I went to see the baths of Diocletian and was rewarded with this beauty! So amazing and before going to Rome I was watching the excavation video of the carriage from Pompeii and right there in this museum I turn around and it’s right there!!! I had the best time of my life in Rome; and I discovered so many amazing places thanks to you and other UA-camrs, thank you so much for sharing the beauty of Rome ❤
As a former archaeologist, I wish the authorities would rebuild some of the monuments in Rome to give us moderns an impression of how huge their world was. While the sculptures are wonderful, I am awed by the vaults of the baths of Diocletian. Wow. When I read Lanciani’s works a decade ago and when I went to see Rome for myself in 2012, I could not believe the scale of destruction by the limeburners in the medieval period.
So true. Luckily, Rome has a lot of monuments still standing. If you look at our anastylosis video, you'll see reconstructed monuments... Nowadays, yes, the efforts are focused on the digital reconstructions with videos in Domus Aurea (another tour you can take), Palatine Museum, Santa Maria Antiqua, Imperial Fora museums, and more!
My daughter and I went to Rome last December when we were at these baths. This year we were wondering where to go and we felt we didn’t see enough of Rome for the two weeks we were there so we are going back again this December 2023 look forward to seeing this new exhibit.
I was lucky enough to have seen this fantastic exhibition earlier this year (June 2023). Mind blown, not just because of the amazing artefacts, but also the building that holds them in the form of the Baths (Terme) of Diocletian.
@@AncientRomeLiveyou need to come with more than a cheap one liner as a reply! You don't have to reply to everybody but it would show some respect I mean she just told you about the beauty of what she saw and all you could say was couldn't agree more??? When people are that early to your video at least throw in a little extra something and say thank you. There are plenty of other channels that do the same thing you do and we watch you for a reason so show some respect please to the people who make you have a channel
Absolutely stunning it's beyond anything I could imagine. It's so well done it makes you feel like these are your friends or your family or your history it's just amazing
I sent this video and the ones on the latest excavations and finds in Pompeii to my husband and kids and we’re now discussing a much needed return visit to Italy. So much has happened since we were last there! Thanks for your informative and inspiring videos. I’m a huge fan.
@@AncientRomeLive We were last in Rome in 1974. We spent five weeks visiting all the key sites and museums. Since then, so much more has been discovered and placed on display. I can remember our tour guide---a man in his late 60s, with a black raincoat and umbrella. At strategic times he was wave his umbrella around and tell us, "Rome was destroyed more by the hands of man than by the hands of time!" In light of that young couple a few weeks ago who decided on some carving into the Coloseum brickwork to mark their visit to Rome, I can see the wisdom of his words. So much of ancient Rome was carted off for use in other building projects, and it's remarkable that anything exists today with so many people and tourists over the years willing to take Roman ruins, statuary, and archeological finds home with them. We look forward to more of your videos.
Wow! Thank you so much for this revelation! Very well put together! Excellent! This will be the next place we visit which will be soon God willing! 👍🏼😀
It is so cute to see you do what we all tend to do: spend too much time on the first few items in a museum, then speed up and zap past other piece, even the greatest ones in the entire exhibition. I am so glad to see this. Frank LLyod Wright, when designing the Gugenheim, tried and succeessfully remedied this, by making the floor slide downward--to make the visitors not to linger too much at the start :)
Thank you for another extraordinary, highly-informative video, Darius! I've added another must-see to my current list of must-sees when I ever get back to Italy.
Amazing! Thank you for pointing me in the direction of fresh places to visit when I’m back in Rome. This and Largo Argentino and, hopefully completed soon, the Mausoleum of Augustus! Just imagine….!
I visited the Baths of Diocletian many years ago (early 1990's), I'll never be able to visit in person again so a huge THANK YOU for sharing this, wonderful to see the site again and the new exhibits.
What a fantastic exibition! I will certainly have to cross the Appenines to see it…hopefully when it’s little cooler in the air😉 Thanks for this nice and tempting video! I had a little trouble hearing the findspot for the relief from Abruzzo… Another thought…my old father is also interested but lika many others in his age a bit deaf, in the future maybe subtitles would be something to long for.😊
Awesome exhibit, thanks Darius, those are some pretty recent finds. Those 2 casts, that chariot and the Hercules sculpture. Wow!! Nice to see stuff being put out there on display so quickly as you say. Is this a permanent exhibition in this location?
@@AncientRomeLive Darius, do you have any idea where these items will reside permanently once the exhibition ends? I won't be able to get back to Italy this year...
