Egyptian Pharaohs Family Tree | Dynasties 1 to 31

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CREDITS:
Charts by Antonio Vitor da Silva Loiola and Matt Baker
Animation by Syawish Rehman
Audio editing by Ali Shahwaiz
Theme music: "Lord of the Land" by Kevin MacLeod and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution license 4.0. Available from incompetech.com

Пікірлер: 743

  • @UsefulCharts
    @UsefulCharts10 ай бұрын

    Get a 7-day free trial and 25% off Blinkist Annual Premium by clicking here: www.blinkist.com/usefulcharts or scanning the QR code.

  • @MikeGill87

    @MikeGill87

    10 ай бұрын

    Did you really just used the Khafre pyramid picture to portrait the Khufu pyramid? :-)

  • @nikolaevkatesla3823

    @nikolaevkatesla3823

    10 ай бұрын

    I love you thank you for making this

  • @gorgonzolastan

    @gorgonzolastan

    10 ай бұрын

    I think at the beginning of the video you said the Nile flows south, which is only true for one small spot. At about 3:40-ish Maybe I'm confused.

  • @empireofengland6039

    @empireofengland6039

    10 ай бұрын

    How about Consuls of Rome. I know this is republic. But unlike nowadays republics ,Roman consuls were related to each other

  • @JH-pt6ih

    @JH-pt6ih

    10 ай бұрын

    Is the first chart going to become available? I can't read the name from the video and don't see it on the website. I see the 18th dynasty onward chart but not the Old and Middle Kingdoms shown in the video. I'd like to get the pair, so if it's going to become available .... thanks.

  • @ObligatoryReference
    @ObligatoryReference10 ай бұрын

    A friend of mine is a history teacher that happened to have 31 kids in his class this past year, so for their section on Ancient Egypt he assigned a dynasty to each kid. They had to do research and make a presentation with a poster about their chosen dynasty. Not only did they learn a lot, but for the rest of the year they could link whatever else they were learning about to the dynasty in power at the time (and whoever had done the report on the dynasty could often chime in). It was a really cool way to get the kids involved!

  • @a.l.pittman1762

    @a.l.pittman1762

    10 ай бұрын

    I love that 🥰

  • @seamusfinnerty5897

    @seamusfinnerty5897

    10 ай бұрын

    i feel bad for whoever got number 7

  • @Awesoman66

    @Awesoman66

    10 ай бұрын

    @@seamusfinnerty5897 Or anyone who got basically a non-dynasty.

  • @itsytyt5192

    @itsytyt5192

    10 ай бұрын

    Gh

  • @whitecloak9724

    @whitecloak9724

    10 ай бұрын

    @@seamusfinnerty5897 Forgive my ignorance, but what's with number 7?

  • @untruelie2640
    @untruelie264010 ай бұрын

    Fun Fact: During the reign of Ramesses the Great, official restoration works were conducted on the Step Pyramid of Djoser at Sakkara. To Ramesses and his contemporaries, the Djoser Pyramid was already an ancient building, having been built 1,500 years ago. Djoser was to Ramesses what Justinian and Belisarius are to us. Yet, Ramesses was still separated from Cleopatra VII. by more than 1,100 years, and she is separated from us by over 2,000 years. 47 centuries have passed since Imhotep stood there in the desert sand and oversaw the construction of the first pyramid and we can still visit it today. Truly amazing.

  • @stevendebettencourt7651

    @stevendebettencourt7651

    10 ай бұрын

    The sheer scale of time that Ancient Egypt existed is mind-boggling. Just remember these two items: First, the sheer length of time of Ancient Egyptian civilization is so great, it actually provided the first challenge to the literal reading of the Bible that the Earth is only about 6,000 years old. The issue this theory ran into was the fact that Egyptologists in the early 1800s were starting to uncover evidence of Pharaohs who reigned before the Great Flood and Noah’s Ark story, which is not possible; the Great Flood was meant to wipe away all evidence of prior civilizations. Some disputed the age of these finds to keep literal Bible history alive, but the later discovery of dinosaur fossils ultimately proved Young Earth false (some VERY misguided people still believe in it, though). Second, the last Pharaoh of an independent Ancient Egyptian kingdom, Cleopatra VII (the famous one who had children with both Julius Caesar and Mark Antony) is closer in terms of time to us today that she was to the construction of the Great Pyramids.

  • @marwaqoura7804

    @marwaqoura7804

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for your comment ,I am Egyptian ❤🇪🇬🙏..We are trying to convince people with these facts that Egyptologists unearthed beginning from the 1800's ..but they still believe in all that political and religious crap (once about Je*ws,or centre-African ... ), the amazing thing about Egypt and Egyptians that neither their borders nor its people have changed over thousands of years ..

  • @untruelie2640

    @untruelie2640

    8 ай бұрын

    @@marwaqoura7804 With all due respect, both have changed significantly. Modern Egyptians have as much in common with ancient Egyptians as we modern Germans have with the ancient pagan germanic or celtic tribes. There is a certain genetic and linguistic continuity, but not a major one. And I don't know what theories you are talking about, but the results of modern egyptology are pretty much the accepted standard everywhere as far as I know. I also don't see how the word Jew is supposed to be a curse word, except if you prefer to submerge yourself in the all too common muslim antisemitism. In this case, I would advise you to keep your opinion to yourself.

  • @marwaqoura7804

    @marwaqoura7804

    8 ай бұрын

    @@untruelie2640 Surprise , I am not religious at all ...and who gave you the right to assume my religious beliefs in first place they are not of your concern or business,I said Egyptians as we all call ourselves here no matter what our colour ,religion , race ..etc is ,so keep your culture to yourself as it is not comparable to Egyptians .

  • @untruelie2640

    @untruelie2640

    8 ай бұрын

    @@marwaqoura7804 Part of my assumption may have been wrong, but you still wrote "J*ws" like a censored curse word. I will not tolerate something like that in a discussion.

  • @TG-nd9rj
    @TG-nd9rj10 ай бұрын

    Just think... by the time of Tutankhamen, Egypt had been in power for almost two thousand years. There were likely Egyptians who studied the first dynasties, the pyramids, and necropolis' like we're doing today, because for them it was already extremely old. It's the same as us looking back to the Roman period from today's perspective. Crazy to think about.

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    10 ай бұрын

    More than if you include the pre-dynastic "Scorpion I" (not the one of the image at the start of the video) was possibly reigning around 3300-3250BCE. But yeh, Egypt is insane for its duration. Still my favourite trivia that we in the modern day are around 500 years closer (so to the time of the conquest of the Aztecs for us, to give a comparison) to Cleopatra (VII), last solo ruling Pharaoh of Egypt, than she was to Khufu's Great Pyramid being built

  • @dorderre

    @dorderre

    10 ай бұрын

    To think that also the dynasties zero and one are merely the oldest we have any tangible evidence of. By that time there were already two distinct kingdoms in Egypt, which have probably already existed for quite some time at that point. Several hundred years at the very least I think. We just didn't find any evidence of them (yet). One reason for that it that nasty habit of erasing all signs of your predecessor each time a new king/dynasty takes over. Lots and lots of Information is lost forever because of that. Imagine if they hadn't done so - we could probably trace egyptian history back way further than that, maybe like 5.000 BC or even further.

