I wish I was born back when you could just live as a "scholar" or "philosopher" and just make shit up like fact.
I wish more I was born in the era of mad science, like, "we just figured out electricity and machining and engines and shit, let's see what we can slap together!" science
Yeah but this is also when people didn't understand the fun aspects of things like fluorine
Would You Survive In a Different Historical Era?10:54 https://youtu.be/lIKMWflBL7Q Ever wonder how you'd fare in a different time period? Today, we're exploring the most lethal dangers people from around the world faced from 14th century Florence to 1st century ancient Rome. Brush up on your survival skills and let us know how well you think you'd do if alive way back when.
Maybe not the tightest channel in terms of fact checking but I have been watching a lot of the videos recently because they are pretty entertaining
What I've learnt is that the past sucks and if I have a time machine I would use it to go forward instead
how did I never know was St. Augustine was a Amazigh (berber) north african from modern day algeria?
i mean i know the answer is racism but still wow one of the seminal figures on christian theology was from algeria. (and yeah I know north africa was an early center of Christianity but it is amazing how much that is glossed over in general overviews of early christian history.)
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PiptheFairFrequently not in boats.Registered Userregular
how did I never know was St. Augustine was a Amazigh (berber) north african from modern day algeria.
i mean i know the answer is racism but still wow one of the seminal figures on christian theology was from algeria. (and yeah I know north africa was an early center of Christianity but it is amazing how much that is glossed over in general overviews of early christian history.)
Most early church figures are Mediterranean and some are East African
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PiptheFairFrequently not in boats.Registered Userregular
Santa was from Anatolia
St Christopher was from Canaan
St Jerome was from modern day Slovenia
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JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
17th Century Ninja Explains How To Be A Ninja // The Bansenshūkai // Japanese Primary Source4:13 https://youtu.be/0-8P382wPIw
Straight from the pages of the ultimate Ninja manual - The 17th century Bansenshūkai (萬川集海 - translated as 'All Rivers Merge into the Sea'), here we have a passage of advice for lords on the ten key aspects they should search for when hiring a prospective Ninja/Shinobi.
Compiled in 1676 by Fujibayashi Yasutake, The Bansenshūkai is an exhaustive guide to many of the key moral ideas that underpin the Ninja, as well as practical advice on how to execute various strategies - from castle infiltration to haircuts.
Thanks to Antony Cummins for allowing us to use his excellent translation -
Seems like a long video just to say "flip out and kill people."
Well yeah, you need the full technique repertoire ready or you're just the guy that flipped out, tried to run up a wall, and broke his ankle falling three feet.
JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
I just finished reading a pretty good book about Leonardo da Vinci. There's a lot of neat stuff about his art and engineering, and every ten pages there will be a story like "and then he painstakingly mapped out the entire human circulatory system to he could more accurately draw the forehead veins in a concept sketch for a project that he never really went anywhere on, and then he never bothered to publish it so nobody knew how blood worked until hundreds of years later." So that's always fun.
My main takeaway is that Leonardo and Michelangelo really didn't get along at all. They were both gay, but Leonardo didn't really care about the church and basically just lived his life as a happy gay dude, while Michelangelo was hella churched and hated being attracted to men and it just led to him being shitty and mad all the time. And so you get the feeling that Michelangelo thought they were in this lifelong feud of seething mutual hatred, and Leonardo would just pop up every now and then and be like "Yo, man, those naked dudes you just painted look like a bunch of bags of walnuts. Suck less, I guess" and then just piss off to Florence to dodge the pope's phone calls and invent turbulent flow theory.
Anyway, I would like Jeff Bridges to do a movie about Leonardo with no attempt at an accent, this concludes my TED talk.
I just finished reading a pretty good book about Leonardo da Vinci. There's a lot of neat stuff about his art and engineering, and every ten pages there will be a story like "and then he painstakingly mapped out the entire human circulatory system to he could more accurately draw the forehead veins in a concept sketch for a project that he never really went anywhere on, and then he never bothered to publish it so nobody knew how blood worked until hundreds of years later." So that's always fun.
My main takeaway is that Leonardo and Michelangelo really didn't get along at all. They were both gay, but Leonardo didn't really care about the church and basically just lived his life as a happy gay dude, while Michelangelo was hella churched and hated being attracted to men and it just led to him being shitty and mad all the time. And so you get the feeling that Michelangelo thought they were in this lifelong feud of seething mutual hatred, and Leonardo would just pop up every now and then and be like "Yo, man, those naked dudes you just painted look like a bunch of bags of walnuts. Suck less, I guess" and then just piss off to Florence to dodge the pope's phone calls and invent turbulent flow theory.