I think that this is an extraordinary, bold and interesting exhibition in which the Italians are putting a selection of their absolute best ancient works from the country as a whole into one very exciting space. The ceiling fresco brough to mind Nero's Palace and the tons of dirt atop it endangering the vaults, which I wish they could remove! SZ BA MA Art History and Architecture UW Seattle
Nice video, thanks. A small portion of the baths could be restored. I wonder if sometimes those pieces of sculptures, paintings are sometimes reconstructed. Regards
being trying to find a full statue of Hera Farnese/ Artemis Ariccia object 16875 ( like the bust in Napoli ) type that is supposed to be in that collection...is it on display please ? None of the staff seem to know where it is located, has it vanished or has it been stolen or sequestered away ?
wow! i wish there was subtitles when you say the cities where things were found i am not sure about where it is etc. and i cant quite get the name right to google
"Here we have two discovered casts....". The shapes are cast in caveties in mainly vulcanic ash, left in it after the stuff that made up the organisms it surrounded, has rotted and dried up.
Sei d'accordo con me Darius che l' Italia archeologicamente è più interssante di alri paesi antichi. È una stratificazione di diversi stili e periodi. Qui ci sono stati un po tutti i poppli dai Nostrani agli invasori. Etuschi Romani Greci ecc.. È come una torta a strati.😊
Visitata 10 gg fa , straordinarie anche le Intere tombe dalla via PORTUENSE, con le volte interne e le pareti affrescate ancora con colori vivi I due atleti in bronzo da Ercolano Le due danzatrici da Ercolano , alcuni reperti da Santorini, I mosaici sul pavimento in alcune parti degli ambienti delle #termedidiocleziano Etc Mostra molto interessante E oh! Statue trovate in ville lungo la via #prenestina /#praeneste , proprio dive abito io ! Bellissime!
I know you said this guy was anonymous, but if its a portrait as was suggested of the Emperor Decius perhaps this was near his burial place on the Appian Way.
That identification of the statue as emperor does not match the official portraits. Definitely someone else according to all of the recent assessments. We concur.
@@AncientRomeLive I'm not sure I agree! The style of portrait certainly matches the period. But there are certainly anonymous vanity portraits of Romans in various mythological guises from the record.
Man. I first read the truncated title to this video on my phone as, "Newest archaeological disco." And I thought, considering how the host of this channel scrubs up, "That'd be right!." So I'm a little sad that there was no disco ball and lights, but found it fascinating nonetheless. BTW. Republican era is way under-reported.
The sculpture at the 8:10 is in no way related to any of the other pieces, or the expressly stated purpose of the collection "...Ancient Rome". This piece meets none of the criteria. It is a lie and Propaganda.
Wow! He thinks that the tablet is written in greek! I can see how people can be confused as the modern Greek alphabet is borrowed from the Macedonians! You have to remember that in order for a nation of people to go and conquer the known world as was the case of Alexander The Great of Macedonia, the nation behind him had to be powerful in all areas of politics, art, culture, manufacturing, farming and literature and so on! The Greeks have been a minority since time immemorial! It's well known that king Philip II of Macedonia went and conquered the Greek minority and not consolidate them as the Greeks would prefer you to believe! At the time of the founding of the Rosetta Stone, there was no person who wrote spoke or could read this supposed greek alphabet, it was (if you have studied the Rosetta Stone in detail) the British and French linguistic experts who worked on deciphering what they believed to be greek writing on the stone as it had been seen carved into the ancient macedonian ruins which was the capital of Macedonia called Hella before 1500bce after the eruption of the Santorini volcano which forced the Macedonians to relocate further east and established the new city Pella! It was some time after the Macedonians abandoned the old city around 1500bce that the Greeks turned up to occupy the abandoned area! Incidentally the word greek comes from the Macedonian word Grejci pronounced Greitsi meaning those who came! The word being a description of people was later adopted by the Romans when they invaded and conquered the Macedonians, the Greeks were still a minority by this point in time and they don't appear on any maps until the 1800's. Also, I believe that the Greeks who were taken into slavery by the Romans called them Greko Romans which I don't know of any other people from any other place to be given a special title! It's not too difficult to understand why! The Greeks had dark skin and were different in appearance to everyone else! Even today there are still Greeks who are very dark and it's got nothing to do with the Mediterranean sea of sun! If a person identifies as Greek but has white skin, they and their descendants are European and only greek by country, but not by DNA! There's many cases where a greek person has come across what they believed to be ancient Greek writing but are unable to read it! Like the ancient manuscript found by a priest in a greek church in Alexandria Egypt, the priest couldn't read it but felt that it was a historically significant paper so he called in some Danish linguistic experts to figure it out, they couldn't read it either because they also believed it to be ancient Greek because that's what the world is taught, by chance a few pictures were sent to a macedonian colleague who returned a translation, when the Danish linguistic experts asked how was it that he was able to translate it, he responded with, it's written in Macedonian! It's not the only Macedonian alphabet either, before the koine alphabet was the Macedonian Sanskrit, the greek alphabet has no history! There's nothing before it and only a styling adjustment since adoption in the early 1800's... The arrival of the Greeks to Europe is documented in the bible, it's in the book of exodus! They are the Israelites that were led out of Egypt by Moses, archeological digs on the island of Crete have shown that the Israelites made it there! They followed the erupting volcano of Santorini! Since then, they have occupied all the islands and all the ancient Macedonian lands! They never left! Their journey began in Sub Saharan Ethiopia and ended where Greece is today! The majority of people in Greece are not greek by decent which still makes them a minority! The more things change, the more they stay the same! Edit: the marble African head! That's your greek person right there! There's completely no reason why a black marble head of an African should exist in Europe! Unless they were there! And they were and still are, it's called Greece!