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    10 ай бұрын

    @@dorderre my research, following Günter Dreyer, posits back to around 3460BCE, with a King "Ma-Hedj" (King Gazelle), with around 5-6 rulers before we get to "Scorpion I". Before then, the written record simply fails, so any complex polities simply are not attested back then, although the Badarian and similar were indeed in place around 4-5000BCE. Dreyer's ideas are controversial however, and not commonly accepted so take this with some salt.

  • @timothystamm3200

    @timothystamm3200

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@Matthew-rh6ei well we know from Geology that the Saharah is a relatively recently formed desert, so it could be that if you go back before monsoons stopped reaching the region you likely had spread out nomadic herders and early agriculturalists. Meaning Egypt and oasis communities likely formed when people from the growing desert sought refuge there.

  • @zombieat

    @zombieat

    10 ай бұрын

    @@timothystamm3200 no. the sahara desert is 7 million years old.

  • @tomtomtrent
    @tomtomtrent10 ай бұрын

    I remember I once recently tried to think of what the oldest historical figures I could name from memory were, and the oldest was Pharoah Khufu because of the pyramid. So I guess if you want to be remembered forever, building a giant structure is one way to do it

  • @rivenoak

    @rivenoak

    10 ай бұрын

    it pays off to build; his pyramid is the earliest AND the last intact building of the seven wonders of ancient world. the other 6 fell to earthquakes and fires etc. _Man fears time, but time fears the pyramids_ arab proverb

  • @Hadar1991

    @Hadar1991

    10 ай бұрын

    It is a very good guess. I would probably say Hammurabi or Cheops (name for Khufu in my langueages), but if I would think very very hard there is small change I would say Gilgamesh without checking it (know I just looked on list of Sumerian rulers and I had the moment "ahh, yes, I know Gilgamesh). :p But my first instinct would be probably Hammurabi which was waaaay later than Gilgamesh or Cheops. :p

  • @vitormelomedeiros

    @vitormelomedeiros

    10 ай бұрын

    I would say Narmer, I knew him even before the video haha you can't go wrong with him! A certified oldie!!

  • @theMOCmaster

    @theMOCmaster

    10 ай бұрын

    Mine would be utzi the iceman, if you want to be remembered, die somewhere very cold

  • @Hadar1991

    @Hadar1991

    10 ай бұрын

    @@theMOCmaster Does he classify as historical person? Also I think that Iry-Hor is earliest person recorded by name. And whoever Utzi the Iceman was, he died only around 100 years earlier than Iry-Hor

  • @meldinway
    @meldinway10 ай бұрын

    As an Egyptian and Ancient Egypt enthusiast, I say to you Bravo and Thanks!

  • @Backroadslim301

    @Backroadslim301

    10 ай бұрын

    Wrong you can make up anything

  • @hircenedaelen

    @hircenedaelen

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Backroadslim301 what the fuck dude?

  • @philo3936

    @philo3936

    10 ай бұрын

    Pretty insane how he keeps repeating the myth that south is up because it's where the Nile flows. ALL ANCIENT MAPS HAD SOUTH AS UP (Arabs, Chinese, first actual map makers ). Don't mistake him for someone unbiased or without agenda.

  • @hircenedaelen

    @hircenedaelen

    10 ай бұрын

    @@philo3936 no they didn't. The Scottish HIGHlands are in the north

  • @lakesander2458

    @lakesander2458

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@philo3936 Sources for: "ALL ANCIENT MAPS HAD SOUTH AS UP"? Arabic maps had south at the top - yes, but those maps are deffinitely from middle ages, and so, they are not "ancient". Chinese maps? Which ones? First known maps were made propably by Assyrians, then later ones by Greeks. What agenda would be behind saying that names for Upper and Lower Egypt are connected to river-flow?

