What Happened To Britain's Last Hunter-Gatherers? Prehistoric Europe Documentary

2020 ж. 15 Ақп.
2 200 884 Рет қаралды

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  • Phew this was a struggle to upload. I felt the pain of ancient farmers planting their crops only to see them fail when I saw this repeatedly fail to upload. Feels good to be finally there! Don't forget to like, subscribe and let me know what you'd like to see covered next in the comments! People based in the UK- What are your favourite stone circles/ancient monuments? I'm putting a list together for my upcoming 'Age of the Stone Circles' Doc. It'll be my most ambitious yet. Thanks for watching! Oh and here is my new channel where I visit historical sites:- It's sort of a behind the scenes of History Time as well. kzhead.info/tools/Mq-bTjlaTZhaohEracnN6w.html Watch my latest full length history documentary:- kzhead.info/sun/lpeBoZqNmHiHpKM/bejne.html

    @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • More on Carnac please!

      @jameswagstaff7180@jameswagstaff71804 жыл бұрын
    • Ta for this, really enjoyed it

      @BRIANJAMESGIBB@BRIANJAMESGIBB4 жыл бұрын
    • Historical records begin in the 3rd millenium BC. Any "history" before that is pseudo-history. And there is no evidence that the Earth is more than about 6,000 years old. The Biblical date of creation can be traced to about 4300 BC.

      @tylerb9877@tylerb98774 жыл бұрын
    • My favourite ancient monument is Christopher Biggins .

      @Dad-Gad@Dad-Gad4 жыл бұрын
    • @@tylerb9877 Lol you silly goose !

      @Dad-Gad@Dad-Gad4 жыл бұрын
  • Wow , please indulge me, when I was a youngling I told my teacher I wanted to be a archeologist. He told me not to be stupid as kids like me don't go to university and anyway there weren't any jobs in it. History is a dead subject. Who I think I was India Jones? That got a laugh. I never did go to university , I'm a manual worker. I shovel shit for a living. However iv always consumed history , every aspect of it. Your self made videos have inspired me. Your clear love of the subject has produced a masterpiece of historical emersion. With your work I can study, to a level I didn't think possible and it's pure joy to put a few of your vids on whilst I'm doing my daily. Funny thing I keep seein archeologist jobs on offer. Thank you for uploading

    @kupus6622@kupus66224 жыл бұрын
    • It's pretty easy for a member of the public to volunteer on archaeological sites, even at the weekends www.archaeology.co.uk/digs this site has a lot of info on it

      @anniesearle6181@anniesearle61814 жыл бұрын
    • What a useless Teacher... Go study Archaeology, Ben. You'll find places to learn online if you can't afford a course, and if you're really into it, you'll get some volunteer work on a dig somewhere... it'll be mostly be boring, back-aching work but things lead to better things if you've a passion for it. Get a metal detector even.... There's always stuff to be found and if you do it properly then you're part of a big team of people uncovering history one step at a time! Don't let people tell you what you can't do based on their own perceptions of life.

      @tobyehillier@tobyehillier4 жыл бұрын
    • @@tobyehillier thank you for taking time to read and reply. You know what I'm gonna take your advice and am contacting a few digs to offer my spade. I'm quite good at graft I'm told. Also iv been a metal detectorist for a few years , it seen my destiny is linked with spades. Keeps me fit. Have a happy and positive day.

      @kupus6622@kupus66224 жыл бұрын
    • @@anniesearle6181 thank you for link. Clicking now. Wishing you a good day

      @kupus6622@kupus66224 жыл бұрын
    • @@kupus6622 if you can dig a hole you're set for life!

      @tobyehillier@tobyehillier4 жыл бұрын
  • Kudos to that lobster for discovering flint tools on the sea bed .

    @Ruby-ep8oc@Ruby-ep8oc2 жыл бұрын
    • 😂

      @Ruby-ep8oc@Ruby-ep8oc2 жыл бұрын
    • What?? How afar into the video?? 😦😦😦

      @porkypig2971@porkypig29712 жыл бұрын
    • The Lorb provides

      @daemonxblaze@daemonxblaze2 жыл бұрын
    • @@porkypig2971 Around 27 minutes

      @LordKalte@LordKalte2 жыл бұрын
    • The lobsters are taking over!

      @LordKalte@LordKalte2 жыл бұрын
  • Just a couple of notes: The Palaeolithic hunter/gather culture in Western France had been going on for 30,000 years before there was any hint of a transition to an agricultural society. That is approximately five times longer than the span of years between the beginnings of Egyptian culture and today. These were people who produced elaborate and quite beautiful cave art. Moreover, in some places the caves were in clusters of a couple of dozen sites. All of this is to say, that these people were not just advanced animals hunting other animals. They had art, they had population centres and they probably had some sort of trade going on as there are approximately 350 painted caves from Portugal to the Urals. Finally, we might want to wonder if the people who built complex stone structures were in some way inspired by a very long heritage of cave living.

    @sethfeldman8674@sethfeldman86743 жыл бұрын
    • Giants placed those stone structures there before the hunter gatherers, gvt suppressed that knowledge from us since birth. I'm just passing on what I was told by a family member in gvt who knows secrets were not supposed too know.

      @enolwlfe@enolwlfe3 жыл бұрын
    • @@enolwlfe lol!!!!

      @SonOfTheDawn515@SonOfTheDawn5152 жыл бұрын
    • No longer since the neanderthals

      @johnagar7610@johnagar76102 жыл бұрын
    • @@enolwlfe you mean you're just showing a) you're gullible, and b) you're nearly illiterate. 😄

      @MaryAnnNytowl@MaryAnnNytowl2 жыл бұрын
    • We are still just animals eating other animals, though. We are, even those who chose to be vegan, still animals.

      @MaryAnnNytowl@MaryAnnNytowl2 жыл бұрын
  • "This is an hour long, deep dive, into ancient, pre-historic, Europe" This is why I come here.

    @connarcomstock161@connarcomstock1613 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for the shout out! I wish my videos were as atmospheric as yours. You really paint a picture in our minds!

    @StefanMilo@StefanMilo4 жыл бұрын
    • It's nice to see creators follow their "colleagues". Love your channel by the way!

      @davidegaribaldi1503@davidegaribaldi15034 жыл бұрын
    • What a nice surprise to see you here.

      @skipinkoreaable@skipinkoreaable4 жыл бұрын
    • Love your channel Stephan

      @AutomaticBadger@AutomaticBadger4 жыл бұрын
    • @@AutomaticBadger I want to love his channel too. How do I find it?

