Maya Expert Answers Maya Civilization Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED
Ойын-сауық
Dr. Ed Barnhart, an American archaeologist, answers the internet's burning questions about the ancient Maya civilization. Why was the Maya calendar year only 260 days? Who did they sacrifice? Did they build more pyramids than the Egyptians? This Maya expert answers all these questions and much more.
Dr. Ed Barnhart is the director of Maya Exploration Center www.mayaexploration.org
Check out The ArchaeoEd Podcast - www.archaeoed.com for more content about the ancient Americas.
Director: Lisandro Perez-Rey
Director of Photography: AJ Young
Editor: Christopher Jones
Expert: Ed Barnhart
Line Producer: Joseph Buscemi
Associate Producer: Brandon White
Production Manager: Peter Brunette
Casting Producer: Nicholas Sawyer
Camera Operator: Lucas Vilicich
Sound Mixer: Kari Barber
Production Assistant: Fernando Barajas
Post Production Supervisor: Christian Olguin
Post Production Coordinator: Ian Bryant
Supervising Editor: Doug Larsen
Additional Editor: Paul Tael
Assistant Editor: Billy Ward
00:00 Maya Support
00:10 Shaping Baby Heads
00:59 Kukulkan
01:40 Maya Calendar
02:48 Maya Sandals
03:13 2012 Apocalypse
04:15 Maya vs Aztec
04:47 Sports
06:36 Sacrifice
06:57 Lost Maya City
08:53 Cacao
09:56 Maya Civilization
11:06 Pyramids
12:09 Tools
12:49 Aliens
13:16 King Pakal
14:10 Palenque
15:25 Indigenous Writing
17:26 Mayan Language
18:39 Building Ancient Cities
19:55 Astronomy
21:05 Math
22:11 Maya Today
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Пікірлер: 1 200
''The city that I found ' Thats gotta be the coolest thing anyone could say about themselves.
@AntonSuprun
12 күн бұрын
I'm sure there are thousands of shallow women somewhere who find that nerdy and boring.
@aarons3014
12 күн бұрын
@@AntonSuprun Are you able to comment on the internet without insulting women? Set your anger to one side and enjoy how cool this video is.
@lynxthewise7233
12 күн бұрын
@@AntonSuprun spoken like someone who will never find a city.
@FairbrookWingates
12 күн бұрын
@@AntonSuprun As a woman who finds such nerdy and fascinating, still no reason to insult others for not being interested. Good grief, each to their own makes the world more interesting over all.
@CerciRodriguez
12 күн бұрын
@@AntonSuprunI'm a woman and found that to be super cool! I grew up playing SimCity 4 and creating my own cities and I love history.
lmao he answered that alien question with the utmost exhaustion, like he had been asked 1000 times already haha. Which i'm sure he has.
@user-fh6ov3wl4h
12 күн бұрын
They had him in ancient aliens. I never got a full story but in one lecture at least he made it pretty clear he was interviewed without full explanation of what his sound bites were going to be used for…
@peculiarpig
12 күн бұрын
any person in archeology probably despises that question, especially those who focus in western indigenous communities
@scaps2200
12 күн бұрын
@@peculiarpigmaybe it is asked because both the Mayans, Egyptians and Aztecs built incredible Pyramids which weren't made by any other societies during the same time. So it is a fair question not a western bias.
@AirLancer
12 күн бұрын
@@scaps2200 You know you can't use the word "both" and then go on to list 3 separate civilizations...
@Deviantial
12 күн бұрын
He gives a great answer too.
The Mayans taught me that if you don't finish something, it's not really the end of the world.
@aliciabuckley821
12 күн бұрын
Amazing & underrated comment, glad I’m here bravo 🤣
@cacogenicist
12 күн бұрын
Maya, not Mayans.
@DelaynaBailey-ng6ne
12 күн бұрын
LoL the calendar
@papabeanguy
12 күн бұрын
@@cacogenicist Wow you are so smart. Thanks for your valuable contribution.
@8thFurno
12 күн бұрын
Ba dum tish.
