Uncovering Secrets of Mesopotamian Medicine | Dr. Irving Finkel

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  • Опубліковано 22 кві 2023
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 324

  • @jdstar6352
    @jdstar6352 Рік тому +222

    In Japan they have craftspeople designated as "national treasures." Surely Irving Finkel deserves no less.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +11

      So true! He is such a treasure! ❤

    • @WindTurbineSyndrome
      @WindTurbineSyndrome Рік тому +6

      how come he hasnt' got a series of letters after his name. Maybe King Charles will give him an OBE?

    • @batzzz2044
      @batzzz2044 Рік тому

      Lmao why? Just regurgitated lies like every schlomo

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +16

      @@WindTurbineSyndrome Maybe we should initiate a letter-writing campaign!

    • @erbalumkan369
      @erbalumkan369 Рік тому +1

      If he were Japanese.

  • @ArieSchwartz
    @ArieSchwartz 10 місяців тому +19

    You know it's going to be good when the opening line is, "Hello, my name is Irving Finkel."

  • @anna_in_aotearoa3166
    @anna_in_aotearoa3166 Рік тому +192

    The medical history is fascinating but honestly as a former librarian, I was most impressed by the HIGHLY developed cataloging systems of the royal librarians!! Very carefully-thought-out metadata levels both for finding things easily in a huge collection & keeping track of which documents were related to each other. Bravo! Would dearly love to see a presentation one day focusing specifically on the development of these systems & on who was doing the cataloguing & other library work...?

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +46

      Oh, that's an interesting thought! Thank you!

    • @markfisher5119
      @markfisher5119 Рік тому +2

      It's too bad that the actual content was anything but actual medicine. It worked great if the patient was going to get better anyway. The major exception is probably broken bones. They were pretty good with fractures, although all of their knowledge was empirical.

    • @terryrueckert9540
      @terryrueckert9540 Рік тому +5

      @@markfisher5119 Can you explain why you do not think it is actual medicine? This statement seems to directly oppose the lecturers’ perspective.

    • @koltoncrane3099
      @koltoncrane3099 Рік тому

      Mark
      Medicine today is pushed to promote big pharma monopolies, high prices and higher taxes. Pills are more lucrative then cheaper imported drugs that’s why they made em illegal. But seriously some Native American illegal medicine is more effective then so called western medicine in some cases like depression. Look it up

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +11

      It just occurs...wonder how the Mesopotamian systems might have differed from Egyptian systems of creating order AND wonder if any research has taken place in either system? One still mourns the demise of the Great Library of Alexandria

  • @andrewlast1535
    @andrewlast1535 Рік тому +17

    I can’t tell you how happy I am to know there are real dudes like this and it isn’t just a movie trope. Lol

  • @ClearlyPixelated
    @ClearlyPixelated Рік тому +23

    Medicine, ancient history, and Dr Finkel?! UA-cam, you know my heart!!

  • @aariley2
    @aariley2 Рік тому +105

    Dr. Finkel is an absolute riot! Love 'em! Wish he had taught at my University!

  • @hannahbrown2728
    @hannahbrown2728 Рік тому +69

    My favorite thing abour Dr. Finkel, beyond the obvious, such as his infectious enthusiasm and lovingly hilarious form of lecturing; is that he looks like he has to be careful about reading out anything in Sumerian, Akkadian, etc. for fear that his power will be too great and he will cast an incredibly dangerous spell. Many of my favorite lecturers just straight up look like wizards.
    Edit: Also his willingness to muse about things that are so utterly human. Theres a non zero chance many professionals of whatever field in many a country in antiquity got pestered by scholar tourists, and that one of them fed the person transcribing the info absolute horseshit.

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +7

      THIS!!! It's the quality that we love best about him! One never knows exactly what little tidbit will pique his interest, causing a fascinatingly unexpected riff.

  • @koksalceylan9032
    @koksalceylan9032 Рік тому +37

    Dr. Finkel is a treasure,wish him long life,good health 😊

  • @gregmunro1137
    @gregmunro1137 Рік тому +33

    Dr. Finkle educates and provides humour in such a charming manner. He could make the phone book sound interesting

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +4

      You are so right! Indeed he could! ❤

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +3

      Hmmmmm...now there is a fascinating idea! Interestingly, in our lifetime, a phonebook has gone extinct. Such a sad state of affairs because it allowed one to be completely nosey and peer into the lives of others. It also has been a rich source of information for those studying genealogy.

  • @StanJan
    @StanJan Рік тому +5

    Dr. Irving ! “THE” Curator !

  • @charleshuguley9323
    @charleshuguley9323 Рік тому +34

    Wonderful! Another presentation by Dr. Finkle!

  • @SolidRollin
    @SolidRollin Рік тому +13

    I'm a fanatic for Finkel!

    • @timbob1145
      @timbob1145 Рік тому

      Definitely preferred to that Einhorn.

  • @MaggieMm10
    @MaggieMm10 Рік тому +18

    Nooo I missed it! Thanks so much Dr. Finkel and Archaeology Now. Love from Australia 💜

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +2

      Never fear, a recording will be released here. However, the treat for the live audience is the opportunity to ask questions...stay tuned or log on to our website at archaeologynow.org to stay up to date on his upcoming events!
      We will also post updates on our Community Section of our channel.

  • @roryryan2933
    @roryryan2933 Рік тому +7

    What a scholar and a gentleman!

  • @cattymajiv
    @cattymajiv Рік тому +21

    Not only is Irving extremely knowledgeable but he's also lots of fun! He's 1 of a kind, a total gem! I'm very easily bored, but I could listen to his lectures all day. I will never get enough! ❣❤💜💙💕

  • @paulapridy6804
    @paulapridy6804 Рік тому +4

    Irving Finkel is a living treasure. Nuff said.

  • @authormichellefranklin
    @authormichellefranklin Рік тому +4

    Dr Finkel is the best!

  • @husambotros3958
    @husambotros3958 Рік тому +18

    Assyrians were the specialist in this field as i believe.. thank you Archaeology now and Dr. Irving. Great video and information.

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +3

      Thank you so much

    • @RigepFroggit
      @RigepFroggit Рік тому +3

      Would make sense, like the Romans they were extremely militaristic and the health of their armies would have been very important to their culture.

  • @string-bag
    @string-bag Рік тому +4

    Dr. Finkel is a treasure.

  • @merlapittman5034
    @merlapittman5034 Рік тому +21

    This man is an absolute marvel! I love his lectures!

  • @domfel2123
    @domfel2123 Рік тому +4

    I love your lectures Irving.

  • @johnrohde5510
    @johnrohde5510 Рік тому +7

    With dynastic marriages between Egypt, Syria and Mesopotamia it's perhaps likely that brides would bring doctors or prescriptions with them to their new home.

  • @anamariaclaragrama-asztalo5562

    Dr. Finkel should voice and present everything in the World. Beautiful presentation.

