Virtual Egypt: What Abu Simbel Looked Like

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Manuel Bravo

Manuel Bravo

2 роки тому

What did the cave temples of Abu Simbel look like 3000 years ago?
Today we take a tour of the Abu Simbel complex in Southern Egypt, analyzing the architecture of the Temple of Ramesses II and the Temple of Nefertari, the ancient Egyptian temples that were carved in the rock of a cliff.
Subtitles available in several languages.
Ve el vídeo en español: • Egipto Virtual: Los te...
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КОМЕНТАРІ: 1 100
@ManuelBravo
@ManuelBravo Рік тому
What Egyptian Temple would you like to see next?
@Bart-Did-it
@Bart-Did-it Рік тому
When one can we cut up then lol
@montanacorp
@montanacorp Рік тому
NEFERTITI
@Bart-Did-it
@Bart-Did-it Рік тому
@@montanacorp notenoughtitty
@sid2112
@sid2112 Рік тому
Abidos! Shout out to my SG fans.
@DONMAZ7
@DONMAZ7 Рік тому
I was there last year very nice place except haw the locals and the staff are annoying when they ask for tips . Made me sick and never want to visit again
@ethanol1586
@ethanol1586 2 роки тому
Egyptology is truly fascinating. So glad the algorithm brought me to this great channel
@roylle6346
@roylle6346 Рік тому
Not egyptology but Egypt
@KebabsRock1997
@KebabsRock1997 Рік тому
@@roylle6346 Exactly. I see Egyptology and archeology as fields of dogmatic study that cannot be called science. They are too many questions asked regarding the discovery of the unknown that lead very bright minds who are passionate about these fields to be silenced and treated as outcasts.
@frankathl1
@frankathl1 Рік тому
@@KebabsRock1997 Try substituting, say, nuclear physics for Egyptology and archaeology and you will arrive at the same meaning. However, the word ‘dogmatic’ doesn’t really suit either context.
@Kemet3.0
@Kemet3.0 2 місяці тому
Not.... Egypt ... this was Kemet. Egypt are the Greeks images. Two different time and era.
@nanvolentine9110
@nanvolentine9110 2 роки тому
Fascinated by Egypt since childhood, I remember following the relocation of Abu Simbel closely. An amazing engineering feat! Thanks for this beautiful video.
@thephilosopher7173
@thephilosopher7173 Рік тому
Its not, for all we know they could have ruined potential research into the original structures as they were. It wouldn't be any different if they moved Giza.
@gofoats
@gofoats 11 місяців тому
@@thephilosopher7173 Had it been left in place, it would be under water.
@SpreadAU
@SpreadAU 10 місяців тому
Only part that sucks is that it would be under water and might aswell be the titanic. Take oceangate to see it
@Byronic19134
@Byronic19134 2 місяці тому
@@gofoatsI cant believe I never knew they relocated this entire temple that is actually insane. Why could they not have just built another dam wall? I find it hard to believe it was cheaper to build 2 fake mountains and completely dissemble and reassemble those temples than it would have just to built another big wall protecting them. They could have put a mini fake beach on top of the wall and had steps leading down into the canyon with the temple.
@johng4093
@johng4093 23 дні тому
​@SpreadAU There is an underwater Egyptian city, Thonis-Heracleion in the Nile delta. In the future there may be dangerous experimental sub rides available.
@___jd
@___jd Рік тому
The fact that they MOVED the entirety of two separate, giant cave temples is unreal!
@gtlfb
@gtlfb Рік тому
One of the most remarkable aspects of the temples of ancient Egypt is how much original color remains in protected areas. Must have been an astonishing sight when first built.
@blueskies3336
@blueskies3336 11 місяців тому
I am always in awe when i see the structures they built. I honestly can't imagine what it'd be like as foreigner visiting egypt during its ancient days. It must have been so incredibly surreal.
@mho...
@mho... 11 місяців тому
my bet is on feeling similar to an ancient egypt builder visiting a modern city!
@csch92
@csch92 10 місяців тому
I belive they where faaar more advanced then we might know. And they only keept whats worty for us knowing.
@e.matthews
@e.matthews 3 місяці тому
​@@csch92 What evidence do you have of this?
@boygraphychannel
@boygraphychannel 2 місяці тому
you would have been enslaved and stricken with whips hourly to work for the pharos.
@user-eh9op4mq4s
@user-eh9op4mq4s Місяць тому
@@e.matthews "trust me bro"
@imbombur
@imbombur Рік тому
I can’t even wrap my head around how these were made so long ago, much less how they still remain all this time later. My mind simply refuses to process how great a timescale lies between now and then. So amazing what we are capable of as a species.
@martinquevedo4821
@martinquevedo4821 Рік тому
u said it perfectly, "lies".