      @nostracrystaal2156@nostracrystaal21563 жыл бұрын
    • @@nostracrystaal2156 Just click on his profile picture, will take you to his channel. He's really great

      @nuao88@nuao883 жыл бұрын
  • If I got to choose between shorter ones and your full, feature-length documentaries which are better than most of those with big budgets behind them, my vote is keep doing this. It's easily my most favourite youtube channel you've built here.

    @dhindaravrel8712@dhindaravrel87124 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks! Yep HT will remain full length docs. I’ve started doing shorter ones again but they are on a different channel.

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • @@HistoryTime I shall subscribe there as well :)

      @dhindaravrel8712@dhindaravrel87124 жыл бұрын
    • I disagree, the old ones were much more compact and to the point. These feture lenght videos are really bloated, but I guess this is the fate of all youtube documentary channels once they get rolling.

      @mogyesz9@mogyesz94 жыл бұрын
    • @@mogyesz9 There are plenty of channels with shorter videos for those with short attention spans who don't want to get in-depth with a topic, though.

      @dhindaravrel8712@dhindaravrel87124 жыл бұрын
    • @@dhindaravrel8712 what a shit meme answer

      @mogyesz9@mogyesz94 жыл бұрын
  • Another very well produced video, great job. People always forget the gathering side of hunter gatherer, from which it is a very short step to farming. The nuts, berries, seeds and plants, and mushrooms etc, it's a short leap from finding them to cultivating them, much easier than selectively breeding grass into wheat over generations. Look at the wide variety of fruits and vegetables that exist, from apples to turnips, carrots to cucumber, and then rethink waiting for the wheat foreigners to come and show us how to live. The other thing people forget is that you can't just show up and be a farmer, you have to survive for best case months, worst case years before you get a decent crop, so you are going to need something to eat in the mean time. This completely ignores fishing and shellfish of course, which would be used by both hunters and farmers, so what you end up with is a chowder of all sorts of people doing all sorts of things at the same time in the same place, not some dramatic shift.

    @Argrouk@Argrouk4 жыл бұрын
    • You preserve last year's crops to live on until the next harvest by drying, salting, smoking, and/or pickling. You can also dig a hole in the ground for colder storage facilities. All of those technologies were available for uncounted milennia. Only canning is a relatively new technology. However, even to this day, farmers supplement their food supplies with wild food that is gathered or hunted. Hunting and gathering are a lot less work, so it only makes sense to farm/keep animals if you don't have enough to feed your population, otherwise.

      @robinlillian9471@robinlillian9471 Жыл бұрын
    • @@robinlillian9471 Lets face it. Most people don't eat raw wheat. Any assumptions based on that sort of crop farming that requires further processing is going to be thousands of years after the farming of plant to mouth crops. Strawberries to Carrots, anything you can pick and eat is going to be the first thing to domesticate, but is going to be harder to find evidence for.

      @Argrouk@Argrouk Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly, we still hunt to supplement for crop shortages.

      @bushwhackerinc.4668@bushwhackerinc.4668 Жыл бұрын
  • When at school in Australia, ancient history was concentrated between Roman times to about 1600 mostly English based History, also 1770 to 1788 (Captain Cook to First Fleet Australian History) Really not much else. I now find the much earlier times as the true foundation of modern society (hunter gatherer to farming based society)much more important.

    @vintagetintrader1062@vintagetintrader10623 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah this is me too. Growing up in Canada, I used to find learning about the 1800s - our city roots out West - as so old and interesting. But as I've gotten older and much more interested in medieval, ancient, and pre-historic & anthropological roots, going back to the 18th and 19th centuries just seem so recent and somewhat boring in comparison. I find I really enjoy learning about different cultures, as opposed to just the (comparatively speaking) recent history of my own culture.

      @sainters7@sainters73 жыл бұрын
    • agreed, i believe that it is because we know so little about it though as there was no recorded texts etc

      @20ZZ20@20ZZ203 жыл бұрын
    • Well, the lithic eras are not ancient history but prehistory so...

      @-----REDACTED-----@-----REDACTED-----3 жыл бұрын
    • And then America, which is pretty much focused on the Colonial period onward, with an undue emphasis on the 1940s.

      @stevenschnepp576@stevenschnepp5762 жыл бұрын
    • @@stevenschnepp576 meanwhile in my country we waste 6 years of history on the 2nd World War.

      @udozocklein6023@udozocklein60232 жыл бұрын
  • Didnt realise this is an indy production until i scrolled through the comments. Very well done!

    @MtnTow@MtnTow4 жыл бұрын
    • It's almost too good to he true. Who's to say he's not being bankrolled by some agenda orchestrated by history revisionists? I say we came from an egg that fell from the moon, this is known. All this talk of ancients is some mumbo jumbo we came from an egg in that landed in the Euphrates!!! Wake up!!! You came from an egg!!!

      @ajantsmith6139@ajantsmith61394 жыл бұрын
    • @@ajantsmith6139 wut

      @RRC6490@RRC64904 жыл бұрын
    • @@RRC6490 you came from an egg that fell from the moon, the egg landed in the Euphrates river. That's where humanity comes from

      @ajantsmith6139@ajantsmith61394 жыл бұрын
    • @@ajantsmith6139 was the monkey???? I've seen that idea before Chinese fokelore I prefer the lady and the rabbit idea more though. Thanks for your POV.

      @anything6398@anything63983 жыл бұрын
    • The comments are a mob production.

      @WR3ND@WR3ND3 жыл бұрын
  • I'm so impressed that you'll created your own, full-length history documentary! You don't have all the filler scenes that BBC uses, either. Very interesting material not covered elsewhere. I look forward to watching more of your original shows.

    @MaternalUnit@MaternalUnit2 жыл бұрын
  • They became the Basques

    @selfinihalation@selfinihalation Жыл бұрын
  • This is great, one of KZhead’s golden nuggets. Well paced, watchable and gives the impression of being well researched and factually correct (so rare these days). Thank you! One thought that came to mind when watching this was how much trade and migration - especially the small genetically distinct coastal settlements here and there - depended on Stone Age ocean going ships. A video about Neolithic maritime technology would be fantastic.

    @antoninbesse795@antoninbesse7953 жыл бұрын
    • Also to note, Doggerland flooded in around 8000 BC which would have been catastrophic to the early peoples of the region and their trade routes. Suddenly they had to sail.