  • @user-nf4lf4sf9s
    @user-nf4lf4sf9s 8 місяців тому +1

    Mr Irwin Finkel is truly a master of rhetoric and teaching in the most marvelous way. No chance that someone got tired to listen to his learning and speech.

    • @beamazed1162
      @beamazed1162 8 місяців тому

      1. There are not a large number of bronzes unearthed in Egypt. The latest archeology proves that they were built by construction workers, not slaves. Slaves can eat high-quality beef and be buried near the pyramids. 2. There is no history of bronze ware in Europe. Only a very small amount of bronze is picked up from the water or bought from the antique market. In this way, carbon 14 cannot be measured (compare Sanxingdui in China to see what bronzes can be carbon 14 tested) 3. There is no bronze in Europe. Astronomical calendar (China has many observatory sites, and there are no such sites in Europe. It takes hundreds or thousands of years of continuous observation, calculation, and accumulation to have a calendar) 4. Europe does not have unified weights and measures. China has unified weights and measures for more than 2,000 years. Many measuring instruments have been unearthed in China. There is no unified weights and measures in Europe, so where can advanced arithmetic come from? 5. There is no writing in Europe that can record history. Language expressions are different in different places and in each period. Only China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam in the world have writing, speaking and recording history. It is a separate mode. The writing mode has not changed for thousands of years to record history. Can anyone overturn the above points? If it cannot be overturned, then ancient Babylon (has anyone obtained a cuneiform dictionary and translated the clay tablets?), ancient Egypt, and ancient Greece are all fake. Ancient Rome (in the north of Arabia), which China called Fulinguo (Purum), was not Rome. It had a certain degree of civilization, but its technology was also considered to be ordinary and crude. Europe renamed this to the Roman Empire.. If you look at the technology of China's Song Dynasty and the Sanxingdui ruins, you will know the reason. Note that the first steam engine-driven car was also in China, but it is a pity that the Ming Dynasty, the creator of civilization, had the technology stolen by the barbarian Manchus and European missionaries, and the real history was edited. 6. If the Babylonian civilization was as great as described in the textbook, why was the writing still written on clay tablets? Why not use noble sheepskin? 7. There is no such grammatical dictionary for cuneiform writing that can translate these clay tablets into modern writing for ordinary people. Without such a dictionary, they can make fakes at will.
      If there are 100 chariot and horse remains excavated on the earth, then 99 are in China. If there are 1,000 bronze artifacts unearthed on earth, 999 are in China. This is an estimate, and the real ratio is definitely higher. Apart from China, there is no other bronze civilization. This should become a public opinion in the historians
      Everything must be carbon-14 tested and corroborated by multiple evidences. China’s history has been corroborated by multiple evidences
      The ancient nautical chart of ancient Egypt is marked as Babylon, which is the map of China 600 years ago(it was codified by European missionaries to 1601):
      www.loc.gov/item/2010585650/
      This is a map of Europe:commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Geographia_by_Ptolemy,_Aphricae_Tabula_III,_1540_Basel_edition_-_Maps_of_Africa_-_Robert_C._Williams_Paper_Museum_-_DSC00625.JPG
      Babylon was so civilized, so why did it write on clay tablets? And Egypt is so developed, why does it not have any steel smelting, and even bronze tools and cultural relics are very few. In China alone, Sanxingdui estimates hundreds of tons of bronzes, and there are all kinds of daily necessities. In addition, as for the calendar you mentioned, there are many observatory sites in China, and the officials who observed astronomy in ancient times have been dedicated to studying the world for more than ten generations. Everything China does is related to agriculture and life. It is not a waste of energy and no use value as you said. The Great Wall was built to protect against barbarians such as the Mongols, Turks, and Huns. Did the Pyramid of Khufu spend so much manpower for the exhibition?
      Bronze ware was first found naturally in Asia Minor. But it is made of natural copper, while China discovered smelted copper pipes 6,700 years ago
      ,The early bronze objects discovered in Europe and the United States were very small, while the early bronze objects in China were very large. If ancient bronze ware weighed 100kg, then Europe accounted for 0.001kg, and China accounted for 99.999kg

  • @marijntaal1531
    @marijntaal1531 Рік тому +6

    A new lecture by Dr. Irving Finkel! A blessing from the lord!

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому

      Stay ready - the day approacheth! Be in your seat with beverage at hand on Sunday, June 11 at 3pm CDT for the next installment!

  • @lindasue8719
    @lindasue8719 Рік тому +3

    And on an unrelated note... when I was married, my father requested the service be held in a local Ukrainian Greek Orthodox Church in canada. The priest had such a thick accent, alas, that he was mostly not understandable and people asked me after the service what language he was speaking. For myself I was so stressed out I don't remember much and couldn't make out anything he said. The only thing I do remember is that he exclaimed at some point, "Mesopotamia!"
    And how it was relevant, I have no idea lol

  • @yvonnethompson5568
    @yvonnethompson5568 Рік тому +4

    absolutely marvelous Dr. Finkle

  • @rainbowdancer2862
    @rainbowdancer2862 Рік тому +8

    Irving Finkel transports us to Ancient Mesopotamia to 'bathe' in true cuneiform knowledge... as per the library of King Ashurbanipal [a scribe who learnt wisdom & the value of keeping records & became one of most significant Kings in History] Dr Finkel follows in the footsteps of George Smith, (1840-1876) British Museum Assyriologist, who pieced together cuneiform script from clay tablets in the BM archive to reveal 'The Flood Story' and the Epic of Gigamesh. Great talk, Dr Finkel, you & the BM team open our minds to where civilisation began. More of the same, please!🙂🙂✳✳

    • @rainbowdancer2862
      @rainbowdancer2862 Рік тому +4

      🙂Thank you, thank you, Archeology Now... for opening the 'Gates of knowledge' to so many & giving a zoom-podium to Ambassadors of the Ancients such as Dr Irving Finkel. As someone who's seen Irving Finkel's dynamic lectures first-hand @British Museum!!; it's obvious the thirst for Finkelesque ancient wisdom & enlightenment is truly 'hitting home' from the great viewing figures. Well Done, Archeology Now. Keep up the good work. ✳✳

    • @Northcountry1926
      @Northcountry1926 Рік тому

      @@rainbowdancer2862🎯🎯🎯

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +1

      @@rainbowdancer2862 So happy to be here for you and to offer presentations that showcase the wonders of humanity. THANK YOU for your support.

  • @nicoleorton5299
    @nicoleorton5299 Рік тому +3

    Gosh, we’re all so much better off having heard this.Thanks

  • @Green.Country.Agroforestry
    @Green.Country.Agroforestry Рік тому +15

    When Urushiol is applied to a surface lesion that is resistant to normal healing, it provokes an immune response in the immediate area .. leading the body's immune system to mount a response against the offensive pathogen(s). Before going to the extreme measure of rubbing poison ivy, oak, or sumac on an open wound, first try the efficacy of the following, preferably in combinations of two or more: Thyme, Oregano, Bee Balm or horsemint for thymol, Wintergreen for methyl salicylate, Eucalyptol from Eucalyptus or gum trees, or Menthol from peppermint and its relatives.