As a maya speaking person living in Yucatán, Dr Barnhart is invited to the cochinita.
@alisterfolson
11 күн бұрын
As long as he doesn't bring potato salad with raisins 😂
@mcwarlords4378
7 күн бұрын
@@alisterfolsonew he said he eats that?
@erakfishfishfish
7 күн бұрын
@@mcwarlords4378nah, he’s just making a reference to Chadwick Boseman’s Black Jeopardy sketch on SNL.
@Mikeztarp
6 күн бұрын
Your sentence means that Dr. Barnhart is a Maya-speaking person living in the Yucatán.
@alexbucsp
6 күн бұрын
@@Mikeztarp for sentences like these you are not invited to the cochinita
The false theory of aliens “disparaging the abilities of the Mayans” is such an important point and a perspective I hadn’t considered. This was a fascinating talk!
@jpteknoman
12 күн бұрын
My theory when it comes to aliens, is that maybe the gods of ancient people were actually aliens who, however, had very limited interaction with their worshippers if any. For example aliens didn't build the pyramids, but maybe they had pyramid shaped ships and the people who saw them decided that "this shape has divine origin so we build our temples to match "
@youdontknowme9068
12 күн бұрын
@@jpteknomana pyramid is just a way to build a tall structure that doesn't fall down It's a natural shape to find eventually The Egyptians did and the maya/aztec did too
@minti3245
12 күн бұрын
Does that apply to the Christian god too? Was he an alien too? Ignoramus.
@FarewellOrwell
12 күн бұрын
@@jpteknoman please don't vote
@romanshatalin7077
12 күн бұрын
If you or someone else interested, there is a whole KZread channel Miniminuteman with more of that stuff. It was truly refreshing to see how a lot of conspiracy theories or bad archaeology takes are dismissing intelligence of ancient people, have roots in scientific racism, disrespected culture which was a subject of the study, gave publicity to actual conmans, etc.
Lmao at me being a 5'2 Maya descendent living in the US. My great grandparents were *mostly* colonized. A lot of my older relatives still speak the language. We're still around 🙋♀️
@cacogenicist
12 күн бұрын
I live in the Pacific Northwest, in the States, and it recently sort of struck me that I see _many_ more people of Maya descent up here than I do local indigenous people.
@hughmann9568
12 күн бұрын
"Assimilation" isn't colonization.
@leggi_bois4eva
12 күн бұрын
@hughmann9568 ofc not! I have assimilated. My great grandparents and their peers, on the other hand, were forced to abandon their teachings(mine still did rituals in secret), change their names(mine kept theirs in secret), and learn a new language, as well as forcing their future generations to only speak the new language- spanish, etc. Just like most other Native people, the culture was erased for a lot of us and we have to take the time and effort to go back and reclaim our heritage 💖 remember this is just one example of many. You can probably find someone local to you with a similar story if you're willing to learn more. Highly recommend!
@user-mx4fh4zp6f
12 күн бұрын
@@hughmann9568 when someone says theyre colonized it means the same thing as assimilated dipshit
@80sGamerLady
12 күн бұрын
Exactly. And many are petite like you. ❤
Asking where the Mayans went is like asking where the Ancient Romans went. They became "Italian", among other nationalities. The problem is that most Maya have been forced to speak Spanish and identify as "Hispanic" today, even if they've got no European ancestry.
@petercarioscia9189
12 күн бұрын
European master race 😊
@Zerbey
12 күн бұрын
Like any culture, they just got assimilated. Where did the Vikings go? They settled all over Europe.
@KateeAngel
12 күн бұрын
Mayan languages have plenty of speakers today. Seems like you too have been misinformed
@cyborgninjamonkey
12 күн бұрын
@@KateeAngel Yeah I've been through villages where the elders could kinda speak spanish and the kids could kinda speak english but everyone talked to each other in K'iche or Que'ekche. I don't think they considered themselves Latin Americans... It's hard to get demographics numbers in the jungles but in regard to the Aztecs, at least 1.5 million still speak Nauhatl as a first language.
