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The Incredible 11,000-Year-Old Tower of Jericho | Ancient Architects 

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Tell es-Sultan is an archaeological mound site in the West Bank, with a history going back to the Natufian Culture, to at least 10,000 BC. But this mound is something special because what its hiding is in fact the ancient city of Jericho.
Before excavations began, you would be forgiven for thinking it was just a natural hill at first glance, but the hill itself is made up of many layers of collapsed architecture, mainly mudbrick, and over the years, excavations have uncovered the long and complex history of this very ancient city.
In the 1860s, Charles Warren identified the site as Ancient Jericho, but it wouldn’t be until the work of British archaeologist, Kathleen Kenyon decades later, when we would learn just how old this site really was.
To understand the phases of occupation, Kenyon and her colleagues recorded the stratigraphic sequences through the mound. Years and years were spend digging and meticulously recording, and by the 1950s this was one of the world’s most famous archaeological sites.
In the Pre-Pottery Neolithic, Jericho was certainly a settlement, but one discovery surprised everyone. During her excavations in the 1950s, Kenyon discovered an ancient stone structure from these very remote times, and it was unlike anything else seen before. This discovery was the Tower of Jericho.
Watch this video to learn more about this 11,000-year-old stone structure, as old as, or even older than some parts of Gobekli Tepe and Karahan Tepe.
Read the paper by Barkai and Liran at antiquity.ac.uk/projgall/barka...
All images are taken from Google Images for educational purposes only. Please subscribe to Ancient Architects, Like the video and please leave a comment below. Thank you.
#ancientarchitects #jericho #archaeology

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20 дек 2022

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Комментарии : 422   
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Thank you for watching and for being here! If you want to support the channel, you can become a RU-vid Member at ru-vid.com/show-UCscI4NOggNSN-Si5QgErNCwjoin or I’m on Patreon at www.patreon.com/ancientarchitects
@johnbuchman4854
@johnbuchman4854 Год назад
So the Great Deluge happened no more recently than 11k years BP. (Otherwise this tower would have been completely erased from the face of the earth.)
@RAJohns
@RAJohns Год назад
@@johnbuchman4854 It could have been buried by 5,600 BC., The Black Sea Flood.
@Khankhankhan420
@Khankhankhan420 Год назад
Stop over accentuating your last syllable of every sentence! It’s so annoying dude. If that’s the way you talk then hire a person to do the dialogue because you really are just over doing the accent man.
@ariankaragiozi
@ariankaragiozi Год назад
Very interesting accent 🤔
@yarrlegap6940
@yarrlegap6940 Год назад
Talk about 'social constructs' ... interpreting archeological finds by projecting the author's political biases onto the past is well ... smh silly ... It's as bad as seeing everything through the lens of space aliens or 'young Earth' Biblical models ...
@Apocalypse_Tube
@Apocalypse_Tube Год назад
8000 years of continuous occupation is mind blowing.
@chadb1675
@chadb1675 Год назад
By far my favorite discovery of 2022 was. . .your YT channel. Constantly blowing my mind dude. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Thank you
@mirandamom1346
@mirandamom1346 Год назад
Thank you for pointing out that the tower may have played multiple roles for the people of Jericho. It’s baffling to me how often a single interpretation will be defended ad infinitum when, not only is it unlikely we will ever know which competing interpretation is right, but the interpretations don’t actually need to compete!
@BronzedTube
@BronzedTube Год назад
mm exactly...
@sociallyferal4237
@sociallyferal4237 Год назад
I was thinking to myself during this video - wouldn't be interesting (although as you said - there is no way to really know) if things like the alignment was just accidental. Bob - we need a tower over by that wall - Right O, I will get it done. Say Bob , doesn't that finished tower cast a neat shadow.? - Yes , I suppose it does. . . . LOL.
@lennybuttz2162
@lennybuttz2162 Год назад
@@sociallyferal4237 LOL I was thinking the same thing. Some scientist says the same thing about almost every ancient structure. Except if the people who built it were sun worshipers I don't see how it would matter to them? If it's a round tower does it make a difference? If it's the tallest architecture in the area The sun is going to hit it.
