The Nile - On the Banks of the World's Longest River | Free Documentary Nature

Published 2021-01-20
The Nile - On the Banks of the World's Longest River | Nature Documentary

Watch 'World's Last Paradises' here:    • World's Last Paradises | Free Documen...  

This documentary presents us with opulent images of fabulous landscapes and fascinating people that make a living in the Nile valley, between optimism and tradition, with fantasy and creativity.
No other river is as cloaked in mystery as the Nile and no other river rules the surrounding countryside through which it flows quite as much as the Nile.
We experience the dawn of a great civilisation, whose buildings still cause us to stare in sheer astonishment to this very day.

▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬

Subscribe Free Documentary - Nature Channel for free: bit.ly/2mFDC3Q
Facebook: bit.ly/2QfRxbG
Twitter: bit.ly/2QlwRiI

▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
#FreeDocumentaryNature #Documentary #Nile
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬

Free Documentary is dedicated to bring high-class documentaries to you on youtube for free. With the latest camera equipment used by well-known filmmakers working for famous production studios. You will see fascinating shots from the deep seas and up in the air, capturing great stories and pictures from everything our beautiful and interesting planet has to offer.

Enjoy stories about nature, wildlife, culture, people, history and more to come.

All Comments (21)
  • @ezradamie2836
    Really nice to see how Egyptians love the river Nile and see their daily life. what I don't understand is they all say it's dying. We Ethiopians are planting billions of trees every year so that rain became abundant. when it rains in Ethiopia, the Nile will go larger in Egypt. we (including Sudan) can use the Nile for thousands of years to come. we should abolish distrust among us and work together.
  • Nothing beats learning something about other Cultures, the River Nile originates from my Country Uganda, am proud of that
  • @HenyaGirl
    I could watch 100 more of these type of doccies! I find Egypt and the nile to be fascinating topics.
  • The Nile goes through Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, Kenya, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan, Eritrea, and Egypt we are all people of the Nile.
  • Your documentaries show us that there is a force not wanting us to see the truth about how amazing people of the world truly are,
  • @roger3911
    if you ever have a chance to visit, THEN DO IT! Went on a cruise down the Nile 2 yrs ago......brings a feeling of awe, humility and realizing how "insignificant" we are as individuals when looking at the bigger pic of thousands of yrs of history and culture. Is a bit expensive to get there, but once in Egypt, it is a very affordable trip.
  • The culture of living those people, man big respect! May nature bless them!
  • This channel is better than the entire Netflix...God bless you!
  • The Nile - On the Banks of the World's Longest River The Nile has been a witness for thousands of years to the dawn of great civilisations, whose monuments were and still astonish us with the greatness and innovation of humanity. Today, the people live between tradition and optimism with fantasy and creativity. No other river is cloaked in as much mystery as the Nile and no other river rules the surrounding countryside through which it flows quite as regally as the Nile. With opulent, magical images, our documentary presents the amazing landscapes and fascinating people that live along the river Nile. A river that conjures up all sorts of things. The Mummy, Death on the Nile, and many other famous stories in written and visual form, have taken us to the lands of the Pharaoh. #freedocumentary #nature
  • @petera5894
    I love this place . The last 10 years i visited 3 times .thank you god
  • I really like how simple yet beautiful the area is. Those people have a great sense of community that you really don't see in first world countries. I think a simple life living in the beautiful areas around Egyptians River Nile with a good sense of community seems more stress free than living in the USA where it's all about being independent and having pressure upon pressure on one in that kind of society. I think it kind of explains why so many people go crazy and do terrible things like Chris Watts while in places like Egypt you don't hear much of that ever happening. Yes first world countries are much richer, but you also have more pressure on you from that society unlike communities near the River Nile where it's simple, yet you have more community support which seems to be much easier on a person's mental state. Just my opinion though.
  • @tarltonjohns6806
    What I learned from video is that people from the Nile are working for their family to have money and they have markets there. People somehow in Africa are doing their jobs and planting fruits and vegetables outside their houses and wanted to show people some respect on they've done it. Hot air balloons were good on flying transportation from the land to the sky. People learned to cook bread and fishing on the lake for fish to eat and they like to paint pictures for their creations that they made. All of us sometimes we do things wrong and do things right with respect as we keep on doing things productive and learning our knowledge to encourage our skills and to develop our strength to the environment so that we could keep our country clean and our personal developments.
  • @garysara969
    Great documentary. The Nile is on my "Bucket List" God willing.
  • @momenbadriy
    In Egypt, the mother of the world, I love these videos, thank you
  • The scenery is breathtaking. That is one cruise I would gladly take.
  • @relaxingblog
    Slept the deepest and best to this last night, here again to play it for tonight, thank you :)
  • @lazystalker1
    This was very good, thank you for posting. It's so good to see a perspective of places from the people who live there and not just tourist views. So interesting and a good variety of different personal aspects. ... But that black Cobra, .. made me squirm in my seat. Cheers.
  • The turning point of the Nile👍⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Excellent Documentaries