@MORE_BEANS_PLZ
12 күн бұрын
Lmao you clearly don't know 💩 there'd plenty in Mexico speaking their native languages and identify as Mayan and whatever else like in the US with native Americans
As a dude with a History degree that was more Ancient Med focused: This guy is fascinating. 10/10 would love to have him back on for more episodes
@maya-mu3ce
12 күн бұрын
ancient med? i’d love to learn more about what you studied
@PenguinofD00mxxx
12 күн бұрын
You should check out his KZread Channel/ Podcast: "Archaeo Ed Podcast" if you want more.
@BruceBoyde
12 күн бұрын
If you're interested in such things, he did at least three lecture series with The Great Courses, all of which were fantastic. Best reason to get an Audible subscription, imo, though you could probably get them via Libby or something as well.
@danielpicassomunoz2752
12 күн бұрын
Nah, he called the Mexica Aztecs, unacceptable
@JerriBush
12 күн бұрын
He’s done several Great Courses video series on North America and South America civilizations.
Dr. Barnhart is a mentor & great friend of mine. So glad to see him get a big platform like this. Well deserved.
@milamilla1977
12 күн бұрын
I watched all his courses on "Great Courses"! He is my teacher!
@antewaso8876
12 күн бұрын
Such a brilliant communicator! He sets out everything so clearly I feel I learned something
@GIR9595
12 күн бұрын
@@milamilla1977 Same! Gotta go on one of his trips if I can swing it. Also have to shout out his podcast ArchaeoEd if anyone else wants more Ed content
@FatTracksMusic
12 күн бұрын
He is an even better mentor and an even greater friend of mine. I'm even more glad to see him get a platform like this
@milamilla1977
12 күн бұрын
@@FatTracksMusic I liked his appearance on Oak Island! Like: "What is it?... Vikings!"
"Tech Support" is one of the best quick little shows on youtube. it never disappoints and this one was no different. cheers and bravo
@lauryn6059
11 күн бұрын
Yes I hope they continue this series for a long time
@PM-of3fn
7 күн бұрын
I wish they were longer! I always want to hear more
I feel I just learned more about the Maya than half a dozen documentaries (even the good non-alien kind!) in just one short video. This man is a goldmine, please bring him back again!
@HenryThree
11 күн бұрын
He's got roughly 52 hours worth of lectures on Wondrium, go crazy
@aenzontll86
10 күн бұрын
He has a podcast here on youtube.
@EyeofZai
8 күн бұрын
He hosts probably my favorite podcast, ArcheoEd, and runs the Mayan Exploration Center.
@chamade166
3 күн бұрын
He keep ignoring African American contributions.
Please have this guy back just to talk about his time in Guatemala and the discoveries he made! I want to know more
@ForeverLoveFelix
11 күн бұрын
he has a great podcast called archeoed on Spotify where he goes into his exploits highly recommend
@chamade166
3 күн бұрын
Very Eurocentric view of history. He not mentioning the contributions of African Nations and Africans Americans. 👎🏿
@Meeeey.
2 күн бұрын
Lmao latin america is literally what his PhD is about. That’s his specialty. The world doesn’t revolve ab Africans. Get over yourself
Soo good to listen to a passionate expert who knows what he is talking about. Been hearing too much ancient alien mumbo jumbo lately.
@gregpena7131
12 күн бұрын
Here here!
@irissupercoolsy
11 күн бұрын
Why do you have to bring Mumbo Jumbo into this 😭😭
@irissupercoolsy
11 күн бұрын
ah wait, mumbo jumbo is actually slang. Sorry, English isn't my first language. Didn't know
Really noticing the ardent use of the correct term Maya and not Mayans, loved this vid
@ericktellez7632
11 күн бұрын
Yet they are still using “Aztec” and not Mexica and Mexicas
@cronchybo
9 күн бұрын
oh, Mayan is incorrect? i didn't know that
@skanderbeg152
9 күн бұрын
@ericktellez7632 he's using the term that 99% of people will understand, not the term only 1% will. This is a video about the Maya, and he understandably decided the correct term for the aztecs was not important for the conversation.