@sociallyferal4237
@sociallyferal4237 Год назад
@@lennybuttz2162 I mean it's not to say they didn't put more thought into something that involves an awful lot of work for early tools. But sometimes I like to think of people assigning more emphasis on things that may not have been significant to the people back then. Just like say in 1000 years the WhiteHouse and its Obelisk and whatever they might align to. May be hearsay - but I recall watching some documentary that kind of joked about Archaeologists assigning anything that they can't quite find a purpose for in a dig as 'Religious Significance'. :D Doing it on purpose 11,000 years ago is also a pretty nifty thought too.
@tomcollins5112
@tomcollins5112 Год назад
It may have served multiple functions, but it was obviously built for a very specific purpose. The people living in that area probably viewed the site as holy ground, because the shadow of the mountain overtakes it at exactly 6:30 pm on the day of the summer solstice. Why would 6:30 pm be significant? I'm not sure, but it is a natural time in the evening to quit working. The fact that there is a natural spring nearby is probably also significant. They call it a "city", but I think we should consider the possibility that it was a city in the same sense that the Vatican City is a city. It was a spiritually significant site for the people living in the region during the early Neolithic, possibly even the Paleolithic.
@laurah1020
@laurah1020 Год назад
Appreciate you keeping us so up to date on latest archeological findings. Amazing to think that people of this period, those we have been taught were nomadic, are revealing themselves as organized builders of civilizations! Thank you for everything you do in bringing us the latest discoveries in archeology!!
@penneyburgess5431
@penneyburgess5431 Год назад
The ancients were amazing. Thank you Matthew.
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
They were indeed!
@Snickerszn
@Snickerszn Год назад
Just discovered your videos. Really awesome job. Thank you.
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Welcome!
@barrywalser2384
@barrywalser2384 Год назад
Great stuff! Fantastic visuals. Thanks Matt!
@dougalexander7204
@dougalexander7204 Год назад
Thank you Matt. Fascinating as always. It is hard for me to grasp how pre-pottery humans quarried stone, transported and constructed challenging projects with it.
@whatshappeningnext
@whatshappeningnext Год назад
Excellent video! Very interesting, I haven't ever heard of this before. Great work with the images and maps.
@sharoncromer1910
@sharoncromer1910 Год назад
You're awesome, Matt. Thank you, once again, for the hard work you put into these videos. You are very appreciated. Happy Holidays to you and your family. ❤️
@4pmpm114
@4pmpm114 Год назад
Oh come on mate...he Repeats what we all know. Not His theories at all. As said, he repeats what we all know. No need for Praising one whos repeating Others efforts. Cheap, mostly incorrect and NOT his work.
@nancyM1313
@nancyM1313 Год назад
Hi Matt, thank you for all your hard work/research uploading these wonderful videos for us. Very appreciated. 🎄❄Happy Holidays, Merry Christmas to you and Family🎅🏼❄ Thank you Matt❤
@ckotty
@ckotty Год назад
Many thanks for another great video 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@Adam_Thor
@Adam_Thor Год назад
The design of the tower at Jericho reminds me of the design of towers found all over Sardinia.
@scottschultz6573
@scottschultz6573 Год назад
Yes! I was wondering along the same line of thought!
@angrybird29
@angrybird29 Год назад
amazing research analysis video!
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Thanks for watching
@TheARguy15
@TheARguy15 Год назад
Another fantastic video. Thank you
@Melih_R_Calikoglu
@Melih_R_Calikoglu Год назад
Hi Matt. Truly incredible that such a civic building was building at the time. It makes me wonder if any artifacts pointing to early war fare have been found in the levant and the Fertile Crescent back then? I don't recall any in Gobeklitepe or Catalhoyuk. So is it really a tower to watch out for enemies?
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
At the time there is no archaeology that implies war or that Jericho was under attack in the Pre Pottery Neolithic, but we can’t say for sure.
@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
@@AncientArchitects What a stupid stair case!
@tonyadams6375
@tonyadams6375 Год назад
Hello Matt. It’s amazing to me that people are so quick to assume that Neolithic man was not intelligent or creative. The human brain was just as wonderful and creative then as now.