Enjoy your videos but as I've said before much better with less of you and your hand waving, and you tend to stress the final word of a phrase eg 4.29 'this use(?) associated with ASTRONOMY', which sounds clunky and is distracting. Why don't you get a native speaker to voice your script?
Great video👍 but i disagree with your also use of the woke BCE rather than the long accepted BC/AD. Common Era?what does that even mean?Common to whom? Too vague too woke and undermines history.
I went to see the baths of Diocletian and was rewarded with this beauty! So amazing and before going to Rome I was watching the excavation video of the carriage from Pompeii and right there in this museum I turn around and it’s right there!!! I had the best time of my life in Rome; and I discovered so many amazing places thanks to you and other UA-camrs, thank you so much for sharing the beauty of Rome ❤
Thank you. Yes a great collection/ too infrequently visited!
As a former archaeologist, I wish the authorities would rebuild some of the monuments in Rome to give us moderns an impression of how huge their world was. While the sculptures are wonderful, I am awed by the vaults of the baths of Diocletian. Wow.
When I read Lanciani’s works a decade ago and when I went to see Rome for myself in 2012, I could not believe the scale of destruction by the limeburners in the medieval period.
So true. Luckily, Rome has a lot of monuments still standing. If you look at our anastylosis video, you'll see reconstructed monuments... Nowadays, yes, the efforts are focused on the digital reconstructions with videos in Domus Aurea (another tour you can take), Palatine Museum, Santa Maria Antiqua, Imperial Fora museums, and more!
My daughter and I went to Rome last December when we were at these baths. This year we were wondering where to go and we felt we didn’t see enough of Rome for the two weeks we were there so we are going back again this December 2023 look forward to seeing this new exhibit.
Amazing and beautiful artefacts. Thanks for showing them to us - wish you could linger on them longer as it is sometimes difficult to take It all in.
So much to cover - and videos are already pretty long - but we hear you!
The pause button exists
I was lucky enough to have seen this fantastic exhibition earlier this year (June 2023). Mind blown, not just because of the amazing artefacts, but also the building that holds them in the form of the Baths (Terme) of Diocletian.
Couldn't agree more!
@@AncientRomeLiveyou need to come with more than a cheap one liner as a reply! You don't have to reply to everybody but it would show some respect I mean she just told you about the beauty of what she saw and all you could say was couldn't agree more??? When people are that early to your video at least throw in a little extra something and say thank you. There are plenty of other channels that do the same thing you do and we watch you for a reason so show some respect please to the people who make you have a channel
Absolutely stunning it's beyond anything I could imagine. It's so well done it makes you feel like these are your friends or your family or your history it's just amazing
Wow the fact the recently found statue is on display is amazing! I remember seeing news about it...and now it shows up in your video. Great stuff!
We like to keep up with all of the new discoveries!
I sent this video and the ones on the latest excavations and finds in Pompeii to my husband and kids and we’re now discussing a much needed return visit to Italy. So much has happened since we were last there! Thanks for your informative and inspiring videos. I’m a huge fan.
Fabulous new museum display and great presentation of it here. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it
Stunning. Roman bronze statuary is captivating.