@imbombur
@imbombur Рік тому
@@martinquevedo4821 ???
@glenchapman3899
@glenchapman3899 Рік тому
well they were carved straight out of the side of the mountain. Which means they are going to be very durable. The basic engineering is not that complex, it is just a case of lots of time and desire. They were designed to induce bowel motions in any potential enemy coming up the Nile. The fact 3000 years later we can look at this complex and go WOW says a lot about the effect it must have had back then.
@_swegs
@_swegs Рік тому
@@martinquevedo4821 that’s not what they said at all.
@michaeldeierhoi4096
@michaeldeierhoi4096 Рік тому
@@glenchapman3899 The megalithic structure of Abu Simbal is carved out of sandstone which though not as hard as granite it is still a hard rock and hard to imagine the mountain side was carved with copper tools. I do not advocate for some more ancient construction of this temple as well as the great pyramids, but we cannot yet explain how Abu Simbal was carved.
@chrismanuel1360
@chrismanuel1360 2 роки тому
The discovery photos at the latter part of the video was awesome. I can just imagine what the the first people felt upon seeing this marvelous cave.
@jishnurajp1215
@jishnurajp1215 Рік тому
Literally unimaginable moments that would be😍😍😍🔥
@freedom_born
@freedom_born Рік тому
Man that would’ve been scary af not knowing what could’ve been setup. Idk if poisonous gases or booby traps would’ve lasted that long over the centuries. But wowee what a thrill.
@marwaabbaro5020
@marwaabbaro5020 Рік тому
some these photos from Halfa northren Sudan
@PortugalZeroworldcup
@PortugalZeroworldcup 5 місяців тому
​@@marwaabbaro5020what about iraq do they have sthg similar??
@TurpInTexas
@TurpInTexas Рік тому
When I was a kid back in the 1960's, I remember reading about the relocation of temples due to the rising waters. National Geographic covered the whole process in great detail and it was absolutely fascinating considering the scale of the project.
@deniseeulert2503
@deniseeulert2503 Рік тому
We must be about the same age as I remember that too. It was one of two articles that inspired me to cellect the magazine. Before I was done I had around eleven hundred issues.
@TurpInTexas
@TurpInTexas Рік тому
@@deniseeulert2503 Lol! I guess in a way, National Geographic was to then, as the internet is to people now. It had lots of interesting articles about everything under the sun, big color pictures, and I couldn't wait for each monthly issue to come out at the public library since we were too poor to afford it when I was a kid.
@TurpInTexas
@TurpInTexas Рік тому
@@c.518 Too late. You missed it. They did it already. You snooze, you lose. ;)
@vandalnonesuch8274
@vandalnonesuch8274 Рік тому
@@c.518 UNESCO actually did move the statues of Ramses II at Abu Simbel! Their teams of engineers, stoneworkers and others sawed the statues and surrounding enclosure into huge stone blocks, numbering and diagramming them as they went, then moved it higher up above what would be the flood line of the under construction Aswan High Dam, and painstakingly reassembled it. Took them something like 4 years! How I know" I had an older cousin who taught Paleontology at SMU. He was invited to work on the project, and spent almost a year at Abu Simbel. He took many photos of that monumental undertaking and shared them with me! I remember asking him after he returned what the most memorable part of his trip was - his response: the 2 weeks he spent afterwards, exploring the Amalfi Coast of Italy as a vacation! This is considered one of the great engineering efforts of the 20TH Century!
@vandalnonesuch8274
@vandalnonesuch8274 Рік тому
@@c.518 If you're interested, there is a book titled Egypt: Yesterday and Today by David Roberts. It's full of some of the most amazing Lithographs I've ever seen, and date from his trips to Egypt in the 1840's! It covers much more than just Abu Simbel, but the art is just jaw-dropping! It's also very informative.
@josephpiskac2781
@josephpiskac2781 2 роки тому
Thanks for sending us a Christmas present! I am a 70year old retired architect living in a van in the Nevada USA desert. I cannot send anything back except my UKposts viewing. Best Holidays Wishes!
@andrewd7586
@andrewd7586 Рік тому
I visited Egypt, first in 1990. I was in awe of the pyramids themselves! A childhood dream come true. Then with several other Aussie backpackers, we took the trip down to Abu Simbel. To say these monuments were astonishing like the pyramids, is an understatement! To know they had been relocated some 22 years before was even more astonishing! Well worth the effort to go there. 👍🏼🇦🇺
@Mohamed-jm4po
@Mohamed-jm4po 4 місяці тому
Welcome to Egypt ❤
@bholmes5490
@bholmes5490 Рік тому
Manuel- You are right. They are colossal and magnificent. Two great engineering projects three thousand years apart. The building, the relocation. Thanks for your most excellent videos.