    • @pointsnorth3924
      @pointsnorth3924 Рік тому +4

      Culpepper recommends Borage for ringworm. For cuts I use Weleda Hypercal Salve for Painful Cuts. It contains Calendula which repairs the collagen between cells and Hypericum perforatum, the oil of which was used by crusaders to heal their wounds and which is reputed to be effective against tetanus. I have written down your recommendations. I am planning to make herbal salves from my own plants.

    • @janicejames3005
      @janicejames3005 Рік тому

      Lovely. Thanks to you both. I live in the Caribbean and we have used herbs for healing for generations. Over the past 60 years Western medicine has debunked everything that we do calling it bush medicine with no basis in science. Very demoralizing for us older folk.

    • @Green.Country.Agroforestry
      @Green.Country.Agroforestry Рік тому +2

      @@pointsnorth3924 I grow quite a lot of borage .. I'll keep that in mind, if the need to treat ringworm arises! We are now cultivating broad leaf plantain, hopefully we will be able to offer it through the online nursery in a year or two .. it is EXCELLENT for accelerating healing.
      I recall betadine made an antiseptic ointment with a water base some time back .. I don't know if they still make it, but that preparation kept the injured skin edges hydrated so well that scarring was minimal, or none existent. Great stuff if you can't find the right herbs.

    • @annettefournier9655
      @annettefournier9655 Рік тому +5

      Thyme and oregano are marvelous. They kill bacteria and fungus! If all you have are 4 choices add peppermint which helps muscle spasms and lavender which helps nerve pain as well. Plus they do other things of course . If you are limited then these cover most bases. Except for fever. Plants are wonderful things chemically.

    • @pointsnorth3924
      @pointsnorth3924 Рік тому +2

      @@Green.Country.Agroforestry Yes, I am well aware of the power of plantain too. I have an idea about creating a medicinal herb nursery. I have lots of St John's Wort plants, the seed of which I collected locally, to begin with. They are a herb of the sun. They are antibiotic and also are prescribed for depression. There is so much medicine all around us. The knowledge of medicinal plants should be taught in school. As a forestry, you must be familiar with Pine Needle Tea. After Storm Arwen, I collected and dried Scots Pine Needles from the fallen trees. The flavour is delicate and delicious .Note the "u" I am in Scotland! You are near Broken Arrow.

  • @StandedInUtah
    @StandedInUtah Рік тому +2

    I just bought his novel The Writing in the Stone. I will start reading after I hit send! I am so excited!!

  • @greghansen38
    @greghansen38 11 місяців тому +3

    The wizard, Dr. Irving Finkel, reveals ancient wisdom.

  • @WindTurbineSyndrome
    @WindTurbineSyndrome Рік тому +9

    I so enjoy Dr. Irving Finkel's explanation and lectures on his work on ancient Babylon and Sumeria. I think we get a lot of govt and medical structure from this ancient civilization. Many similarities with how the culture structured itself seems to be in use today. Fascinating. Wish more people would watch these. Go watch his video on how he discovered the original Noah's Ark story and how he set out to build a small scale copy of the ARK which was round. I hope he has great staff he is training up behind him to keep this scholarly research going on into mid 21th century. I hope more stellae turn up that advance his knowledge. Many of these writings are in private collections.

    • @anna_in_aotearoa3166
      @anna_in_aotearoa3166 9 місяців тому

      Dr Finkel & team's reconstruction of a downscaled Sumerian ark was definitely another presentation I found fascinating & have watched several times!
      And yeah, isn't it interesting how much incidental knowledge gets accidentally folded into a culture's folktales, myths and religious stories? Whether it's information about surrounding geography or enemy peoples, available dietary items, gender or class relations, prevailing weather & available domesticated animals at the time, etc etc....
      Teasing that back out from amidst all the exercise of imagination and wishful thinking can be tricky, and when done without good scientific method can often lead to 'ancient aliens' type conspiracy thinking? 🙄 But as part of seeking data in concert with rigorous examination of all the other available evidence, I find it a really fascinating field of endeavor!

  • @graymouser1
    @graymouser1 Рік тому +5

    Wow, the character assassination of Herodotus! Savage!
    note: For anyone looking, as I was, the third of this series has not yet happened. In the age of instant gratification, I confess I find this vexing.

  • @simpleiowan3123
    @simpleiowan3123 Рік тому +8

    This man is a treasure. A real feather in the UK’s cap 👍

  • @Bildgesmythe
    @Bildgesmythe Рік тому +9

    Thank you! Love Dr Finkel.

  • @shellyharry8189
    @shellyharry8189 Рік тому +17

    what a treasure you are, Dr Finkel!

  • @annettefournier9655
    @annettefournier9655 Рік тому +2

    Absolutely adore Dr. Irving Finkel. 😂❤

  • @deejayk5939
    @deejayk5939 Рік тому +6

    This is so interesting that medical knowledge was so organized, amazing!

  • @ckotty
    @ckotty Рік тому +7

    Mesmerising lecture. Fascinating subject and sharing your wisdom, knowledge and experience is a privilege for us.
    Enough of that 😃.
    I do defend that it's perplexing how the, arguably, first human great civilization got from nothing to have encyclopedias about medicine, writings about maths, stars, education, agriculture, architecture and planning... Their writings seem to cover most sciences...
    That's what puzzles me.
    Great lecture, could listen to you for hours 👋🏽👋🏽👋🏽

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +3

      Demonstrates the capacities of the human soul to reach for the infinite and to be awed by the universe.

  • @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity
    @AndreyBogoslowskyNewYorkCity 8 місяців тому +3

    Dr. Finkel.
    In my humble opinion, you deserve a title of a professor, and certainly, most certainly to be knighted in your own domain, locally.
    I think of you as one of the greatest minds walking on 🌍.
    I wish you prosperity and health to you and to everyone you know.
    I revisit your lectures on many occasions, because I appreciate you’re not wasting my time, and every word in your lectures has a huge significance for me personally, and hopefully for my art students.
    Truly yours
    Andrey #Bogoslowsky .🦁🤴
    A.k.a. immortal king Gilgamesh
    If you ever need any help, please reach out

  • @coranova
    @coranova Рік тому +4

    What an absolute treat! ❤

  • @thegroove2000
    @thegroove2000 Рік тому +2

    Finkel is the man. Thanks.

  • @matyasbuzgo3410
    @matyasbuzgo3410 6 місяців тому +1

    For one teaching pharmacognosy and botany for non-science mayors, this clip is of immense value! Thank you so much, please never remove or break the link.