@theghosthero6173
7 күн бұрын
@@cronchybo Mayan is a language family, Maya is the name of the people
I live in the Yucatan peninsula and I'm so glad our culture gets a Wired episode. Great talk.
@rokosbasilisk913
12 күн бұрын
🇬🇹🇬🇹🇬🇹
@shredderofstrings3223
12 күн бұрын
It's so hot around there. I visited for a week and holy moly. Beautiful area though. So many different animals and natural areas
@3RACHASUPREMACY
11 күн бұрын
so fortunate!
@ericktellez7632
11 күн бұрын
@@rokosbasilisk913Yucatan is in Mexico not Guatemala wtf
@frisco9568
3 күн бұрын
@@rokosbasilisk913🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽
As someone who has Inca ancestry & backpacked in Mexico, Belize, & Guatemala I can assure you the Mayan people are EVERYWHERE in that region despite colonization. They still speak Mayan languages & dress traditionally, as well as retain & practice much of their precolonial customs
@microbios8586
8 күн бұрын
You don't even need to leave the US to see this. Guatemalans are everywhere in the US and speak Mayan dialects in addition to Spanish. You hear it literally everywhere
@Dhi_Bee
7 күн бұрын
@@microbios8586 I’m aware. There are a lot of Mayans where I live. Palm Beach County has tons, especially in the Lake Worth Beach area (Florida)
I held off watching this because I was afraid of another prejudiced video against people that is so often mysticized. I am so happy after watching this video because of how respectful all this knowledge was presented. It’s clear he loves his field of study and has immense respect for the maya culture and people both past and present. Thank you for posting this.
You all should do one on the Aymaran, Quechua, and other pre- and post-Inca cultures and people. Those communities are also still alive and thriving today!
@bestpinoza
12 күн бұрын
Mapuche! Mapuche!
@thegodofsoapkekcario1970
12 күн бұрын
They’ll probably do the Inca since they’re popular, but it would be cool if they did Chiloe or Chimu people.
@joaquinbendezu
12 күн бұрын
The would definitely do an Inca Support
The experts you select to do these are so entertaining and engaging with their styles.
Man that whole King Pakal question made me remember my intro to archeology class in college where the prof was an expert on Mesoamerican civs mostly Mayans and the man went on a 50min rant about how dumb ancient aliens are and used Pakal as an example. One of the funner classes we had
My favorite way, as someone who studied anthropology in college, to explain to coworkers about the 2012 thing back then was "You ever roll over the odometer on your car? 'Yeah, why?" "Did the car disappear?"
@bentoth9555
12 күн бұрын
Also, the Maya and Aztecs aren't the only civilizations to beat Egypt on number of pyramids, the Nubians did too. It's just that the ones in Egypt are more obvious and bigger.
@user-ie1tz5rm8x
12 күн бұрын
Fingers crossed for a happy 4772
@digitalnomad9985
9 күн бұрын
Yes, but it was a Lada and it had a "Free Ukraine" bumper sticker.
Once again, Wired found the singlemost charismatic and engaging teacher for the class. This was amazing, I hope Dr. Ed will come back for Mayan Support 2!
It's soo refreshing to actually learn about real Mayan culture instead of in the context of "aliens" or "human sacrifice". Great presentation too.
@frijolero6048
11 күн бұрын
Or Apocalypto.
@supernatural5354
2 күн бұрын
unfortunately, he did reduce the Aztecs to savages and said that they did sacrifices, which they did not.
we are kindly requesting "Linguist answers Language questions"
@hathawyn
10 күн бұрын
As a linguist, I volunteer lmao I could talk about languages all day
@seileach67
8 күн бұрын
Paging Dr. Geoff Lindsey!! @drgeofflindsey
@blue---monday
4 күн бұрын
omg ur so right i cant believe they havent done that one before
@plsnthxu
Күн бұрын
please
This video needs a part 2 for sure. Could watch him talk ab this all day
Dr Barnhart also does an excellent lecture series for the Great Courses on Ancient Mesoamerican history- pleasantly surprised to see him in my KZread feed with this now
I’ve lived in Yucatán for 7 years and I’m so fascinated about Maya culture and history. Can’t tell you how happy this made me.