Absolutely
Our days of overseas travel are over. When we watch your videos we are transported back to Rome and all the wonderful treasures in the museums.
Thank you! So happy to share the wonders of ancient history!
@@AncientRomeLive We were last in Rome in 1974. We spent five weeks visiting all the key sites and museums. Since then, so much more has been discovered and placed on display. I can remember our tour guide---a man in his late 60s, with a black raincoat and umbrella. At strategic times he was wave his umbrella around and tell us, "Rome was destroyed more by the hands of man than by the hands of time!" In light of that young couple a few weeks ago who decided on some carving into the Coloseum
brickwork to mark their visit to Rome, I can see the wisdom of his words.
So much of ancient Rome was carted off for use in other building projects, and it's remarkable that anything exists today with so many people and tourists over the years willing to take Roman ruins, statuary, and archeological finds home with them. We look forward to more of your videos.
What a wonderful looking exhibit!
Yes!
Fantastic exhibition! Thank you for sharing! 👍
Thanks for taking the time to watch!
Stunning! I will definitely visit this exhibition when in Rome in August
Ends July 30
@@AncientRomeLive oh no! 🥹
Incredible! Exquisite displays!
Thank you for guiding us through this amazing exhibition. We can't wait to return to Rome!
👍👍👍
I would have a hard time not running off with Imperator Lucius Verus. What a great collection. Thanks Darius.
Haha he has quite the beard!
Can't thank you enough for these wonderful videos! ❤
Stunning, Darius! Thanks for giving us a peek!
Leslie and Tim
It’s a great exhibit - lots more to share!
Thank you for another fun and informative video!
Thank you!
WOW! I am left speechless by this video. Thank you.
Wow, thank you!
Wow some amazing finds
Truly!
Absolutely amazing!
Wow that’s incredible!
Great exhibit!
Thanks Artists for clear pictures
Found in 2023, now on display, great!
Awesome! Watching this video makes me want to go back in time and imagine how beautiful those places were. Thanks for sharing your experience with us.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great job as usual . Cheers 😎🥃
Wow! Thank you so much for this revelation! Very well put together! Excellent! This will be the next place we visit which will be soon God willing! 👍🏼😀
It is so cute to see you do what we all tend to do: spend too much time on the first few items in a museum, then speed up and zap past other piece, even the greatest ones in the entire exhibition. I am so glad to see this. Frank LLyod Wright, when designing the Gugenheim, tried and succeessfully remedied this, by making the floor slide downward--to make the visitors not to linger too much at the start :)
Fantastic video. Interesting and educational. Just discovered your channel and can’t wait to watch more videos as I love anything ancient Rome
Welcome aboard!
The Ulysses statue was so crisp…This whole exhibition is incredible..
Thank you for another extraordinary, highly-informative video, Darius! I've added another must-see to my current list of must-sees when I ever get back to Italy.
Thank you!
Wonderful, and very interesting !!!
Thank you! Cheers!
Stunning!
Wonderful!
A very interesting museum.
Amazing! Museum - archaeological site!
Enjoying your channel in Canada. Thank you.
Amazing! Thank you for pointing me in the direction of fresh places to visit when I’m back in Rome. This and Largo Argentino and, hopefully completed soon, the Mausoleum of Augustus! Just imagine….!
Our pleasure
Thanks so much for your videos 🎉
You are so welcome!
I visited the Baths of Diocletian many years ago (early 1990's), I'll never be able to visit in person again so a huge THANK YOU for sharing this, wonderful to see the site again and the new exhibits.
Our pleasure
wow! just WOW!
Amazing. All new since I visited about 2 or 3 years ago
Yes lots more to see!
Incredible
What a fantastic exibition! I will certainly have to cross the Appenines to see it…hopefully when it’s little cooler in the air😉 Thanks for this nice and tempting video! I had a little trouble hearing the findspot for the relief from Abruzzo…
Another thought…my old father is also interested but lika many others in his age a bit deaf, in the future maybe subtitles would be something to long for.😊
Hello just put subtitle by select the little gear symbol then choose option subtitle and language you want by selecting automatic translate
@@TheDelem should have known...
@@TheDelem ...but much is wrong...
Lago Fucino
Love it.. how craftfull our ancestors are. How degraded we are today..
thank you
Thanks
Subscribed🎉
Would LOVE to see this exhibition.....!
Outstanding. New Rome. NYC
Ciao!!
Awesome exhibit, thanks Darius, those are some pretty recent finds. Those 2 casts, that chariot and the Hercules sculpture. Wow!! Nice to see stuff being put out there on display so quickly as you say. Is this a permanent exhibition in this location?