  • @thattimestampguy
    @thattimestampguy10 ай бұрын

    0:00 This video is/was/still is sponsored by Blinkest 2:05 Addressing The Word Pharaoh Rulers of Egypt were called Kings from Dynasty 1 to Dynasty 17 The 18th Dynasty was when the title Pharaoh would be used to speak of The Ruler of Egypt. Pharaoh used to refer to the entire ruling palace family, not just the main ruler. 2:45 Dynasty 0 + Includes a handful of Pharaohs such as Iry Hor and Scorpion, + the earliest known writing of a person's name IN HISTORY, and + the FIRST PICTURE OF A PHARAOH in history, Pharaoh Scorpion. 3:24 Dynasty 0 Ruled from their capital city of Naqada. Upper Egypt = Upper Nile River Egypt Lower Egypt = Lower Nile River Egypt Lower Egypt is North of Upper Egypt, because The elevation increases from Lower Egypt to Upper Egypt. 5:15 Alot of the early family trees are guesswork. Dynasty 1 Narmer to Qua, 3150 to 2890 4:06 Narmer conquered Lower Egypt, uniting Lower and Upper under 1 King, King Narmer 5:04 The First 8 Pharaoh's on the list are from Dynasty 1. 1st King Narmer 3150 to 3125 BC 2nd King Hor-Aha 3125 BC to 3050 BC 3rd King Djer 3050 BC to 2980 BC 4th King Djet & Queen Regent Mereneith [Brother Sister pair who became Husband-Wife] , 2980 to 2970 BC 5th King Den 2970 to 2930 BC 6th King Adjib 2930 to 2920 BC 7th King Semerkhet 2920 to 2910 BC 8th King Qua 2910 to 2890 - They practiced human sacrifice, believing the sacrificed souls would aid the King in the afterlife. 6:50 Dynasty 2 Hotespekhemwy to Khasekhemy, 2890 to 2650 BC 9th/1st King Hotespekhemwy 10th/2nd King Nebra 11th/3rd King Nynetjer 12th/4th King Wadjenes & King Seth-Peribsen 13th/5th King Senedj & King Sekhemib Perenmaat 14th/6th King Khasekhemy + King Khasekhemy started having Egypt build large building projects + King Khasekhemy commissioned statues of himself to be built as well 7:45 *EGYPT: THE OLD KINGDOM OF EGYPT, Djoser to ????? 2686 to 2181 BC* Dynasty 3 15th/1st King Djoser + King Djoser built _THE FIRST EGYPTIAN PYRAMID_ *The Step Pyramid* in Lower Egypt. + King Djoser's/Architect Imhotep's Step Pyramid ranks 10th on the list of TALLEST PYRAMIDS. 8:35 16th/2nd King Sekhemkhet 17th/3rd King Sanakht 18th/4th King Kahaba 19th/5th King Huni, father of Sneferu. 8:48 PEAK OLD KINGDOM Dynasty 4 20th/1st King Sneferu 2600 BC to 2590 BC + King Sneferu had The Red Pyramid, The Bent Pyramid, and The Collapsed Pyramid. 21st/2nd King Khufu 2590 BC to 2575 BC + King Khufu had built The Great Pyramid of Giza, the tallest structure in the world for 4,000 Years! 22nd/3rd King Djedefre 2575 BC to 2570 BC + King Djedefre had built The Lost Pyramid 23rd/4th King Kahfre 2570 BC to 2530 BC + Had built The Great Sphinx Statue 24th/5th King Menkaure 25th/6th King Shepseskaf built himself a smaller tomb, not a pyramid. Dynasty 5 10:52 26th/1st King Userkaf 27th/2nd King Sahure + King Sahure's stone tomb would be copied in style by many Kings who ruled after him. + King Sahure's navy expanded to new territory like Eritrea. 28th/3rd King Neferirkahre Kakai 29th/4th King Shepseskare 11:59 30th/5th King Neferefre + King Neferefre IS THE EARLIEST KING FOR WHOSE BODILY REMAINS HAVE BEEN FOUND! 31st/6th King Nyuserre Ine 32nd/7th King Djedkare Isesi 33rd/8th King Unas 2380 BC to 2350 BC + Archaeologists found Pyramid Texts inside King Unas' Tomb. Dynasty 6 14:25 The Intermediary Period/Egyptian Dark Age/Lost Records Period. Dynasty 7 - "70 rulers in 70 days" Dynasty 8 Lower Egypt minor dynasty Dynasty 9 Lower Egypt minor dynasty Dynasty 10 Lower Egypt minor dynasty 15:00 Dynasty 11 The 5 Nomarchs - Intef The Elder - Mentuhotep I - Intef I - Intef II - Intef III *THE MIDDLE KINGDOM OF EGYPT* 15:10 Mentuhotep II reunites Lower and Upper Egypt 15:44 Dynasty 12 King Amenhemnat I 2nd King Senusret I 3rd King Amenhemnat II 4th King Senusret II 5th King Senusret III, part of a Greek Legend referring to Susastras. 6th King Amenhemnat III had The Black Pyramid built, and ruled peacefully. 7th King Amenhemnat and Queen Sobekneferu Dynasty 13 18:12 8th/1st King Sobekhotep I 18:27 2ND INTERMEDIATE PERIOD/DARK AGE 1750 to 1580 Dynasty 14 Dynasty 15 Dynasty 16 Hyksos/Rule by foreigners aka non-Egyptians/Canaanite Kings Dynasty 17 19:45 Dynasty 18 *Kings are now referred to as _Pharaohs_ 20:43 Ancient History Family Tree Chart. 1st Pharaoh Ahmose I 2nd Pharaoh Amenhotep I 3rd Pharaoh Thutmose I 4th Pharaoh Thutmose II & Queen Hatshepset 5th Pharaoh Thutmose III 6th Pharaoh Thutmose IV 7th Pharaoh Amenhotep III The Great, Pharaoh of The Apex of Egyptian Art 8th 24:05 Pharaoh Akhenaten & Queen Nefertiti. 25:23 9th Pharaoh Smenkhare 26:08 10th Pharaoh Tutankhamun aka "King Tut" died at age 19. Dynasty 19 28:15 9th/1st Ramesses I 10th/2nd Seti I 11th/3rd Ramesses II The Great 90 YEAR OLD + He built lots of massive statues of himself, 1 in Nubia. + He might be Pharaoh from The Old Testament Bible Story in Exodus Dynasty 20 31:40 1st Pharaoh Setnakthe, victor of Ancient Egyptian Civil War. 2nd Ramses III: BRONZE AGE COLLAPSE!!! Sea People Attacks weaken Egypt! Ramses IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI THIRD INTERMEDIATE PERIOD 1077 BC Dynasty 21 Lower Egypt is ruled by Pharaohs. Upper Egypt is ruled by Priests. Dynasty 22 overlaps With The Kingdoms Period of Israel and Judah. 33:47 Shoshenq I "Shishak" 34:42 Dynasty 23 Dynasty 24 35:15 Kushite Egypt, Egypt is a part of The Kushite Empire Dynasty 25 36:16 Taharqua/Tirhakah 36:36 Dynasty 26 - Shift from 3rd Intermediate Period to Late Period. Necho II killed King Josiah of Judah. 37:41 THE PERSIAN ACHAEMENID EMPIRE Dynasty 27 Darius The Great The Persian ruler of Persia and Egypt Xerxes The Great The Persian ruler of Persia and Egypt Dynasty 28 (1 ruler can be considered a dynasty?) Pharaoh Amyrtaeus Dynasty 29 (2 rulers can be considered a dynasty? Doesn't it need like more than 2 rulers?) Dynasty 30 39:15 PERSIAN RULERS OF EGYPT PART 2 Dynasty 31 39:25 ALEXANDER THE GREAT, THE MACEDONIAN/GREEK 39:55 The Ptolemaic Dynasty Dynasty 32 END: Cleopatra and Marc Antony.

  • @salwaabusaad9819

    @salwaabusaad9819

    10 ай бұрын

    Appreciate you❤

  • @BillGreenAZ

    @BillGreenAZ

    10 ай бұрын

    Underrated comment.

  • @RepOfAntarctica

    @RepOfAntarctica

    10 ай бұрын

    I guess that's a way to understand the difference between Upper & Lower Egypt. More simply, the Nile flows from south to north, & Upper usually refers to being closer to the source, & Lower closer to the mouth or delta. Logically, most rivers, if not nearly all, flow from higher to lower elevations.

  • @ZfromBrooklyn

    @ZfromBrooklyn

    10 ай бұрын

    👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

  • @MatthewMcVeagh

    @MatthewMcVeagh

    9 ай бұрын

    I admire your dedication to documenting the content in text, with time links. At an earlier age this is the sort of thing I might have done myself.

  • @theshenpartei
    @theshenpartei10 ай бұрын

    Egypt will always be my favorite ancient civilization

  • @lovecraftianwalrus4490

    @lovecraftianwalrus4490

    10 ай бұрын

    Just everything about them is so endlessly fascinating.

  • @CJMapping

    @CJMapping

    10 ай бұрын

    Ancient Mesopotamia I think is more fascinating

  • @drswag0076

    @drswag0076

    10 ай бұрын

    Not to mention that its the oldest country right after China and Iran.

  • @alimohamed7356

    @alimohamed7356

    10 ай бұрын

    thanks man as an Egyptian, it makes me happy that people appreciate our civilization

  • @theshenpartei

    @theshenpartei

    10 ай бұрын

    @@CJMapping that one is my third and second is either ancient China or any of mesoAmerican or ancient North American civilizations like Cahokia or Clovis or Mayan

  • @Replicaate
    @Replicaate10 ай бұрын

    The continuity of the Ancient Egyptian world is mindblowing, when you think of all the civilizations that rose and fell around them during their run - even the Romans were in awe that Egypt was an empire of cities and temples when their founders were living in a few tiny villages and stealing cattle.