What an impressive man, discovering that at 25 sounds insane!!
@irissupercoolsy
11 күн бұрын
yeah, I'm 25 right now and can't imagine that
That detail abour reservoirs is genuinely fascinating! It's a really ingenious way to get a stable water supply that you'd never imagine at first!
Fellow archaeologist and paleoanthropologist here! I cannot appreciate enough how much he touched on the conspiracy of aliens being directed solely towards POC/Indigenous groups, as if they were not as capable as the "more white" civilizations and could never construct such impressive structures on their own - like the Greeks and Romans. He has always been such an incredible archaeologist! There is *almost* never a question of aliens (or giants) helping the Romans build the Colosseum (which had the capability to have naval battles within it), The Colossus of Rhodes or Nero, Trajan's Column, the Pantheon, the aqueduct systems, so on and so forth. These hurtful conspiracies are crucial to debunk in our field, and not everyone is willing to touch on the subject; particularly the older people in our field. Working for the museum industry, you can guess what kind of people always ask us these questions. They also tend to throw a hissy-fit when we reach the human evolution part of the Paleo tours.
I've always wondered about cultures whose "year" wasn't 365 1/4 days long. Arabs, Maya, Aztecs. Did they live in areas near the equator where there was no apparent passage of the seasons, no natural yearly cycle, so they had to look elsewhere for a natural cycle? Arabs adopted a monthly cycle. Now I'm told the 260-day Mesoamerican year was inspired by the human gestation period; makes sense.
@noctisocculta4820
12 күн бұрын
The Mayans had a solar year, out to 4 decimal places. That involves measuring all three years (tropical, sidereal, and lunar) and correctly figuring out how they tie together. The equinoxes for tropical year(seasons), and the background stars for the sidereal. Just wasn't their daily standard. Even had extremely accurate dragonic years (eclipse years).
@luvitrbs
12 күн бұрын
Well, the 365 day calendar might be the unnatural one here :)
@jonatanmarklund7473
12 күн бұрын
@jaykaufman9782 it could be a good theory but it's simply not true. Areas near the equator do have seasons like the rest of the world with stark contrasts throughout the year, it just doesn't look like the ones in the ex northern hemisphere with snow, but the temperature still drops a great deal, a big part of the world (especially when looking at ancient text and writing), what we call winter they call the "rain season", meaning downfall. Etc. Cultures around the equator also celebrate, have traditions or mark the start and end of said rain season with feast. It would be weird if a strip of the earth do not experience seasons :)
@blarfroer8066
12 күн бұрын
@@luvitrbs what's unnatural about earth rotating around the sun?
@ericthompson3982
12 күн бұрын
@@blarfroer8066Just a slightly pedantic nitpick: revolves around the sun. It rotates on its axis. Sorry, physics/astronomy was my major in college, so I get a little nitpicky.
As an avid ancient Greek sport historian, I love this.
Another fun fact, headbinding isn't exclusive to the Maya. It's found in South America, North America, and across the Asian Steppe
@krono5el
12 күн бұрын
Always imagined it was a way to shape the head so they could wear certain giant headdresses. just a thought tho
@PuzzledMonkey
3 күн бұрын
I was thinking of the flathead tribe, myself. Could the practice have migrated with the culture of corn?
Real archeology is so much cooler than aliens.
Wow, I could listen to Dr. Barnhart talk about the Maya all day.
@lukecaverns
12 күн бұрын
It’s been a great pleasure of my life to experience this
@cholulahotsauce6166
9 күн бұрын
Good news, he has a podcast and a bunch of Great Courses lecture series.
Dr. Barnhart has always been generous and informative to my email inquries regarding the Maya. Nice to see him on this platform.