@pzapir8
@pzapir8 Год назад
@@tonyadams6375 evidence to support your world shattering assertion? because there is PLENTY of evidence (scientific and empirical: human remains, archaeological and anthropological data points, everything we know about the past basically) that supports the SCIENTIFICALLY INDISPUTABLE FACTS that neolithic etc "humans" were less artistic, less creative, and less intelligent than 'modern man,' which is precisely why technologies essential for civilization and culture didn't exist yet, because no one was yet intelligent enough or creative enough to solve the problems later people solved to develop those technologies.
@ancientsitesgirl
@ancientsitesgirl Год назад
Is it the oldest city in the world??? Fascinating topic, thanks!😍
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Depends how you define city! But maybe :)
@mikegc3816
@mikegc3816 Год назад
So far
@catman8965
@catman8965 Год назад
HAPPY HOLIDAYS Ancient Sites Girl. 🎊🎉🎇🥳🍾
@Sealia77
@Sealia77 Год назад
the oldest continually habited, maybe?
@ThursonJames
@ThursonJames Год назад
@@Sealia77 1:54 not continuous.
@RicardoVelozo
@RicardoVelozo Год назад
Great work! Thank you!
@kafkon123
@kafkon123 Год назад
I have been following your videos since the beginning. You are outstanding. I am a fan for life.
@nomadscavenger
@nomadscavenger Год назад
I think this is a great platform, find all the videos very interesting. But I'm having difficulty visualizing what these people living on top of each other used if not pottery? Did every dwelling have animal skins hanging on the walls, eat off the floor, drink from shells? Etc. How do we know that whatever pottery might have existed, wasn't absconded with when invaders showed up? Is it possible each neighborhood/family had a way to make it, since they certainly knew how to make mud "bricks" and lots of'em, and lasting 10,000+ yrs.? I'm trying to find an episode that explains how a settlement of 100s could not have any kind of pottery. Thanks again for a great video.🙋
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Animal skins or reed roofs… vessels were made from wood (yes!), stone and also terrazzo - lime based mixture they used for flooring - like a proto-pottery but not clay based.
@podfuk
@podfuk Год назад
We have found pottery 20-30.000 years old, dont believe to every YT bullshit you hear ;)
@buildingwithtrees2258
@buildingwithtrees2258 Год назад
There's theories of a 2 groups. Hunter gatherers and advanced people. Like today, take away power and how much of the earth's population would be dead? 50%? 90%? We don't know how to survive. But take backwards tribes in remote parts of the earth, they would live on. And may even occupy our deserted cities. Even the Bible hints that Jericho and Jerusalem were built from an earlier civilization. We can find clues written inyths and other ancient documents of advanced civilization. Not today's advanced, but civilized vs loin cloth people.
@mariewolton7027
@mariewolton7027 Год назад
I know! No progress for 20,000 years! I think we're getting closer to the answers.
@sdrtcacgnrjrc
@sdrtcacgnrjrc Год назад
Pottery came to the middle east around 7000 BCE
@Akimos
@Akimos Год назад
Nice info. TY for your research.
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Thanks for watching!
@sarahspencer9360
@sarahspencer9360 Год назад
Another fascinating tale! Thank you. :)
@onenewworldmonkey
@onenewworldmonkey Год назад
The reason it was built is still in us. When you were young did you ever play the game "king of the hill"? Two men enter one man leaves. lol
@irisapartments8156
@irisapartments8156 Год назад
Awesome video. Thank you
@dropnoelfield295
@dropnoelfield295 Год назад
I had no idea the Tower of Jericho was a real, proven, thing. Just wow! Thanks mate, that was brilliant 👍👍
@VeritasEtAequitas
@VeritasEtAequitas Год назад
Just because it's attributed to that doesn't mean it definitively is.
@dropnoelfield295
@dropnoelfield295 Год назад
@@VeritasEtAequitas well, a tower in Jericho, anyway
@kalil9074
@kalil9074 Год назад
@@VeritasEtAequitas 😂😂😂😂 🤦‍♂️
@kalil9074
@kalil9074 Год назад
@@VeritasEtAequitas oh it definitely is . Biblical facts proven
@ShaFnZAM
@ShaFnZAM Год назад
Hey Matt. Just a quick question. With all the amazing discoveries in that neck of the woods, I was wondering with it being in close proximity, have you come across anything being found in Cyprus? Love the channel and have been with you for years.
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
I’m going to research Cyprus properly soon. Keep an eye out for a future video.