      @jorritt1@jorritt12 жыл бұрын
    • Fantastic journey through our history, thank you. I watched an earlier program of yours on “Doggerland” which was utterly riveting. Based on the flood myths in around every culture on the planet, is it possible that our Mesolithic ancestors were all but wiped out during this apocalypse around 8000bce, and our Neolithic (and a handful of Mesolithic Hunter gatherers) were the survivors that were forced to migrate?

      @jorritt1@jorritt12 жыл бұрын
  • Most important consequence of agriculture: A steady supply of beer.

    @HS-su3cf@HS-su3cf4 жыл бұрын
    • H S the count of all civilisation hic

      @onlineenglish7065@onlineenglish70654 жыл бұрын
    • Beer was likely not a consequence of agriculture, bur agriculture was a consequence of beer-production: www.cbsnews.com/news/archeologists-link-rise-of-civilization-and-beers-invention/

      @billmiller4972@billmiller49724 жыл бұрын
    • @@billmiller4972 It actually makes sense that the entirety of civilisation was built upon alcohol, you'd have to be drunk to think this was all a good idea :3

      @Frog154@Frog1544 жыл бұрын
    • @@Frog154 "Reality is an illusion caused by a lack of alcohol" (A. Bierce)

      @billmiller4972@billmiller49724 жыл бұрын
    • No joke, once beer was discovered it's production became a prime motivation for agriculture

      @freefall9832@freefall98324 жыл бұрын
  • Many years ago I read Stan Beckensall's Prehistoric Northumberland. He's an amateur archaeologist recognized by professionals for his work on cup and ring marked stones. He stresses meaning in the physical landscape. Physical features such as waterfalls, and rock formations acted as signposts / place markers for wandering hunters, but they also had spiritual or sacred significance. People would add to these sacred places with rock art, henge posts, and burial sites. I'd always walked in Northumberland, but Stan's work connected me to the past. It was poetic and almost paganistic. I realized that the places where I'd sit down, and get the flask out, were the same places where Mesolithic people would have stopped. I've just found History Time, and I feel inspired by and connected to the past again. I can't wait to watch the Old North one next. Three and a half hours and 15 million views. One man putting the dumbed down agenda driven BBC to shame. 'Men went to Catreath at the dawn...'

    @raffaz66@raffaz66 Жыл бұрын
  • I love the cave of dreams there. 34,000 years old. Painted in 3d so the flicker of a torch made it look like animals were running

    @freeair9460@freeair94604 жыл бұрын
  • 0:36 it just feels so wrong seeing that map without Doggerland now :(

    @gronizherz3603@gronizherz36033 жыл бұрын
    • I miss doggerland :(

      @johnnyoverpour@johnnyoverpour3 жыл бұрын
    • @@johnnyoverpour if your from the UK, there is a strong chance you have DoggerLand DNA in you. See it that way.

      @DigitalBard1@DigitalBard13 жыл бұрын
  • When I was in 8th grade, in 1999, my Social Studies class learned about the Paleo/Meso/Neolithic eras. Not ONCE did my teacher say, "hey kids, check out this cool Mesolithic boat-building site they just discovered at Bouldnor Cliff! 2000 years before the Neolithic Revolution!" I feel really cheated.

    @DoinItforNewCommTech@DoinItforNewCommTech4 жыл бұрын
  • what a time to be alive! This is free on the internet for all to watch, no catches. God I love humans.

    @neekBG3@neekBG33 жыл бұрын
  • Love your long documentaries and the quiet narration. Thank you so much for the hard work. neolithic and vikings are among my favorites!

    @munxgrosgeant2324@munxgrosgeant23244 жыл бұрын
  • Your efforts are so appreciated. I really enjoy these videos daily. Thank you!

    @1StewartSarah@1StewartSarah4 жыл бұрын
  • I love the longer more in-depth videos as does everyone I know. Family and friends all agree these longer ones are terrific. For this video my friends and family gathered at my home so we could all watch it on the big screen tv together. Afterward we discussed the content at length while sitting in front of the fireplace. We’ve decided to do this again for another of your longer videos. I believe we are creating our own style of gathering lol. Of course we also watch on our individual devices as well as on the big screen lol so we don’t mess up your view count lol. We don’t watch on our devices WHILE we are watching on the tv lol. Please do more on the U.K. I’ve been using them to teach my son about the U.K. since his father and all his ancestors are from there. Cheers mate

    @prepperjonpnw6482@prepperjonpnw64824 жыл бұрын
  • I enjoy these videos so much, and I want you to know how much I appreciate the amount of work that you must put in to each one. Thank you!

    @CoryRoo33@CoryRoo334 жыл бұрын
    • Pity he doesn’t work harder just kidding

      @dilksjoel@dilksjoel Жыл бұрын
  • I just want to say thank you for all the time and effort you put into your videos to teach true history to all your viewer's I truly appreciate it! #ILoveHistory

    @iamtroll8334@iamtroll83344 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for watching!

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • @@HistoryTime Always!! 👍👍

      @iamtroll8334@iamtroll83344 жыл бұрын
    • @@iamtroll8334 a troll that's a history buff - novel idea. 😄

      @MaryAnnNytowl@MaryAnnNytowl2 жыл бұрын
    • @@MaryAnnNytowl you have no idea Loved history since I was in the 5th grade I'm 40 now I study all the time. History alot of times will tell you the future of a country's outcome as history repeats its self.

      @iamtroll8334@iamtroll83342 жыл бұрын
  • Longer historical videos like this plz. Awesome!

    @philswede@philswede4 жыл бұрын
  • I absolutely love these longer format videos. They are incredibly well done and an immense joy to watch. Your narration is spot on and you don’t overwhelm with music which is rarely necessary anyway. Please make more of these longer videos, maybe go back and choose some of your 5-10 minute videos and re-do them into a longer version. That would be awesome. Thank you for what you are doing I will be contributing financially to your channel as well as continuing to share them with everyone I can. Cheers mate

    @prepperjonpnw6482@prepperjonpnw64824 жыл бұрын
  • Your docs are always fantastic! Thanks for all the work you put into them.

    @MadTracker@MadTracker4 жыл бұрын
  • Pete, between your recent hike on the hill fort, the wonderful account of the Portuguese/Japanese over at VOTP, and now this, I'm feeling particularly spoiled. I've already got Curiosity Stream and Magellan thanks to you, so I'm headed over to your Patreon. Cheers!

    @elihobson7956@elihobson79564 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for the support! Appreciate it. It has indeed been a busy weekend for us!