  • @lolaost9559
    @lolaost9559 Рік тому +4

    Fascinating information. Thank you to all that keep and treasure human history.

  • @lindagates9150
    @lindagates9150 Рік тому +9

    He is the god of games and their rules . Plus worshiped by those who sail in round boats and those who wish to learn more about how best to make medical tablets neat and readable 😊

  • @dowdayjing8442
    @dowdayjing8442 Рік тому +5

    If ML algorithms are going to provide useful results then we’ll need people like Dr. Finkle to cross check them. A GANs (generative adversial networks) with him giving a thumbs up or down on the result would help immensely. We need qualified professors in the loop

  • @gregkral4467
    @gregkral4467 6 місяців тому +1

    What a fascinating look into the lives and culture of the past. Fascinating, and how wonderful that these tablets have lasted this long to such a degree. And how on earth people have learned to decipher that beautiful writing, is astounding. I really must look up more of the history of that.

  • @szymonbaranowski8184
    @szymonbaranowski8184 Рік тому +2

    it may actually work, forcing higher inflammation can cause antiinflammatory reaction of body
    but if applied to chronically inflamed it can certainly kill you instead of help by shocking
    into recovery

  • @aariley2
    @aariley2 Рік тому +5

    Fascinating stuff!!!

  • @markusgorelli5278
    @markusgorelli5278 Рік тому +4

    Maybe the problem was that there were too many student doctors wandering around the place and in order to get business (or people to practice their training on) and make a name for themselves they offered their services for free in the market. And if they were able to make someone well, that person would in turn recommend them to everyone. Think about it like being in a university town with a substantial medical campus.

  • @grey8940
    @grey8940 Рік тому +2

    Damn, that guy Irving is so cool. I would love to have dinner a few times with that guy!

  • @TheMadAfrican1
    @TheMadAfrican1 Рік тому +2

    Imagine getting a terminal disease and thinking which one of your wretched family members gave it to you.

  • @MichaelKingsfordGray
    @MichaelKingsfordGray Рік тому +6

    Quite. We Australian aborigines have transmitted similar curative use of local flora for at least 65,000 years.
    (And use of vegetable poisons for stunning fish)
    Our females are true botanists.
    But only transmitted through verbal and song means.
    Our "writing" is used for mapping: both seasonal resources, and astronomy.

    • @johanneswerner1140
      @johanneswerner1140 Рік тому +1

      Interesting about the writing. I'd like to learn more about that. Writing systems (in a wider sense) are always interesting!
      In many parts of the world we have "folk remedies", though they got lost in some places.
      I think it was a video by Eugenio Monesma (spelling?) about preparing snakes to treat illness in rural Spain...

    • @MichaelKingsfordGray
      @MichaelKingsfordGray Рік тому +2

      @@johanneswerner1140 The "writing" of which I speak is comprised of dot pictures of different hues.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +1

      @@MichaelKingsfordGray It's such a shame that it is not discussed more! I am making a note of it in my list of things that I need to read more about. Thank you very much for mentioning it! I am unsure how accurate the depictions are of your people, but I have always found the art very fascinating. I think a lot of it was not meant as art, but as communication. But it is very beautiful in many ways. I will try to learn.

    • @MichaelKingsfordGray
      @MichaelKingsfordGray Рік тому +1

      @@cattymajiv Thank you for your keen interest and intent. You are correct about your perceptive distinction between Art & Messaging.
      You might wish to place at the forefront of your cogitation that the much-touted "art" is but a bland trivialization of the culture. "Easy" to digest for the uninitiated. But it is Science that my ancestors concocted in order to survive, in one of the harshest environments, to be the oldest human civilization on the planet.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv Рік тому +1

      @@MichaelKingsfordGray Thank you very much for your reply. It was very interesting. I did sort of get the idea that is what it was, but I would hesitate to say that I "knew" that, because I actually know next to nothing, even about the aboriginal cultures nearest to where I've always lived, in Western Canada.
      I believe aboriginal or indigenous people have always had very difficult lives, and so did need to transmit and recieve as much practical information as was possible. There must have always been very high mortality rates, with knowledge and skill being supremely important, and with luck as far as climate and weather often making the difference between survival and death.
      That's a big part of why aboriginal cultures are so interesting, no matter where they exist, now or in the past. I love to learn about the simlarities and differences, from the perspectives of the people themselves. But it's so utterly tragic that they've always been treated in such a terrible manor. I can't see why the prejudices in societies never seem to go away. I can't understand why some people cling to the idea that a small feeling of power or superiority is more important than mutual acceptable and learning between us all.
      It was kind of you to reply to me as you did. It is much appreciated. My best wishes to you and and all of your loved ones. From Barbara. (My name means barbarian, strange, foreign, or savage, all words that were so often used to refer to indigenous peoples, essentially as an insult. So in a small way I too have been insulted for no reason.)
      I'm sorry for digressing here again. I hope you and those you care about are all safe, healthy, and happy. ✌🏼❤💜💙

  • @tiffanyannhowe1712
    @tiffanyannhowe1712 Рік тому +1

    Yes!! I’ve been waiting! Thank you. 🖤

  • @kellydalstok8900
    @kellydalstok8900 Рік тому +3

    Wolves don’t sweat, so it has to be something else.

  • @johnbrown4568
    @johnbrown4568 Рік тому +10

    Gandalf fears Dr. Finkel. 😳💪👊

  • @disky01
    @disky01 Рік тому +4

    These are always so fascinating, thank you!

  • @JarlOfSwot
    @JarlOfSwot Рік тому +9

    Dr. Finkel is an amazing fellow, quite entertaining and brilliant of course. If I had had teachers that were even 10% as interesting as Dr. Finkel I would have had better grades. 😄

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv 11 місяців тому +2

      I wouldn't have quit half way through grade 9. What a mistake! But I just couldn't take any more boring stuff presented in the worst possible ways!

  • @paulhill3187
    @paulhill3187 8 місяців тому

    Great stuff ! All power to your efforts

  • @BenjaminDeutsch-xd1yh
    @BenjaminDeutsch-xd1yh Місяць тому

    Excellent presentation, with wit and humour, that makes absorbing the history enjoyable and thorough. 👏

  • @OmarTravelAdventures
    @OmarTravelAdventures Рік тому +5

    Thank goodness for this type of content on UA-cam. Life is worth living in the 21st century because we have such access to knowledge. Thank you Dr. Finkel.

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +1

      EXACTLY!!! Isn't that one of the wonders of UA-cam?

  • @marshanicholson8582
    @marshanicholson8582 Рік тому +1

    A historical Unsolved Mysteries type show featuring Irving Finkel and Ronald Hutton would be peak

  • @thegardenprophet1582
    @thegardenprophet1582 Рік тому +5

    I appreciate these!🌱♾🌱

  • @PortmanRd
    @PortmanRd 11 місяців тому +1

    If you don't know where you've come from you won't know you're going to. Just love ancient history. 👍

  • @sgilbert5753
    @sgilbert5753 Рік тому +2

    Fascinating topic with brilliantly distilled analytics.