@TheWhore2culture
@TheWhore2culture Год назад
There is the wonderful site - UNESCO World Heritage status since 1998 - of Chirokitia Neolithic village, one of the best preserved prehistoric sites in the Eastern Mediterranean. In the middle of the Southern part of the island,the circular dwellings are well worth looking at.Dates 10/9,000BCE with first believed human habitation.Every island in the Mediterranean is/has incredible sites & there must be a common denominator to explain the similarities.
@johndutchman
@johndutchman Год назад
Good show . thank you !
@guywithalltheanswers6942
@guywithalltheanswers6942 Год назад
Since everything is built on top of each other I suspect that we might find stuff built 20 thousands years ago.
@peterfrance7489
@peterfrance7489 Год назад
Extraordinary how these old structures get buried by later constructions and completely forgotten.
@kenlieck7756
@kenlieck7756 Год назад
I find it hilarious that in at least one case, religious zealots who attacked and decimated one ancient site inadvertantly opened up a tunnel to an older and more incredible one beneath it!
@philoso377
@philoso377 Год назад
We have been unearthing history ever since we could in small and large scale. But have never ask this question - where and how did these construction get covered under earth?
@yesterdayschunda1760
@yesterdayschunda1760 Год назад
It's neat how much stuff is being discovered, so many more people are studying the field than 20 years ago and the results are great, there is just about daily news that is huge these days, great to see.
@cantsay
@cantsay Год назад
Anyone else use Ancient Architects as sound check? I do this quite often. Like in the middle of the night when I want to watch a video, but most videos begun with someone yelling HELLO into the video. Of course I watch all AA videos as soon as they drop because they are just awesome!
@realcooking1833
@realcooking1833 Год назад
Hi Matt. Tonight I've switched off music by Kevin bloody Wilson to watch your vid😁I suppose I've just swapped one cultural insight for another🤣😂merry Christmas friend😁👍
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Ha! Merry Christmas 🎄
@jeffbridges5876
@jeffbridges5876 Год назад
what a time to be alive. regular mind blowing discoveries in turkey, genetic research discoveries, precise C14 dating lider etc
@spanqueluv9er
@spanqueluv9er Год назад
^*LiDAR, not lider
@Eyes_Open
@Eyes_Open Год назад
Great analysis.
@aartdegraaf6754
@aartdegraaf6754 Год назад
Looking at the stones used to build this tower or most of the others sites you've shown now you wonder why we had a brief period in history where we used those huge megalithic blocks to build stuff.
@CaptainSaveHoe
@CaptainSaveHoe Год назад
Imagine living in a society where writing doesn't yet exist, it isn't intuitive that we have the capacity to visually scan symbols and translate them into meaningful complex stories, when you think about it, reading is a bit of a miracle just the fact that it works. So I can't imagine living in such a society and saying "let's invent writing",, the idea would be too wild to ever work in any but the most basic way. So it would be interesting to find the roots of reading and writing.
@kenlieck7756
@kenlieck7756 Год назад
That's why so much ancient writing we find is boring shit like shopping lists. It's born out of necessity.
@onepercenter13
@onepercenter13 Год назад
Very Interesting Thanks very much
@ThatDudeLarzFoo-ah
@ThatDudeLarzFoo-ah Год назад
Great vid. Made me want to Sound the Trumpets! -“Whoa! Whoa! Easy with the Trumpets, pal!”
@PatchouliPenny
@PatchouliPenny Год назад
Thanks Matt. Dunno how I missed the one on Cakmaktepe? Heading over there now!
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Thanks. Enjoy!
@paulblase3955
@paulblase3955 Год назад
I wouldn't mind seeing an overview of how the Younger Dryas, older Dryas, and the preceding warm spell effected civilizations. I think that we miss the effects of the ending of the last glaciation on things.
@lawneymalbrough4309
@lawneymalbrough4309 Год назад
Yes it's called climate change these days, but it's been going on for most of humsn history. Not really a new thing
@AmazingPhilippines1
@AmazingPhilippines1 Год назад
Love ancient history so thanks for this discussion Matt. Watching from the Philippines islands which have an amazing and complicated ancient history as well.
@DGM4372.
@DGM4372. Год назад
True, I'm from Palawan. Palawan is rich in natural history from Northeast - El Nido, to Southwest - Quezon.