Anyway, I would like Jeff Bridges to do a movie about Leonardo with no attempt at an accent, this concludes my TED talk.
michaelangelo was a notorious asshole and diva
leo was (and I really hate being an armchair psych but a lot of modern doctors tend to agree) pretty onto the spectrum and possibly had aspergers, so he just really couldn't relate well to people at all
they were both outrageous geniuses whose breadth of work will likely never be rivaled
EDIT: also leo wasn't really happy being gay, as it was kinda a capital offense, also the whole being real bad at relating to other people thing
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Metzger MeisterIt Gets Worsebefore it gets any better.Registered Userregular
He could comfort himself by being extremely fucking yoked at least
So here's a bit of relatively local history stuff. Really just a history anecdote that struck a chord with me.
Anybody familiar with America's history with Native American/US relations has probably heard of the Cherokee. Cherokee isn't actually their own name for themselves, but rather one of the names that many other indigenous people used for them. It's exact etymology is lost to time, but a common theory is it derives from an Iroquian expression that translates to "people of the caves."
The reason why many people think this a plausible origin is because caves are traditionally a really big deal in Cherokee belief systems. To oversimplify as a stupid colonist, caves serve as a boundary between the mundane and metaphysical. Because of this they often played an important ceremonial role and might often be ordained with elaborate cave art.
In the past several decades dozens of these caves have been found in the traditional Cherokee homeland (spanning parts of the Carolinas, Tennessee, and Georgia) and researchers have been extremely interested in studying them. The time frame of the art's creation in any given cave is often enormous. The oldest drawings in some of the caves go back almost eight thousand years. It's impossible to determine the authors of the oldest art. They may have been cherokee or their ancestors or another culture which was displaced at some point by the Cherokee. But the youngest carvings in the cave? Well those are definitely cherokee. Because not only is there art, but also writing to go with it.
That is, very old, and very archaic Cherokee dating from the late 18th, early 19th century.
Even with Cherokee assistance, it's been very difficult to translate. For a comparison imagine as a modern English reader trying to parse together old English texts from scratch. Still over time the Cherokee researchers persisted and they were astounded by what they found. The majority of the writings detail sacred and ancient Cherokee rituals and customs. And like real secret stuff. Apparently many of the Cherokee who deciphered the writing were taken aback that such important cultural secrets were written where potentially anyone could see them. It seems as if in the decades before the Trail of Tears, many cherokee were aware of how dire their situation was becoming and so decided to create what was might be called a cultural encycopedia hidden in their most sacred places to preserve their culture in the face of potential annihilation. It goes over everything from their syllabary and basic writing and grammer instructions to their (previously only oral) history, societal and administrative practices, instructions for how to perform sacred rites, etc.
There is also a second group of cave texts which did not fall into this category which confused the researchers who first found them. The writing was mirrored. The researchers wondered if this was an attempt to deliberately obfuscate researches until several Cherokee hit upon the actual reasoning. They weren't meant to be read by people looking at them in the cave. They were meant to be read by people, or beings, on the other side of the cave. In the stone. When I read about this it was this final bit that really struck me. There's something deeply moving to me there.
Most of the caves' locations have been kept secret to as to try and avoid vandalism, but some of the older discovered ones are open to the public like Manitou cave. That being said much of the cave art was intentionally put in extremely hard to reach places so it can be quite dangerous to get to.
So here's a bit of relatively local history stuff. Really just a history anecdote that struck a chord with me.
Anybody familiar with America's history with Native American/US relations has probably heard of the Cherokee. Cherokee isn't actually their own name for themselves, but rather one of the names that many other indigenous people used for them. It's exact etymology is lost to time, but a common theory is it derives from an Iroquian expression that translates to "people of the caves."
The reason why many people think this a plausible origin is because caves are traditionally a really big deal in Cherokee belief systems. To oversimplify as a stupid colonist, caves serve as a boundary between the mundane and metaphysical. Because of this they often played an important ceremonial role and might often be ordained with elaborate cave art.
In the past several decades dozens of these caves have been found in the traditional Cherokee homeland (spanning parts of the Carolinas, Tennessee, and Georgia) and researchers have been extremely interested in studying them. The time frame of the art's creation in any given cave is often enormous. The oldest drawings in some of the caves go back almost eight thousand years. It's impossible to determine the authors of the oldest art. They may have been cherokee or their ancestors or another culture which was displaced at some point by the Cherokee. But the youngest carvings in the cave? Well those are definitely cherokee. Because not only is there art, but also writing to go with it.
That is, very old, and very archaic Cherokee dating from the late 18th, early 19th century.