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
  • Farming and hunting aren't mutually exclusive. Even today, many farmers, here, hunt to supplement their food supply. I expect it was the same back then, even though there have been much more recent periods of more advanced civilization in which wealthy rulers claimed such activities as their own. In the stone age, all the extra time spent waiting for crops to grow likely wasn't only spent doing crafts. Hunting would've still been essential for farmers.

    @NefariousKoel@NefariousKoel4 жыл бұрын
    • Although we are still hunting wild animals and gathering mushrooms and berries for our dining table, the concept of hunters-gatherers is probably meant to describe a nomadic people who did not cultivate the fields.

      @PerJustert@PerJustert4 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@PerJustert I believe by the time of Carnac the people were at least semi settled. Maybe with small pockets of nomadic people on the outskirts of their settlements. There is just no way to get the resources needed for such large earth / stone works.

      @GilgameshEthics@GilgameshEthics4 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@GilgameshEthics Before I venture into deep water, I would like to point out that I am far from skilled in human development. I can only claim to have a little above average interest in history and anthropology, but as I understand it, the Neolithic revolution was the first agricultural revolution and is the term for the gradual transition from a nomadic society of hunters and gatherers in the Stone Age to a society of agriculture and permanent settlement. Here in Norway where I come from, evidence has been found that the nomadic hunter-gatherer had permanent settlements for spring, summer and autumn seasons, where they hunted and fished while waiting for mushrooms and berries to mature. But as far as I know, they rarely wintered in the same place but went south to more temperate regions when it came to winter. It was not until they cultivated the landscape that the need for permanent settlement came. Now, of course, there is a great difference between the geographical conditions of the golden crescent where the Neolithic revolution started, and up here in the north. Up here, the first major domestication of the animal kingdom was carried out by nomadic hunter-gatherers, and apart from the taming of wolves used for hunting and guarding, the "taming" of the reindeer herds was probably a result of several nomadic tribes cooperating to herd the reindeer to pick out the weak and damaged animals and care for the right breeding individuals of the nomadic deer. Our indigenous Sami people still carry on the same nomadic domestication culture. Remains of monumental ritual buildings have been found in Göbekli Tepe, Turkey, but no residences or traces of domestication. In other words, the nomadic man had the ability to both build large permanent constructions and to collaborate with more than the individuals in his own tribe to perform such tasks. One could thereby take into account the common need of several nomadic tribes for mythological rituals, such as burials or worship of celestial gods and underground beings that mattered to everyone.

      @PerJustert@PerJustert4 жыл бұрын
    • Fishermen and crofters for example.

      @mikesands4681@mikesands46812 жыл бұрын
    • @@PerJustert so fascinating! - your last comment

      @alexae1367@alexae13672 жыл бұрын
  • Curious thing: what we find tells us Hunter-gatherers were overall healthier and taller than the agriculturalists. Also Hunter-gatherers were pursuing their subsistence with a diversified risk strategy: largely low-risk low-reward, if a hunt failed this week next week you might get luckier. Agriculturalists on the other hand bundled their risk into a high-risk high-reward system where when the crop failed you were likely fucked. And yet this gambling in the end so far seems to have paid off.

    @-----REDACTED-----@-----REDACTED-----3 жыл бұрын
    • Yep. Early agriculturists worked a lot harder, too. Agriculture was not an obvious quality of life improvement at all. He said that it allows a larger population. It's bigger than this. It's that agriculture *demands* a larger population as well as land expansion. Where hunter/gathering requires population restraint. It's nothing to with "idyllic" lifestyles - life was never idyllic for all people. However, that lifestyle endured for hundreds of thousands of years. How long will ours last? Whatever crises hits humans here, I'd bet its some remote living people who can live off their surroundings who will survive.

      @OrangeNash@OrangeNash2 жыл бұрын
    • paid off in the contest of conquest over things that sustain our health

      @zeeanemone6482@zeeanemone6482 Жыл бұрын
    • Most hunter gatherers time was spent gathering. Nuts and shell fish and fruit. Eggs too. Also foraged greens and roots. Nobody ever discusses trapping but even neanderthals could make string. Hunting is mostly seasonal and involves taking out the weakest animals. No point in killing a lot of large mammals unless you had ice or salt. What agriculture and pottery did was make it possible to store grain so that a bad harvest could be survived. The earliest known writing, in the Middle East, was to keep track of grain stores. And you could capture slaves to farm your land. Slavery would not work in the hunter gatherer world.

      @casteretpollux@casteretpollux Жыл бұрын
    • Agriculture almost demands technology to be long term success, from storage and transportation to understanding the weather and improving seed types all lead to modern civilisation

      @hawklord100@hawklord100 Жыл бұрын
    • The only reason you need to farm, Is to feed the slaves, so you force the slaves to farm , and build walls to keep them in

      @gratefulkm@gratefulkm Жыл бұрын
  • I would love to see what life was like back then. Truly a beautiful age.

    @ReplyToMeIfUrRetarded@ReplyToMeIfUrRetarded6 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for another excellently written and informative video Pete! I always look forward to your videos. Keep up the great work! :)

    @jackielou68@jackielou684 жыл бұрын
  • Well done as always! Your videos have been a great source of content throughout the pandemic. Now that things are opening up, we should organize a tour to see them in person!

    @miscleaf@miscleaf3 жыл бұрын
  • Peter, you're doing such a marvelous job! Truly professional tier work. I'm so happy I found your channel a little more than two months ago, since I too am a "lover" of history since i was 8 yrs old. I binge watch your videos on the weekends. I am so impressed with your excellent research. Your voice is perfect for narration, and overall your work is top level. Do you need volunteers to help you with projects, research, anything?😊 Thank you for all your work!

    @wendyarmstrong823@wendyarmstrong8234 жыл бұрын
  • I'm loving this, you've done such a good job here. Very grateful for your work.

    @pc2753@pc27534 жыл бұрын
  • Pete, You are performing work of art and production miracle. Above all, Your work is scientifically sound, excellent researched and educative. Thank You for this wonderful work.

    @draganjagodic4056@draganjagodic40564 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for watching! So much more on the way

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • @@HistoryTime Sincere regards Pete

      @draganjagodic4056@draganjagodic40564 жыл бұрын
    • @@HistoryTime hope it is more accurate and less simplistic

      @eifionjones559@eifionjones5594 жыл бұрын
    • @@HistoryTime I hope so. This channel is awesome.

      @skipinkoreaable@skipinkoreaable4 жыл бұрын
  • This is a beautifully done Documentary, thank you Sir for making it!

    @calebradell2511@calebradell25114 жыл бұрын
  • This was beautifully made. Thank you for all the hard work that you put into this.