  • @kalafinwe5498
    @kalafinwe549810 ай бұрын

    In my second-third year of highschool, I nearly memorized the genealogies of every dynasty, using songs and rhymes. It was insane, and my contemporary history teacher was impressed, and suggested I apply for the international program (which was actually for elite and rather snobbish kids). I didn't want to do so, as I felt it didn't change anything to my success in life. Today, I am a PhD candidate and have won a competitive national prestigious scholarship, on my way to realize my childhood dream. Morale of the story : memorize all of the ancient egyptian dynasties and don't get into useless programs.

  • @Noah73827

    @Noah73827

    10 ай бұрын

    Wow, that’s amazing. Good luck in your life!

  • @kalafinwe5498

    @kalafinwe5498

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Noah73827 Thank you mate ! KZread : the one opportunity to share life anecdotes.

  • @mlfett6307

    @mlfett6307

    10 ай бұрын

    Excellent - while Archeologist/Historian was my aim. somewhere I made a left turn and ended up with a Math & CompSci degree. It is my youngest who is the Historian/Museum Specialist in the family!

  • @kalafinwe5498

    @kalafinwe5498

    10 ай бұрын

    @@mlfett6307 Amazing ! Something similar happened to me, altought in an interdiscplinary level instead of a complete change. I went from aiming a specialization on speech and ideology analysis in Nazi Germany, using QGIS and geomatic method to show the influence of the propagation of nazi ideology. I went from that to specializing in human rights and humanitarianism in postcolonial nation-state building in northern africa. Quite the turn.

  • @imokin86

    @imokin86

    10 ай бұрын

    Now we won't stop until you quote at least one pharaoh song! I'm imagining something like I am the A-M-E-N-H-O-T-E-P, we are meant to be a land on the Nile full o glory and style but Hittites keep hitting us, dripping with bile

  • @familypowergroup
    @familypowergroup10 ай бұрын

    A graph on Sumerians and Akkadians would be great

  • @thebandit0256

    @thebandit0256

    10 ай бұрын

    Akkidans you mean they're real I thought they were wiped out long ago

  • @familypowergroup

    @familypowergroup

    10 ай бұрын

    @@thebandit0256 it’s called spell check

  • @thebandit0256

    @thebandit0256

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@familypowergroup Well sorry for being R*tarded

  • @deutschermichel5807

    @deutschermichel5807

    10 ай бұрын

    iltam zumra rašupti illatem

  • @familypowergroup

    @familypowergroup

    10 ай бұрын

    @@deutschermichel5807 ossa lhama lakem

  • @JackRackam
    @JackRackam10 ай бұрын

    Ooh I'm excited for this one! Dynastic Egypt, for the staggering amount of time it existed, has always been a blind spot in my history knowledge

  • @ceegle

    @ceegle

    6 ай бұрын

    Why don't you make videos on this channel anymore

  • @kenkeep69
    @kenkeep6910 ай бұрын

    I believe current thought is that it was not Thutmose III that tried to erase Hatshepsut from memory, but could of been his son Amenhotep III. Hatshepsut was co-regent with Thutmose, towards the end of her reign and he was the head of the Egyptian military during the co-regency. His mortuary temple is directly adjacent to her mortuary temple in Dier el-Bahri. This is so far back in history that many theories have equal validity though, given lack of direct evidence.

  • @barbarossarotbart

    @barbarossarotbart

    10 ай бұрын

    That is one of the mistakes made in this video. Others are the that Aye ursuped the throne from Haremhab who had been Tutanchamun's heir at the time of the pharao's death. It is also speculated that his successors of the 19th dynasty erased all pharaoes from Echnaton upto Harmehab from the records. And it was forgotten to mention that Ramesses III was murdered by one of his sons in the so called harem conspiracy.

  • @fabianhale845

    @fabianhale845

    9 ай бұрын

    Amenhotep II, not III.

  • @ahmednibra89
    @ahmednibra8910 ай бұрын

    Ancient Egypt was around for so long they had not one but 3 dark ages.

  • @ALISTGAMERS1
    @ALISTGAMERS110 ай бұрын

    3000 years in 40 mins is simply incredible. Thank you for helping me practice my passion for history without going to school to become a historian. I use your videos to springboard into more research which I learn more knowledge. Your charts are easy to follow too. I also use your charts to study theology too

  • @sahilsingh6048

    @sahilsingh6048

    10 ай бұрын

    5000

  • @prindle_poetry7521
    @prindle_poetry752110 ай бұрын

    3:38 you say the Nile flows south, you meant to say it flows North

  • @helios9025
    @helios902510 ай бұрын

    The "great pyramid" in the picture is actually Khafre's pyramid. Unfortunately, this is a common mistake.

  • @grantorino2325

    @grantorino2325

    10 ай бұрын

    9:15 Indeed, Khufu's pyramid is the one missing its capstone.

  • @kartik4792

    @kartik4792

    10 ай бұрын

    I was about to write the same. Thanks for pointing this out

  • @MrFishPie

    @MrFishPie

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah, came here to say this too. Good catch!

  • @adriankolsters

    @adriankolsters

    10 ай бұрын

    Yep, same here. This mistake is made by almost anyone posting videos about the pyramids here. They always show the middle of the three, which is Khafre's. It looks taller as it stands on higher ground, but Khufu's Great Pyramid is taller.

  • @hazenoki628

    @hazenoki628

    10 ай бұрын

    Searched the comments hoping that someone would've pointed this out, you did not disappoint!

  • @stephenfoster7149
    @stephenfoster714910 ай бұрын

    03:35 the Nile flows north into the Mediterranean, not south. Small error, love your content. thx

  • @RepOfAntarctica

    @RepOfAntarctica

    10 ай бұрын

    What's hilarious is that they probably know that & still got it confused in writing the script. Source: the animation moves north as they explain it.

  • @LightSourceTemple

    @LightSourceTemple

    10 ай бұрын

    Came here to say that. Innocent mistake

  • @user-pz4su9fi9r
    @user-pz4su9fi9r10 ай бұрын

    The fan-made chart seems to include many more niche fsmily trees as well; it would definitely make a great video

  • @muhammadHassan-kj1jy

    @muhammadHassan-kj1jy

    8 ай бұрын

    💯

  • @kacperwoch4368
    @kacperwoch436810 ай бұрын

    I think you nailed the narration in this video, it's very easy to follow and despite covering thousands of years it gives a good overview of Egypt's history.

  • @carltonleboss
    @carltonleboss10 ай бұрын

    Egyptian history is so fascinating.

  • @ulrike9978
    @ulrike997810 ай бұрын

    My favourite fact about Ramesses II is that he was very prone to kind of overlaying names/inscriptions of his predecessors with his own. As a result his own hieroglyphic inscriptions are chiseled very deeply into the rock, so that no one could repeat this trick with his^^ (I would be careful with this reconstruction of Tutankhamun, though - I have heard a lot of egyptological screaming about that one. Apparently it exaggarates his disabilities quite a bit).