@blue---monday
4 күн бұрын
whaaat, are u currently studying archeology? and if ur not do u just.. email him? should i probably do that too? lol because i really want to
@Anyextee
4 күн бұрын
@@blue---monday I’m an independent researcher, author and tour leader, I just sent him an email to verify something and he was kind enough to reply.
I’ve listened to this guy’s lectures on great courses. They’re really good
Most fascinating one of these in a while! Not only did we learn about the Maya; we also learned to write and calculate how they did.
I have fallen in love with the Maya after going to Cancun. I was so completely blown away by their amazing civilization. I plan on going back as many times as I can to visit as many sites as possible.
This was great! I would love to see Dr. Barnhardt do a whole series of videos about the Maya. Great job, Wired! Keep it going!
@aenzontll86
10 күн бұрын
He has a podcast where he has done several episodes on the Maya. It's called ArchaeoEd and can be found both on youtube and elsewhere.
@newkkl
10 күн бұрын
@@aenzontll86 Thank you, I will look for this.
That is interesting with the nine-month gestation period being the basis for the Mayan calendar. Similarly, if people ever wonder why certain civilizations or groups had/have calendars different than the western, Gregorian, 365-day-year format, it really has a lot to do also with seasons. Our western calendar was more or less formed in colder or places more temperate climates, with “actual” seasons. It’s easy to divide a solar cycle twelve ways when you have four seasons that are roughly three months long, respectively. But the Maya (and other civilizations closer to the equator, or in deserts, mountains, etc.) likely experienced slightly different weather patterns. This would probably affect their organization and division of a solar cycle…
No amount of ridicule of "space aliens gave ancient humans their technology" is too much.
Thank you for making this video
Hands down, the most thorough Wired "Support". Thanks, Dr. B..
Bring an aztec especialist in the future please i wanna know more about them
@RobespierreThePoof
12 күн бұрын
The Aztec ... They were the wild ones in meso-america.
@omarorihuela606
12 күн бұрын
@@RobespierreThePoofwe are also the most iconic.
@erlannderrantem6972
10 күн бұрын
@@RobespierreThePoof*north America
@Dhariuz_T
8 күн бұрын
Well for starters, the term "Aztec" although popular is slightly incorrect. "Mexica" would be a more precise way to represent how they named themselves. Just how the expert said, they were more focused on Combat, War and Sacrifice. Of course there's a reason for it. Whats certain is that there a lot of things often overlooked, they were just as prolific as the Maya in many aspects.
@jvaish
Күн бұрын
They were violent dummies who found Toltec leftovers and tried to imitate them with limited success
Wired gets the best experts every time! They all have a really similar comfortable, conversational vibe.
Dr. Ed Barnhart has done several terrific series in The Great Courses that are well worth watching.
My dad always talked about "The Mayan" he was so so soooo fascinated by them and told me a lot of things, i guess i just learned so much more about them now!
why this guy can't be my teacher when I school decades ago, why teachers can't be like this guy.
@beoweasel
11 күн бұрын
Trust me, we want to.
@robinohara226
7 күн бұрын
i recommend auditing a class at your local university, it's very fun and cheap
This guy was terrific. Super knowledge and with great delivery. Please bring him back.
More videos with Dr. Barhart- explaining Mayan architecture, power centers, lines of travel and communication between city states, Olmec influences, etc. or whatever his personal area of expertise is.
How do they always find those people who look exactly like you would imagine someone looking who is interested in their professional field
Please bring back Ed for more! Love everything he does and he's perfect for this format
I love how passionate these experts are in these videos. Super fun, super engaging and super informational
I love this guy and his presentation of the information. I hope we can see a part 2!
Thank you WIRED for these videos, this is my favorite KZread series ever!
This was amazing. Now let's get a Tech Support edition featuring an expert on Ancient Sub-Saharan society!
Their art is so gorgeous
It's always fascinating seeing professionals read out ancient texts and putting them in the right context etc.
Thank you for making this video!
We desperately need another episode!