    @mike-ovaca5386@mike-ovaca53862 жыл бұрын
  • Yay i love these long ones! This perspective keeps me interested, but it’s also wonderfully relaxing 😌

    @stargatis@stargatis3 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for the GREAT WORK! You do a great job and review different sites and data from each location/region with Europen and the movement from the Futile Crescent to Europe.

    @werdw4849@werdw48494 жыл бұрын
  • They walked into a pub and never left

    @kanesmith8271@kanesmith82714 жыл бұрын
  • these are our ancestors. almost all of us. like looking at family photos. thanks for this! you make such epic documentaries :)

    @NikoAbston@NikoAbston Жыл бұрын
  • This is just an incredibly well-done documentary. Thank you so much!

    @dironahlquist8159@dironahlquist81593 жыл бұрын
  • My gods, what an amazing video! You've outdone yourself! This is far and away better than ANYTHING available on cable tv. Simply fantastic.

    @DanCooper404@DanCooper4044 жыл бұрын
  • I love all of your videos! You do such an excellent job on the narration and graphics, not to mention that you seem to be an expert in historical fact. I really appreciate that. I've always loved history but I think there are a lot of people who maybe are not too interested until they run across something like this channel. I would venture to say that you've somehow managed to make history interesting! Keep up the good work!

    @anndriggers6660@anndriggers6660 Жыл бұрын
  • Outstanding presentation. I had never considered this clash of cultures; you have taken me on a fascinating and visually stunning journey of discovery. Bravo.

    @Mirrorgirl492@Mirrorgirl4926 ай бұрын
  • This is awesome. Thank you for making it.

    @Lilasun@Lilasun Жыл бұрын
  • Hunting in a forested area, trees and shrubs afford hiding from prey. I can see how slash and burn agriculture would drive hunter gatherers to give up. It would also drive species into extinction that relied on forest for survival. It wouldn't require extensive warfare to push the earlier culture into extinction.

    @gaslitworldf.melissab2897@gaslitworldf.melissab28972 жыл бұрын
    • Farmers wouldn't burn all of the forest on purpose. It was useful even to them for wood and other resources. Farmers still go out into the countryside to pick berries, hunt wild animals, etc. No one gave up. They just do both as makes sense.

      @robinlillian9471@robinlillian9471 Жыл бұрын
    • That's human kind for you..

      @SECRETORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR@SECRETORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR Жыл бұрын
  • Bonkers that this is available for free. Keep up the great work

    @ryanconnelly7782@ryanconnelly77824 жыл бұрын
  • Great video with one caveat: The local teacher who was touted as being a "direct descendant" of Cheddar Man was, in fact, not the closest DNA match to the Mesolithic remains. Two schoolchildren were an exact mtDNA match, but since they were minors, it was decided not to expose them to the media attention. Also, these tests were done on mitochondrial DNA, which is passed only through the female line, so the male teacher could not have been a direct descendant. Cheddar Man's mtDNA haplogroup was U5, which is common throughout Europe, and was common in several Neolithic waves of British settlement, as well as another influx during the Copper Age. So, the whole sensationalist story of the teacher's family living in the area for 9,000 years is complete media bollocks. I'm sure geneticists everywhere wish this story would stop making the rounds. I was sorry to see this promoted in this video.

    @Pipsqwak@Pipsqwak2 жыл бұрын
    • I just received my mtDNA results and am curious what you mean by the 2 children being an exact match. Does this mean there were no mutations at all between them in 9000 years? My testing company is touting my haplogroup of U5b1c2b being the same as Cheddar Man's but I understand he was U5b1 and they would have branched off thousands of years ago. I have an exact match whose maternal line is from Cornwall and a genetic distance 1 match also from the same small fishing village in Cornwall. I am assuming my maternal line was also in Cornwall at some point. Not too far from Somerset, but surely a coincidence. From what I have heard (and based on more distant matches), the subclade origins were likely Sweden/Denmark.

      @Skeptique@Skeptique2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Skeptique Mitochondrial DNA is passed only from mother to child, and only females can pass it on, so the only thing that belonging to Cheddar Man's mitochondrial haplogroup means is that you shared a common ancestor at some far distant point, not that you (or anyone with the same U5 haplogroup) are a direct descendant. It's more like being very distant maternal cousins. The two minor children's mTDNA was a closer match (i.e., all the subclades were closer to the Cheddar Man's mTDNA). For instance, if Cheddar Man was U5b1c1, and these kids were U5b1c1b, they'd be more closely related than someone who was U5b1c2b2. They'd share a more direct maternal lineage than someone who was just U5 with other subclades. Also, mtDNA is just a small part of one's heritage. Autosomal DNA is the larger part. If you are male, you also have yDNA from your father's father and so on back down the male line. As far as I know, Cheddar Man's yDNA clade has not been determined, but even if it had, it is likely shared by millions of Europeans and means little in terms of individual relationship.

      @Pipsqwak@Pipsqwak2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Pipsqwak Okay so you meant that Cheddar Man and the children were a closer match than the man they claimed was his descendant. Not a literal exact match? My understanding is that an exact match is genetic distance 0 and not just the same/close subclade. I am trying to use autosomal matches to prove that my maternal line was in fact in Cornwall recently. It's a tricky business!

      @Skeptique@Skeptique2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Skeptique All that belonging to the same mtDNA haplogroup/subclade means is that you share distant maternal ancestors. The kids who shared Cheddar Man's mtDNA haplogroup would not have inherited that from Cheddar Man, but possibly from his grandmother, mother, aunts or sisters - or any of the many many tens of thousands or millions of female branches of that tree that have come and gone since. They would be incredibly distant cousins at most, not direct descendants. Same with the yDNA clades - they're your paternal ancestors; ancestors that you share with millions of others. Neither means that any one person is a direct descendant of whatever fossil has been genotyped. Genotyping is fascinating business though, and I wish you luck in your efforts!

      @Pipsqwak@Pipsqwak2 жыл бұрын
    • Was there ever any undisclosed mtdna done on Kennewick man?

      @brainretardant@brainretardant2 жыл бұрын
  • This episode expands on my fascination on how civilization came to be. Excellent work!!!

    @sumnerwaite6390@sumnerwaite63903 жыл бұрын
  • Man, 👌 still Killin it! Ur unique combination of content, editing, maps/charts/graphs etc. of course ur voice is Awesome! Hands-down the best YT history channel! Appreciate all ur hard work and dedication👏!