No it ends July 30!
@@AncientRomeLive Darius, do you have any idea where these items will reside permanently once the exhibition ends? I won't be able to get back to Italy this year...
I think that this is an extraordinary, bold and interesting exhibition in which the Italians are putting a selection of their absolute best ancient works from the country as a whole into one very exciting space. The ceiling fresco brough to mind Nero's Palace and the tons of dirt atop it endangering the vaults, which I wish they could remove! SZ BA MA Art History and Architecture UW Seattle
Yea a great exhibit! We will do one shortly on the Domus Aurea!
Me gusta el arte romano❤
WOW!!!!!
0:01
Are they the originals or just replicas?
Nice video, thanks. A small portion of the baths could be restored. I wonder if sometimes those pieces of sculptures, paintings are sometimes reconstructed. Regards
The rooms we filmed in are pristine. /New Vikings but the rest is original!
being trying to find a full statue of Hera Farnese/ Artemis Ariccia object 16875 ( like the bust in Napoli ) type that is supposed to be in that collection...is it on display please ? None of the staff seem to know where it is located, has it vanished or has it been stolen or sequestered away ?
We think it’s there …
In MANN
Fantastic. Where in Abruzzo was the walled relief found. My Gran was born in Civitella Casanova.
Lago Fucino
@@AncientRomeLive thank you. What a incredible history. The lake is completely gone.
That Hercules, towards the end. I am guessing it was commissioned by Dormition, depicting a younger Vespasian.
Why don't they also display images of the locations where these statues were found?
wow! i wish there was subtitles when you say the cities where things were found i am not sure about where it is etc. and i cant quite get the name right to google
Happy to elaborate
A nice variety of artifacts. The casts of dead Pompeiians were jarring to see.
A great collection. Yes the bodies are always a reminder of the destruction of Pompeii and loss of life!
I would like to go there
"Here we have two discovered casts....". The shapes are cast in caveties in mainly vulcanic ash, left in it after the
stuff that made up the organisms it surrounded, has rotted and dried up.
cool tablet
Yes!!!
Sei d'accordo con me Darius che l' Italia archeologicamente è più interssante di alri paesi antichi. È una stratificazione di diversi stili e periodi. Qui ci sono stati un po tutti i poppli dai Nostrani agli invasori. Etuschi Romani Greci ecc.. È come una torta a strati.😊
Grazie!
Visitata 10 gg fa , straordinarie anche le Intere tombe dalla via PORTUENSE, con le volte interne e le pareti affrescate ancora con colori vivi
I due atleti in bronzo da Ercolano
Le due danzatrici da Ercolano , alcuni reperti da Santorini, I mosaici sul pavimento in alcune parti degli ambienti delle #termedidiocleziano Etc
Mostra molto interessante
E oh! Statue trovate in ville lungo la via #prenestina /#praeneste , proprio dive abito io !
Bellissime!
Si da fare un altro video sulla mostra!
@@AncientRomeLive benissimo ! Lo aspetto! Intanto ho condiviso questo in facebook per gli amici all estero
How come no others there?🧐
Filmed on a Monday- closed to public. Special access!
I know you said this guy was anonymous, but if its a portrait as was suggested of the Emperor Decius perhaps this was near his burial place on the Appian Way.
That identification of the statue as emperor does not match the official portraits. Definitely someone else according to all of the recent assessments. We concur.
@@AncientRomeLive I'm not sure I agree! The style of portrait certainly matches the period. But there are certainly anonymous vanity portraits of Romans in various mythological guises from the record.
Good that you didn't have to blurr the genitals of the ancient artworks.
Wow. Why isn't the omphalos in Greece? Dare I ask?
Yes - and it’s a big exhibit - we focused on the Roman pieces …
Explore ,Golgumbaz,south india
Those two souls on the floor are not artwork, they’re human beings, or copies of, and should be treated with more respect imo.
Typically Merican :
2 seconds per item, " there is so much to see here, and even mucher out of this museum ! hush hush ! Oa wanna see more o them !
More on the way- will do a second feature!
i wouldnt know how to act being close enough to actually toouch ancient history
It’s compelling !
I’ve always found those body casts difficult to look at, I feel like a voyeur.
