7 Ancient Technologies Far Too Advanced For Their Time

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Publicado 2020-12-03

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  • @Hephzibah...
    We tend to underestimate people from ancient times more than we should.
  • @jdmz1103
    This was cool and all, but how do I get one of those hologram hand thingys
  • @Catseye189
    0:41 crossbow in China 2:11 hydraulic hammer China 3:15 big ass boat, Ancient Egypt 5:03 battle chariot, Egypt 6:23 pulley system Archimedes 7:27 swiss army knife, sort of 8:35 saws for rocks, Egypt You are welcome!
  • Those repeating crossbows were able to shoot fast, but their drawweight was really weak. So the crossbow itself would not kill anyone and it was also very short-ranged. They had to use poison to make them deadly and it was primarly a self-defense weapon for untrained people. So it wasn't really superior to later medieval crossbows and bows which had a lot more reach and force. But there was a cool story about a guy with the name Yang Xuan in 180 AD. According to the story he managed to defeat rebel forces by wagons full of lime. The wind blew the lime in the direction of the rebel forces and it blinded them. Then they set rags on the tails of the horses of some other wagons in fire so the horses would run at the enemy without the need for a driver and there were mounted crossbows on the wagons with a mechanism connected to the wheels so the crossbows were basically automated and shot randomly. And the rebel forces tried to shoot back, but just wounded each other. But it really sounds just like a tale without much evidence that it was true. But at least it shows that they were able to imagine a mechanism like that.
  • @wittwittwer1043
    NO invention is "ahead of its time;" it enters the "time-stream" as a sometimes stunning innovation by a (usually) brilliant thinker or artificer. Then, it changes society, often in dramatic ways.
  • @ibcasalin9590
    Those people used their minds to think...unlike us who rely on history
  • @IamKlaus007
    All this proves is that human intelligence has been around for a long long time.
  • @cristalmyth09
    People confuse intelligence with time, same with wisdom and age. Humans will always be ahead of their time. All they need will be someone who is capable of bringing it forward.
  • @thehighlander333
    “What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun” Ecclesiastes 1:9
  • @Hornybonker1
    About the thumbnail, ah yes, it was too advanced for the time, the ability to drag rocks
  • @nigelrg1
    A fun video. I was actually hoping for major scientific discoveries or technologies that came out of nowhere and could spark explanations anywhere from alien intervention to time travel into the past - you know, really crazy stuff.😂 There definitely were a few - Leucippus/Democritus' atomic theory, around 4-500 BCE comes to mind. It was remarkably accurate, wasn't based on any prior work and wasn't experimentally confirmed and improved until the 19th century.
  • In South India there are large number of temples built by chera chola Pandian kings . One such temple is in Thanjavur . A single stone weighing hundreds of kilos was placed by building a slop way four or five kilometres long . It is called the Pragadeeswara temple. From Burma huge chunks of teak woods were throughen into the ocean . Due ocean currents they were transported to southern India. Souther Indian kings conquered the Indonesia and surrounding areas and built many temples one is Angorwat . Indian kings did had a big ships sailed from India to Indonesia and srilanka Buddishsam was spread to other countries .
  • @kurtdemesa3388
    "It was supposed to demonstrate the power and wealth of Egypt, and obviously, the amount of wood they have to spare" Man, that one got me hahahha
  • As a self-contained touring cyclist I gotta say that Roman multi-tool was pretty sweet. Also, there's no doubt in my mind what the shovel was for. lol
  • @uekiguy5886
    btw -- In regards to the Egyptian toothless, copper stone-cutting saws: they sprinkled sand into the groove which provided the cutting abrasive.