@adolflazary5864
@adolflazary5864 Год назад
Me leí los comentarios y si, aprendí cosas nuevas. Gracias a todos por su trabajo. Saludos
@longcastle4863
@longcastle4863 Год назад
Excellent scholarship presented excellently to a lay audience...
@alfonsoduran6910
@alfonsoduran6910 Год назад
I find it very interesting that All the ancient sites are either related to the solstices and or the stars..The older they are the least findings of any type of war and more wonderment on the world around and above them. Beautiful ❤️
@chrisl4999
@chrisl4999 Год назад
I don’t. Pick any modern building and I guarantee you can find some star or constellation it appears to be aligned with.
@lawneymalbrough4309
@lawneymalbrough4309 Год назад
Knowing the seasons of the year are very important to agriculture. One way to know the season is to track the solstices. This knowledge has been handed down for melenia.
@scumskimmer
@scumskimmer Год назад
Astonishing stuff
@MsArgentana
@MsArgentana Год назад
FINALLY Kathleen Kenyon RESEARCH
@catman8965
@catman8965 Год назад
HAPPY HOLIDAYS Matt.🤓😻😃
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
You too! 🎄
@lachlanhoy3492
@lachlanhoy3492 Год назад
8:00 + is great perspective, channel is great 👍
@hayabusaTravels
@hayabusaTravels Год назад
I've been to Catalhoyuk and Gobekli Tepe. Amazing sites to visit and experience.
@glennllewellyn7369
@glennllewellyn7369 Год назад
Awesome!
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
👍
@richardfinlayson1524
@richardfinlayson1524 Год назад
I'm sure if we could travel in time, we would be surprised by much these people were capable of, I don't know if things would have always been as we would expect.
@lawneymalbrough4309
@lawneymalbrough4309 Год назад
You would also be surprised by the human sacrifices taking place in those times. Mankind is reallyvwicked when following false gods.
@multirichard007
@multirichard007 Год назад
There is an obvious question here:- How do the archeologists know, and have determined, that this tower was only 30ft tall? This could be yet another presumption that turns out to be wrong. As you reveal the top of the tower is about 25ft wide, and with 5ft thick walls at its base, it could have supported and been at least 20-30ft taller, or more. It is a well known fact that post construction phases borrow stone from earlier constructions that are present. Hadrian's Wall is a very good example of this where stones have been taken to construct later farm buildings.
@neoAREAXIS
@neoAREAXIS Год назад
I named my baby boy Jericho. He's really bright and stoic. I'm missing him atm. 😢
@mynameudste
@mynameudste Год назад
cool name!
@anim8torfiddler871
@anim8torfiddler871 Год назад
I'll bet a pile of coins that someone, somewhere has posed the question, "Why did they build a 12-meter tower BELOW ground level???" Betcha.
@myboloneyhasafirstname6764
@myboloneyhasafirstname6764 Год назад
You are right. I saw the question in an earlier comment. I responded that at the time it was built it was ground level. Then as years went by more buildings were added to make a tightly packed city, and as refuse and decayed structures piled up construction continued on top of the lower layers. But you knew that!😉
@zulqarnainkhan8084
@zulqarnainkhan8084 Год назад
Make video on pyramid of userkaf Thanks
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Good subject. Nice idea! Ok!
@jimmy_kirk
@jimmy_kirk Год назад
Where did all the dirt come from? It's a huge tower, so why was it so far underground?
@myboloneyhasafirstname6764
@myboloneyhasafirstname6764 Год назад
The city was built up around it, some buildings were connected to it, then more structures added second and third stories over time as the original lower levels filled up with refuse of daily life, staircases were integrated into the growing mass of very tightly packed buildings. When a structure burned or collapsed new structures were built on top of the remains. Ancient cities all developed this way. Think of London, Rome, even New York City.
@FranklinNewhart
@FranklinNewhart Год назад
You missed one important item for the use of that tower. They had moved to agriculture. It was a Grain Elevator.
@reidspeed77
@reidspeed77 Год назад
Matt ,you can walk from deep beneath the old city in Jerusalem (enter through zedikiahs cave) and walk entirely underground to this site in jericho, you walk through citadels and chambers the main tunnel to jericho is 34miles ,
@timb8970
@timb8970 Год назад
Amazing to think how old and continuously occupied Jericho is.