It’s disturbing to many … and also pretty normal for Pompeii studies
Funny that some roman words are stiill in use by the modern spanish lenguage 6:36
Man. I first read the truncated title to this video on my phone as, "Newest archaeological disco." And I thought, considering how the host of this channel scrubs up, "That'd be right!." So I'm a little sad that there was no disco ball and lights, but found it fascinating nonetheless. BTW. Republican era is way under-reported.
For Republican era- please check out our Largo Argentina reopened!
Love how the Ancient Romans were not afraid to portray themselves starkers with their dongs hanging out for all to see!Emperors too!😊
The sculpture at the 8:10 is in no way related to any of the other pieces, or the expressly stated purpose of the collection "...Ancient Rome". This piece meets none of the criteria. It is a lie and Propaganda.
just does not seem right displaying those body casts so openly. At least to me.
It’s a long tradition. Do NOT go to Pompeii - casts everywhere!!!
@@AncientRomeLive I’ve been thank you.
Wow! He thinks that the tablet is written in greek!
I can see how people can be confused as the modern Greek alphabet is borrowed from the Macedonians!
You have to remember that in order for a nation of people to go and conquer the known world as was the case of Alexander The Great of Macedonia, the nation behind him had to be powerful in all areas of politics, art, culture, manufacturing, farming and literature and so on!
The Greeks have been a minority since time immemorial! It's well known that king Philip II of Macedonia went and conquered the Greek minority and not consolidate them as the Greeks would prefer you to believe!
At the time of the founding of the Rosetta Stone, there was no person who wrote spoke or could read this supposed greek alphabet, it was (if you have studied the Rosetta Stone in detail) the British and French linguistic experts who worked on deciphering what they believed to be greek writing on the stone as it had been seen carved into the ancient macedonian ruins which was the capital of Macedonia called Hella before 1500bce after the eruption of the Santorini volcano which forced the Macedonians to relocate further east and established the new city Pella!
It was some time after the Macedonians abandoned the old city around 1500bce that the Greeks turned up to occupy the abandoned area!
Incidentally the word greek comes from the Macedonian word Grejci pronounced Greitsi meaning those who came! The word being a description of people was later adopted by the Romans when they invaded and conquered the Macedonians, the Greeks were still a minority by this point in time and they don't appear on any maps until the 1800's. Also, I believe that the Greeks who were taken into slavery by the Romans called them Greko Romans which I don't know of any other people from any other place to be given a special title! It's not too difficult to understand why! The Greeks had dark skin and were different in appearance to everyone else! Even today there are still Greeks who are very dark and it's got nothing to do with the Mediterranean sea of sun! If a person identifies as Greek but has white skin, they and their descendants are European and only greek by country, but not by DNA!
There's many cases where a greek person has come across what they believed to be ancient Greek writing but are unable to read it! Like the ancient manuscript found by a priest in a greek church in Alexandria Egypt, the priest couldn't read it but felt that it was a historically significant paper so he called in some Danish linguistic experts to figure it out, they couldn't read it either because they also believed it to be ancient Greek because that's what the world is taught, by chance a few pictures were sent to a macedonian colleague who returned a translation, when the Danish linguistic experts asked how was it that he was able to translate it, he responded with, it's written in Macedonian! It's not the only Macedonian alphabet either, before the koine alphabet was the Macedonian Sanskrit, the greek alphabet has no history! There's nothing before it and only a styling adjustment since adoption in the early 1800's...
The arrival of the Greeks to Europe is documented in the bible, it's in the book of exodus! They are the Israelites that were led out of Egypt by Moses, archeological digs on the island of Crete have shown that the Israelites made it there! They followed the erupting volcano of Santorini!
Since then, they have occupied all the islands and all the ancient Macedonian lands! They never left! Their journey began in Sub Saharan Ethiopia and ended where Greece is today!
The majority of people in Greece are not greek by decent which still makes them a minority!
The more things change, the more they stay the same!
Edit: the marble African head! That's your greek person right there! There's completely no reason why a black marble head of an African should exist in Europe! Unless they were there! And they were and still are, it's called Greece!
Amazing exhibition. The presenter, alas, does not do it justice. He is not aiming for a coherent narrative.
Enjoy your videos but as I've said before much better with less of you and your hand waving, and you tend to stress the final word of a phrase eg 4.29 'this use(?) associated with ASTRONOMY', which sounds clunky and is distracting. Why don't you get a native speaker to voice your script?
Black African? Lol. Doesn’t even look like one
Great video👍 but i disagree with your also use of the woke BCE rather than the long accepted BC/AD. Common Era?what does that even mean?Common to whom? Too vague too woke and undermines history.
Thank you