  • @thomasferris3750
    @thomasferris3750 Рік тому +2

    The confident affirmation of health may be there to help induce placebo

    • @WindTurbineSyndrome
      @WindTurbineSyndrome Рік тому

      Modern science has done studies that find people prayed on by groups of people heal faster recover faster. It's not always religious mumbo jumbo if they can find a if this then that cause and effect. Placebo is a very important part they did studies that even if the person knew it was a placebo it would have the effect it was said to induce to the person taking it. But placebo's don't cure cancer or turn back heart disease.

  • @oorzuis1419
    @oorzuis1419 Рік тому +2

    great own theory at the end, love it,
    one of the great gifts of the scientist is to have the fantasy to grow further than the knowledge may take you. (til it may be replaced by facts of course.)

  • @amanitamuscaria7500
    @amanitamuscaria7500 Рік тому +2

    I bet that's exactly what happened to Herodotus. Thank you. Wonderful lecture.

  • @larapalma3744
    @larapalma3744 5 місяців тому

    Fascinating as always

  • @SootyS-wg4lm
    @SootyS-wg4lm 9 місяців тому +2

    So fascinating 🤍 I love Dr Finkel 🤍🤍🤍

  • @bassreeves1965
    @bassreeves1965 Рік тому +2

    Great stuff!.

  • @blue123439
    @blue123439 8 місяців тому

    I love your videos with your very informative information , especially with your lighthearted wit.

    • @beamazed1162
      @beamazed1162 8 місяців тому +1

      1. There are not a large number of bronzes unearthed in Egypt. The latest archeology proves that they were built by construction workers, not slaves. Slaves can eat high-quality beef and be buried near the pyramids. 2. There is no history of bronze ware in Europe. Only a very small amount of bronze is picked up from the water or bought from the antique market. In this way, carbon 14 cannot be measured (compare Sanxingdui in China to see what bronzes can be carbon 14 tested) 3. There is no bronze in Europe. Astronomical calendar (China has many observatory sites, and there are no such sites in Europe. It takes hundreds or thousands of years of continuous observation, calculation, and accumulation to have a calendar) 4. Europe does not have unified weights and measures. China has unified weights and measures for more than 2,000 years. Many measuring instruments have been unearthed in China. There is no unified weights and measures in Europe, so where can advanced arithmetic come from? 5. There is no writing in Europe that can record history. Language expressions are different in different places and in each period. Only China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam in the world have writing, speaking and recording history. It is a separate mode. The writing mode has not changed for thousands of years to record history. Can anyone overturn the above points? If it cannot be overturned, then ancient Babylon (has anyone obtained a cuneiform dictionary and translated the clay tablets?), ancient Egypt, and ancient Greece are all fake. Ancient Rome (in the north of Arabia), which China called Fulinguo (Purum), was not Rome. It had a certain degree of civilization, but its technology was also considered to be ordinary and crude. Europe renamed this to the Roman Empire.. If you look at the technology of China's Song Dynasty and the Sanxingdui ruins, you will know the reason. Note that the first steam engine-driven car was also in China, but it is a pity that the Ming Dynasty, the creator of civilization, had the technology stolen by the barbarian Manchus and European missionaries, and the real history was edited. 6. If the Babylonian civilization was as great as described in the textbook, why was the writing still written on clay tablets? Why not use noble sheepskin? 7. There is no such grammatical dictionary for cuneiform writing that can translate these clay tablets into modern writing for ordinary people. Without such a dictionary, they can make fakes at will.
      If there are 100 chariot and horse remains excavated on the earth, then 99 are in China. If there are 1,000 bronze artifacts unearthed on earth, 999 are in China. This is an estimate, and the real ratio is definitely higher. Apart from China, there is no other bronze civilization. This should become a public opinion in the historians
      Everything must be carbon-14 tested and corroborated by multiple evidences. China’s history has been corroborated by multiple evidences
      The ancient nautical chart of ancient Egypt is marked as Babylon, which is the map of China 600 years ago(it was codified by European missionaries to 1601):
      www.loc.gov/item/2010585650/
      This is a map of Europe:commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Geographia_by_Ptolemy,_Aphricae_Tabula_III,_1540_Basel_edition_-_Maps_of_Africa_-_Robert_C._Williams_Paper_Museum_-_DSC00625.JPG
      Babylon was so civilized, so why did it write on clay tablets? And Egypt is so developed, why does it not have any steel smelting, and even bronze tools and cultural relics are very few. In China alone, Sanxingdui estimates hundreds of tons of bronzes, and there are all kinds of daily necessities. In addition, as for the calendar you mentioned, there are many observatory sites in China, and the officials who observed astronomy in ancient times have been dedicated to studying the world for more than ten generations. Everything China does is related to agriculture and life. It is not a waste of energy and no use value as you said. The Great Wall was built to protect against barbarians such as the Mongols, Turks, and Huns. Did the Pyramid of Khufu spend so much manpower for the exhibition?
      Bronze ware was first found naturally in Asia Minor. But it is made of natural copper, while China discovered smelted copper pipes 6,700 years ago
      ,The early bronze objects discovered in Europe and the United States were very small, while the early bronze objects in China were very large. If ancient bronze ware weighed 100kg, then Europe accounted for 0.001kg, and China accounted for 99.999kg

    • @blue123439
      @blue123439 8 місяців тому

      @@beamazed1162 I see your point.

  • @GreebleClown
    @GreebleClown Рік тому +4

    I think you’re right on the strange names being plants, as wolves don’t have sweat glands so it would be impossible to obtain. Maybe it’s a plant that smelled like wet dog?

    • @rakino4418
      @rakino4418 11 місяців тому +1

      Excited dogs definitely sweat a little out of their paws. Not much but its there

    • @jrojala
      @jrojala 10 місяців тому

      @@rakino4418no, they don’t. If you’re thinking of the “smelly feet” part, that’s just bacteria, not sweat.

    • @rakino4418
      @rakino4418 10 місяців тому +1

      @@jrojala I am literally a veterinarian. Look it up.

  • @ronalddollarhite5216
    @ronalddollarhite5216 4 місяці тому

    I really admire your work and enthusiasm on everything cuneiform. I hope others can delineate all of the plants. It would be aware of plant that has no seed or root and grows from an egg. Love your lectures.😊

  • @thegroove2000
    @thegroove2000 Рік тому +2

    The ancients were a very clever lot.