@rennedelorean3341
@rennedelorean3341 Рік тому
I remember when The Aswan Dam was being built, several Nations of the World contributed to the effort to relocate The Temple of Abu Simbel. Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy worked tirelessly to get the United States involved, for it's efforts, Egypt gifted a smaller Temple to the United States, The temple is located in a special location of The Smithsonian.
@johng4093
@johng4093 23 дні тому
I'm sure there are ignorant people saying those "stolen" relics must be returned to Egypt.
@mikeifyouplease
@mikeifyouplease Рік тому
Manuel, it is amazing. Every time I come back to see your videos again, I am more impressed than I was the first time. Thank you for all your work!
@pbrn1729
@pbrn1729 11 місяців тому
We were in Egypt about 40 years and went to Abu Symbel -it was beyond amazing😃😃
@hamedsaharani3530
@hamedsaharani3530 2 роки тому
it is amazing how modern technology able to rescue both WHOLE temple from the river flood and move them above to higher location nearby
@beverleydeeming4427
@beverleydeeming4427 Рік тому
The scale of these structures is truly mind blowing and definitely deserved the mammoth task of firstly uncovering them and then moving them. Really interesting video. Many thanks
@sunnythegreat9617
@sunnythegreat9617 11 місяців тому
Egypt is one of the most fascinating Ancient Civilization out there.
@GAS.M3
@GAS.M3 2 роки тому
I'm so glad those statues aren't defaced like every other statue in Egypt. This is amazing, thank you 👏
@rogercoltest350
@rogercoltest350 2 роки тому
Depends on what you mean by defaced...I visited in 2019...it seems every conquering culture left their 'mark' on everything...it's a shame.
@salaialexander7022
@salaialexander7022 2 роки тому
04:42 they aren't. You can clearly see the nubians bound for slavery here. You can tell them apart from the Egyptians by their facial features
@bilaljahi5364
@bilaljahi5364 2 роки тому
@@salaialexander7022 still they were black Africans. Ugandans typically don’t look like Somalis but 🤷🏾‍♂️
@salaialexander7022
@salaialexander7022 2 роки тому
@@bilaljahi5364 Somalis are admixed with Arabians and caucazoid north Africans for eons. Totally obliterated your own premise
@cjyoung4080
@cjyoung4080 Рік тому
@@salaialexander7022 i like it that way
@VeneficaDelirium
@VeneficaDelirium Рік тому
It's so remarkable, I think seeing Egypt in person would move me to tears.
@jesseleesamples
@jesseleesamples Рік тому
This is my number one place I want to visit on the entire planet. I love Egyptian history and mythology and Ramses is my favorite Pharaoh. I hope to someday visit there but this video was by far the best I’ve found on Abu Simbel and I’m so thankful to you for making it.
@oscar17891
@oscar17891 Рік тому
I've been there last week and I can't believe I waited all these years to visit. It truly is something incredible
@Kariakas
@Kariakas Рік тому
What great detail. The moving of the whole temple seems like an unreal feat.
@josephpiskac2781
@josephpiskac2781 2 роки тому
Blessed guy knows what he is looking at and able to travel to see it. Very Very Merry Christmas!
@johnmcglynn4102
@johnmcglynn4102 День тому
Was there myself two years ago. One of the most remembered days of my life.
@andrewdale6856
@andrewdale6856 11 місяців тому
I was there in 1988 and got the chance to see behind and insidethe artificialmountain. Incredible. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to visit again in your amazing video ❤
@weirdsearchhistory5876
@weirdsearchhistory5876 Рік тому
The fact that ancient artifacts survived neglect until the 19th or 20th centuries shows the kind of building quality of those days. My house was built in 1989 and I’m having to do major renovations already
@mariaevans5793
@mariaevans5793 Рік тому
Excellent video, your narrative is just right,you have taken me back to 1989 ,when at 5 o'clock in the morning my friends and I went there ,we walked there from the local hotel,there was no one but us ,it was magical, it was a moment in my life that can never be forgot !!!!!!!!!😁🇬🇧
@JenniferJCouch
@JenniferJCouch Рік тому
Thank you so much for sharing the incredible videos of the an ient world. My aunt and uncle visited these two temples before they were moved and i remember watching their photos on a slide projector in 1963. Kudos to the Egyptian government for going to such extremes to preserve the temples so exactly to their original site. Stunning!
@janegael
@janegael 10 місяців тому
This video is so good I watched it on my tablet and then came over and watched it again on my computer screen so that I could properly appreciate the details the artists carved on the walls. I can't even begin to understand how they could move it and keep everything intact but people smarter than I am did a wonderful job.
@rogercoltest350
@rogercoltest350 2 роки тому
Egypt is an amazing place...soooo much more than what you see on TV...