  • @MachiavellisApprentice-nv4dx
    @MachiavellisApprentice-nv4dx10 ай бұрын

    Akhenaten was a monotheist, not a henotheist or monolatrist. That he initially allowed the temples for the traditional pantheon to operate does not mean that he believed in those gods, but that he needed the revenue from the temples. For him to have just closed all the temples at the start of his reign would also have probably caused a civil war, or at least prompted non Atenist nomarchs and other lords to stage a coup. Too complicated a topic for KZread comments though.

  • @TheCandiceWang

    @TheCandiceWang

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah, kind of shocking to see him get this in error. Ahken-aten was a monotheist.

  • @WickedFelina
    @WickedFelina10 ай бұрын

    The photo you used for The Great Pyramid is actually the 2nd of the pyramids at Giza or Khafre's pyramid.

  • @terryz935

    @terryz935

    10 ай бұрын

    Khafre's pyramid can easily be identified by the remaining casing stones still visible at the top.

  • @mattwilliams9466

    @mattwilliams9466

    10 ай бұрын

    No you're wrong it's not the khafre's pyramid

  • @zbh-gl3gg

    @zbh-gl3gg

    10 ай бұрын

    No, it's right. The pyramid shown in the film is not Chufu's pyramid, but the pyramid of his son Chafre.

  • @1abdelrahmanwael

    @1abdelrahmanwael

    15 күн бұрын

    ​@@mattwilliams9466you are wrong its the khafr3 pyramid, its the 2 second pyramid. Dont argue im Egyptian and I visited it last month

  • @kamel30001
    @kamel3000110 ай бұрын

    Small correction. The picture shown as the great pyramid of Giza is actually khafre's. Not khufu's.

  • @chimera9818
    @chimera981810 ай бұрын

    36:00 most likely Egyptian look like Egyptian considering they are genetically mostly still same people

  • @Amadeu.Macedo
    @Amadeu.Macedo10 ай бұрын

    Congratulations on this outstanding, illuminating chart, which I respectfully call an amazing, thorough documentary. Most importantly, I must thank you so much for setting up this extremely complex historical production, comprising the entire Ancient Egyptian lineage from Dynasty-0 (of which I was beforehand unaware) through Cleopatra Selene II (70/69 BCE - 30 BCE), because until today I had been unsuccessfully attempting to establish an equivalent, comprehensive and relatively reliable list of Egyptian rulers over 3,000 years!!! BRAVO!

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    10 ай бұрын

    Ey, welcome to the club. It is a challenge isn't it heh.

  • @HistoryfortheAges
    @HistoryfortheAges10 ай бұрын

    I love lecturing on Ancient Egypt! Not only the family lines but how the geography of the region impacted the region. I have a video showing the earth at night, you can still see almost eveyone in Egypt lives near the Nile.

  • @vanhaven7331
    @vanhaven733110 ай бұрын

    When you mentioned the Great Pyramid, you showed the picture of a different pyramid (Khafre's).

  • @efusco
    @efusco10 ай бұрын

    I desperately want a pocket version of the Dynasty 1-18 (or 31) that is laminated to take along when I travel to Egypt next year that I could use as a handy reference.

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    10 ай бұрын

    As the video shows, alas we can't link them all together. The first time we have a connective link that lasts more than a Dynasty is the end of Dynasty 3 to Dynasty 6. The earlier we go, understandably the weaker our knowledge. But yeh, would be a fun resource to do

  • @d-lo811

    @d-lo811

    26 күн бұрын

    Enjoy Egypt! I went there after I fell in love with Ancient Egypt history, and the ruins and relics there are MIND BLOWING. And that's discounting all the stolen artifacts by many other countries to display in their museums.

  • @jayedgardyson1920
    @jayedgardyson192010 ай бұрын

    You have a real gift for conveying knowledge. Your videos - like your posters - are always so clear, concise and easy to follow. If all teachers followed your methods (ie talk to your students/viewers/listeners, etc as if we have no prior knowledge of the subject BUT do so in a non-patronising, easy-to-follow manner) then education would become far more interesting and pleasurable. Thank you for all your hard work and dedication - it is appreciated enormously!

  • @lordofdent2399
    @lordofdent239910 ай бұрын

    Next episode: “Who would be Pharaoh today” 😅

  • @genghiskhan2056

    @genghiskhan2056

    10 ай бұрын

    Now That would probably be pretty hard to make. Going back thousands of years would leave like possibly thousands of not millions of people as descendants.

  • @emilybarclay8831

    @emilybarclay8831

    10 ай бұрын

    Since none of the children of the last native Egyptian pharaoh Nectanebo II were recorded, none of the children of the last Achaemenid pharaoh Darius III had any known offspring, and Cleopatra’s children all either died or disappeared into history, there is no answer there. There is no provable or known heir to the title

  • @DavidJohnson-dc8lu
    @DavidJohnson-dc8lu3 ай бұрын

    You took on a lot, from 525 BCE non-African rulers controlled Kemet, which became known as Egypt under the Macedonians and Ptolemaic rulers. Then in 642 CE Egypt became the Arabic Misr. So fun fact, Egypt was known a Kemet until 525 BCE.

  • @cameroff
    @cameroff10 ай бұрын

    Minor correction at 3:36 - the Nile flows north not south

  • @Can-A-Da-n-D
    @Can-A-Da-n-D2 ай бұрын

    This, literally, is all I watch now. I can't even watch regular TV anymore. Useful Chart videos. I bought most of the posters also! I'm going to buy them all. They hang in my tax office for all my clients to see. They are conversation pieces that''s for sure.

  • @Can-A-Da-n-D

    @Can-A-Da-n-D

    2 ай бұрын

    One thing I hate though, is when I post this link to social media, everyone thinks I'm promoting Blinkist instead of Useful Charts. Anyway to change that?

  • @alimohamed7356
    @alimohamed735610 ай бұрын

    9:16 just pointing out a mistake the pyramid shown in the picture is the pyramid of Khafre not the Great Pyramid regardless, great video man, keep it up

  • @thomasrinschler6783
    @thomasrinschler678310 ай бұрын

    You know, even after decades of studying ancient history, it just struck me that the "70 kings in 70 days" of the 7th Dynasty being a metaphor for chaos was very like the "Who was king? Who was not king?" in the Sumerian King list as the Akkadian Empire collapsed into chaos. And it also never struck me concerning the dates of both until Matt brought it up - the traditional date for the 7th Dynasty is 2181 BC and the Middle Chronology dates for the four kings that make up the chaos of the collapse of the Akkadian Empire are 2193 - 2189 BC. So... living in the first couple of decades of the 22nd century BC could not have been very fun...

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    10 ай бұрын

    Yep, it is right at the time of the 4.2 kilo year event if you want to research that. Mantheo did over exaggerate the disorder of the kingdom however. Although yes the record is slim, we do have names for many rulers of the 7th and 8th Dynasties.