Even with Cherokee assistance, it's been very difficult to translate. For a comparison imagine as a modern English reader trying to parse together old English texts from scratch. Still over time the Cherokee researchers persisted and they were astounded by what they found. The majority of the writings detail sacred and ancient Cherokee rituals and customs. And like real secret stuff. Apparently many of the Cherokee who deciphered the writing were taken aback that such important cultural secrets were written where potentially anyone could see them. It seems as if in the decades before the Trail of Tears, many cherokee were aware of how dire their situation was becoming and so decided to create what was might be called a cultural encycopedia hidden in their most sacred places to preserve their culture in the face of potential annihilation. It goes over everything from their syllabary and basic writing and grammer instructions to their (previously only oral) history, societal and administrative practices, instructions for how to perform sacred rites, etc.
There is also a second group of cave texts which did not fall into this category which confused the researchers who first found them. The writing was mirrored. The researchers wondered if this was an attempt to deliberately obfuscate researches until several Cherokee hit upon the actual reasoning. They weren't meant to be read by people looking at them in the cave. They were meant to be read by people, or beings, on the other side of the cave. In the stone. When I read about this it was this final bit that really struck me. There's something deeply moving to me there.
Most of the caves' locations have been kept secret to as to try and avoid vandalism, but some of the older discovered ones are open to the public like Manitou cave. That being said much of the cave art was intentionally put in extremely hard to reach places so it can be quite dangerous to get to.
I am super happy about this. The Trail of Tears was something I learned about in school at an early age and the thought that my ancestors didn't completely destroy the Cherokee's culture makes me happy. Thing is, I am aware that had they known about this, they would have destroyed it too. This is a major find and super important.
History's "worst" nun - Theresa A. Yugar4:46 https://youtu.be/9wSOt3z_-YY Get to know the life of Mexican nun, poet and scholar, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, who was censored by the Church for her critical writings.
--
Juana Ramírez de Asbaje sat before a panel of prestigious theologians, jurists, and mathematicians. They had been invited to test Juana’s knowledge with the most difficult questions they could muster. But she successfully answered every challenge, from complicated equations to philosophical queries. Who was this impressive woman? Theresa Yugar details the life of the Mexican poet and scholar.
Lesson by Theresa Yugar, directed by Wow-How Studio.
Posts
Yeah but this is also when people didn't understand the fun aspects of things like fluorine
https://youtu.be/lIKMWflBL7Q
Ever wonder how you'd fare in a different time period? Today, we're exploring the most lethal dangers people from around the world faced from 14th century Florence to 1st century ancient Rome. Brush up on your survival skills and let us know how well you think you'd do if alive way back when.
Maybe not the tightest channel in terms of fact checking but I have been watching a lot of the videos recently because they are pretty entertaining
What I've learnt is that the past sucks and if I have a time machine I would use it to go forward instead
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
Is a petty supercrime like if The Flash were to jaywalk at every street in central city in a few seconds?
Flash Gordon?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7pD2bjNCaUQ
fuck that is one of the more excessive apocalyptic way to go out
fallout 3's "lol lets nuke a city" might have been worth it if I coulda lit a joint off it
future so bright you gotta wear shades, baby
i mean i know the answer is racism but still wow one of the seminal figures on christian theology was from algeria. (and yeah I know north africa was an early center of Christianity but it is amazing how much that is glossed over in general overviews of early christian history.)
Most early church figures are Mediterranean and some are East African
St Christopher was from Canaan
St Jerome was from modern day Slovenia
Pictured: a Berber gentleman, probably.
https://youtu.be/VCA0O2iN3xE
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
https://youtu.be/0-8P382wPIw
Straight from the pages of the ultimate Ninja manual - The 17th century Bansenshūkai (萬川集海 - translated as 'All Rivers Merge into the Sea'), here we have a passage of advice for lords on the ten key aspects they should search for when hiring a prospective Ninja/Shinobi.
Compiled in 1676 by Fujibayashi Yasutake, The Bansenshūkai is an exhaustive guide to many of the key moral ideas that underpin the Ninja, as well as practical advice on how to execute various strategies - from castle infiltration to haircuts.
Thanks to Antony Cummins for allowing us to use his excellent translation -
I can do it but I don't wanna
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
Well yeah, you need the full technique repertoire ready or you're just the guy that flipped out, tried to run up a wall, and broke his ankle falling three feet.
My main takeaway is that Leonardo and Michelangelo really didn't get along at all. They were both gay, but Leonardo didn't really care about the church and basically just lived his life as a happy gay dude, while Michelangelo was hella churched and hated being attracted to men and it just led to him being shitty and mad all the time. And so you get the feeling that Michelangelo thought they were in this lifelong feud of seething mutual hatred, and Leonardo would just pop up every now and then and be like "Yo, man, those naked dudes you just painted look like a bunch of bags of walnuts. Suck less, I guess" and then just piss off to Florence to dodge the pope's phone calls and invent turbulent flow theory.