    @lowekal@lowekal4 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for watching ! Appreciate the support

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • @Jed Clampett Trump is a criminal who should be in prison. LOCK HIM UP! LOCK HIM UP! LOCK HIM UP!

      @aaronjaben7913@aaronjaben79134 жыл бұрын
    • Short answer, Trump is a piece of shit! A bullet to his brain is too merciful for the likes of him.

      @Frankowillo@Frankowillo4 жыл бұрын
    • @@aaronjaben7913 seriously prison!!! Bush n blair maybe?

      @tonyalanmarchant7330@tonyalanmarchant73304 жыл бұрын
    • @@Frankowillo you sound like a nice piece of work

      @tonyalanmarchant7330@tonyalanmarchant73304 жыл бұрын
  • Your videos are absolutely perfect to listen to while making art. The narration is some of the best that I've heard and really takes the listener into the heart of the historical moment being told. Thank you for all your hard work.

    @elanabloom1071@elanabloom10713 жыл бұрын
  • thank you for posting you stay safe out there 🙏

    @brianferris1233@brianferris1233 Жыл бұрын
  • fantastic, really enjoyed it and look forward to seeing more. nice storytelling, thanks

    @gadge83@gadge833 жыл бұрын
  • I put together a playlist of my favorite videos of yours, and I fall asleep to them at night. This one is definitely going on the list. Thanks for the work you do.

    @TheLacedaemonian300@TheLacedaemonian3004 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for the support., Glad you like the videos

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • Same. Same, once in a while I will look for more history videos by other original creators, but none have matched up to the finesse of these. for sure.

      @charlottemonger9799@charlottemonger97994 жыл бұрын
  • I'm relatively discovering this channel and I found the uploads so impressive that I can't help comparing the title pages against the descriptions and checking in the comment sections to make sure I'm not watching a BBC or Amazon production. I can't say enough how incredibly well this content is made and presented and it wasn't too much of a surprise to hear that Peter Kelly is the brother of the guy who is the Voice of Voices Of The Past.

    @eardwulf785@eardwulf785 Жыл бұрын
  • I absolutely adore your work and your channel. Thank you for all that you do. 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻

    @Moonewitch@Moonewitch4 жыл бұрын
  • I never saw a documentary of that quality on KZhead! I learned a lot and it was so great to watch! I subscribe straight away!

    @duneydan7993@duneydan79934 жыл бұрын
  • I found your channels today. You have something going on here. Impressive. Subscribed to all of them.

    @zachariaszut@zachariaszut4 жыл бұрын
  • Real Uncorrupted European History : Haplogroup R1b,R1a (Indigenous Europeans)(Basques, Gaels, Poles) Haplogroup I (Neolithic Indo European wave from Anatolia.Stone monuments, Polytheism, Pottery,Longhouses, Axes,Sailing ships)(Bosnians,Scandinavians,Sardinians) Haplogroup J2b (Bronze Age Indo European wave. Ancient Greece, Rome. Writing, Metallurgy) (Modern Cretans) And some lesser sporadic influxes of Haplogroup E (North Africa) and Haplogroup G (Western Caucasus) Every single word associated with agriculture in Europe is of Indo-European origin.. There are also many maritime words as well such as "sail". Suggesting the Indo-Europeans were avid seafarers.. "Scythe" "Plough" "Wheat" "Bread" "Milk" "Cattle" "Goat" "Sheep" "Swine" "Wine" "Beer" "Mead" "Wool" "Hull" "Rudder" "Sail" "Axe" Every one of these words came from and with the Indo-Europeans....Suggesting the Indo-Europeans wrere synonymous with the advent of agriculture in the fertile crescent...It also suggests they journeyed by sea..

    @Turkish_Model__1@Turkish_Model__1 Жыл бұрын
  • Hooked on ancient history. Been listening to a lot of your videos at night. I'm not one to fall asleep easy. Takes me a long time and I love your channel. Brilliant voice, fabulous delivery and I'm hooked every time.. Keep it up and thank you!!! Oh, and the longer the video, the better. Thanks again.

    @brianhildreth9099@brianhildreth90995 ай бұрын
  • Thank you, excellent work with fantastic production values as always!

    @Nyctophora@Nyctophora3 жыл бұрын
  • It must of been heartbreaking for the last tribes of hunter gatherers to see the forests cut down to make way for the new farming methods

    @anjkovo2138@anjkovo21383 жыл бұрын
    • . . .and it's still happening in S. America and renewed in Indonesia to plant palm trees for the production of palm oil. Protests fall on deaf ears. Some protestors have been killed, shot by soldiers - trying to block deforestation.

      @gaslitworldf.melissab2897@gaslitworldf.melissab28972 жыл бұрын
    • Burned down rather. But yes.

      @undefinednull5749@undefinednull57498 ай бұрын
  • This was really exceptionally good - thank you so much! I'm sharing it with a group I'm in on Facebook where we discuss things like the split from our connection with nature... which you cover beautifully here! PS - I do also watch Stephan Milo's work but I find that he has a very conservative and unimaginative approach whereas you seem to have a more open mind and better ability to apply and communicate the results of your critical thinking. No comparison!

    @iamtheyorkiemom@iamtheyorkiemom2 жыл бұрын
  • I love your videos have been wanting ancient history docos that are actually enjoyable to watch for so long!! bless u

    @nataliesynnott5590@nataliesynnott55903 жыл бұрын
  • Well done! and a period of history thats just so cool!

    @kevinmurphy65@kevinmurphy652 ай бұрын
  • Fascinating to see how our distant, distant ancestors lived and how dependent on nature they truly were.

    @harrietharlow6766@harrietharlow67664 жыл бұрын
  • Nice! Great production, mate. Love your channel, everything is well researched and presented in an enthusiastic, intelligent way that reminds me why I love good documentaries so much. In a world of substance-free History, Smithsonian, even Nova, Nature, and many BBC productions these days, it’s independent creators who are bringing the fun and the un-dumbed down facts back to a genre that hasn’t been great in 20 years. I remember big budget, high concept educational TV from the 70s and 80s, and some good cable stuff in the 90s. Then a bunch of corporations bought everything that was interesting and drained the life from it, and we’ve had a long stretch of Duck Dynasty and Ghost Hunters and Ice Truckers and about 200 other shows you couldn’t pay me to watch. Nature and science and history is either dumbed down to the point of insult, or it’s relegated to some special pay channel. Aren’t people interested in learning about the past anymore? Well I sure am, and I know there are a lot of us judging by the comments on videos like this, so all I can say is thanks and keep it up! I’ve been subscribed to you since I watched your first video, and watched just about all your videos (I’ll have to check). And they’re always interesting.