  • @guilhermeluisfrancarego266
    @guilhermeluisfrancarego26610 ай бұрын

    It's quite interesting that Nectanebo II was the last native egyptian to rule Egypt until Gamal Abdel Nasser in the 50s

  • @mindymorgan8479
    @mindymorgan84795 ай бұрын

    I'm so glad you do charts. Because, many people put out videos and don't know how to make the connection.

  • @aliasqar5379
    @aliasqar537910 ай бұрын

    last week I watched your latest video on biblical figures and when it came to Egyptian Pharaohs who lived at the same time as Moses, I thought it would be great if you published a comprehensive video about Egyptian Pharaohs, I am very glad that you accept suggestion through thoughts as well. like your channel very much. :)

  • @jacquelineandrade3281
    @jacquelineandrade328110 ай бұрын

    Such a great video! I know this must've taken so much work. But, so happy to have watched it! I love learning history and this channel is just so great for that!

  • @Lizablue0608
    @Lizablue060810 ай бұрын

    In high school all my friends made fun of me because I was the only one of the bunch who loved history class. Especially ancient Egypt. :) Still do. Great video!

  • @giordy9013
    @giordy901310 ай бұрын

    Hoped for a long time you would publish a video about Pharaohs, I'm so happy as ancient Egypt is my favorite old civilization by far

  • @thejimmydanly
    @thejimmydanly10 ай бұрын

    When I was in second grade, we had a lot of lessons about ancient Egypt. At the end, we had to write a paragraph about why we wanted to visit Egypt. As I was going through a contrarian phase, I refused. I didn't want to go to Egypt. I negotiated with the teacher who eventually let me write a paragraph about why I didn't want to go. I don't know if I still have it, but I remember it went something along the lines of "I already live in Texas. I know what our summers are like. Egypt is a desert that gets even hotter. I don't want to have to deal with even worse heat just so I can see some big triangles and dead people." Of course, I now actually think Egypt is pretty neat. I knew it back then too but was just being stubborn.

  • @darkblade4340
    @darkblade43406 ай бұрын

    23:26 Clarification: Canaan was under Egyptian dominion during the New Kingdom (though this dominion waned by the time of Merenptah and ended completely during the 20th dynasty), but wasn’t part of Egypt in the same way that the modern governorates are part of Egypt.

  • @gordontaylor2815
    @gordontaylor281510 ай бұрын

    For those looking for a more in-depth look at how the dynasties of Egypt worked and the kings within them, I would recommend History with Cy's "Ancient Egypt: Dynasty by Dynasty" video series -> playlist?list=PLUx8354UG5yy4JiAs1I23s5cLtnfDs0pN Currently the series goes to the start of the New Kingdom with plans to eventually cover all the way up to the rise of the Ptolemies. One of the episodes even gives a shoutout to Useful Charts in the intro!

  • @moreliarodriguez4482
    @moreliarodriguez448210 ай бұрын

    Outstanding work! Excellent coverage of such a lenghty and complex period of history. Congratulations. I learnend a lot..

  • @ginagina5452
    @ginagina54526 ай бұрын

    Hi, Matt hope your doing well in these disturbing times right now. I learn so much from watching your Useful Charts. It's like a history class. TY

  • @selimk1
    @selimk110 ай бұрын

    Best part is that, this picture( 9:19 ) isn’t Khufu’s pyramid. That’s Khafre’s Pyramid.

  • @shel_shel
    @shel_shel10 ай бұрын

    Omg! I literally asked if you could do a video on this few weeks ago! Thanks for posting this.

  • @ingaman
    @ingaman10 ай бұрын

    LET'S GOOOOOOO! Been waiting for this one since I started following the channel years ago.

  • @Mikefantasia22
    @Mikefantasia2210 ай бұрын

    Everyone else need to watch these like 7 - 10+ times in order to grasp it all Like I gota take notes

  • @michaelandrews2619
    @michaelandrews261910 ай бұрын

    Matt, that was spectacular. Well done.

  • @keevancrawford6708
    @keevancrawford67085 ай бұрын

    Love that side by side of what I thought with Egyptian and biblical history.

  • @nicholashunt-bull101
    @nicholashunt-bull10110 ай бұрын

    You misspoke… the Nile flows north. Otherwise great stuff as always.

  • @vitormelomedeiros
    @vitormelomedeiros10 ай бұрын

    would love an Akkadian family tree video too! this one was sooo great, I love very ancient history! keep it up!!!

  • @havefunbesafe
    @havefunbesafe10 ай бұрын

    I’ve been hooked since I saw the Tut exhibit in La brea around 1978 or so…

  • @lillianvoekler9908
    @lillianvoekler990810 ай бұрын

    This is a blessing

  • @kevincraigmile7340
    @kevincraigmile734010 ай бұрын

    Sorry to say, @ 9:14 is a photo of the Kafre pyramid, not Khufu.

  • @theeth3242
    @theeth324210 ай бұрын

    It's crazy to think about how long Egypt has been around. Like the Romans view Ancient Egypt the same way we view the Romans. That's the timescale were working on. Crazy.

  • @doyouknoworjustbelieve6694
    @doyouknoworjustbelieve66949 ай бұрын

    Great video. Just a minor correction: The Nile flows North.

  • @rnanni1048
    @rnanni104810 ай бұрын

    I never clicked this fast on a video!

  • @TheMCCraftingTable
    @TheMCCraftingTable10 ай бұрын

    Wouldn't it be interesting to have little icons beside each pharaoh to designate if their pyramid / tomb was found (triangle / square), or if their remains were found (circle)..?

  • @MuriKakari
    @MuriKakari10 ай бұрын

    Love it when I think in time with the narration; Was thinking "That's pretty cool" about Iry Hor right as Matt said it.

  • @JetinDhinjal
    @JetinDhinjal4 ай бұрын

    The only person who makes me understand history. Thank you!

  • @RandomLorence
    @RandomLorence10 ай бұрын

    3:05: That's (Probably) Wrong... The Earliest Written Name of a Person is actually the _Kushim_ Tablet, an Akkadian Tablet where this _Kushim_ provides 14.712 litres of Barley to his officials, the Tablet is Signed by Him The Iry-Hor scripture is dated around the 32nd Century BC (3200 BC) while the _Kushim_ Tablet is dated around 3400 - 3000 BC So, depending on when you believe _Kushim_ signed his tablet, the Iry-Hor scripture could either be the first know Written Name in History or possibly the Second.

  • @je9026
    @je902610 ай бұрын

    This is one of the best channels on youtube 👏🏽👏🏽

  • @scottgrunow5201
    @scottgrunow52018 ай бұрын

    The Kings List, the Turin Canon, and Manetho contradict each other

  • @RussellFlowers
    @RussellFlowers10 ай бұрын

    "...the way that the Nile River flows, which is south" - wait...

  • @UsefulCharts

    @UsefulCharts

    10 ай бұрын

    Oops!

  • @happystory8685
    @happystory868510 ай бұрын

    Channel UsefulChats (England) and ASISI Channel (Indonesia) are two of the best channels on the KZread channel right now. Studying History based on Literacy Facts and Archaeologists.