@stownsin
@stownsin Рік тому
I remember the removal of the tombs in the sixties. You probably know that the Boyne Valley in Ireland has several passages tombs that predate Egyptian pyramids, including the most famous, Newgrange which also has an opening which illuminates the inner chamber at the winter solstice. Love your videos - I wish I had seen them before we went to Venice and Cordoba.
@johnhenderson8149
@johnhenderson8149 Рік тому
Orkneys also.
@pacofgarcia5998
@pacofgarcia5998 Рік тому
I have seen Venice and I am from Córdoba: good choice anyway.
@ScorpioMojo
@ScorpioMojo Рік тому
lol, the first people discovered in ancient Britannia were Negroid. The first female discovered on the British Isle was a black chick. The Americas indigenous people recorded themselves as dark skinned people with Negroid features, until Renaissance invaders destroyed their civilizations and colonized them with European DNA and customs.
@allangibson8494
@allangibson8494 11 місяців тому
Abu Simbel wasn’t a tomb - it was a shrine and a symbol of Egyptian dominance over the Nubians.
@robote7679
@robote7679 11 місяців тому
This was a wonderful, epic video. Well done on all counts and it brought back memories for me. As a child back in the 60's I remember reading about the colossal engineering feat of moving these two magnificent temples. Thanks so much for giving me this fantastic follow-up from so many decades ago.
@howser1961
@howser1961 Рік тому
Again outstanding work - your dedication shines through every frame and every line of narration - thank you.
@martinburdge8820
@martinburdge8820 Рік тому
I have been to Egypt and it was one of my bucket lists to do, I would highly recommend people to go to Egypt and see the wonders of the pyramids and temples it’s astonishing how they built these places, It’s a shame that the colours have faded but in some places you still have the original colours still visible, I have always been fascinated by Egypt and cannot wait to go back.
@user-dj7vx4em3z
@user-dj7vx4em3z 11 місяців тому
Welcome to Egypt ❤
@renaldorocha3379
@renaldorocha3379 2 роки тому
Parabéns, Manuel! Seus vídeos são inspiradores, continue a fazê-los.
@shaheennawaz5390
@shaheennawaz5390 9 місяців тому
I had visit eygpt in October 2016. I went to abu simbel. It's indeed fascinating to watch the ancient architectures of eygpt..
@jakobbergen7574
@jakobbergen7574 11 місяців тому
Of all the documentaries I have seen on ancient Egypt, this was the most interesting. Manuel discussed aspects of the history I have never come across before of Abu Simbel
@thomash6853
@thomash6853 2 роки тому
Absolutely amazing video!
@rogerdines6244
@rogerdines6244 2 роки тому
Wonderful, as always-you are so talented, I would not be surprised if you played the music as well!
@NR-vw2rd
@NR-vw2rd 7 місяців тому
You are so fortunate to be able to travel to these wonders, thank you for sharing and educating those less fortunate. Gracias caballero.
@valeriaornano9883
@valeriaornano9883 Місяць тому
To me this is the most beautiful place in the world. When I went to Abu Simbel, I didn't want to leave 😢❤
@mrs6968
@mrs6968 2 роки тому
I always wondered why the statues were so massive and now I know because they weren't to reflect mortal men yet to reflect the gods and those Egyptian's we're so clever to create a room where a god of the shadows would always stay in the shadows even when then earth was in perfect alignment of the sun that is so cool to know thank you for all these highly informative videos about traveling through time especially considering Milwaukee Wisconsin USA is so far away from such a historical place on this globe just spinning in space
@alinedeleandro123
@alinedeleandro123 2 роки тому
Have a look around UKposts referring to human giants. Divergent, Paul Cook, Mud Fossil University and many more.
@boricuaalma2176
@boricuaalma2176 Рік тому
The structures built on The African Continent Are Amazing! with all kinds of people from The North, South, East & West... All Creating things that are part of history (despite those who defaced alot of ancient statues! specifically the face! (Noses & Mouths/Lips) almost as if THE DEFACERS we're trying to "Hide" something or someone and keep them from being seen or acknowledged! But still the structures are just fascinating! ❤️
@ScorpioMojo
@ScorpioMojo Рік тому
Subverting the truth, to promote whyte supremacy propaganda and lies.
@deevee9139
@deevee9139 Рік тому
Yes indeed you are absolutely correct! but some of these comments are trying it! If you know what I mean! 😎
@cezz1105
@cezz1105 Рік тому
😍
@beauty-boy
@beauty-boy 10 місяців тому
North Africa is different from sub-Saharan Africa.
@boricuaalma2176
@boricuaalma2176 10 місяців тому
@@beauty-boy Ok...
@sputumtube
@sputumtube Рік тому
Absolutely awe-inspiring. Thanks for posting.
@ioshthornton1971
@ioshthornton1971 Рік тому
Thank you for sharing your joy and talents with the rest of us!