  • @theofficialsoldierthatreviews
    @theofficialsoldierthatreviews Рік тому +1

    Thank you for your wealth of knowledge

  • @differous01
    @differous01 6 місяців тому +1

    The knowledge in Nineveh's hundreds of tablets [16:55] was a great find for Archaeology, but an immense loss to that city. Nobody expected law & order to be restored there and, fearing a similar fate, Egypt, Canaan and Judea formed an alliance against Assyria. Judea's king Josiah thwarted that plan, but Elam established its own library, and Nineveh rose as a proto-Iranian city, ahead of the dawn of Persia.

  • @thesmilingmercenary937
    @thesmilingmercenary937 Рік тому +6

    You heard it here first, folks. Herodotus is SLANDER! Thank you Dr. Finkel for another riveting lecture.

  • @Unpluggedx89
    @Unpluggedx89 10 місяців тому +2

    It's like listening to Dumbledore explain ancient history and in no way is that an insult

    • @beamazed1162
      @beamazed1162 8 місяців тому

      1. There are not a large number of bronzes unearthed in Egypt. The latest archeology of the pyramids proves that they were built by construction workers, not slaves. Slaves could eat high-quality beef and be buried near the pyramids. 2. There is no history of bronzes in Europe. There are only a small amount of bronzes picked up from the water or bought from antique markets. In this way, it is impossible to do carbon 14 testing (compare Sanxingdui in China to see what bronzes can be carbon 14 tested), or natural copper products. Not smelting. 3. There is no astronomical calendar in Europe, so ancient Europeans did not know the exact time and could only roughly estimate a period of 6,000 years (there are many observatory sites in China, and there are no such sites in Europe. It takes hundreds or thousands of years of continuous observation and calculation , only through accumulation can we have a calendar. The history of civilization alone can be recorded to nearly 5,000 years, of which 3,000 years are not stories, but almost completely real history, verified by multiple evidences) 4. Europe does not have unified weights and measures, but China has unified weights and measures. It has been more than 2,000 years, and many measuring instruments have been unearthed in China. There is no unified weights and measures in Europe, so where can advanced arithmetic come from? 5. There is no writing in Europe that can record history. Language expressions are different in different places and in each period. The only writing in the world that has recorded history is Chinese characters, which are Chinese characters in China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam. Moreover, speaking and writing are separate modes, and the writing mode has not changed for thousands of years. Only in this way can history be recorded. Can anyone overturn the above points? If it cannot be overturned, then ancient Babylon (has any ordinary person obtained a cuneiform dictionary and translated the clay tablet text?), ancient Egypt, and ancient Greece are all stories. Can the stories be discussed as real things? Ancient Rome (in northern Arabia), which China called fulinguo (purum), was not called Rome (rum). It had a certain degree of civilization, but people in the Song Dynasty also thought that their technology was ordinary and crude (Sharaf al-Zamān Marvazī: "Tahā'l al -hayawan"), Europe is likely to rewrite this as the Roman Empire. If you look at the technology of China's Song Dynasty and the Sanxingdui ruins, you will know why. Note that the first steam engine-driven car also appeared in China, but it is a pity that the Ming Dynasty, the creator of civilization, had the technology stolen by the barbarian Manchus and European missionaries, and forged a false history. 6. If the Babylonian civilization was as great as described in the textbook, why was the writing still written on clay tablets? Why not use noble sheepskin? 7. There is no such grammatical dictionary for cuneiform writing. With the help of grammatical dictionaries, ordinary people can translate these clay tablets into modern writing. Without such a dictionary, they can make false claims at will.
      If there are 1,000 bronze artifacts unearthed on earth, 999 are in China. This is an estimate, and the real ratio is definitely higher. Apart from China, there is no other bronze civilization (a civilization must be proven by the simultaneous appearance of a large number of bronze smelting sites and a large number of unearthed cultural relics of bronze vessels used in daily life). This should become a public opinion in the field of history.
      The ancient nautical chart of ancient Egypt is marked as Babylon, which is the map of China 600 years ago(it was codified by European missionaries to 1601):
      www.loc.gov/item/2010585650/
      This is a map of Europe:commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Geographia_by_Ptolemy,_Aphricae_Tabula_III,_1540_Basel_edition_-_Maps_of_Africa_-_Robert_C._Williams_Paper_Museum_-_DSC00625.JPG
      Babylon was so civilized, so why did it write on clay tablets? And Egypt is so developed, why does it not have any steel smelting, and even bronze tools and cultural relics are very few. In China alone, Sanxingdui estimates hundreds of tons of bronzes, and there are all kinds of daily necessities. In addition, as for the calendar you mentioned, there are many observatory sites in China, and the officials who observed astronomy in ancient times have been dedicated to studying the world for more than ten generations. Everything China does is related to agriculture and life. It is not a waste of energy and no use value as you said. The Great Wall was built to protect against barbarians such as the Mongols, Turks, and Huns. Did the Pyramid of Khufu spend so much manpower for the exhibition?
      Bronze ware was first found naturally in Asia Minor. But it is made of natural copper, while China discovered smelted copper pipes 6,700 years ago
      ,The early bronze objects discovered in Europe and the United States were very small, while the early bronze objects in China were very large. If ancient bronze ware weighed 100kg, then Europe accounted for 0.001kg, and China accounted for 99.999kg

  • @whisped8145
    @whisped8145 9 місяців тому +2

    35:00 Oh, that makes a lot of sense. Just think of the "Dandelion" - The German word is even more direct in plainly calling it "Lion Tooth," and its leaves can be used in a spinach like fashion (though you shouldn't just take those off the roadside but rather but a nice clean meadow). Now if some standard medicinal recipe of our times somehow contained "Lion Tooth" and thousands of years later the next civilization uncovers that, they might first have to think that we must have had an extensive lion breeding industry, but just couldn't find any of those lion farms. Only chicken and cows and pigs. It's a mystery! - It also makes a lot of those witch-concoctions sound less icky with this approach.

  • @Northcountry1926
    @Northcountry1926 Рік тому +4

    Yes, I’m down for the June Presentation … If you could confirm the date Becky … Thank You ❤

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +3

      YES - working on it. Dr. Finkel had an unexpected travel requirement and we are working around it. The latest update will be listed on our website at archaeologynow.org.

    • @Northcountry1926
      @Northcountry1926 Рік тому +1

      @@ArchaeologyNow Thank you … Warm Greetings to you and Dr. Finkel from Canada 🇨🇦

  • @Squeeeez
    @Squeeeez Рік тому +2

    Interesting, azupiranu becoming saffron, when in another lecture there were also two words getting transcribed to greek with a p -> phi transition.

    • @skywindow6764
      @skywindow6764 5 місяців тому

      safran in greek is called Krokos

  • @monarozin2408
    @monarozin2408 Рік тому +1

    The last quote from Herodotus just might have some truth to it. It sounds like an ancient form of support groups - helping and comforting others with the same affliction!

    • @skywindow6764
      @skywindow6764 5 місяців тому

      Or an informal council on an undocumented disease

  • @Acetyl53
    @Acetyl53 Рік тому +1

    Very interesting.