    @dukeon@dukeon3 жыл бұрын
  • Interesting, instructive and very enjoyable! Thank you.

    @danilodesnica3821@danilodesnica38213 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you Magellan

    @monkeywrench2800@monkeywrench28003 жыл бұрын
  • It seems common to assume that burial preparation implies belief in an afterlife. I think it implies something different. Perhaps it implies sadness for the loss of one's companion or appreciation for the joy, comfort or security the deceased had provided while living. Those things could spark the desire to anoint the dead with or without belief in an afterlife.

    @jaredprince4772@jaredprince47724 жыл бұрын
    • That is true, and considering hunter gatherers had to have close relationships and rely on each other in order to survive, it makes sense that they would have paid their respects in that manner

      @swagcandy2576@swagcandy25763 жыл бұрын
    • Take dmt. There is a place before and afther ‘life’🙏

      @psylocibin9359@psylocibin93593 жыл бұрын
    • @@psylocibin9359 A psychedelic trip from N,N-Dimethyltryptamine is not evidence of anything supernatural. It's evidence of hallucinations resulting from the use of mind altering chemicals. It requires circular reasoning to conclude that it creates a portal to "a place before and afther [sic] ‘life’."

      @jaredprince4772@jaredprince47723 жыл бұрын
    • I believe they didn't want to dig holes. that's exhausting. and consumes worthy land (I guess wasn't some sort of a reason as nomadic life style anyways). much better by just chopping some nearby trees, put the body on top of a tad wooden logs and set the whole arrangement on fire. additional bonus of warmth during winter season. 😆

      @the_rover1@the_rover13 жыл бұрын
    • @@psylocibin9359 you seem like a bright spark, don't you? The comment "Brittain (sic) flooded, that's what happened". Your definitive answer to the title of the video pretty much says it all. Perhaps lay off the drugs? They don't seem to be doing you any favours.

      @riks081@riks0812 жыл бұрын
  • Yes! History Time.... One of the highlights of my week when I get a notification.

    @greeny202ab@greeny202ab4 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for the support! plenty more on the way :)

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • Information cushioned with fluff, and eerie sounds. How long would the presentation be if they didn't fluff it up?

      @mu99ins@mu99ins4 жыл бұрын
  • Love your videos so much Pete, I have a passion for history. Having inherited it from my Dad. Love your channel keep the videos coming 😊

    @barbaralucas1220@barbaralucas12203 жыл бұрын
  • Excellent production - indistinguishable from any big studio and your narration - sublime.

    @gaslitworldf.melissab2897@gaslitworldf.melissab28974 жыл бұрын
  • I find myself listening to this, and #8 Fall of Civilizations; Sumeria, over and over and over. Thank you so much! :)

    @kaarlimakela3413@kaarlimakela34133 жыл бұрын
  • As population rises, hunting for a living becomes difficult. As game becomes scarce, hunter gatherers probably settled down and started to raise crops and/or livestock to supplement hunted game. It likely wasn't a sudden change from one to the other. In North America most farmers are still in part, hunter gatherers. The annual deer hunt, duck/goose hunt, small game hunting and fishing are still a big thing , especially in the farming community.

    @minuteman4199@minuteman41994 жыл бұрын
    • That is precisely what I would think happened. Obviously, there may have been some mingling, but ultimately I believe that both groups would have been highly distrustful of each other... let's say that cosmopolitanism wouldn't take you very far as a hunter-gatherer or early farmer, and we have plenty of anthropological evidence to support this extreme paranoia of strangers in traditional societies. I think that violent confrontations would have been relatively common. Farmers prevailed ultimately by sheer force of numbers and take-over/destruction of prime hunting-gathering areas. Also, as you say, the conceptual frontier between hunter-gatherers and farmers (particularly neolithic farmers) was likely ill-defined, but I think on the whole it is more likely for neolithic farmers to have had many hunter-gatherer skills than vice versa.

      @marcostrujillo2617@marcostrujillo2617 Жыл бұрын
    • but that's a special thing once a year or so you know everyone goes in the fall or whatever you go get a deer that's not a regular source of food

      @CookingWithMichaelD@CookingWithMichaelD Жыл бұрын
    • Well, I honestly don't think it's that simple either. Paleo-style hunter-gatherer couples give birth to very few children because they have to move around constantly to follow prey and find places with more resources. Mesolithic hunter gatherers would have had more children after they realized they could instead settle down, stop moving around, and use the resources that grow in the area. Then, yeah, the idea that they farmed to compensate for a growing population may have been the case.

      @guacre2675@guacre2675 Жыл бұрын
  • Absolutely the best on KZhead, and better than TV!

    @marier7336@marier7336 Жыл бұрын
  • Your videos are amazing. The information is fascinating and the quality of the videos is better than anything I can find on mainstream tv history docs. Great work!

    @mainHERO88@mainHERO884 жыл бұрын
    • @@alfredthickcock Thanks. Check out Jordan Buckley's art. He's the one that made it.

      @mainHERO88@mainHERO883 жыл бұрын
  • They lived extremely difficult lives compared to the present day. ....The scene goes from beautiful nature to an over populated city with a gazillion people all trying move in an over crowded city street . Yeah a different type of difficulty if you ask me.....(food 4 thought )

    @Ruby-ep8oc@Ruby-ep8oc2 жыл бұрын
    • Lol yes very true

      @toocuteforwords9976@toocuteforwords99762 жыл бұрын
    • You can go to a store or online and buy literally everything you could ever need and more. You have the wealth of the entire human knowledge in a small device that fits in your pocket. You have a government that provides infrastructure to boost your quality of life and safety. Then to top it all off they he virtually no medicine or medical knowledge so even a little cold or cut could turn deadly quick. Ancient people would call our medicine magic today it is so far advanced. I could probably write a book, and I’m sure someone has, about how easy we have it even compared to 50 years ago. The fact that you were able to write this comment means you live an extremely easy life no matter how bad compared to anyone alive a few hundred years ago let alone thousands.

      @KnarBurger@KnarBurger2 жыл бұрын
  • This is the best history channel on YT! Keep up the good work!!

    @RBYU001@RBYU0014 жыл бұрын
    • Wow thanks Randy. Really glad you like the show

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
  • Great soundtrack choices and use of nature footage, very atmospheric cool and haunting

    @Journeyman107@Journeyman1074 жыл бұрын
  • Imagery, music and editing 1000 times better. Very interesting dude well done 👍

    @tedleyedwards@tedleyedwards4 жыл бұрын
  • Am I ever going to get to my household chores? Thank you so much.