Please make an episode like this on Indus valley civilization 🙏
If I recall correctly, there was a Mayan who knew the Spanish were destroying their books, and so collected many of the remaining ones. Tragically, that collection was found and then burned, either that or it burned by accident but still...
This is one of the best episodes of support I have watched. So interesting!
He is great at talking!!!! I could listen to him all day!!!
Fascinating. Thanks Dr Barnhart This is one of the best expert-answers-Twitter-questions across all channels, not just Wired.
This episode was great. He should come back for another round of questions.
Wow. That finding the temple story is incredible. What a feat!!
I think the craziest fact which he didn't dwell on much is that about 90% of the Mayans were wiped out by mostly disease when the Europeans came. Such a shame that such a vibrant civilization was nearly wiped out pretty much by accident, but we often don't think or talk about this. But I'm glad he talked about Maya in the modern times as well. I loved to hear him talk about these questions though with such passion and admiration!
this is definitely my favourite series on this channel
This was an absolute treat!!! These kinds of videos always bring smile to my face because it's such a pleasure to hear people truly passionate about their jobs explain their field and area of expertise! Would love to see Dr. Barnhart again!!!
This is fantastic. Videos like these are what makes KZread great. Well done Dr. Barnhart.
Very informative, I really didn't knew anything about Mayan culture but I gained a lot. Thank you 🙏
Love these history series so much! Thank you for sharing all this knowledge!
He needs to come back! I need part of Mayan bc they're crazy interesting
Loved this so much!! Wish it was longer! I could listen to his explanations for hours!!
That was informative. Thank you
Best tech support video yet - amazing expert
this is definitely one of my favorite supports of all time, such eloquence, respect, and admiration towards an amazingly accomplished civilization that are the Maya people is clearly depicted by Dr. Barnhart 💯❤️
My favorite The Great Courses series is by Dr. Barnhart. Fantastic.
loved this so much! i studied mesoamerican archaeology and found this video so enjoyable ! thank you!
Very interesting...thank you for the video
What an incredible communicator - such passion and clarity!
This was beautiful. Thank you very much Dr. Barnhart. What an achievement to discover a Mayan city. I look forward to your next discovery and learning more.
This was really interesting-great job.
Yaaass! Good seeing Ed other places
I’ve really been wanting to see a Mayan expert and this made me so happy 😊, please bring him back an another video, also would love to see him reviewing Mayans in movies and TV shows
This was an absolute delight to listen to!! Thank you so much!!
This was fantastic, Thank you for sharing this!
Really enjoyed the video and all the answers. As a mathematics major, I do take issue with the claim that the Mayan number system is more elegant than what is commonly used now. That's an extremely vague term to use and the claim is incorrect. If he is arguing that it was simpler and easier to learn I can totally agree and see that, but that simplicity makes expressing larger number extremely inefficient and harder to read. It is somewhat reminiscent of roman numerals which while functional for every day use, had their own issues for more complex endeavers. There is a reason that even today we use multiple numeric systems for different tasks. The claim he makes just sounds like he is saying it because it is in his field of study.
@spikyballoon6207
9 күн бұрын
I thought that too! He seems like a bit of a Maya fanboy like when he claimed they invented rubber and writing in the Americas even though the Olmec were the ones to actually do so
@p51abc
20 сағат бұрын
Yes, and the Mayan system (I really have no knowledge though) seems very similar to the Roman numeral system, not overly complex.
Thank you Dr. Barnhart for opening the Maya rabbithole that I will now jump into.
When I studied ancient mesoamerican civilizations at university I realized how amazing Mayans were/are. Underrated!
I love his answers to the alien questions!
This was amazing, thank you.
Fascinating, loved this. Someone who is knowledgeable & great at answering questions. Want more like this
That story about him finding that lost city was actually super cool
This was so interesting and informative. Thank you.
Really enjoyed this! I don't know much about this culture.
Brilliant scholar. Just an incredible depth of knowledge and passion for Mayan people and culture. He is largely to thank for educating us on the existing culture of the Maya
This is amazing. thank you, gonna start listening to these podcasts. Deeply interesting