@wwdjf
@wwdjf 2 роки тому
Sus videos son únicos, cortos, llenos de información profunda y una excelente fotografía. Y me gustan aún más los que están en español, al alcance de la gente de nuestra América Latina que, en su gran mayoría, no habla inglés. Ojalá haya más contenido en español.
@ManuelBravo
@ManuelBravo 2 роки тому
ukposts.info/have/v-deo/fadjgaBkeZWGuKM.html
@mistylover7398
@mistylover7398 11 місяців тому
@@ManuelBravo wha with da horus and set/Seth wall with da one person in da middle? And what Egyptians thought of their ⚔️.
@33Donner77
@33Donner77 Рік тому
Thanks for the information. I remember when the monument was placed here. No, I'm not thousands of years old. I made a model of the monument back in 6th grade when it was being moved.
@geograph-ology4343
@geograph-ology4343 11 місяців тому
A great job again explaining historical sites! It greatly expanded what I saw when I visited..but I am truly down away by the lack of tourists when you were there. The lines into both temples were so long that we only had time to enter Rameses' temple and not his wife's. Keep up the great work!
@budgetaudiophilelife-long5461
@budgetaudiophilelife-long5461 Рік тому
THANK YOU MANUEL ,🤗 for all your labor’s in sharing this with us 👍😎💚💚💚
@EEAMD-co6nw
@EEAMD-co6nw Рік тому
mind blown by the fact that they moved the statues further up
@Sebastian_GBC
@Sebastian_GBC 2 роки тому
Amazing video
@JC-xw2sb
@JC-xw2sb 2 роки тому
Yes indeed.
@1suitcasesal
@1suitcasesal Рік тому
Abu Simbal is one of my favorite places in the world. Beautiful and interesting video.
@pallen49
@pallen49 11 місяців тому
Wow!! I love looking at those old pics of those times when those temples and statures were first discovered and was all covered in sand and such...It has that mystical ancient charm to it... I can only imagine what the first discoverer must've of felt when he or she first set their eyes on something that haven't been seen in centuries..
@Marc1973Dez
@Marc1973Dez Рік тому
Never knew those temples were actually located several meters down the hill, and modern tech had it disassembled and rebuilt it back up again on top of the hill. Wonder how much time and money they spent on the process. I guess that was more remarkable and impressive than the original construction.
@rorychivers8769
@rorychivers8769 Рік тому
To be fair, the ancient Egyptians probably would have appreciated having cranes and excavators to do all the hard work...
@glenchapman3899
@glenchapman3899 Рік тому
4 years and about 300 million dollars in todays money. They chopped them up into something like 20 ton blocks and put them back together like a giant game of tetris
@dr.banoub9233
@dr.banoub9233 2 роки тому
Proud of my great Egyptian heritage.
@ScorpioMojo
@ScorpioMojo Рік тому
Especially the Kushites and Ethiopians
@dr.banoub9233
@dr.banoub9233 Рік тому
@@ScorpioMojo We don’t subscribe to Afrocentric nonsense. Egyptians are the ONLY non tribal ethnicity on the African continent, something we take a great deal of pride in. Egyptians belong to the White racial category, Kushites and Ethiopians are Black. Their languages belong to a different language group as well. The final stage of the Egyptian language is Coptic and is STILL in use today. Without Copts, Egyptology would never have existed.
@ScorpioMojo
@ScorpioMojo Рік тому
@Dr. Banoub, U💵C ‘86,’90 - modern Egyptian transplants and immigrant invaders since 700 AD. The continent of Africa is afrocentric. Creating a new land mass by calling it the middle east in the early 1900's doesn't change facts and history concerning ancient Kemet aka Egypt. Kemet means black land. Unremarkable olive skinned, European mixtures and wannabes contributed NOTHING to Egypt's glorious past achievements. Arabs just live there and take up space, helping whyte supremacy propaganda suppress the land's original people. Must be infuriating to dwell in someone else's historic homeland where no one of legend looks like you. I can't think of any remarkable modern Egyptians who are known for anything significant. Surrounded by the true inheritors and inhabitants who number over a billion must make colonizers nervous. #TicToc.
