New Historia brings history and mythology to life with 3D animation and storytelling.
This is a channel made for people interested in Ancient History (Ancient Egypt, Ancient Rome, Ancient Greece) and Mythology (Greek Mythology, Roman Mythology, Ancient Egyptian Mythology).
Explore the deserts and temples of Ancient Egypt.
See how life was in Ancient Greece.
Experience what it was really like in ancient Rome.
just got back from 2 weeks there and a 300 mile boat trip on Nile saw river scenes of folks living/farming on the riverbanks that looked lie 2000 years ago great video
Why do soldiers always wear their battle gear when doing things like cooking and doing laundry? Whenever I get to camp after hiking all day, I always take off my pack and strip down to a tshirt and camp slippers. Metal armor looks uncomfortable
One problem with the video there is little or no black people to be found in the video. Ancient Egypt was a black nation. Ironically this video does show some brown skin type peoples which you europeans call white whenever convenient and call savages or subhuman when its not. I refer to arabs, middle eastern looking peoples of today
Let’s stop romanticizing Romans (and other cultures) because they built colossal marble structures. This brutal, conquering culture (Romans) had slaves (all skin tones) and killed people for entertainment. Now, we only see ruins of this society. Let’s learn from their mistakes because high tech does not equal elevated spirituality and morality. 🤔
In Latin Roman text they used the word Servus that we have incorrectly interpreted to mean slave but the word means servant. The Romans did have slaves that they captured in war.
"The ghosts of the venerable Senate of Ancient Rome, draped in the gravitas of their toga-clad silhouettes, stepping through time's veil into the cacophony of our era. Their eyes, once fixed on the sturdy marble and disciplined lines of the Eternal City, now stare agape at the jarring mosaic of the modern metropolis. Each building a cacophonous echo of Babel, a dissonant symphony in glass and steel, reaching for the heavens in vain, devoid of the harmonious hymns of architectural worship that once graced the Roman skyline. To these illustrious forbears, the modern world unfurls as a tapestry frayed at the edges, woven with threads of disquiet and disharmony. Where the fluid dance of Roman roads once led to the heart of a civilization pulsing with the blood of empires, now lies a labyrinth of soulless machines that scurry with the restless energy of a decapitated Hydra-directionless, senseless, devoid of the mighty authority that once coursed through the veins of their well-ordered society. A kaleidoscope of humanity mingles before these eyes that once knew the marvelous racial uniformity of Roman citizens, moving in a chaotic ballet. In ancient days, tongues and traditions twined like ivy around the columns of the Forum, each a note in the grand symphony of civilization. Now, the streets are a Babel reborn, no single tongue commands the air, nor any tradition stands unsullied, as linguistic sovereignty lies in ruins. The gossamer threads of tradition and culture, once the tapestries upon which the might of Rome was proudly rendered, now lie in disarray. The ancients recoil as they witness a world where the warp and weft of collective heritage fray and unwind, the disenchantment of past ages where every man's hearth was a bastion of familial custom and community rites now but starved flames in a universal cold hearth. Where the Roman banner of culture unfurled across the known world, enriching and educating, modernity appears to our spectral sentinels as cultural erosion-a relentless tide washing away the footprints of antiquity, leaving behind only the hollowed-out shells of past greatness. The ancient virtues, cast in the living bronze of Roman will, now seem caught in a relentless drift of meaningless variety, their noble forms tarnished by the patina of neglect. The visceral disgust of these temporal voyagers swells as they witness the departure from the centered life of civic virtue and public glory. Civic forums once brimmed with the robust debate of citizens, the amphitheaters throbbed with the collective heartbeat of Rome-alive in the spectacular confluence of man, beast, and deity. Now, silent screens flicker with the pale shadows of reality divorced from the communal triumphs and tragedies of the amphitheater's sands. In the cold light of the present, those titans of the ancient world see naught but a scattered legacy, a civilization bereft of its unifying narrative, its architectural majesty dismembered by the indifferent passage of time. To these shades of power and splendor, our world reveals itself as an empire of echoes, where the once mighty pulse of Rome is but a ghostly echo in the hearts of sleeping stones." - Andrea Zanzotto
This is so beautiful! Love it and yes, I would love to see more of such animations from ancient times. Ancient Egypt must have been fascinating in terms of architecture and landscape.
Citizens actually didn't go to Agora as they considered it as something to be done by their slaves or women. They thought spending their time in Gymnasion like a man is what should be done.
Stuff like this makes me feel mysteriously nostalgic, like I'm seeing some time and place that I vaguely remember living in. Reincarnation confirmed? (jk.. sorta)
Hay muchas impresiciones esto es solo una video que puede considerar como publicidad y engañosa Esto no puede enseñarse en los colegios porque entrega información falsa
Esto tiene muchas impresiones algunas son grotescas Hay errores en la navegación, hay errores en la cotidianeidad de la vida Hay serias impresiones en las dinastías faraónicas y el desarollo Hay impresiones en la ciudades y la administración del alto, medio y bajo egipto Esto disculpándose la expresión es basura porque entrega información ERRÓNEA No puede considerarse un documental Es más bien una farsa hollywodense
Interesting, but since we have only been around a very short time and ancient civilizations were around before our time, plus the lack of true knowledge on them, we are left with only our imaginations to dwell upon what ancient civilizations and our ancestors looked like and did back then. For all we know, what if it was different than what we assume it to be? The rest also leaves out our ancestry before the great flood happened. I’m intrigued by history but I also see a trend to it and the demise of civilizations after a time of affluence and growth. In all of them, there is a time of excelled knowledge and then humanity’s downfall begins afterwards. Are we actually living in those times now or will we be thrown back into the dark ages of no knowledge and illiteracy? Plus, we’re the pyramids and Sphinx actually built by them or are they older than what we know of them, another civilization perhaps before them? These are questions still unanswered in our history and not mentioned in classroom or textbooks. Because of the structures mathematical evaluation, and how Egyptians built them with tools less advanced than ours, I find more questions than actual answers to these very specific questions. Maybe someday, we will discover or know more if there are still artifacts buried underneath the sands hidden beneath our earth. 👍❤️🙏🏼🤔
I asked a museum docent in Naples about a fresco that depicted a wealthy woman in Pompeii using a dark skinned man for sex. And I asked her who the man was and she said “oh that was likely a slave” and made a grimace. Some people are honest about it