  • @Duececoupe
    @Duececoupe2 ай бұрын

    Absolutely love history (and geography) and have done so since my schooldays....outstanding work! 👍🏻👌🏼👏🏻

  • @aliasmarg8ta127
    @aliasmarg8ta1277 ай бұрын

    Bravo for all the research. Even bigger respect for being able to pronounce the long names.

  • @juliannerohm1297
    @juliannerohm129710 ай бұрын

    So impressive. And your pronunciation-game is amazing!

  • @thirdyramos6437
    @thirdyramos643710 ай бұрын

    What are you doing Step-Pyramind?

  • @drswag0076
    @drswag00769 ай бұрын

    the step pyramid was a stack up of a mastaba which is what the kings of the two previous dynasties were buried in.

  • @adangbe
    @adangbe10 ай бұрын

    Kudos for attempting the genealogIies of Ancient Kemet. They're family lines that are VERY unclear.

  • @Fanz7719
    @Fanz771924 күн бұрын

    Thanks for this i love your content keep it up man ❤

  • @RossLinderman
    @RossLinderman10 ай бұрын

    The Nile flows south? Got it. Well done.

  • @Tekmirion
    @Tekmirion10 ай бұрын

    Very good Mat! Well done! Just in time that i am cheking Manetho`s scripts! Thanks!

  • @flickcentergaming680
    @flickcentergaming68010 ай бұрын

    You madlad, you actually did it.

  • @irishdawn8387
    @irishdawn838710 ай бұрын

    loved it, hope to see more!

  • @tiredteen8906
    @tiredteen890626 күн бұрын

    I watched your video, made notes, made a bunch of charts explaining the political directoons, believe, innoventions etc etc etc...for my FANTASY story. I could have just made everything up in my comic, but NO, IT NEEDED TO BE ACCURATE. I may hate myself for hyperfocussing, but your video was god damn perfect info delivery!

  • @clivemeisterperryweiner3415
    @clivemeisterperryweiner341510 ай бұрын

    I have yet to finish the video, but something else of note about Pepi II is that it was calculated to be likely during his reign that the comet Hale-Bopp was last at Perihelion (point closest to the sun) before it's famous next appearance 4000 years later during 1997. I don't remember the source sorry to say but I've read before that a record from that time was found of what the egyptians referred to as a "long haired star" which could've been a reference to the comet.

  • @tirex3673
    @tirex367310 ай бұрын

    I have heard, Alexander and his son being called Dynasty 32, the Ptolomies being 33 and the roman emperors being we have being referred to as pharaos being 35.

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    10 ай бұрын

    Although not heard the part for the Roman Emperors, this is not an atypical thought process, so well said.

  • @gordontaylor2815

    @gordontaylor2815

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes, you will sometimes get Alexander the Great and his son as the 32nd, the Ptolemies as the 33rd and the Principate Roman Emperors as 34th Dynasties. That's a rare thing, however. Some Coptic Egyptian sources also add a "35th Dynasty" referencing the Christian Emperors of the Eastern Roman/Byzantine Empire that controlled Egypt up to the Muslim conquest, however no Christian Emperor was ever called "Pharaoh" by the native population of the time.

  • @tirex3673

    @tirex3673

    10 ай бұрын

    @@gordontaylor2815 i‘ve just noticed i somehow counted 32,33,35

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    10 ай бұрын

    @@gordontaylor2815 precisely. As I imagine you are aware, Maximinus II Daza was the last titled Per A'a/Pharaoh

  • @Wolfsgeist
    @Wolfsgeist10 ай бұрын

    "The names are based on the way the Nile River flows - which is south" ...except no, it's north ^^;

  • @R3stor
    @R3stor10 ай бұрын

    Pls do video about family tree of kings of Gondor. Many people who didnt read the books have absolutely no idea why Aragorn had claim to the throne of Gondor and why Gondor did not have a king in the first place

  • @TheCandiceWang

    @TheCandiceWang

    5 ай бұрын

    This i support 💯❕ would love to see the Gondorian family tree!!

  • @TheCandiceWang
    @TheCandiceWang5 ай бұрын

    Nice!! Looking forward to this 🗺️

  • @tirex3673
    @tirex367310 ай бұрын

    As far as I have heard, outside of the conspiracy theories, there is actually some serious discussion, if Khaffre really built the sphinx, or, if it was built a few centuries earlier, based of erosion patterns differing from the ones of the pyramid.

  • @yurpcrusher123
    @yurpcrusher12310 ай бұрын

    Great video!!!! Amazing all the time and effort that went into this. I thought Pharoahs were called nesut-bity originally.

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    10 ай бұрын

    Hard to say. As Km.t originally was a dual Kingdom state, the pre states were Nesu/Nesut. Then they became Nesut-Biti/Bity. Nesut is interpretable to mean King (of Lower Egypt), and so Nesut-Biti is interpretable to mean Dual King/King of the Two Lands

  • @giovannimieli4271
    @giovannimieli427110 ай бұрын

    Missed pun at the endwith that “and was never resurrected” (40:28) cause the reason the successor of Daza, Licinius, never adopted the title of pharaoh is that he thought that, you know, someone else had recently (couple hundred years before) resurrected, and dropped the office for the association with the traditional egyptian religion

  • @przedwczorajszyszprot9931
    @przedwczorajszyszprot99318 ай бұрын

    "prior to this the more accurate term would be king" I didnt know that bronze age egyptians used english language. Today i learned.

  • @Matthew-rh6ei

    @Matthew-rh6ei

    8 ай бұрын

    Nswt/Nesut works as well :P (Nswt-Biti/Nesut-Biti being dual king)

  • @samuelvavia8920
    @samuelvavia892010 ай бұрын

    Can't wait to watch this later! Would it be possible to do an Sumerian/Akkadian royal family tree? It would be a true Iltam Zumra Rashupti Elatim moment.

  • @bl1tz533

    @bl1tz533

    10 ай бұрын

    UGARIIIIIIIIIIIIT

  • @epiccrusadr8583

    @epiccrusadr8583

    10 ай бұрын

    Iltam sumra rashupti elatim

  • @voltageesq.

    @voltageesq.

    10 ай бұрын

    UDA REEEEEEEEEAAA

  • @raistlinmyers5468
    @raistlinmyers546810 ай бұрын

    Excellent work i loved this.

  • @HeinzeC1
    @HeinzeC110 ай бұрын

    Clarification: the nile river flows from south to north.

  • @bigfel3240

    @bigfel3240

    Ай бұрын

    North and South were switched back then.