@dr.banoub9233
@dr.banoub9233 Рік тому
@@ScorpioMojo I know all the Afrocentric nonsense: “mountains of the moon”, the charlatan named Dr Ben, Anta Diopshit, Nubia as the mother of Egypt etc. Blacks have contributed nothing to Egyptian civilization . Afrocentric racist supremacists developed a therapeutic mythology , based on cultural appropriation , revisionist history and pseudo science to alleviate their feelings of inferiority from the transatlantic slave trade that their direct antecedents, like Nzinga, were complicit in. Copts are the original people who still read , write and speak in the final stage of the Egyptian language. FYI, ancient Egyptians didn’t even like getting tanned let alone black skin color, sad…. You’re twisting yourself into pretzels because you’re embarrassed that you Hoteps don’t come from a place of ancient civilization or culture. Do you know ancient and modern Egyptians found dark skin undesirable? So much so my ancestors invented sunscreen! “The first record of sun protection began with the Egyptians, who used ingredients such as rice bran, jasmine, and lupine.Though they did not understand the harmful effects the sun has on the skin, they did understand the concept of tanning. In a culture where lighter skin was more desirable, the purpose of their sunscreen was solely cosmetic. It has only recently been discovered that rice bran absorbs UV light, jasmine helps repair DNA, and lupine lightens skin. Other cultures have tried their luck at sun protection with varying success.” From Journal of the American Medical Association December Dermatology 2015 The History of Sunscreen - JAMA Network Go ahead refute JAMA(Journal of the American Medical Association)! The AMA’s racist too? Or how about the US census Bureau? Per the US 2020 Census, Egyptians are White! White: The category “White” includes all individuals who identify with one or more nationalities or ethnic groups ORIGINATING in Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa. Examples of these groups include, but are not limited to, German, Irish, English, Italian, Lebanese, EGYPTIAN, Polish, French, Iranian, Slavic, Cajun, and Chaldean. Black or African American: The category “Black or African American” includes all individuals who identify with one or more nationalities or ethnic groups originating in any of the black racial groups of Africa. Examples of these groups include, but are not limited to, African American, Jamaican, Haitian, Nigerian, Ethiopian, and Somali. The category also includes groups such as Ghanaian, South African, Barbadian, Kenyan, Liberian, and Bahamian. Key word: originating 1. have a specified beginning.
@ScorpioMojo
@ScorpioMojo Рік тому
@Dr. Banoub, U💵C ‘86,’90 - American born black people are proud to stand against whyte supremacy and oppression. We've been surviving and thriving in American Babylon for centuries. We don't want to be whyte and reject the Neanderthug culture. We ARE the American pop culture. You are an Arab transplant whose ancestors invaded Kemet around 70 AD. All that coptic crap is irrelevant to a civilization that was founded 1000's of years ago and left evidence of their appearance and identity from the white Nile in Uganda, to the blue Nile originating in Ethiopia. The E1B1A DNA dominates the region. Kemet is Egypt's original name and it means black land. Like their historic ties and family bonds with Ethiopia and Kush. The Arab phenotype is a hybrid and excels at nothing on the world stage. A bland mixture of chromosomes that produces less than spectacular people, who want to be European, but are rejected to 2nd class citizen status. The day is soon approaching when the dark skinned African people who are indigenous to the entire continent until the full scale invasion by Europeans in the late 1800's .. with automatic weapons, will rise up and reclaim what is rightfully theirs. The Boers/Afrikaaners and Chinese will be evicted soon enough. It's already beginning. The middle east and Arabian desert are your true ancestral lands. Arid sands and dust just like Kemet has degraded to. The most lush, bountiful lands and territories were inhabited by everyone BUT Europeans. They couldn't build ships fast enough to flee from that frozen POS, into the historic paradises that darker skinned people are indigenous to. We know who always wins in any fair competition against black people. Looking at the image of the great black rulers and gods who inspired the sphynx tells the world the truth. Shattering the noses, flooding tombs and destroying Alexandria to subvert the truth only bought time. There will be more discoveries like Saqqara and it's untampered black images and history. The truth always emerges. Allowing Arabs to FINALLY claim European identity and status is another pathetic stalling tactic. Neanderthug birthrates are non existent. The Arab spring fiasco was staged to force wannabe whytes to immigrate to Europe .. who desperately needs low skilled and wage workers to maintain the economy that free black labor established centuries ago. It's always been about race and black people. American born black people will be receiving our long overdue reparations for slavery very soon, and the world follows our lead. The other great civilizations of Africa which were pillaged and destroyed by colonizers like Great Zimbabwe, Benin, Mali, and Timbuktu will continue to reveal their true past and achievements. And we know they won't be attributed to inferior olive skinned European wannabes. Hope you like sand and sun .. your historic homelands. Always bet on black.
@sanpedrosilver
@sanpedrosilver Рік тому
Truly amazing to know those temples were physically moved to a higher location. Thank you for sharing
@brendabrass2715
@brendabrass2715 Рік тому
Your presentations are readily understood and the illustrations are found nowhere else. Thank you
@Sevenp3
@Sevenp3 Рік тому
Such an amazing part of African history!❤😄 Edit: I know I should've said achievement I understand why everyone is upset with the Cleopatra blackwashing thing.