  • @troopernate8046
    @troopernate8046 Рік тому +2

    Really cool!

    • @beamazed1162
      @beamazed1162 8 місяців тому

      1. There are not a large number of bronzes unearthed in Egypt. The latest archeology of the pyramids proves that they were built by construction workers, not slaves. Slaves could eat high-quality beef and be buried near the pyramids. 2. There is no history of bronzes in Europe. There are only a small amount of bronzes picked up from the water or bought from antique markets. In this way, it is impossible to do carbon 14 testing (compare Sanxingdui in China to see what bronzes can be carbon 14 tested), or natural copper products. Not smelting. 3. There is no astronomical calendar in Europe, so ancient Europeans did not know the exact time and could only roughly estimate a period of 6,000 years (there are many observatory sites in China, and there are no such sites in Europe. It takes hundreds or thousands of years of continuous observation and calculation , only through accumulation can we have a calendar. The history of civilization alone can be recorded to nearly 5,000 years, of which 3,000 years are not stories, but almost completely real history, verified by multiple evidences) 4. Europe does not have unified weights and measures, but China has unified weights and measures. It has been more than 2,000 years, and many measuring instruments have been unearthed in China. There is no unified weights and measures in Europe, so where can advanced arithmetic come from? 5. There is no writing in Europe that can record history. Language expressions are different in different places and in each period. The only writing in the world that has recorded history is Chinese characters, which are Chinese characters in China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam. Moreover, speaking and writing are separate modes, and the writing mode has not changed for thousands of years. Only in this way can history be recorded. Can anyone overturn the above points? If it cannot be overturned, then ancient Babylon (has any ordinary person obtained a cuneiform dictionary and translated the clay tablet text?), ancient Egypt, and ancient Greece are all stories. Can the stories be discussed as real things? Ancient Rome (in northern Arabia), which China called fulinguo (purum), was not called Rome (rum). It had a certain degree of civilization, but people in the Song Dynasty also thought that their technology was ordinary and crude (Sharaf al-Zamān Marvazī: "Tahā'l al -hayawan"), Europe is likely to rewrite this as the Roman Empire. If you look at the technology of China's Song Dynasty and the Sanxingdui ruins, you will know why. Note that the first steam engine-driven car also appeared in China, but it is a pity that the Ming Dynasty, the creator of civilization, had the technology stolen by the barbarian Manchus and European missionaries, and forged a false history. 6. If the Babylonian civilization was as great as described in the textbook, why was the writing still written on clay tablets? Why not use noble sheepskin? 7. There is no such grammatical dictionary for cuneiform writing. With the help of grammatical dictionaries, ordinary people can translate these clay tablets into modern writing. Without such a dictionary, they can make false claims at will.
      If there are 1,000 bronze artifacts unearthed on earth, 999 are in China. This is an estimate, and the real ratio is definitely higher. Apart from China, there is no other bronze civilization (a civilization must be proven by the simultaneous appearance of a large number of bronze smelting sites and a large number of unearthed cultural relics of bronze vessels used in daily life). This should become a public opinion in the field of history.
      The ancient nautical chart of ancient Egypt is marked as Babylon, which is the map of China 600 years ago(it was codified by European missionaries to 1601):
      www.loc.gov/item/2010585650/
      This is a map of Europe:commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Geographia_by_Ptolemy,_Aphricae_Tabula_III,_1540_Basel_edition_-_Maps_of_Africa_-_Robert_C._Williams_Paper_Museum_-_DSC00625.JPG
      Babylon was so civilized, so why did it write on clay tablets? And Egypt is so developed, why does it not have any steel smelting, and even bronze tools and cultural relics are very few. In China alone, Sanxingdui estimates hundreds of tons of bronzes, and there are all kinds of daily necessities. In addition, as for the calendar you mentioned, there are many observatory sites in China, and the officials who observed astronomy in ancient times have been dedicated to studying the world for more than ten generations. Everything China does is related to agriculture and life. It is not a waste of energy and no use value as you said. The Great Wall was built to protect against barbarians such as the Mongols, Turks, and Huns. Did the Pyramid of Khufu spend so much manpower for the exhibition?
      Bronze ware was first found naturally in Asia Minor. But it is made of natural copper, while China discovered smelted copper pipes 6,700 years ago
      ,The early bronze objects discovered in Europe and the United States were very small, while the early bronze objects in China were very large. If ancient bronze ware weighed 100kg, then Europe accounted for 0.001kg, and China accounted for 99.999kg

  • @CaseTrick
    @CaseTrick 2 місяці тому

    I like Finkel much, I only wish he would address devine remembering that brought about the repetition and construction of the reliquarium used to teach ~

  • @cholulahotsauce6166
    @cholulahotsauce6166 Рік тому +2

    Idk I really think joining tablet fragments would be a good job for AI but then that might deprive Dr Finkel of the fun.

  • @Coosacat
    @Coosacat 28 днів тому

    How fascinating! I had no idea about that fantastic library, or thought about the generations of hard-won knowledge behind these medical practices. I wonder how much information is recorded there that might be useful in our modern times, like plants that are useful for certain conditions?
    I was also struck by the part about considering that designations such as "wolf's sweat" most likely refer to plants we haven't identified (or concoctions/preparations that were common knowledge back then, but lost over the centuries), as it seems like such an obvious and practical assumption, now that people smarter than me have thought of it!
    My brain feels drenched in knowledge right now! 😋

  • @Harry-qu7vg
    @Harry-qu7vg Рік тому +1

    you're a good dude bro

  • @yvonnesmith6152
    @yvonnesmith6152 8 місяців тому

    Prof. Finkel is truly a bescherter to Ancient history, he, who can transport you back in time thousands of years without any trouble.