  • @HaldirMark
    @HaldirMark10 ай бұрын

    I wanna start by saying that I love your videos, and have probably seen 90% of your dynasty videos. I'm a fan, sincerely. However, I have a few sincere problems with the framing of the information presented in the video. With hope, I can with clarity provide and address what I see to be errors of framing, or potentially unrecognised biases/assumptions. I should continue by clarifying that I am not an Egyptologist or Nubiologist; neither am I an archaeologist. I am a hobbyist who studies under a hobbyist, albeit one who has been studying for decades. He streams on KZread under the channel "Smash Rockwell"; the opinions I'm about to express are NOT his (to my knowledge). They are mine, as developed from the information gleaned from his podcasts. When he expresses an opinion on his programme, whether or not it is in conformity with mainstream Egyptology/Nubiology, he provides the source material or the PhD analysis/assertion to buttress his claim. /All that to say, if there is any error of analysis in this comment, the fault is mine, not his./ The grammar of the Amenhotep 3/MerenPtah stele does not support the claim of Israel being on that stele, to my hobbyist eye. It seems much more likely to say Sryia, not least because of the presence of the logogrammic stroke beneath the "r" being claimed as the "L" in "Ysiriar/Israel". This would change the final "r" to a mouth. The pattern of mouth, throwstick, people group repeats throughout the text in reference to other people groups. Ironically, the only other place in the text where translators seem to ignore the logogrammic stroke under the mouth is in the place name "Gezer", where the final "r" is in reality a mouth, and where the translators seem inexplicably to have replaced the "a"s in the text with "e"s. Finally, the Egyptians' more commonly known name for "Syria" immediately succeeds mention of "Ysiriar", and, to my eye at least, appears to refer first to a people, then to a geographic area. Thus, this would in fact be the first mention of "Syria", rather than "Israel", in history. I first encountered the information above, save my expressed opinion, on Smash Rockwell/Casual's livestream, and it remains the only place I have encountered this information. He retains all claims and rights to his find as intellectual property or in any (and every applicable) other form. "Hyksos" are not a people; it is a transliteration into Greek of a singular noun, HqA xAswt (Heqa Khasut, we can Egyptologically pronounce it), which is a ruler of foreign lands. It is not a demonym or an ethnonym, or a plural noun. Finally, and not really most importantly, but certainly expressed with the greatest confusion, you associated the DNA studies done to date with modern "Middle Eastern" folk without (to my mind) the necessary caveat that these studies were done in Lower Egypt, in later periods, and do not address the founding populations of the society. It would have been less alarming if it had stood alone; however, you immediately pivoted to showing Fayum portraits which you openly assert are post-Roman, but which you additionally claim should give one and idea of "what some of the pharaohs probably looked like, too". This may not, in fact, be untrue (/some/ of the pharaohs), but it seems woefully hollow as a description of 3000 years of cultural development, especially coming as late to the game as the Romans have. It /may/ lead a member of the audience to gather that throughout the course of that 3000 year history, nsw btyw and "citizens" of the Empires/Kingdoms would on average look like those Fayum portraits. I'm inclined to agree with the assertion that exporting 21st century race politics two to five thousand years in the past is a foolhardy endeavour; I also think it is at least equally as foolhardy to champion the portraits you showed as representative of average Kemetic representation of themselves. That's it; hope the message is received in the spirit I meant it. Thanks for another video.

  • @TheCandiceWang

    @TheCandiceWang

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this. Looking forward to reading it!

  • @LordJazzly
    @LordJazzly10 ай бұрын

    20:30 I hadn't read that story about the hippos, but I've read some other ancient Egyptian literature; the idea of someone getting a letter that reads 'We can't sleep because your hippos are making _so much noise_ that we can hear it hundreds of kilometres away' seems pretty well in line with the sense of humour I've seen in those others. Extra points if other documents elsewhere imply that 'your hippos are making noise' is also some sort of rude innuendo or ridiculous pun.

  • @TheCandiceWang

    @TheCandiceWang

    5 ай бұрын

    LOL 🦛🦛

  • @shawnwilliams1917
    @shawnwilliams19173 күн бұрын

    I would love it if you made a video (and also a chart) of just the ancient greek royalty but include the legendary ancestors of Greece from the mythology.

  • @insulaarachnid
    @insulaarachnid10 ай бұрын

    This was brilliant!

  • @imokin86
    @imokin8610 ай бұрын

    Great work as usual! To be precise in a boring way, Ozymandias is the Greek adaptation not of the name "Ramesses" itself, but of his second regnal name/title "Usermaatre".

  • @patricktilton5377

    @patricktilton5377

    10 ай бұрын

    Isaac Asimov, in his book "Familiar Poems Annotated," discusses Shelley's poem 'Ozymandias', and notes that one of Ramesses II's honorific names was User-ma-Ra. The difference between 'ma' and 'maat'/'Maat' is probably not so important, because the goddess Maat has a final '-t' due to it being a feminine ending added to the root word 'maa', which means "right, just, true, in proportion" (etc.), Maat being the goddess representative of that concept. I'm of the opinion that Egyptian names like 'Usermaatre' would be better spelt User-Maat-Re, as such a spelling shows how the one name is comprised of three separate 'root'-names. Am I the only one who thinks this is preferable? One could do this with other foreign names from ancient times, such as Bel-Shar-Ushur instead of Belshazzar, or Nabu-Kudurri-Usur instead of Nebuchadrezzar (mistakenly spelled Nebuchadnezzar). Even a Greek name like Alexander could better be spelled Alex-Andros or AlexAndros ['Helper of Man'], so as to make it easier for a student of history to get a sense of the meaning of a famous name to his/her contemporaries. The emperor Caligula -- or, CaligUla -- means "little boots" [caliga = boot; + -ula = diminutive], for example. Just a thought/suggestion.

  • @NovaSeven

    @NovaSeven

    10 ай бұрын

    @@patricktilton5377 I go back and forth with my preference for the spelling of ancient names, but it seems that that style of spelling personal names has won out in ancient Sumerian and Akkadian names, but less so in Egyptian for some reason. I think the reason that the author spelled the word "ma" rather than "maat" is to reflect that in Middle Egyptian, final -t was being pronounced as a voiceless glottal stop /ʔ/, which is often imperceptible to those who aren't conditioned to notice it, and so perhaps he thought this would give the reader a better understanding of how the name was Hellenized into Ozymandias. These are, of course, the "Egyptological" (i.e., less accurate but more convenient for non-Afroasiatic-language-speaking folks to pronounce) transliterations. However, a more accurate transliteration to what is known about the language now (see Ancient Egyptian Phonology by James Allen, published by Cambridge University Press in 2020) for "Usermaatre" would be something more like Wasir-Muʾʿat-Rīʿ or Wasirmuʾʿatrīʿ. At least that's how it would be in the Old Egyptian stage of the language, when pronunciation most closely matched the spelling. However, as the language innovated, words were being pronounced differently but spelled the same, and so how one transliterates a word comes down to whether you want to be truer to the spelling or to the pronunciation.

  • @TheCandiceWang

    @TheCandiceWang

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@patricktilton5377I totally agree!

  • @TheCandiceWang

    @TheCandiceWang

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you! I wanted to know more about ozymandias and that Percy Shelley poem!

  • @NxMluLloyd
    @NxMluLloyd10 ай бұрын

    Suggestion: Please do one for Zulu dynasty of the Kingdom of KwaZulu in South Africa 🙏🏾