@quake_er1149
@quake_er1149 Год назад
Awesome
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
👍
@flashwhite
@flashwhite Год назад
That whole area has decades of digging and scraping to be done and sadly I don't think we'll see it anywhere near finished before we pass.
@laugustam
@laugustam Год назад
That is amazing! It reminds me of the place where Rahab helped the spies to escape in biblical times. Interesting to think that it could have been in use then, already some thousands of years later.
@samuelreed2994
@samuelreed2994 7 месяцев назад
Joshua fought the battle of Jericho... And the walls came tumbling down.
@TV-tm9mb
@TV-tm9mb Год назад
I've got a friend who argues that Indus Valley was the bas of all the civilization on the face of the earth. He says it was from Indus valley that the ethics, political system, structured cities, religion, written language, knowledge of trade spread across the world. When I see this documentary, I feel how blind some can be.
@ChristianPareATLAS
@ChristianPareATLAS Год назад
Great video very interesting. Historians have been wrong because of missing information. Now we are discovering more of our past it is very interesting to see. I am not that old and the history I learned in school is different than the new research results we have today. I love history ♥️
@macalister8881
@macalister8881 Год назад
Most historians had to be approved by the bible thumper foundatations thats why they have the view of one side only , the smithsonian institute made it there buisiness to destroy and erase much of the old world . And they sponsored much of the work that was called research , thats just my opinion .
@summersolstice884
@summersolstice884 Год назад
Multi functional makes a lot of sense ... If you are learning how to grow crops then knowing the movement of the sun is very important ... Like bell towers in medieval towns, a tower gives you the ability to alert the town's people of necessary events, a look out position for protection ... a meeting point for some important news, etc.
@joshthalheimer
@joshthalheimer Год назад
Is this narrated by an algorithm? (this question accented on the the most annoying, random, unexpected syllables) 🙂
@jimschiltz5343
@jimschiltz5343 Год назад
Thanks, Sibs!
@puddintame7794
@puddintame7794 Год назад
I suspect they started as trading posts. Places where hunter gatherers could come to trade.
@lorincszabo2452
@lorincszabo2452 Год назад
Excavations in Turkey have also uncovered the ruins of 11,000-year-old cities. With a much more developed couture than Jericho.
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
See my channel! I have videos on Gobekli, Karahan, Cakmak, Sefer, Harbetsuvan, Gre Filla Hoyuk, Boncuklu Tarla and more!
@jimmyzbike
@jimmyzbike Год назад
Interesting
@Samsoncomposer
@Samsoncomposer Год назад
We shouldn't assume that a large structure like this needed leaders to compel others to build it, especially if these towers were somewhat common for the time period. Communities could have constructed them cooperatively.
@ptolemaiosachaenczyk7657
@ptolemaiosachaenczyk7657 Год назад
a little reminder there are / were stone towers in chechnya
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
👍
@ngauruhoezodiac3143
@ngauruhoezodiac3143 Год назад
All over Georgia too.
@Sarnarath
@Sarnarath Год назад
Wow 11.000 years.. it's incredible to think how long ago that is.
@spanqueluv9er
@spanqueluv9er Год назад
^It’s the blink of an eye- not that long ago at all.🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️
@kenlieck7756
@kenlieck7756 Год назад
@@spanqueluv9er You're gonna need some Visine...
@robsellars9338
@robsellars9338 Год назад
There is much to add to this video. The entrance to the tower steps is a few metres above ground level, why? The incline of the 22 steps mirrors the incline of the pyramid in Giza? The ratio of the towers diameter to its height? This city was the first canaanite city conquered by the Israelites in the Bible and back then it was called Moon city ( not city of the sun equinox) although the name now is said to mean city of the palms after the Jews conquered it's God's. The same archaeologists have proven the Biblical events by studying the walls of Jericho so this must give us a better window into its ancient significance than just the pottery. It's a fascinating place as you say but so much more you could say about it that would take us closer to the truth.
@ryanwills-37
@ryanwills-37 Год назад
I've seen videos on this at least 3 years ago now
@w.neuman
@w.neuman Год назад
I'm Just Not Buying Into The Notion That It Took 11,000 Dsys To Stack A Bunch Of Rocks °28-Feet High !