    • @beamazed1162
      @beamazed1162 8 місяців тому

      1. There are not a large number of bronzes unearthed in Egypt. The latest archeology of the pyramids proves that they were built by construction workers, not slaves. Slaves could eat high-quality beef and be buried near the pyramids. 2. There is no history of bronzes in Europe. There are only a small amount of bronzes picked up from the water or bought from antique markets. In this way, it is impossible to do carbon 14 testing (compare Sanxingdui in China to see what bronzes can be carbon 14 tested), or natural copper products. Not smelting. 3. There is no astronomical calendar in Europe, so ancient Europeans did not know the exact time and could only roughly estimate a period of 6,000 years (there are many observatory sites in China, and there are no such sites in Europe. It takes hundreds or thousands of years of continuous observation and calculation , only through accumulation can we have a calendar. The history of civilization alone can be recorded to nearly 5,000 years, of which 3,000 years are not stories, but almost completely real history, verified by multiple evidences) 4. Europe does not have unified weights and measures, but China has unified weights and measures. It has been more than 2,000 years, and many measuring instruments have been unearthed in China. There is no unified weights and measures in Europe, so where can advanced arithmetic come from? 5. There is no writing in Europe that can record history. Language expressions are different in different places and in each period. The only writing in the world that has recorded history is Chinese characters, which are Chinese characters in China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam. Moreover, speaking and writing are separate modes, and the writing mode has not changed for thousands of years. Only in this way can history be recorded. Can anyone overturn the above points? If it cannot be overturned, then ancient Babylon (has any ordinary person obtained a cuneiform dictionary and translated the clay tablet text?), ancient Egypt, and ancient Greece are all stories. Can the stories be discussed as real things? Ancient Rome (in northern Arabia), which China called fulinguo (purum), was not called Rome (rum). It had a certain degree of civilization, but people in the Song Dynasty also thought that their technology was ordinary and crude (Sharaf al-Zamān Marvazī: "Tahā'l al -hayawan"), Europe is likely to rewrite this as the Roman Empire. If you look at the technology of China's Song Dynasty and the Sanxingdui ruins, you will know why. Note that the first steam engine-driven car also appeared in China, but it is a pity that the Ming Dynasty, the creator of civilization, had the technology stolen by the barbarian Manchus and European missionaries, and forged a false history. 6. If the Babylonian civilization was as great as described in the textbook, why was the writing still written on clay tablets? Why not use noble sheepskin? 7. There is no such grammatical dictionary for cuneiform writing. With the help of grammatical dictionaries, ordinary people can translate these clay tablets into modern writing. Without such a dictionary, they can make false claims at will.
      If there are 1,000 bronze artifacts unearthed on earth, 999 are in China. This is an estimate, and the real ratio is definitely higher. Apart from China, there is no other bronze civilization (a civilization must be proven by the simultaneous appearance of a large number of bronze smelting sites and a large number of unearthed cultural relics of bronze vessels used in daily life). This should become a public opinion in the field of history.
      The ancient nautical chart of ancient Egypt is marked as Babylon, which is the map of China 600 years ago(it was codified by European missionaries to 1601):
      www.loc.gov/item/2010585650/
      This is a map of Europe:commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Geographia_by_Ptolemy,_Aphricae_Tabula_III,_1540_Basel_edition_-_Maps_of_Africa_-_Robert_C._Williams_Paper_Museum_-_DSC00625.JPG
      Babylon was so civilized, so why did it write on clay tablets? And Egypt is so developed, why does it not have any steel smelting, and even bronze tools and cultural relics are very few. In China alone, Sanxingdui estimates hundreds of tons of bronzes, and there are all kinds of daily necessities. In addition, as for the calendar you mentioned, there are many observatory sites in China, and the officials who observed astronomy in ancient times have been dedicated to studying the world for more than ten generations. Everything China does is related to agriculture and life. It is not a waste of energy and no use value as you said. The Great Wall was built to protect against barbarians such as the Mongols, Turks, and Huns. Did the Pyramid of Khufu spend so much manpower for the exhibition?
      Bronze ware was first found naturally in Asia Minor. But it is made of natural copper, while China discovered smelted copper pipes 6,700 years ago
      ,The early bronze objects discovered in Europe and the United States were very small, while the early bronze objects in China were very large. If ancient bronze ware weighed 100kg, then Europe accounted for 0.001kg, and China accounted for 99.999kg

    • @yvonnesmith6152
      @yvonnesmith6152 8 місяців тому

      @@beamazed1162 your reply to my comment doesn’t make sense. I was just very congratulatory over Mr. Finkel’s lecturing style

  • @benjima100
    @benjima100 Місяць тому

    as someone who suffers from non epileptic siezures i'm happy that if i had been born in babylonian times i would have been in good hands

  • @susanmcdonald9088
    @susanmcdonald9088 Рік тому +2

    Thank you! It must be awesome to be one of so few, who can read, & interpret for us, these texts. I am searching for other lectures that address the "visuals" carved in stone, cylinder seals, and tablets, and any astronomical references!
    The details on seals & stones are incredible in these pictures, yet hard to interpret!
    For example, that first seal you showed . . . There are jars yet on those long "poles". And on the left at the top, a pointed "star" 2 of them actually. What are these?
    There is a theory about that which MUST be addressed by scholars! I'm quite sure these folks didn't include such things, for nothing! It's our job to find out!
    You mentioned later, with the 8th century BC, Babylonian code, there's Hammurabi, facing a "god" with that eastern hat, & conical shoulders, I believe it's not just "Shamash", but the planet Saturn!
    Please do a lecture on the astronomical beliefs. The gods. The cosmic wheel, in the sky, and the cosmic thunderbolt held in stone carvings & on seals! Please!! SYMBOLS OF AN ALIEN SKY, on YT.
    THUNDERBOLTS OF THE GODS, part 2, more science.
    If the "Electric Universe" & plasma physics are helping to explain ancient art including rock carvings, my God! This is explosive! This is revolutionary! This is the SOURCE of ALL RELIGIONS & Traditions! An amazing proposal of explanatory power, even the "BULL OF HEAVEN"! And all the cultural-gender-customs-beliefs, that followed. Scholars MUST examine & help the research!
    ua-cam.com/video/t7EAlTcZFwY/v-deo.html

  • @chantlive24
    @chantlive24 Рік тому +1

    Thanks

  • @nagoranerides3150
    @nagoranerides3150 10 місяців тому +2

    Suddenly a floating head appears in the darkness and starts telling you about Mesopotamian medicine. Roll for initiative.

  • @dorotafranczak
    @dorotafranczak Рік тому

    Danke :)❤

  • @bilbodilger897
    @bilbodilger897 3 місяці тому

    wow how amazing would it be to meet this man in person. It always stupefies me what we can know about mesopotamia

  • @Meevious
    @Meevious Рік тому +2

    At a guess, Herodotus heard about Babylonian medicine from a tourist whose medical insurance wasn't recognised in Babylon...
    ...or from a loyal agent, who went to a medical centre, falsely complaining of an illness, in order to investigate their healthcare system, but was covertly diagnosed as a hypochondriac.
    It seems clear that the tribulations inflicted on all manner of oriental fauna, in the name of medicine, must result from some sort of misunderstanding or another... but how human it would be for the root cause to be shabby interpretation of old texts. >_>

  • @Cannibaltron
    @Cannibaltron Рік тому +3

    Is there anyone in the same universe as Dr. Finkel when it comes to Mesopotamian history or proficiency in reading and interpreting cuneiform?

    • @ArchaeologyNow
      @ArchaeologyNow  Рік тому +2

      We think he's one of the best!

    • @1346crecy
      @1346crecy 9 місяців тому +1

      That's because he is! Just a wonderful educator!.@@ArchaeologyNow

  • @SargonvonThule
    @SargonvonThule 6 місяців тому

    the world has to less nice scientits like Irving, such a nice guy i would loved to learn under him.