Una cuenta atrás inteligente y divertida que detalla cómo funcionaba la tecnología antigua, lo sorprendentemente avanzada y lo increíble que era.Una cuenta atrás inteligente y divertida que detalla cómo funcionaba la tecnología antigua, lo sorprendentemente avanzada y lo increíble que era.Una cuenta atrás inteligente y divertida que detalla cómo funcionaba la tecnología antigua, lo sorprendentemente avanzada y lo increíble que era.
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Episode nine states Teotihuacan was the Aztecs, but it wasn't, it was Mayan. Most every other series ever, as well as The History Channel website states it was Mayan. Odd they would contradict themselves. But it is from 2016, and archaeology evolves. Now it's 2020 and it's all about the science, until it's not.
Very informative and illuminating. However, it misses out the top one in most categories.
This series fails to reckon with many crucial historical facts. It seems somewhat biased as the civilizations and locations discussed are limited to Egypt, Mayan, Chinese, Macedonian, Greek, Arab and African. I am surprised that makers of the series did not do their homework.
Let me shed some light on this missing account of one of the richest, most sophisticated and advanced civilization of all times that happened not some 3000- 4000 years ago but 7000 years ago. Indus civilization.
Ramayana happened 7000 years ago and was composed in Sanskrit in 5th century BC. Mahabharata happened 5000 years ago.
Bridge - Ramsetu 5075 BCE - A light weight limestones shoal chain bridge that was built between India and Srilanka 7000 years ago which can still be seen from space.
Aircraft - Pushpak 5075 BCE - an aircraft that brought Rama and Sita back to Ayodhya from current days Srilanka has been mentioned in Ramayana agaib was written in 5th century BC.
Remote sensing or drones 3000 BCE - Sanjay reports the war live to the king Dhrutrashtra (who is blind) sitting next to the king in the palace. And this war is being fought some 50-60 miles away from the palace.
Missiles - Astra 3000 BCE - Astra (weapons) used during Mahabharata war used Gamma rays. They were GPS guided and password controlled (Mantra). They were used both for defensive and offensive battles. Some of them were also reusable such as Sudarshan Chakra that would return back to dock.
And further into this list, the state-of-art modern architectures that included under ground tunnels, fire escapes, photorealistic 3D illusions, Human Cloning, Cosmetic Surgeries many more that flourished during Mahabharata times..
This series fails to reckon with many crucial historical facts. It seems somewhat biased as the civilizations and locations discussed are limited to Egypt, Mayan, Chinese, Macedonian, Greek, Arab and African. I am surprised that makers of the series did not do their homework.
Let me shed some light on this missing account of one of the richest, most sophisticated and advanced civilization of all times that happened not some 3000- 4000 years ago but 7000 years ago. Indus civilization.
Ramayana happened 7000 years ago and was composed in Sanskrit in 5th century BC. Mahabharata happened 5000 years ago.
Bridge - Ramsetu 5075 BCE - A light weight limestones shoal chain bridge that was built between India and Srilanka 7000 years ago which can still be seen from space.
Aircraft - Pushpak 5075 BCE - an aircraft that brought Rama and Sita back to Ayodhya from current days Srilanka has been mentioned in Ramayana agaib was written in 5th century BC.
Remote sensing or drones 3000 BCE - Sanjay reports the war live to the king Dhrutrashtra (who is blind) sitting next to the king in the palace. And this war is being fought some 50-60 miles away from the palace.
Missiles - Astra 3000 BCE - Astra (weapons) used during Mahabharata war used Gamma rays. They were GPS guided and password controlled (Mantra). They were used both for defensive and offensive battles. Some of them were also reusable such as Sudarshan Chakra that would return back to dock.
And further into this list, the state-of-art modern architectures that included under ground tunnels, fire escapes, photorealistic 3D illusions, Human Cloning, Cosmetic Surgeries many more that flourished during Mahabharata times..
I like the concept but it was terribly executed. I am no historian but even as someone who is naturally inquisitive and competent, you start noticing a lack of objective facts. The show seems very biased towards the Roman, Egyptian & Greek empires (I sometimes heard about Asian & Middle East empires), almost to the point where you feel as if there was no other cultures in the world at those times. I get that much of Europe and Egypt were amazing empires back then but it seems the series strategically picked certain categories so they could place only the above empires within those categories and limit others. I'm at episode 10 of season one and it all now just sounds very redundant of the same facts - I think I've relearned the same thing 10 times now. Also, the historians, archaeologists and other tv personas, while nice to look at, are overdramatizing, to the point where it's almost comical. I did at first think it was interesting to see younger, more diverse people reporting the facts, which made it relatable to my generation (I'm 28) but instead it was an awkward group of people that you start wondering about their credentials. It would've been great to see the same age group of people that really knew their stuff but presented it in a more well mannered way, so the audience can take them serious. Instead, I felt
I was watching an episode of Mythbusters. Another reason the show felt so biased and comical was they kept saying "Our top 10" or "This is why it need to be on my top 10" - like what!?!? I'm watching THE HISTORY CHANNEL, not tuning into someone's live on YouTube or TikTok. Lastly, the show has a logo of what resembles a Trojan warrior helmet, like seriously? I'll leave it at that.
I hope you like LOUD HYPED MALE NARRATOR with EPIC ROCK MUSIC. Sensationalism for sensationalism's sake. This screams of something made to grab a Pawn Stars viewer instead of someone eager to learn history. Mostly treads the same few civilizations as most other budget docuseries, but gives Africa some love which is nice to see. The most frustrating aspect is when they run out of factual information but need to give a solid 'conclusion' for the audience and make stuff up instead of saying 'we don't know yet'.
It's a good docuseries to show people who have short attention spans, but like fictional historical shows since it focuses more on entertainment than neutral presentation.
It's a good docuseries to show people who have short attention spans, but like fictional historical shows since it focuses more on entertainment than neutral presentation.
Informative but potentially damaging. While much of what is said on the show is factual, the blanks are filled in with a lot of hearsay, he said she had, conjecture, and misinformation. Additionally, like most of the history "documentaries" the specialists, and professionals in their fields actually become actors speaking outside of the earth specific field of expertise. More of a show to grab audiences and entertain them then to actually teach them factual information, it's really not much of a documentary at all. Watch with a grain of salt, there's some good stuff, but there's a lot of bad stuff too.
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- Fecha de lanzamiento
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- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Top 10 de la Antigüedad
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