Thanks for sharing so well these beautiful places 😉👍
I wish you a lot of success in 2023 my friends 👩❤️👨and a wonderful weekend
Hélène & Serge 👩❤️👨🌈🇨🇦
NOTHING we make now will last 2000 years.
@@scottmerrow1488 I wonder 🥴
I never though that Lebanon has this ruins Roman Empire. It's so incredible to see this ancient site.
That's not a Roman ruin the jnfo is faulty that a Phoenician, it was built for their gods
Yet when Roman conquered the land they named it for them
And that's only a small portion of what we have in Lebnaon
But media is way busy showing fake news ( destruction not safe blabla )
Boa tarde, que lugar espetacular adorei, e com essa música ficou prefeito, lindo e relaxante, um excelente final de semana para vc.
Единственное что порождает как все монументы сохранились в жарком континенте и руины сохранили свои орнаменты...и поражает население живущее рядом...это героизм!!! Спасибо МИЛОШ озвучка показывает неминуемость бытия!!!👍👍👍👍👍
Жаркий климат без перепада температур - нормально
Когда влажность и перепад температур гораздо хуже
Здесь только если песчаные бури , но что то говорит , что или они редки или не сильны
Lebanon has a Mediterranean-type climate characterized by hot and dry summers (June to September) and cool and rainy winters (December to mid-March), with an average annual temperature of 15˚C.
Судя по заснеженным вершинам гор, на фоне которых происходит съёмка, а также хвойной растительности, то зимой там довольно прохладно. На некоторых кадрах 6:52 - как Греция на фоне швейцарских гор 🙂
Касательно ливанцев Вы совершенно правы - удивительный народ с тяжелой судьбой и героической историей.
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
O olhar do fotógrafo
Revelando a riqueza de detalhes de uma arquitetura genial
Amazing 😊
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
Beautiful video, love to watch this old ancient ruins, amazing. Thank-you very much.
Nice :)
Bože to je nádhera. Egypt, Řecko, Řím jsou mé velké srdcové záležitosti.. úplně při sledování videa a poslechu té silně relaxační hudby jsem si představovala,jak tato místa musela být krásná v minulosti, co tam asi lidé dělali?na co mysleli. Video ve mně vyvolalo obrovský klid .. děkuji za krásné video
Geht mir auch so
What an intriguing place, very impressive ruins. I'm happy you went there.
O Panteão é colossal!
Спасибо❤великолепный обзор🤩
Всегда жду Ваши видео.
4:11 огромное спасибо❤
9:23 ❤
9:45❤
@@doctorb4896 Thanks . I know you're right.
Your music choices are as breathtaking as the videos themselves
Baalbek is a very important site and fortunately it has not been trashed by groups like IS. I know that Lebanon is in financial trouble at the moment but it has many important sites that must be preserved. Thanks for doing this video, a really good look at the site, even down to the "Pregnant Woman" stone block. Compliments as usual for excellent work. 👀👍
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WONDERFUL !!!!! WONDERFUL!!!!!!! CONGRATULATIONS!!!!!!!!
A group of robust ruins that can remind you of the past even after a daunting amount of time, and they are beautiful. I am delighted to be able to join you on another wonderful video journey this year. Take care of your health❣✨
What you just said explains why the longer I stared my emotions began stirring, feeling sadness the the past is over, trying to imagine how beautiful this location must have been so long ago..then feeling fearful that one day we will also be gone 😢
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
@@mariecolette170Marie, you will be gone and likely all the buildings you lived in, but those Roman ruins will still be there. Meanwhile...Carpe Diem!
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Go blue 💙
Way more Awesome than any Roman ruins in Rome. Absolutely Brilliant Spellbinding Videography by One and Only Amazing Milosh.
I need to buy a big TV. My mobile not enough..😒
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Thanks my friend for your nice upload, it's very beautiful and professional. Greetings from Leen and have a great weekend. 👍 👍 👍
Beautiful site. The gorgeous ruins against the backdrop of that lovely mountain range is a sight to behold! I hope I'll get the chance to go there once myself. I did notice that several of the ruins had been defaced with graffitti, such as the column at 4:38, but hopefully since it's a world heritage site it will be prevented from happening again. Thank you for the video!
@@doctorb4896 What an odd comment to paste over and over... it was a Levantine city, for sure, but the ruins that are a World Heritage Site, were in fact built by the Romans.
Incredible place! In the past people were more intelligent than now... I'm sure about that...this magnificent place showed us the truth ...! Today people don't like working hard anymore.
Not just the location of your videos are amazing selection of music is mesmerizing especially..... Petra jordan......... Nature clock all time fav video and music....... Your content is next level ..... Keep it up....
Бях в Баалбек през октомври. Впечатляващо, грандиозно и много красиво. Благодаря за професионалното видео. 😄🍀
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
Monumentales y espectaculares las ruinas de Baalbek, increíbles construcciones, infinitas gracias.
Its not roman, its levantine Phoenician antiquities and romans used it for a short time and were expelled.
Why can't we build beautiful cities like this one, today? No slaves?
Everything will soon come to an end! Lord Jesus Christ is coming soon 🙏🏼❤️🕊Repent, believe in the Gospel, Be Born Again
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You capture the grandeur and magnificence of these massive sites so well. Thank you, I might never be able to see it in person.
What an amazing place! How did they ever construct such massive strutures? Would have been a beautiful place back in 1st and 3rd century.
thank you so much for these amazing videos❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
amazing ........! Thanks a lot 👍 brother wonderful world .......!👏👏👏👏👌👍👌👌🙏🙂