Differences Between Dolmens, Cairns, & Tumuli

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  • Опубліковано 9 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 20

  • @mikkel6938
    @mikkel6938 3 місяці тому +3

    This is both informative and entertaining, and I think you deserve great success! Thank you!

  • @2lit2003
    @2lit2003 24 дні тому +1

    That was great you got a new sub today for sure

    • @irishmyths
      @irishmyths  23 дні тому +1

      Thanks for watching and welcome aboard!

  • @AlanDevaney-u2e
    @AlanDevaney-u2e 6 місяців тому +3

    Very entertaining, learned a lot!

  • @Pjvenom1985
    @Pjvenom1985 6 місяців тому +4

    Great video good sir, interesting and educational, over the years I've visited at least 50+ or so Tumuli, Cairns & particularly Dolmans all across Eire. I've about 5 favourites I visit a few times a year while strolling the greater Dublin area.🌳🌅☘️

  • @aletadevaney6820
    @aletadevaney6820 6 місяців тому +3

    I learned a lot! Thanks!!

  • @hugoponders
    @hugoponders 6 місяців тому +2

    Great video as always. You deserve a ton of views.

  • @randomliamsquares765
    @randomliamsquares765 6 місяців тому +3

    Great vid !

  • @LesNouvelle-Angleterreur
    @LesNouvelle-Angleterreur 6 місяців тому +1

    There's a tumulus in Upton, Massachusetts. It's nestled along side a swampy lake and has a beehive like inside with dirt between the stones that when dated suggests may be built in the 1600s. It's doorway also aligns with the setting sun occasionally. Just a handful of miles from it are Cairns on top of a hill.
    The local Nipmuc, Ponnagansette, and Narragansett tribes do not have a history with stone working as they lived migratory lives between the ocean and the inland lakes depending on the hunting season.
    Edit: Stone work was common in the sense on knapping- sort of. The stones inland are brittle quarts and granite which don't make great knapping materials. However masonry or tomb building is scarce.

  • @GkPhotographic
    @GkPhotographic 6 місяців тому +3

    always enjoyable to listen to your telling of grand days past of the Golden age of Eru before time was counted .
    tis a grand culture they left us , its more important then ever to keep the truth form subversion .
    be safe, from under the gaze of SeeFinn .

    • @irishmyths
      @irishmyths  6 місяців тому

      'Tis a grand culture indeed. Thanks for watching, and thanks for taking the time to comment 🙏

  • @thegreenmage6956
    @thegreenmage6956 6 місяців тому

    The first Celtic inhabitants of both Britain and Ireland probably first spoke Proto-Celtic or perhaps even Common Celtic - they seem to have diverged into Brythonic and Goidelic respectively some time in the Bronze Age…

  • @eldraque4556
    @eldraque4556 5 місяців тому

    do you speak the lingho? you pronounciations are bang on, i think

  • @longshotkdb
    @longshotkdb 6 місяців тому

    I once was asked by an English tourist:
    Where are all the trees... ?
    lol once I was sitting in the pub and an American family called by. Soaked through, mad af because the bus was an hour late. When they complained to the driver he replied
    " But, I'm the 9 o'clock bus, so I'm actually 10 mins early"
    ...

  • @HenryLanepilkington
    @HenryLanepilkington 6 місяців тому +1

    i love your content but i think you’re thinking too hard about the pronunciation, say for the aggressive h (ch) try to combine that sound with a c and say it softer

  • @markedwards9247
    @markedwards9247 5 місяців тому +1

    With all due respect. You haven't got a clue what you are talking about.
    Celts were a common group (haplogroup), today in northern Portugal, northern Spain, Atlantic France, Eire, Briton, Germania, southern Scandinavia, Morocco (Amazigh) and Atlantic coastal North America (Abenaki).. The ancient world knew of these people as Berbers (Barbarians). This was not an offensive name, but a name of a race of people. The modern nations did not exist then.
    All of these territories have the unique formations known as tumulii, and standing stones, and stone circles. Some dating back at least 6,000 years.
    They also share the same insignia, known as the sacred spiral today. It is an insignia identifying their common heritage. This same insignia can be found on many stone monuments the length and breadth of the aforementioned Celtic territory.
    So, of course the sacred monuments weren't built by the Celts.
    It is just pure coincidence that the monuments, insignia, and haplogroup are from these Celtic lands.
    If you want to know the actual origin of Celtic people, it is quite a simple process.
    Get a world map that shows all of the Celtic territories, and it will be quite obvious where the central distribution is from.
    Here is a clue. Apart from the mountain peaks known as The Fortunate Isles, it no longer exits.

    • @gabrielalves-lh7bq
      @gabrielalves-lh7bq 4 місяці тому +1

      Dude, he never said the celts have built any of these structures. Quite the contrary, in fact. And he knwons very well were how the celts originated and how they spread. He even shows this map you speak of at 2:48. The thing is that his channel is focused in Ireland and irish culture and mythology, so he's always gonna talk about anything throul irish lenses.
      Also,this thing about celts having reached North America is nothing but a myth, with no solid evidence to back it up. IrishMyth even debunk this in another videos. The Abenaki were a people on their onw right with no relation to any of this.
      Please check your sorses before saying people who study the subject have no idea what they're talking about.

  • @eldraque4556
    @eldraque4556 5 місяців тому +1

    do you speak the lingho? you pronounciations are bang on, i think