@user-dj7vx4em3z
@user-dj7vx4em3z 11 місяців тому
Egyptian 😡not African
@Sevenp3
@Sevenp3 11 місяців тому
@@user-dj7vx4em3z Egypt is part of the African continent. I'm not saying the history belongs to all Africans, just an achievement achieved on the African continent, since most of it is pretty bland, Stone Hedge would be considered a European achievement not a British one because still no one knows who or what made them
@tertlert
@tertlert 11 місяців тому
@@user-dj7vx4em3z these are Africans that built this. Black sudanese and egyptians. Nubia/egypt. Its in southern Egypt, border of sudan. These were black people lmao
@KotkotKatkot
@KotkotKatkot 10 місяців тому
@@tertlertNo, Nubia was down in Sudan
@johng4093
@johng4093 23 дні тому
Cleopatra was the last queen of the Macedonian dynasty that ruled Egypt between the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BCE and its annexation by Rome in 30 BCE.
@SpanishEclectic
@SpanishEclectic Рік тому
So much great photography and analysis in your videos. Always interesting and enjoyable. Gracias!
@Marco1973est
@Marco1973est 11 місяців тому
WOW - Amazed, at what the Ancients did, about the ones who discovered them did, the international preservation and finally the great video explaining it all. ( Nice background music low and not distracting).
@bilaljahi5364
@bilaljahi5364 2 роки тому
Those black Africans of ancient Egypt did an amazing job
@wodemaya7899
@wodemaya7899 2 роки тому
We are just ∆fric∆ns 🙅🏿‍🤎🟤 and our true colour is brown 🟤🟤 and NOT black🕳️. Why do you feel the need to wrongly add - " black " ?
@bilaljahi5364
@bilaljahi5364 2 роки тому
@@wodemaya7899 black
@wodemaya7899
@wodemaya7899 2 роки тому
@@bilaljahi5364 we are NOT black 🕳️ ! We are brown 🤎🟤 . Nelson Mandela , Michael Jordan , Drogba , Queen Tiye , Hailey Selassie , Winnie Mandela , Miriam Makeba , Pele , Serena Williams . We are brown 🟤 and ∆fric∆ns🤎🤎.
@bilaljahi5364
@bilaljahi5364 2 роки тому
@@wodemaya7899 we are all human first. i am black. okay? we good now?
@wodemaya7899
@wodemaya7899 2 роки тому
@@bilaljahi5364 you seemingly know NOT your cocoa tree r🟤🟤ts . Unsurprising after a 🌴 tree transplantation ? " We are all human first " - that OBVIOUS is of negligible value and many " malice racists " - have & will - violently DISAGREE we are all human first.
@tertlert
@tertlert 11 місяців тому
More black people. The ancient Egyptians in this region of southern Egypt were identical to nubians
@NeptunesLagoon
@NeptunesLagoon Місяць тому
Definitely not, and congoids didn’t even know that Egypt existed… 😮
@cypresse1620
@cypresse1620 Рік тому
I really like your channel! Learned a lot especially after my own trip to Egypt. So fascinating! 👍👍👍
@johnmccann8319
@johnmccann8319 Рік тому
Great video.Just got back from Egypt(visting the Temples,Valley of the kings,Pyramids and Abu Simbel).Well done with the interesting information!👌
@wuatanirichard7390
@wuatanirichard7390 Рік тому
BLACK POWER
@Mr.ChickenmanKitchen
@Mr.ChickenmanKitchen 27 днів тому
Egyptian power
@mitsparmar4221
@mitsparmar4221 21 день тому
​@@Mr.ChickenmanKitchenwell they're blacks though not arabs
@michealdominic7788
@michealdominic7788 Рік тому
Aincient Egyptians were black
@Aaron.
@Aaron. Рік тому
No
@boricuaalma2176
@boricuaalma2176 Рік тому
Yes, they were... and some still are! there's a lot of Egyptians, and other Middle easterners/Arabs who have Sub-Saharan African (Black) blood in them! PEOPLE LIE! but DNA is the ultimate TRUTH! there's a video I watched where they did the DNA of several people who are "ARAB" (Middle Eastern) Syrian, Lebanese, Egyptian, Albanian & Yemeni and EACH ONE OF THEM! had a percentage of "Black/African Blood" in them... 4 out of the 5 were IN SHOCK! but the one said "HE EXPECTED IT!" he just didn't know how much...
@NeptunesLagoon
@NeptunesLagoon Місяць тому
Definitely not… and congoids didn’t even know that Egypt existed… SMH 😮
@michaeldeierhoi4096
@michaeldeierhoi4096 Рік тому
Great stuff! Thanks for showing the details of Abu Simbal and its past history.
@barbaracrain2975
@barbaracrain2975 Рік тому
This is unreal how they were built!! Thank you!!
@thetruthisoutthere5265
@thetruthisoutthere5265 Рік тому
Great work telling the story of ABU SIMBEL!
@johnl2727
@johnl2727 4 місяці тому
The repositioning of the temples was a spectacular engineering feat. Simply perfect.