@claudermiller
@claudermiller Год назад
There could have been a bronze pole on top and kootchie dancers would perform for sea shells or some other trinket.
@praveenb9048
@praveenb9048 Год назад
Amazing that there have been no rock falls in the stairway passage. Or has it been repaired in modern times?
@MrHoojaszczyk
@MrHoojaszczyk Год назад
What kind of catastrophe caused it to be covered like that? Tower looks primitive compared to many older sites around the world.
@KKing55
@KKing55 Год назад
How did they get covered in so much mud. The Great Flood ?
@ngauruhoezodiac3143
@ngauruhoezodiac3143 Год назад
Disintegrated unfired mud bricks.
@therealb888
@therealb888 Год назад
3rd 00:34 22 Dec 2022. For history!
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
🥉
@therealb888
@therealb888 Год назад
@@AncientArchitects I have much to discuss with you. What would be the best way to reach out?
@AncientPuzzles
@AncientPuzzles Год назад
What an incredible tower. Multi-functional is what makes sense to me as well. I found pretty much the same when researching north american mounds recently. Looking forward to next vid👍🏻
@spanqueluv9er
@spanqueluv9er Год назад
@AncientPuzzles You found that the N American effigy mounds… are multi-purpose things… like the tower of Jericho was a multipurpose thing. The two are not related in any way. Wt actual fuq are you talking about? Jesus.🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🙄🤡
@AncientPuzzles
@AncientPuzzles Год назад
@@spanqueluv9er I perfectly know they are not related in any way. I'm just pointing out that this was very common in ancient times. A super normal coincidence. What is your problem? Calm down
@spanqueluv9er
@spanqueluv9er Год назад
@@AncientPuzzles😂🤣Your more recent words do not reflect the reality of your earlier comment. You, speaking of the tower of Jericho: “I found pretty much the same thing when researching (^*North American, not )north american mounds recently.” How can there be a coincidence between the two line you’ve just suggested when they aren’t related in any way?🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️ That’s not the comment of someone who knows perfectly well that they aren’t related.🤷‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤡🤡🤡🤡🙄
@spanqueluv9er
@spanqueluv9er Год назад
@@AncientPuzzlesYou should change your RU-vid handle to PermanentlyPuzzled.🤦‍♂️
@AncientPuzzles
@AncientPuzzles Год назад
@@spanqueluv9er it does not reflect what I said, and it also does not reflect what you said. The problem is you assumed I was suggesting a connection, and never did such a thing. Nothing incorrect about saying it's just a coincidence: If I thought the cultures were connected, I would have said it is NOT a coincidence. Hope that once and for all you understand it, cause next step is blocking you. Have a nice day👍🏻
@dadthejedi
@dadthejedi Год назад
RU-vid has made watching videos pretty much unbearable these days. You have a set of ads at the beginning then another set every 3 to 5 minutes. It’s maddening.
@durden91tyler
@durden91tyler Год назад
absolutely incredible. thank you so much for showing us this. i never would have seen this otherwise. i dont think it was used to control people in a sense of awe, i think it was the only fucking way to find your way home so they made a fire pire on top of it. so everyone would come there.
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Nice! Makes sense 👍
@deanhoward4128
@deanhoward4128 Год назад
I saw this tower in 1982,& it leaves a lot of questions & fewer answers especially to the date of it's construction; there are some that believe that this is part of the wall that is mentioned in the Bible when Joshua marched around & the walls fell down; that is straight down,as if the walls were sunk in quicksand!
@kimwarburton8490
@kimwarburton8490 Год назад
i think it is ALOT LESS impressive than gobekli tepe etc. Those sites are aesthetically pleasing to the eye, not just the 'decoration' and the stones were much MUCH larger, as well as being created earlier. Im sure the tower was a great feat for it's time. i imagine it was to help the citizens prepare for warfare, by gaining them precious minutes to organise and for spying animals to hunt in the distance. Gobekli tepe and it's kin are more impressive to me EDIT, ok, having watched the next part of the vid; im less certain about defensive reasons as it may not give vision in all directions and there seems to me to be a reason to have at least two such towers. Now i believe it was all of the other reasons equally, with defense as an extra bonus, unless they knew their enemies would only come from one side of jericho, which i doubt as hunter-gatherers wouldve known about the power of surprise and ambush from hunting game, such as being down-wind and dressing-up to look more animalistic n less threatening
@jesperandersson889
@jesperandersson889 Год назад
great job! spannxx!!!