    @sidstovell2177@sidstovell21774 жыл бұрын
  • Interesting that Britain was still Hunter gatherer as recent as 3500 bc. But why am I surprised? A lot of Native Americans were Hunter gatherers until a few hundred years ago. But imagine being able to drink from any stream without fear of becoming ill from it. It would have been wonderful to live in a time when no land was owned by anyone and the human population was so low. True freedom.

    @nole8923@nole89232 жыл бұрын
  • Love this! Thanks for uploading. And no... I would rather see you make LONGER docs!

    @AmericanWoman1964@AmericanWoman19642 жыл бұрын
  • The best and most comprehensive video of its kind on KZhead, or anywhere.

    @Tipi_Dan@Tipi_Dan3 жыл бұрын
  • 12:54 is a view of Cologne, Germany, and the Rhine river. People have settled the Rhine river valley for tens of thousands of years. Cologne began as a Rhine river colony of the Roman Empire. If you ever visit Cologne, right near the central train station there is a Roman-German Museum with artifacts from all of these periods, including neolithic Rhine settlements. In my opinion, one of the coolest exhibits anywhere in the world. So, showing Cologne right at that point in the narration matched extremely well. It's that kind of attention to detail that just won you a sub, sir.

    @DerHammerSpricht@DerHammerSpricht4 жыл бұрын
    • Stimmt!

      @lowersaxon@lowersaxon2 жыл бұрын
  • Very interesting Pete, I would like you to tell us about the Beaker people in a future video as remains of one of their graves was found near where i live in Wales. A bonus in the video today featured a piece on Ohalo II, I've visited Tiberius a few times which is just a mile up the road from the site tho' that was in 1981 sometime before Ohalo's discovery.

    @bertieschitz-peas429@bertieschitz-peas4294 жыл бұрын
    • It’s ‘Age of the Stone Circles’ next, then ‘The Beaker Folk Arrive in Britain’, then ‘Bronze Age Britain’, and then finally its Iron Age Britain. Of course I’ve decided to do an entire series. Because I never make things easy for myself :)

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • @@HistoryTime What a lineup!! This makes me hard and hot for you.

      @wodenravens@wodenravens4 жыл бұрын
    • Congrats Woden1809 - you have won an award for Feb 2020's Most Inappropriate Comment with regards to the uploaded content / professional answer given. You have won the Internet !

      @Boric78@Boric784 жыл бұрын
    • @@Boric78 And no women were harmed in the making of all this creepiness!!! Equality at last!!! Lol

      @NoName-fc3xe@NoName-fc3xe4 жыл бұрын
    • @@NoName-fc3xe Awards for everybody. All round. Well done lads.

      @Boric78@Boric784 жыл бұрын
  • Love ur stuff. Thank you.

    @craigmorrison440@craigmorrison4402 жыл бұрын
  • Amazing work as usual! Great documentary

    @matthewbryant958@matthewbryant9582 жыл бұрын
  • This channel just gets better and better, going from a slideshow of images to interesting and all original pieces of professional footage with great narration.

    @jackhakken@jackhakken4 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks Jack. I appreciate that. It's been a wild three years for sure

      @HistoryTime@HistoryTime4 жыл бұрын
    • @@HistoryTime It sure has been pete.

      @jackhakken@jackhakken4 жыл бұрын
  • Just gotta say that the farmers who settled in Europe came from Western Anatolia and the Aegean basin, and were genetically distinct from the farmers of the Fertile crescent. So this was an extremely gradual expansion across populations rather than one big migration

    @MrGuyJacks@MrGuyJacks4 жыл бұрын
    • Historical records begin in the 3rd millenium BC. Any "history" before that is pseudo-history. And there is no evidence that the Earth is more than about 6,000 years old. The Biblical date of creation can be traced to about 4300 BC.

      @tylerb9877@tylerb98774 жыл бұрын
    • @@tylerb9877 ever heard of something called radioactivity? Because yeah. There's plenty of evidence. I've got some 12 million year old shells here next to me. Next to that. That 6000 you mention, you do realise that's the probable age of when genesis was written right? According to you, there were humans writing down what god was going to do in about 1000 years. And yes several, since the version we have now is a composition of the stories by multiple people. So yeah. According to you. Genesis is pseudo-history. Congratulations. You just disproved the bible with your unexplained and unsupported argument.

      @theMRsome12@theMRsome124 жыл бұрын
    • @theMRsome12 Scientific dating methods are inaccurate because they rely on too many assumptions. They rely on the assumption that the rate of decay for minerals has always remained the same, on the assumption that the amount of minerals in the atmosphere has always remained the same, and on the assumption that these minerals have not been contaminated.

      @tylerb9877@tylerb98774 жыл бұрын
    • @@tylerb9877 So, you are insulting God, claiming that he was not capable of creating a planet and life on it, that would be older than 6000 years? Well, I personally believe that God is far more productive.

      @draganjagodic4056@draganjagodic40564 жыл бұрын
    • @@tylerb9877 With that line of reasoning your belief is based on the assumption that everything written in the bible is absolutely true

      @MrGuyJacks@MrGuyJacks4 жыл бұрын
  • You are showing many things I've never seen before. Thank you!

    @lindalee7322@lindalee73223 жыл бұрын
  • Great content. Well told!!

    @danlhendl@danlhendl2 жыл бұрын
  • Fabulous! I have always (since I was an adolescent) loved History, yet, during my youth I was mainly concerned with the Post-Renaissance time (1500-1900), then as an adult I got fascinated with the Ancient world (from Sumerians to Hittites). But now, as I grow older I have drawn my attention towards the prehistorical period, and, as such, documentaries like this one have been satisfying my curiosity and enriching my overall historical knowledge. Thanks for the upload.

    @Amadeu.Macedo@Amadeu.Macedo4 жыл бұрын
  • Minions in Cornwall is one of my favourite places.

    @brian280453@brian2804534 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for the work you put into bring us these videos. I have a never ending thirst of knowledge of for the story of human history and your videos do a tremendous job keeping me satisfied.

    @kobebarka8633@kobebarka86333 жыл бұрын
  • Your documentaries are superbly well researched, written, and presented. Please keep making these

    @AutomaticBadger@AutomaticBadger4 жыл бұрын
  • I would like to know about the carpathian mountains and the hutsel people

    @rebeccakahler2081@rebeccakahler20813 жыл бұрын
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