@novem646
@novem646 2 роки тому
Excelent explanation about the Aswan Dam and how was the discovery of Abu Simbel in Egipt. Amazing thank you Manuel
@Shanthi-hn4jx
@Shanthi-hn4jx Рік тому
Wonderful ancient Egypt Architecture,thanks for sharing very beautiful video and detailed information congratulations 👌👌👌
@elainaworsley470
@elainaworsley470 3 місяці тому
I've been here and you gave so much information it was amazing. The place to me has a wonderful feeling to it. Like you feel they are still there watching you walk around their temple. 😊. Great video.
@skwoods7986
@skwoods7986 3 місяці тому
I really appreciated the rendering of where the original temples were and where they are now. Helped me understand the site.
@TheScreamingFrog916
@TheScreamingFrog916 3 місяці тому
Loe the piano background music. You have a wonderful approach to this subject. Thanks for sharing 🌎☮
@user-zk8ed4kd2b
@user-zk8ed4kd2b Рік тому
It's a masterpiece. I love the artistry of the ancient Egyptians.
@antonmarino6568
@antonmarino6568 Рік тому
Have visited these temples, absolutely breathtaking
@GardenofDiamonds
@GardenofDiamonds Рік тому
These documentaries make me anxious and almost light headed as if a certain energy is transmitted through to me from these places 🇪🇬 ✨
@makteko
@makteko 6 місяців тому
Great video. Wow, I didn't know they actually moved temple from its original place.
@patjones2082
@patjones2082 6 днів тому
Glad these were saved. Nice photography and story! Thank you for posting this. I never knew there was a cave type temple.
@architude
@architude Рік тому
Very educational and with a lot of background research to highlight the upload, but I must say, you've actually got a real hard-on for this stuff.
@ninarizzo7312
@ninarizzo7312 11 місяців тому
How very fascinating! What a magnificent people they were. They have left magnificent monuments and I am sure, many more secrets to be discovered!!!! I love it.❤️❤️❤️👏👏👏👏
@andrelordello
@andrelordello Рік тому
Incredible video! Great research you did! Amazing guys! Thank you! Greetings from Brazil! 😆🏆😁
@johnshields6852
@johnshields6852 2 місяці тому
Watching these marvels be recreated to show what they originally looked like is fascinating and thrilling to see.
@skylenoxtribute8518
@skylenoxtribute8518 Рік тому
Love your channel! Thanks for all the information and work
@bigantplowright5711
@bigantplowright5711 Рік тому
I was lucky enough to take a night flight down to Aswan and was at the temple when the sun rose over lake Nasser. Incredible experience.
@140adj
@140adj 9 місяців тому
Thank you for the multi language subtitles
@WheresThatDamn4thChaosEmerald
@WheresThatDamn4thChaosEmerald 8 місяців тому
That was beautiful a great video
@janiekcarney5482
@janiekcarney5482 Рік тому
If I went to Egypt I wouldn’t be able to see all things you have in your videos. I’m too old to go now. So glad I found your channel.
@MaximusOfTheMeadow
@MaximusOfTheMeadow Рік тому
Thank you, for making this video!!!
@acuest1
@acuest1 Рік тому
Bravo! Manuel, geniales reportajes
@chrischristoferson1191
@chrischristoferson1191 4 місяці тому
Absolutely amazing that such ancient people created these insane works of art/architecture.
@kindredtheembraced
@kindredtheembraced 2 роки тому
Terrific!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! As always Manuel.
@mikeford1273
@mikeford1273 11 місяців тому
Fantastic! What an awesome video!. I had forgotten they had been moved which must have been on an engineering scale similar to building them in the 1st place!. Thanks for this!!😊
@timp1051
@timp1051 3 місяці тому
Sir, this video is absolutely fantastic!! Wonderful videography, very informative!! Very, very well done!!
@stevenf.2620
@stevenf.2620 7 місяців тому
Informative lecture. Well done.
@bubhub64
@bubhub64 Рік тому
Stunning mind boggling acomplishments of man....first to build these wonderful monolithic temples, and second, to move these incredible temples to their current location. Unbelievable!
@Peace_nJoy
@Peace_nJoy 3 місяці тому
Karnak.. Thanks a million for this video. The best I've seen of Abu Shimbel. Ramses supposedly found this site on his first trip to Nubya. What an unbelievable monumental achievement!!
@colvingenealogy
@colvingenealogy 10 місяців тому
Always enjoy your videos. So well done an informative.
@MHarenArt
@MHarenArt Рік тому
Thank you for sharing this wonderful video! The photography was fantastic, giving us a real perspective of the size of the temples and statues. I will never get to see this in person, but I feel like I had the next best thing! thank you.
@KotkotKatkot
@KotkotKatkot 10 місяців тому
Why, you cab give a visit
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