@StoicDescention
@StoicDescention Год назад
I wonder if they managed to dig down to the water table and build cisterns at this site? 🤔 Being that it is close to that spring.
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
I’ll try and find out more as this video was really just focusing on the tower. But interesting subject for sure
@StoicDescention
@StoicDescention Год назад
Indeed. Thank you for all the awesome content and passion for this stuff sir. Truly awesome
@TMAC_burninator
@TMAC_burninator Год назад
Too many "experts" are often stuck in their own dogma to the extent they'll reject anything that doesn't support their already-formed conclusions. Or they tend to interpret evidence to fit their preconceived notions instead of being open-minded to what the evidence is actually showing them. It's been this way for a very long time. Copernicus, anyone?
@mattneilson644
@mattneilson644 Год назад
11000 days? That's over 30 years. Do you think they made a miscalculation?
@merlinwizard1000
@merlinwizard1000 Год назад
2nd, 21 December 2022
@AncientArchitects
@AncientArchitects Год назад
Hey Merlin!
@More-Space-In-Ear
@More-Space-In-Ear Год назад
But, where did all the earth come from? This is what gets me, these places have either been filled in by humans or nature, was it the disaster that came from the so-called flood, which could of moved soil/earth over the land or something else.
@humanbridges
@humanbridges Год назад
Archaelogists spend years looking for what survives. When they find evidence of the past, the evidence is often hard to conceive of… so for example, every tower diagram here ends with the stone. But of course the reality is that wooden platforms on top could have doubled the height. Would explain the width of the stone, doncha think?
@Itsjustme-Justme
@Itsjustme-Justme Год назад
The tower with it's rather rough looking inner masonry, the more organized looking outer masonry and the inner staircase has the same basic design features that can be found in most of the pyramids that have ever been built. The official explanation for the rise of civilization in the holocene is, it represents an age of 10000+ years of nice climate without major interruptions. Longer than ever before, giving a unique opportunity for developement without getting pushed back after a short time. But whenever I see how fast the basic trades of civilization emerged in the closing stages of the Younger Dryas and the first 1000 years after the YD (9:24), it seems strange to me. I know that all the hard evidence (dating of preserved architecture, visible developement of architecture, preserved remains of their goods and food, content of their garbage dumps, genetic analysis of domestically bred livestock and veggies, genetic analysis of humans and all things living to find out the routes of migration and much more) undeniably supports that sudden rise of civilization. But still, it looks strange. Yes, selective breeding is very intuitive. It happens automatically as soon as seeding is used intentionally. We will always tend to use seeds of the most beautiful plants for the next generation. We will always tend to keep friendly and useful animals and by keeping and breeding only them, we automatically come to the same selective breeding that happens in veggies. We don't need to know that genes exist to do it that way. It's just the same as prefering a healthy looking spouse. The concept is as old as life on Earth. Also yes, selective breeding is a very tight genetic bottleneck, that supercharges evolution. It shows very visible results within a few generations of breeding. That's all logical, testable, undeniable. It really works that fast. But, when it obviously is that intuitive and it works that fast, why was it never done before?
@jbrMillValley
@jbrMillValley Год назад
Thank you for your work Matt. Do you know if at the top of the tower there was an upper part built of wood? Wooden fortification type at the top. I think of this because the tower of Jericho is presented, in its upper part, very flat to receive a second part of another material. Making it an even taller tower in the end. More majestic. Thank you again for your work, bonjour from the south-west of France - country of wines and foie gras ^^
@GrabbaBeer
@GrabbaBeer Год назад
Good thinking that’s how dark age medieval wall towers were built as well
@Tijuanabill
@Tijuanabill Год назад
There is no way our early ancestors, who were just as bright as we are, albeit lacking our knowledge, did absolutely nothing for 190,000 years, then suddenly built pyramids in three decades, before knowing about the wheel. It doesn't add up.
@maxwarboy3625
@maxwarboy3625 Месяц назад
there is definitely some amount of speculation on these very old places like this... definitely incredible, but, grain of salt, I say..
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