Anyway, I would like Jeff Bridges to do a movie about Leonardo with no attempt at an accent, this concludes my TED talk.
Clive James famously called Arnold Schwarzenegger a "condom full of walnuts", I can only assume it was an homage.
michaelangelo was a notorious asshole and diva
leo was (and I really hate being an armchair psych but a lot of modern doctors tend to agree) pretty onto the spectrum and possibly had aspergers, so he just really couldn't relate well to people at all
they were both outrageous geniuses whose breadth of work will likely never be rivaled
EDIT: also leo wasn't really happy being gay, as it was kinda a capital offense, also the whole being real bad at relating to other people thing
Like that is some wild lookin shit that dude is wearing, most of the plate mail in Game of Thrones looked like pots and pans
game of thrones also bought into the fallacy that everything was brown and everybody nobles were covered in shit
people wore bright colors and cared about their appearance, also people bathed at least once a week and washed their hands, feet and face daily
at least until the second plague and the church started saying public baths were the cause of the spread
Anybody familiar with America's history with Native American/US relations has probably heard of the Cherokee. Cherokee isn't actually their own name for themselves, but rather one of the names that many other indigenous people used for them. It's exact etymology is lost to time, but a common theory is it derives from an Iroquian expression that translates to "people of the caves."
The reason why many people think this a plausible origin is because caves are traditionally a really big deal in Cherokee belief systems. To oversimplify as a stupid colonist, caves serve as a boundary between the mundane and metaphysical. Because of this they often played an important ceremonial role and might often be ordained with elaborate cave art.
In the past several decades dozens of these caves have been found in the traditional Cherokee homeland (spanning parts of the Carolinas, Tennessee, and Georgia) and researchers have been extremely interested in studying them. The time frame of the art's creation in any given cave is often enormous. The oldest drawings in some of the caves go back almost eight thousand years. It's impossible to determine the authors of the oldest art. They may have been cherokee or their ancestors or another culture which was displaced at some point by the Cherokee. But the youngest carvings in the cave? Well those are definitely cherokee. Because not only is there art, but also writing to go with it.
That is, very old, and very archaic Cherokee dating from the late 18th, early 19th century.
Even with Cherokee assistance, it's been very difficult to translate. For a comparison imagine as a modern English reader trying to parse together old English texts from scratch. Still over time the Cherokee researchers persisted and they were astounded by what they found. The majority of the writings detail sacred and ancient Cherokee rituals and customs. And like real secret stuff. Apparently many of the Cherokee who deciphered the writing were taken aback that such important cultural secrets were written where potentially anyone could see them. It seems as if in the decades before the Trail of Tears, many cherokee were aware of how dire their situation was becoming and so decided to create what was might be called a cultural encycopedia hidden in their most sacred places to preserve their culture in the face of potential annihilation. It goes over everything from their syllabary and basic writing and grammer instructions to their (previously only oral) history, societal and administrative practices, instructions for how to perform sacred rites, etc.
There is also a second group of cave texts which did not fall into this category which confused the researchers who first found them. The writing was mirrored. The researchers wondered if this was an attempt to deliberately obfuscate researches until several Cherokee hit upon the actual reasoning. They weren't meant to be read by people looking at them in the cave. They were meant to be read by people, or beings, on the other side of the cave. In the stone. When I read about this it was this final bit that really struck me. There's something deeply moving to me there.
Most of the caves' locations have been kept secret to as to try and avoid vandalism, but some of the older discovered ones are open to the public like Manitou cave. That being said much of the cave art was intentionally put in extremely hard to reach places so it can be quite dangerous to get to.
https://youtu.be/QRRQQVK6nV8
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
I am super happy about this. The Trail of Tears was something I learned about in school at an early age and the thought that my ancestors didn't completely destroy the Cherokee's culture makes me happy. Thing is, I am aware that had they known about this, they would have destroyed it too. This is a major find and super important.
https://youtu.be/9wSOt3z_-YY
Get to know the life of Mexican nun, poet and scholar, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, who was censored by the Church for her critical writings.
--
Juana Ramírez de Asbaje sat before a panel of prestigious theologians, jurists, and mathematicians. They had been invited to test Juana’s knowledge with the most difficult questions they could muster. But she successfully answered every challenge, from complicated equations to philosophical queries. Who was this impressive woman? Theresa Yugar details the life of the Mexican poet and scholar.
Lesson by Theresa Yugar, directed by Wow-How Studio.
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully