I really like Paul Harper's YouTube account. It's full of 'off the beaten track' and underreported history. He just gets out there and goes sleuthing. This story is particularly interesting if you're keen to learn more about England and ultimately Britain's buried and rather undersung-by-the-mainstream history.
His book about Cerdic comes out on the 30th April too. Should put even more meat on the bones.
Yes, I believe there were some fascinating “fats” during the Hellenistic Age: animal fats, olive oil, etc. But, primarily, there were some fascinating “facts” during the Hellenistic Age.
There are many examples of Roman lead coffins, this is just the first one found in Yorkshire that's all. As for Ice Ages during the Iron Ages, I note it's P Wagner, read a book yet?
What always intrigues me more is how anything found in Britain is always lumped into the 'Roman' category, which is so catch all. These were staggering periods of change, trade, crossover and numerous tribes. We are always left to assume that by 'Roman' these finds must be 'of Rome' yet there's no idea whether they were, or were just OF that Roman era of British history. And which would therefore throw the door wide open to other explanations.
Of course we can never fully know, but the moniker is handed out very liberally to items, practices or peoples that may ultimately turn out not to be a direct product of Rome or a Roman/fully Roman tradition.
I'm not a purist of any group, and ultimately actual products of Rome are what they are. I'd just like to see more accuracy reflected within academia, rather than us left to assume because of gaps.
Dear Wu, thank you for the nice strory! I have a question. Can you help me with some information about an inscription in the Edfu Temple containing the very large number 1.333.330? I saw its photo (https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpreview.redd.it%2Fthe-num...) but with no indication. I would be grateful to obtain your answer on my mail [email protected].
Alternatively, how about a place for fledgling historical fiction writers to get feedback for accuracy sake?
I have a work in progress setting Moses’s fleeing Egypt near the end of Amenhotep III’s reign and would love to share the link (writing it on Google Docs so it can be shared) to get historical critiques
"Despite his young age, Lorenzo proved to be a skilled politician and diplomat, adept at navigating the complex web of alliances and rivalries that characterized Italian city-states at the time. He skillfully maintained the Medici's grip on power..."
It is said that power corrupts but, in reality, it attracts the already corrupted. The Medicis were very attracted to power. Should we be praising Lorenzo's skill, or condemning his family's corruption?
Historians too often glorify that which has little inherent glory. Being a patron of the arts, for example, does not paint over one's corruption in the eyes of God. But then the Medicis only pretended to look to God. It is telling that the education Lorenzo received is described as "humanist" rather than 'Godly'.
Do we know for sure this was shared technology? It may have been that, but it may have also simply been Lapita/Papuan presence in the area which should hardly be surprising. If it was shared technology with a local Aboriginal tribe, the technology appears to have died out in Australia. There is not a single shred of good evidence for Aboriginal pottery at the tine of European exploration although, as good evidence and Australian anthropology long ago parted company, I guess that doesn't so much matter...
There are witches today. Some are herbalists dabbling stupidly in the Occult. Others are more akin to the witch in the Hansel and Gretel fairytale with all that implies regarding child abuse.
The latter are master manipulators, keen to control the narrative on the subject and to normalise the abnormal. I urge readers to be generally cautious for the probability that they can spot the latter is extremely low. In fact, from what I've seen, it's basically zero.
"Would McDonalds invade New Zealand because their government banned the sale of Big Macs?"
No, because they don't need to. Both McDonalds and the NZ government are controlled by the same forces. Historians should read Machiavelli's infamous tome and attempt to understand it. A court jester was paid by the king to, at times, lampoon him, not because the king wanted to be lampooned but because he didn't want to be. Taking things like the reason why a court jester exists at face value is the short way to serfdom. The NZ government plays the role of court jester and the Sherriff of Nottingham simultaneously.
"Google’s unofficial motto ‘Don’t be evil,’ would’ve been handy for the VoC four centuries ago, because they were, undoubtedly, evil."
And Google isn't evil? People don't change much and neither do massive global corporations. The commonplace idea that power corrupts misses the point almost completely.
Power attracts the already corrupted, just like the VoC did, which cuts out the middle man, again just like the VoC did, and simplifies the process. Corporations like Google have massive power. They're just better at mind control these days, so people don't notice how they're reacting to Google in the same soft manner that people reacted to the VoC with.
That it couldn't happen today is just another commonplace myth that salves the conscience unjustifiably. It can happen today and does and shall continue to because millions, and perhaps billions, don't notice and often don't want to notice.
People are usually timid. They rarely stand up and go with the status quo. So is and does this article.
"...many historians also believe that Jesus was based on a real historical figure..."
Quìtè a few successful historians secretly worship the Devil. The Devil ensures their success in academia and in prìnt and on television. In return, they question either the divinity or the existence of Jesus.
Here you can navigate quickly through all comments made in any article sorted by date/time.
How cleopatra says that no man can will see her tomb.
A good write up. Thanks for this.
I really like Paul Harper's YouTube account. It's full of 'off the beaten track' and underreported history. He just gets out there and goes sleuthing. This story is particularly interesting if you're keen to learn more about England and ultimately Britain's buried and rather undersung-by-the-mainstream history.
His book about Cerdic comes out on the 30th April too. Should put even more meat on the bones.
I was ready to make to same comment, but you put it nicely.
Yes, I believe there were some fascinating “fats” during the Hellenistic Age: animal fats, olive oil, etc. But, primarily, there were some fascinating “facts” during the Hellenistic Age.
It’s a typo, I know. But it’s a fun one.
Occam’s razor method suggests that that story is just an urban myth.
A Pharoah could believe that a name could have power over him, but that nine plagues weren't enough to show power over him...
Nor ten for that matter. Hence the pursuit in the Exodus.
This is what happens when people think themselves to be gods. They ignore God.
I stopped reading at "Y. Harari’s excellent book Jewish Magic before the Rise of Kabbalah."
I have no doubt God would describe it as something other than excellent. The Devil, on the other hand...
There are many examples of Roman lead coffins, this is just the first one found in Yorkshire that's all. As for Ice Ages during the Iron Ages, I note it's P Wagner, read a book yet?
What always intrigues me more is how anything found in Britain is always lumped into the 'Roman' category, which is so catch all. These were staggering periods of change, trade, crossover and numerous tribes. We are always left to assume that by 'Roman' these finds must be 'of Rome' yet there's no idea whether they were, or were just OF that Roman era of British history. And which would therefore throw the door wide open to other explanations.
Of course we can never fully know, but the moniker is handed out very liberally to items, practices or peoples that may ultimately turn out not to be a direct product of Rome or a Roman/fully Roman tradition.
I'm not a purist of any group, and ultimately actual products of Rome are what they are. I'd just like to see more accuracy reflected within academia, rather than us left to assume because of gaps.
Dear Wu, thank you for the nice strory! I have a question. Can you help me with some information about an inscription in the Edfu Temple containing the very large number 1.333.330? I saw its photo (https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpreview.redd.it%2Fthe-num...) but with no indication. I would be grateful to obtain your answer on my mail [email protected].
With best wishes,
Hear,Hear!
Alternatively, how about a place for fledgling historical fiction writers to get feedback for accuracy sake?
I have a work in progress setting Moses’s fleeing Egypt near the end of Amenhotep III’s reign and would love to share the link (writing it on Google Docs so it can be shared) to get historical critiques
"Despite his young age, Lorenzo proved to be a skilled politician and diplomat, adept at navigating the complex web of alliances and rivalries that characterized Italian city-states at the time. He skillfully maintained the Medici's grip on power..."
It is said that power corrupts but, in reality, it attracts the already corrupted. The Medicis were very attracted to power. Should we be praising Lorenzo's skill, or condemning his family's corruption?
Historians too often glorify that which has little inherent glory. Being a patron of the arts, for example, does not paint over one's corruption in the eyes of God. But then the Medicis only pretended to look to God. It is telling that the education Lorenzo received is described as "humanist" rather than 'Godly'.
Do we know for sure this was shared technology? It may have been that, but it may have also simply been Lapita/Papuan presence in the area which should hardly be surprising. If it was shared technology with a local Aboriginal tribe, the technology appears to have died out in Australia. There is not a single shred of good evidence for Aboriginal pottery at the tine of European exploration although, as good evidence and Australian anthropology long ago parted company, I guess that doesn't so much matter...
There are witches today. Some are herbalists dabbling stupidly in the Occult. Others are more akin to the witch in the Hansel and Gretel fairytale with all that implies regarding child abuse.
The latter are master manipulators, keen to control the narrative on the subject and to normalise the abnormal. I urge readers to be generally cautious for the probability that they can spot the latter is extremely low. In fact, from what I've seen, it's basically zero.
"Would McDonalds invade New Zealand because their government banned the sale of Big Macs?"
No, because they don't need to. Both McDonalds and the NZ government are controlled by the same forces. Historians should read Machiavelli's infamous tome and attempt to understand it. A court jester was paid by the king to, at times, lampoon him, not because the king wanted to be lampooned but because he didn't want to be. Taking things like the reason why a court jester exists at face value is the short way to serfdom. The NZ government plays the role of court jester and the Sherriff of Nottingham simultaneously.
The penultimate sentence below should have been "They rarely stand up and, instead, go with the status quo."
I post this as a reply as I cannot edit it.
"Google’s unofficial motto ‘Don’t be evil,’ would’ve been handy for the VoC four centuries ago, because they were, undoubtedly, evil."
And Google isn't evil? People don't change much and neither do massive global corporations. The commonplace idea that power corrupts misses the point almost completely.
Power attracts the already corrupted, just like the VoC did, which cuts out the middle man, again just like the VoC did, and simplifies the process. Corporations like Google have massive power. They're just better at mind control these days, so people don't notice how they're reacting to Google in the same soft manner that people reacted to the VoC with.
That it couldn't happen today is just another commonplace myth that salves the conscience unjustifiably. It can happen today and does and shall continue to because millions, and perhaps billions, don't notice and often don't want to notice.
People are usually timid. They rarely stand up and go with the status quo. So is and does this article.
"...many historians also believe that Jesus was based on a real historical figure..."
Quìtè a few successful historians secretly worship the Devil. The Devil ensures their success in academia and in prìnt and on television. In return, they question either the divinity or the existence of Jesus.
One may reduce the ĺìst to two, including one not mentioned.
Namely, Jesus and the Devil.
The choice between the two is yours.
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