15 Oldest Buildings in the World

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Top Fives

Top Fives

Күн бұрын

There are some buildings and structures around the world, some of which are still relatively intact, that are as old as time itself. Join us for today’s video, as we countdown the top 15 oldest buildings in the world!
#buildings #top15
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Пікірлер: 891
@topfives
@topfives Жыл бұрын
Have you visited any of these places? Let us know in the comments!
@jeremytrent3534
@jeremytrent3534 11 ай бұрын
You showed a picture of a yellow poster that explains exactly what the 'billboard' said.... No questions remain. It said the name of the king.
@That.Guy.
@That.Guy. 27 күн бұрын
Why is everything always randomly labeled as a temple? Dont know what it is? Just call it a church!
@cinfoley4264
@cinfoley4264 25 күн бұрын
Right, it was all most likely Tartarian architecture from not that long ago
@LeylaOzden-fc1bi
@LeylaOzden-fc1bi 16 күн бұрын
Luxor, Karnak, Gaza, Göbeklitepe.
@JoHnLyDon313
@JoHnLyDon313 Жыл бұрын
Yikes. The inaccuracies in this video are beyond remarkable..
@loltrip2741
@loltrip2741 Ай бұрын
yeah.........
@stefanschleps8758
@stefanschleps8758 Ай бұрын
It's so bad I had to thumb down! Yikes! 😆
@castorkat4868
@castorkat4868 Жыл бұрын
Some of these buildings are FAR from being the oldest ...Half of Rome is older than the Colosseum
@JazzHalesBabyGurl
@JazzHalesBabyGurl 11 ай бұрын
Sphinx’s riddle is a Human - crawling in the morning (as a baby 4), walking in the afternoon (as an adult 2), using a cane in the evening (as an elder 3). First person to answer this in Greek Mythology was Oedipus
@brianschmidt9919
@brianschmidt9919 Ай бұрын
Isn't that the guy who killed his father and married his mother?i have always Wondered who paid for that wedding ??
@JazzHalesBabyGurl
@JazzHalesBabyGurl Ай бұрын
@@brianschmidt9919 Yes the myth that you are thinking of is correct. I do believe his mother/wife paid for it, as she was a noble woman of some kind if memory serves me right. I remember reading the play “Antigone” based upon this myth in school.
@Notacrime2023
@Notacrime2023 Жыл бұрын
Newgrange in Ireland, about 700 years older than the pyramids. It’s even a UNESCO site.
@overwhelmingapathy721
@overwhelmingapathy721 Жыл бұрын
Was expecting that as well
@lagraefz9982
@lagraefz9982 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, you saved me having to point that out.
@nicktamer4969
@nicktamer4969 Жыл бұрын
The Cairn de Barnenez in French Brittany is 2400 years older than the pyramids.
@michaelbonello7795
@michaelbonello7795 Жыл бұрын
Ghar Dalam (loosely translated Night Cavern) in Malta, are considered the oldest erected building worldwide. They date to well over then 7000 years old. They are also a World Heritage!
@Pvstt
@Pvstt Жыл бұрын
700 older then the pyramids lol. For starters, lets assume you mean pyramids/tombs in egypt They cant really date the pyramids. Plus, current (inaccurate) dating says they are very likely to be over 5000 years old? Cleopatra and so on, were the Last-Not the First dynasty.
@DrNatemiester
@DrNatemiester Жыл бұрын
15. Gobekli Tepe 14. Masada, Israel 13. Karnak, Egypt 12. The Colosseum, Rome, Italy 11. Tower of Jericho, Palestine 10. Catalhoyuk, Turkey 9. Knossos, Greece 8. Mohenjo-Daro, Pakistan 7. Knap of Howar, Scotland 6. Dholavira, India 5. Pyramid of Djosser, Egypt 4. Cerro Sechin, Peru 3. The Great Pyramids of Giza, Egypt 2. Temple of Garni, Armenia 1. Ggantija Temples, Malta
@stoopidpaki4806
@stoopidpaki4806 Жыл бұрын
My home village is only about 5 miles from Mohejo Daro, Pakistan - the site is barely 0,5 miles from River Indus. Lot of it is still buried under sand as the area is semi-arid desert and resembles Egypt in many ways.
@paulinecabbed1271
@paulinecabbed1271 Жыл бұрын
Orkney Islands
@owoodford
@owoodford Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Modern location was not given moreany of these sites. So tha k you
@paulinecabbed1271
@paulinecabbed1271 Жыл бұрын
@@owoodford Skara Brae Orkney Islands
@pittino70
@pittino70 Жыл бұрын
No no no Cheope’s )pyramid! It’s 36000 years old! Discovered by an italian scientist with a satellite few mounthes ago!
@billpet4602
@billpet4602 Жыл бұрын
A mention to Akrotiri Santorini Greece. Destroyed by volcanic eruption around 1600 BC. Excavations revealed two floor buildings, sewers, wall paintings etc.etc
@dawngw26
@dawngw26 11 ай бұрын
I've been to the Gjigantia Temples in Malta, and the Colosseum in Rome. Both places were absolutely fascinating to see in person and touch. I would love to visit all of these places some day. I learned about some of them in this video! Very interesting.
@williamjones7163
@williamjones7163 Жыл бұрын
It would be nice to have this story told in chronological order. The Colosseum would be the last instead of the first few stories.
@hagerty1952
@hagerty1952 Жыл бұрын
It's also not one of the 7 ancient wonders. The Pyramids are the only ones left standing.
@barrylenihan8032
@barrylenihan8032 Жыл бұрын
The Colosseum shouldn't be included at all. It doesn't come close to being included in the stated criteria '15 oldest buildings in the world'.
@lhasaroadrat9374
@lhasaroadrat9374 Жыл бұрын
this channel is half-assed
@AliceSusanHarding
@AliceSusanHarding Жыл бұрын
I'm sure y'all could do so much better.
@swerdna1970
@swerdna1970 Жыл бұрын
Agree, this is a mess.
@laurahoffman7094
@laurahoffman7094 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting. I love historical finds and emerging a lot about them. You can say I’m a history nerd is this find is that there on the fast I wanna know more about it. I never knew existed until now. Thank you.
@EASYTIGER10
@EASYTIGER10 Жыл бұрын
This should be titled "15 Interesting Old buildings" as its not remotely the 15 oldest. The coliseum wouldn't even crack the oldest 500 buildings. But I guess this content provider is stuck with its brand....
@MusicalAddictionOnlineLessons
@MusicalAddictionOnlineLessons 11 ай бұрын
Name me which you think are the oldest please? I'm interested
@saulspeaks2557
@saulspeaks2557 10 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, social media has killed truth in history. Tik Tok "historians" are almost exclusively wrong about everything. It's crazy how off they are on any given subject
@karinschultz5409
@karinschultz5409 9 ай бұрын
I agree and it's pronounced Minos, not Menos.
@EASYTIGER10
@EASYTIGER10 9 ай бұрын
@@MusicalAddictionOnlineLessons I don't know - you have to define what you count as a "building" but Wikipedia's article is as good as any and I'm happy to agree with them en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_oldest_extant_buildings
@user-nx4hn6hn4p
@user-nx4hn6hn4p 8 ай бұрын
I am waiting with bated breath for your factually correct list.
@52ponybike
@52ponybike Жыл бұрын
Every time I hear or even read the name 'Karnak' I can't help but think of Johnny Carson and giggle a little. Yeah, I'm older.
@kellistorie7917
@kellistorie7917 Жыл бұрын
The old folk in me honors the old folk in you. I miss Johnny, too. And Dave.
@jeffbell9391
@jeffbell9391 Жыл бұрын
​@@kellistorie7917 it's not the same miss johnny and Dave
@gretchengraef3012
@gretchengraef3012 Жыл бұрын
Me too
@johnsheetz6639
@johnsheetz6639 Жыл бұрын
I just put an envelope to my head, and said we are old!
@margaretfitzgerald7187
@margaretfitzgerald7187 Жыл бұрын
And the mayonnaise jar?
@cijmo
@cijmo Жыл бұрын
I have only been to Masada (lifelong dream realised in 2008) and The Coliseum (2017). Enjoyed them and would love to see all of the others. I think what blows me away about ancient sites is that ... everyone has seen (roughly) the same thing for all these years. With allowances for erosion and (unfortunately) vandalism, we have all looked at the same thing.
@kittys.2870
@kittys.2870 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad Masada was protected from that idiot who wanted to take a helicopter up because he was to fat to walk.
@cijmo
@cijmo Жыл бұрын
@@kittys.2870 When I was in Ephesus, they'd held a Sting concert awhile before. Cracked the foundations. Idiots.
@Mike-wc1ns
@Mike-wc1ns Жыл бұрын
The answer is man. As an infant he crawls on all four. As a young man he walks on two legs. As an old man he walks with a cane, which represents a third leg.
@Stryfe2000
@Stryfe2000 Жыл бұрын
answered by Oedipus (the very same as where we get the Oedipus Complex from)
@catherineshoemaker9106
@catherineshoemaker9106 Жыл бұрын
Yes. Exactly right.. Just saw your comment! You explained it better than me .... Intelligent person
@floral-smoke
@floral-smoke Жыл бұрын
What do women do then?
@mikec1096
@mikec1096 Жыл бұрын
@@floral-smoke lol
@jeebuschristos8423
@jeebuschristos8423 Жыл бұрын
@@floral-smoke They go on regardless?
@eleniasimop
@eleniasimop Жыл бұрын
i believe that Colosseum is rather new for this list. Also, you skipped many older things to rich it. For example everything about bronze age and classical Greece (Mycenae, Olympia, Delphi, the Acropolis etc), or Stonehenge in U.K. etc.
@Research0digo
@Research0digo Жыл бұрын
Precisely. Feel free to read my comment, above.
@WhirledPublishing
@WhirledPublishing Жыл бұрын
Stonehenge boulders were erected by cranes in 1957 - a video of this is on youtube - with photos from a previous installation - in 1914 - also by cranes. Photos of the construction of the Great Pyramid are also online - I've uploaded videos exposing the timeline hoax - and I've uploaded videos exposing the true timeline - those that prefer unsubstantiated claims are free to forget I mentioned it.
@eleniasimop
@eleniasimop Жыл бұрын
@@WhirledPublishing I wouldn't argue about Stonehenge but the lion gate and the walls of Mycenae are in their place since the second millennium B.C. and many structures, citadels, temples etc. all around eastern Mediterranean are there centuries before the Colosseum in Rome.
@WhirledPublishing
@WhirledPublishing Жыл бұрын
@@eleniasimop That's what you were told - so you just believe it - with zero proof - while thousands of independent sources tell us we're being lied to - and thousands of sources tell us the true timeline - but never mind the evidence, you've got your programming - so that's what you cling to - because the truth is not a priority to you - it's your programming that you love so much - it's your "scientific" timeline that you bow down to ... because that's what you're programmed and indoctrinated to do because your evil overlords would never lie to you ... they would never deceive you ... because science is sacred and scientists are brilliant ... and anyone who would dare challenge their lies is a "conspiracy theorist"
@Jacob-Simonsen
@Jacob-Simonsen Жыл бұрын
Stonehenge is not a building. More like a site.
@Morgana0x
@Morgana0x 10 ай бұрын
I've been to the Pyramid of Giza and as you mentioned, though looking at a picture of it is incredible, you don't really get to see the sheer scale of it. Standing next to it left me in awe.
@LeylaOzden-fc1bi
@LeylaOzden-fc1bi 16 күн бұрын
It surpassed all of my imagination when I stood at the foot of the Great Pyramid.
@mikebailey9566
@mikebailey9566 9 ай бұрын
Went to the Coliseum in 1982 while on a US Navy port call in Naples. Took a 96 hr. liberty and went to Rome. Went to Gnosis in 2009 while working, (out of navy by then) at Souda Bay navy base. Stayed in Chania. And had a weekend off. Both places were extremely interesting.
@spokanetomcat1
@spokanetomcat1 Жыл бұрын
Been to Karnak and Luxor Temples in the 80s and are still beautiful sites.
@Driver2616
@Driver2616 Жыл бұрын
There is no mention here in this video of the passage tomb at at Newgrange in Ireland. It’s 5,200 years old and as I understand, it’s actually the oldest structure in the world that you can still walk into and inspect from the inside, rather than looking from the outside at/into ruined remains of a structure.
@susi-emily
@susi-emily Жыл бұрын
I'm sorry to say I'd never heard of Newgrange and I'm in the UK! I've now been and read up on it. Thank you.
@farmerpete6274
@farmerpete6274 Жыл бұрын
Newgrange was just a mound back in the 18th and 19th centuries, looking absolutely nothing like it does today. Totally excavated and then rebuilt with dubious external features. Take a look at old photographs to see what I mean. regards
@Driver2616
@Driver2616 Жыл бұрын
@@farmerpete6274 : As I understand it, nearly four and a half thousand years of disuse resulted in a natural collapse of the external white quartz wall of this tomb and then it just melted into the landscape until it appeared to be nothing more than a little hill covered in grass, weeds and other vegetation. The archaeologists excavated the white stone and reconstructed the L external wall during the 1960’s and 1970’s and brought it back to how it originally was. Inside there was no reconstruction. It remained intact, as it was built over five thousand years ago.
@farmerpete6274
@farmerpete6274 Жыл бұрын
@@Driver2616 Sorry, not quite right. The mound was completely excavated to the inner chamber, before being rebuilt, with concrete walls, complete with rebar. The 'lightbox' was also rebuilt using concrete and rebar. The reuse of the white stone was controversial as there was no evidence that such a wall existed, especiall around the entrance. There are good images on Google. example: irisharchaeology.ie/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/newgrange-excavation.jpg
@petermartin2466
@petermartin2466 Жыл бұрын
Newgrange in Ireland is over 5000 years old.
@otuamab
@otuamab Жыл бұрын
Newgrange is a Stone Age (Neolithic) monument in the Boyne Valley, County Meath, it is the jewel in the crown of Ireland's Ancient East. Newgrange was constructed about 5,200 years ago (3,200 B.C.) which makes it older than Stonehenge and the Great Pyramids of Giza.
@tessjuel
@tessjuel Жыл бұрын
@@otuamab Newgrange still isn't one of the 15 oldest buildings in the world although it's much older than almost all the ones included in this video. Newgrange isn't actually the oldest building in Ireland even. Loughcrew is.
@otuamab
@otuamab Жыл бұрын
@@tessjuel
@otuamab
@otuamab Жыл бұрын
@@tessjuel Your are partially correct the oldest building in Ireland , so far, is Listoghil passage tomb which is 3559 BC versus Longcrew at 3400BC. But we are still learning. There are at least 16 older Buildings discovered to date worldwide.
@tessjuel
@tessjuel Жыл бұрын
@@otuamab You mean wikipedia is partly correct? I don't know, I only quoted them. 😛
@tessjuel
@tessjuel Жыл бұрын
Nice video but rather superficial and the title is highly misleading. Only two of these buildings, Göbekli Tepe and the Tower of Jericho, are among the 15 oldest in the world. The actual list of 15 oldest (known) buildings in the world are, according to wikipedia: 1. Göbekli Tepe (Turkey, 10 000-7 000 BC) 2. Tower of Jericho (Palestine, 7 500 BC) 3. Çatalhöyük (Turkey, 7 500-5 700 BC) 4. Mehrgarh (Pakistan, 7 000 BC) 5. Solnitsata (Bulgaria, 5 500 BC) 6. Durankulak (Bulgaria, 5 500-4 100 BC) tied 7. Barnenez (France, 4 800 BC) tied 7. Tumulus of Bougon (France, 4 800 BC) 9. Saint-Michel tumulus (France, 4 500 BC) 10. Anu ziggurat of Uruk (Iraq, 4 000-3 800 BC) 11. Monte d'Accoddi (Italy, 4 000-3 650 BC) 12. La Hougue Bie (Jersey, 4 000-3 500 BC) tied 13. Knap of Howar (Scotland, 3 700 BC) tied 13. Ġgantija (Malta, 3 700 BC) tied 13. Dolmen of Menga (Spain, 3 700 BC)
@thomascoffin3273
@thomascoffin3273 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't take them chronologically.. Also, Karnak isn't a city.. it's a temple on the outskirts of the city of Luxor, which was called Thebes back then.
@Norralin
@Norralin Жыл бұрын
And also, the colosseum is not one of the 7 wonders of the ancient world.. Obviously this entire list is presented by someone without a clue!
@markstewart4501
@markstewart4501 Жыл бұрын
This channel is algorithm driven. This channel isn't even ATTEMPTING to tell the truth.
@jdawgchappellicious
@jdawgchappellicious Жыл бұрын
I waited through the entire part about Catalhoyuk to hear you say where on Planet Earth it is located but I'm still waiting. I would have suggested identifying that in the first 15 seconds of the clip.
@JAvery-ei1cw
@JAvery-ei1cw Жыл бұрын
Seems, As With Most of The Sites I Find Intriguing These Days, It's Also Found In Turkey, More Specifically (Southern) Anatolia...With The Recent Interest Generated By The Area, I'm Also Really Look Forward To All The Newly (Re)Discovered Sites & Findings, To Come!
@danmc7815
@danmc7815 Жыл бұрын
It is in Turkey, North of Cyrprus, and about halfway from Cyprus to Ankara. I had to search the name on the internet. N
@markstewart4501
@markstewart4501 Жыл бұрын
This channel is algorithm driven. This channel isn't even ATTEMPTING to tell the truth.
@kenichinishikawa7007
@kenichinishikawa7007 Жыл бұрын
I love this video. I visited Masada, Colosseum, Piramid, and Knossos. I love them and upgraded videos of them. I think Knossos is related to Akrotiri and both of them are very interesting.
@exoticmoods1650
@exoticmoods1650 Жыл бұрын
Yes indeed 👍
@user-uo7fw5bo1o
@user-uo7fw5bo1o Ай бұрын
I'm glad that little Roman temple on the hilltop stands proud again 😊
@michaelf.bender3718
@michaelf.bender3718 Жыл бұрын
Amazing as always!
@wilburwood8261
@wilburwood8261 Жыл бұрын
actually a bit frustrating
@Apeshaft
@Apeshaft Жыл бұрын
You also have "Cloaca Maxima" in Rome, or "The great sewer" - constructed as a sewer and storm drain over 2600 years ago. And it's still in use today! And you also have the Roman lighthouse "The Tower of Hercules" built over 2000 years ago and still functions as a lighthouse! All my ancestor did was carve some runestones about "Björn erected this stone in honor of his son Torkil who traveled to Miklagård. He died at sea. Sven carved these runes (copyright by Sven)"
@scipioafricanus5871
@scipioafricanus5871 5 ай бұрын
But your ancestor Sven invented the copyright!!!
@Apeshaft
@Apeshaft 5 ай бұрын
@@scipioafricanus5871 The Vikings also produced one of the seven wonders of the world. It was the huge number 2! Not on the list, just a huge number 2 called the Lloyds Bank Coprolite. Ah huge fossilised viking turd found by a palaeoscatologist in York. Must be very valuable too, since they keep it in a bank and all that jazz. I wonder if students who flunk out of scatology university settles for a degree in palaeoscatologist instead? Reading John Gregory Bourke magnum opus under the title Scatalogic Rites of All Nations (1891), with a 1913 German translation including a foreword by Sigmund Freud must be hard to swallow.
@soso4169
@soso4169 Жыл бұрын
It's not Gnossis, It's KNOSSOS! Please check your facts! It's very a well known archeological site in the island of Crete, Greece.
@Sandi_shores_lands_fish
@Sandi_shores_lands_fish Жыл бұрын
One of those people huh I bet you call Ibiza Like I pizza Like the vengaboys sang it God that was confusing... Hey Where going to i pizza Whoah On a part- Wait? What where are you going on a pizza?
@jeannieheard1465
@jeannieheard1465 Ай бұрын
AI wasn't programmed to understand your fine point. AI was born to screw humans into the ground.
@arvidlystnur4827
@arvidlystnur4827 27 күн бұрын
I wanted the Mexican guide to take me to the town named Wahocka, and we ended up in Oaxaca!
@user-pf5jz9me4m
@user-pf5jz9me4m Жыл бұрын
My home village is only about 5 miles from Mohejo Daro, Pakistan - the site is barely 0.5 miles from River Indus. Lot of it is still buried under sand as the area is semi-arid desert and resembles Egypt in many ways.
@busterbiloxi3833
@busterbiloxi3833 Жыл бұрын
And they were not Muslims. You are a Hindu and your ancestors were forced to convert to Islam.
@wilburwood8261
@wilburwood8261 Жыл бұрын
Can you show the LOCATIONS?
@stoopidpaki4806
@stoopidpaki4806 Жыл бұрын
15. Gobekli Tepe 14. Masada, Israel 13. Karnak, Egypt 12. The Colosseum, Rome, Italy 11. Tower of Jericho, Palestine 10. Catalhoyuk, Turkey 9. Knossos, Greece 8. Mohenjo-Daro, Pakistan 7. Knap of Howar, Scotland
@El-Babilonico
@El-Babilonico Жыл бұрын
You do not have the full information and I do not know whether it is intentional or unintentional stupidity!! Iraq has a lot of places & i am wondering who is behind this not only in this video but in everywhere.. The hand will never block the sun's rays. #Mesopotamia
@wilburwood8261
@wilburwood8261 Жыл бұрын
@@stoopidpaki4806 thanks. unbelievable lack of attention to detail, and lack of consideration for viewers by the uploader.
@jeannieheard1465
@jeannieheard1465 Ай бұрын
@@stoopidpaki4806 We are asking the "author" of this list presented.
@jontalbot1
@jontalbot1 Жыл бұрын
At Catalhoyuk the houses are built one on top of another so maybe that’s why there are so few artefacts
@Duxydogs
@Duxydogs Жыл бұрын
Gobekli Tepe was actually first found by an American oil company surveying the region in the ‘60’s…
@Gayoinion
@Gayoinion Жыл бұрын
Our trash will outlive any structure we built
@benibluefoe
@benibluefoe 8 ай бұрын
hmmm. what happened to Monte Verde II? At 14,500 yrs old it's a bit older than the sites on this list.
@Kimmy-pw8tm
@Kimmy-pw8tm Жыл бұрын
They deciphered a sky calendar that was depicted at Gobecly tepli, and a catastrophe happened around 10,400 BC. These people witnessed an asteroid and underground cities were dug and gave thousands of people, in so far found, 5 underground cities in Turkey. These people escaped tsunamis and darkness by living underground.
@chriskube8872
@chriskube8872 Жыл бұрын
would be nice if you named the countries these buildings were found
@sg40011
@sg40011 Жыл бұрын
my reaction exactly.
@YogiMcCaw
@YogiMcCaw Жыл бұрын
He does in the narration, but not in the printed name. The comment above by Nathaniel Smith also has the countries listed.
@johncutajar5560
@johncutajar5560 Жыл бұрын
It's incredible that the oldest built structure in the world is found on one of the smallest islands in the world that is Malta.
@freyalarsen6233
@freyalarsen6233 Жыл бұрын
There are millions of islands smaller than Malta.
@MargotDobbie
@MargotDobbie Жыл бұрын
​@@freyalarsen6233 not as a nation. Shut up
@busterbiloxi3833
@busterbiloxi3833 Жыл бұрын
Corsican shepherds' huts. Bah!
@dawngw26
@dawngw26 11 ай бұрын
@@freyalarsen6233 "one of the smallest" not THE smallest
@freyalarsen6233
@freyalarsen6233 3 ай бұрын
@@dawngw26 Still wrong, since there are hundred thousands of islands smaller than Malta. There are more than 250 000 small islands in Sweden alone! Malta is not a small island. Therefore, it cannot be "one of the smallest islands".
@Sk8Bettty
@Sk8Bettty Жыл бұрын
Man first crawls on all fours, walks on two legs, then uses a cane at the end
@mattstagger
@mattstagger 11 ай бұрын
A top 15 list done by Top Fives of nominally the oldest but more likely the most famous or popular. As thousands of years separates Jericho and the Colliseum, they should retitle this as something like 15 cool ruins or something. They are cool.
@nicktamer4969
@nicktamer4969 Жыл бұрын
The Cairn de Barnenez, in french Brittany, was built 5000 bc. And it's still there.
@chrisvickers7928
@chrisvickers7928 Жыл бұрын
Newgrange in Ireland is 5200 years old. It predates most of these.
@swamykatragadda8661
@swamykatragadda8661 Жыл бұрын
each site location country map will be appreciated.
@wilburwood8261
@wilburwood8261 Жыл бұрын
exactly
@marilynwells1872
@marilynwells1872 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed your content, but the place in Scotland is pronounced SCAR-a-brae, not SACRA-brae.
@clnre
@clnre Жыл бұрын
Thanks for clarifying this, I had no idea where he was talking about!
@occym7560
@occym7560 Жыл бұрын
And it's Orkney not The Orkneys. Never the Orkneys.
@jeannieheard1465
@jeannieheard1465 Ай бұрын
AI doesn't give a shid.
@brankobelfranin8815
@brankobelfranin8815 Жыл бұрын
The colesseum in Rome is old, but there are older one's for example Pula ( Croatia) has one and it is older than the one in Rome.
@andreasf3882
@andreasf3882 Жыл бұрын
Nice video ;) but your picture from the title picture in the video is the Porta Nigra in Germany (city of Trier)
@BubuMarimba
@BubuMarimba Жыл бұрын
Colloseum is far from beimg one of the oldest buildings
@jpmtlhead39
@jpmtlhead39 Жыл бұрын
The most impressive fact abaut Masada its not the building but the way the Romans were able to conquer that fortress. Very Impressive.
@fdshands2663
@fdshands2663 Жыл бұрын
For a fictional tour of spiritual spaces from Malta to Spain to Kyoto, try Frame 39 by Rick Shands
@AlteranAngel
@AlteranAngel Жыл бұрын
As fun as it can be (for some people) to go through lists of things and/or items that concern history, I like those lists more when they come with at least a decent amount of factual basis. Naturally tolerant I'd let a few mishaps slide, but when dealing with the sun temple in Garni I finally felt I had no recourse but to correct you. The temple was dedicated to Mihr, an (surprise...) Armenian sun deity and not Helios. Which incidently is not a Roman sun deity, that more likely being Sol (Invictus), but a greek sun deity. That said, I still enjoyed it, even if it was just to see what such a list could deliver if there's plenty of room for improvement.
@WhirledPublishing
@WhirledPublishing Жыл бұрын
This pompous upload - by Top Fives - is beyond insane - his unsubstantiated timeline claims are exposed as preposterous nonsense by the conspicuous evidence - but you'd have to actually care about the truth in order to do the research - instead of just being a mindless sock puppet for some idiot.
@Duxydogs
@Duxydogs Жыл бұрын
Great point…one of the problems with history, amongst many, is that , more times than not, is that it was written by the conquerors/rulers/vassals ; if the material is from “written” works then you have the problem of the “unreliable narrator”. I still think that there might be one or two more “Troys” out the just waiting for a ”H. Schliemann” to come along.
@doclewis8927
@doclewis8927 Жыл бұрын
Considering he started by saying that some of the buildings are as "old as time itself", I'd say not to trust much in what is said about the buildings other than where they're located.
@WhirledPublishing
@WhirledPublishing Жыл бұрын
​@@doclewis8927 Since the "scientific" timeline is "theoretical", since their geological and historical timelines are contradicted by thousands of independent sources, documented in dozens of languages from all across our Earth while the fake biblical timeline of nearly 6,000 years is also contradicted by thousands of independent sources from all across our Earth, if you want to be intelligent and knowledgeable, review the voluminous evidence before taking a stand on how old time is - here on this Earth. You're free to believe what you want but since the 85 to 115 IQ's of geologists are uploaded online - by Psychologists - since the vast majority of geologists have the intellectual equivalent of smart grade school children ... Since the geologists' C average from low level institutions - with minimal entrance requirements - are also conspicuous, we know most of them barely squeaked by in their Chemistry, Biology and Calculus classes ... to believe in the timeline from the "scientific community" is not recommended. If you're unaware of these conspicuous facts, please go to your local college where you can take their academic placement test - and then listen carefully as your adolescent scores in "Comprehension" are explained to you. Since you've never cared about the truth to compile thousands of independent sources - in dozens of languages from all across our Earth - you're unaware that the true timeline for our Earth is documented, since you don't know the true timeline for humankind is also documented while you assume you do know, your self-aggrandizing delusional detachment from reality is exposed as a fraud - similar to this youtube uploader. If you should ever grow a conscience, you will look at the evidence instead of being a mindless sock puppet for your evil overlords that programmed and indoctrinated you to be insanely pompous.
@GladysAlicea
@GladysAlicea Жыл бұрын
I'm with you. Maybe you remember the name of an ancient monolithic palace built atop a very high mountain in India somewhere (I think). It was featured on an Ancient Aliens episode focusing on monolithic sites too insane to comprehend, and I'd love to find online images. I'm a huge fan of all things ancient and antiquity. Netflix is often worthless except for sometimes unusual docs; Graham Hancock's "Ancient Apocalypse" is quite detailed, with places I'd never seen before. (I don't claim to know them all but love them all.) Tks.
@CarlosGarcia-fi4yu
@CarlosGarcia-fi4yu Жыл бұрын
what walks with 4 leg in the AM? Answer: A Baby. Walks with 2 legs? Answer: An adult. Walks with three? Answer: An Old Person.
@lynx141
@lynx141 Жыл бұрын
Would have been better if the age was cited in the caption on the videos.
@oskartross8459
@oskartross8459 Жыл бұрын
Would be interesting video about 15 Oldest buildings what still looks original and are not remains
@moonwalker091000
@moonwalker091000 Жыл бұрын
This is a very impressive list :o) My favourite is the Roman Coliseum. Great video. Thanks and looking forward to the next one :o)
@topfives
@topfives Жыл бұрын
Same my favourite is the roman colosseum!
@Trigger-Warning
@Trigger-Warning Жыл бұрын
Jesus was LITERALLY a scarecrow, designed by Rome to keep the bullies in power and the ignorant in fear. He never existed. Not a god, not a son, not a prophet, not a guru, not even a regular guy. There was no baby jesus at all.
@stokedtoker9455
@stokedtoker9455 Жыл бұрын
Man, four as a baby, two as an adult, three as a senior, suggesting the third leg is a cane. Don't know who originally answered it.
@shannonkeys8594
@shannonkeys8594 Жыл бұрын
Gobekli tepe was the first site to contain evidence of irrigation for crops and farming.
@Shoey77100
@Shoey77100 Жыл бұрын
Gobeckli Tepe does not show any evidence of farming or irrigation, the people who built Gobeckli Tepe were hunter/gatherers, Klaus Schmidt proved that beyond a doubt.
@shannonkeys8594
@shannonkeys8594 Жыл бұрын
@Stacey Shomaker Layer I Layer I is the uppermost part of the hill. It is the shallowest but accounts for the longest stretch of time. It consists of loose sediments caused by erosion and the virtually-uninterrupted use of the hill for agricultural purposes since it ceased to operate as a ceremonial center. Around the beginning of the 8th millennium BCE, Göbekli Tepe lost its importance. The advent of agriculture and animal husbandry brought new realities to human life in the area, and the "Stone-age zoo" (Schmidt's phrase applied particularly to Layer III, Enclosure D. Agriculture. I rest my case
@mindquestglobal
@mindquestglobal 9 ай бұрын
Interesting. I never heard of Cerro Sechin but I was not far in Chavin the Huantar, another ancient site. I've been to the Colosseum. I really want to go to Karnak.
@anthonyvandyk5150
@anthonyvandyk5150 3 ай бұрын
Go to Ankor Wat
@tommonk7651
@tommonk7651 Жыл бұрын
The Roman Colosseum is not one of the 7 wonders of the ancient world.... And I doubt seriously that it is one of the 15 oldest structures on earth.
@lenguy45
@lenguy45 Жыл бұрын
They never said Ancient. They just said world. Which it is. There's a list of 7 Ancient Wonders and a list of Modern Wonders. The Colosseum falls under the modern portion.
@tommonk7651
@tommonk7651 Жыл бұрын
@@lenguy45 Perhaps, but the title calls the video "The 15 Oldest Buildings In the World" which it most certainly is not.
@zeedub8560
@zeedub8560 Жыл бұрын
@@tommonk7651 It's not even old by Roman standards.
@tommonk7651
@tommonk7651 Жыл бұрын
@@zeedub8560 Exactly....
@tommonk7651
@tommonk7651 Жыл бұрын
@EXPOSING.THE.SATURNISTS Accuracy would be nice.... 😆
@cristianroth8524
@cristianroth8524 Жыл бұрын
Judging by its strangely good condition, the oldest recognizable building in the world is the hut at the site of Ohalo II, in Israel. It dates from roughly 22,000 B.C. Yes, twenty-two thousand.
@roystonmason9125
@roystonmason9125 Жыл бұрын
never heard of it
@cristianroth8524
@cristianroth8524 Жыл бұрын
@@roystonmason9125 It's an archaeological site somewhere in Israel. It belongs to the Kebaran culture (23,000 - 15,000 BC) which were the first to preferentially collect wild plants and process them. They precede the more famous Natufians, which were the first to systematically collect wild cereals and build permanent settlements. At the beginning of the Younger Dryas, Natufians even started intervening in the growth of cereals to save them from the colder climate, which is basically the first attempt at agriculture. almost 14 millennia ago. They were insanely advanced for their time.
@roystonmason9125
@roystonmason9125 Жыл бұрын
@@cristianroth8524 but no city
@cristianroth8524
@cristianroth8524 Жыл бұрын
@@roystonmason9125 What?
@roystonmason9125
@roystonmason9125 Жыл бұрын
@@cristianroth8524 wut wut
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 11 ай бұрын
Masada now has no trees!! I suppose it once had them. This was quite a video. Thank you. What it was like to walk it? How about what it was like to be the builders of that. Difficult, and harsh.
@MorrisonsProphecy
@MorrisonsProphecy Ай бұрын
Smiply stolling through Rome, you can find 30 buildings older the Colosseum in the time it takes to sneeze.
@StephanieElizabethMann
@StephanieElizabethMann Жыл бұрын
I think the builders of today could learn a lot from the builders of yesterday. Ruins of communities up to 5 thousand years ago still clearly standing, displaying the archetecture and art of their day. They must have been brilliant at all the skills required to build such wonderful places to live.
@WhirledPublishing
@WhirledPublishing Жыл бұрын
Please stop believing their timeline lies - it's a hoax - it's a colossal hoax - it's a big moneymaker because the unintelligent gullible people pay for this nonsense - they get on airplanes, go to hotels, pay admission fees, buy souvenirs, pay for taxis and restaurants - and who do you think owns the hotels? Who owns the airlines? Who rakes in the money off the taxes? The billionaires control it all - they're raking in the hard-earned money from imbeciles that think they're intelligent - it's all controlled by the secret society criminal cartels which are run by stupid greedy old men that are controlled by the billionaire banksters.
@MargotDobbie
@MargotDobbie Жыл бұрын
Dumb statement. Builders have nothing to learn. Its not that hard when you have nothing but time unlimited man power and resource. We could easily build what the ancients build of we got rid of society and focused purely on a pyramid with everything we have
@MD11339
@MD11339 Жыл бұрын
Thankyou|. Cannot wait to see more|||
@jackdarbyshire5888
@jackdarbyshire5888 Жыл бұрын
Wouldn't mind seeing that mini series Masada, can't remember which network it aired on years ago 🤔✌
@ronbo11
@ronbo11 Жыл бұрын
Wikipedia entry says it was aired on ABC in 1981. I remember watching that. There were so many great mini-series back then starting with Roots in the late 70s, Shogun, The Winds of War, North and South and Holocaust, just to name a few.
@jackdarbyshire5888
@jackdarbyshire5888 Жыл бұрын
@@ronbo11 thank you 😊 I've seen all of ones you mentioned, i it really was great entertainment back then and everyone was talking about them when you got to high-school the next morning, I'm a history buff and watch and read nothing but 👍✌
@joeg5414
@joeg5414 Жыл бұрын
0:17 crazy how modern it looks for being so old
@bryonmartin1386
@bryonmartin1386 Жыл бұрын
Knossos…been there, its a joke…basically, archeologists found a pile of rocks then fashioned walls in a manner in which they thought the walls were arranged-its one giant guess…oh, and the painted columns they show are all circa 19th century.
@janosik47
@janosik47 Жыл бұрын
But the throne and sewage system are original and couple of walls . I was disappointed also that most is 19 th century creation.
@alxx1378
@alxx1378 Жыл бұрын
Festos is more fascinating.
@shelahansuriza9463
@shelahansuriza9463 Жыл бұрын
There exist older sites as the Earth shifts on its a axis to reveal. You'll be shocked to learn some of them pre-date "450,000" years. Yes all the history books will be rewritten.
@chrisbelos2834
@chrisbelos2834 Жыл бұрын
Archeology is redefining our knowledge of humanity for over 3 century now. Oceanic archeology is just beginning and when they'll find all the cities or building lost in the mediteranean, this will open our eyes once again. there are tons of underwater sites to be found, mostly because when the last Ice age ended and the ocean rised, costal buildings were lost to the ocean.
@TammyMullins-jv8wm
@TammyMullins-jv8wm 10 ай бұрын
What blows my mind how they built it 😮amazing me
@lamastu2156
@lamastu2156 Жыл бұрын
Coloseum is one of the newest buildings mate. You forgot everything how to do with Greeks, Parthenon of Athens, Palace of Mycenea and tomb of Amphipolis the great Macedonian grave who was meant for Alexander. Also Petra of Jordanian is much older than Coloseum. Also you forgot Sphinx of Giza, Matsu Pitsu, the whole island of Delos, Delphi, gates of Hatusa and many others who existed for thousands of years before Coloseum. Good trying but very poor information
@paraic9163
@paraic9163 Жыл бұрын
And newgrange in ireland
@mudman6156
@mudman6156 Жыл бұрын
Carbon dating is totally inaccurate for determining the age of a building. Or for that matter, much of anything else, unless the item in question was once alive. All it tells you is the age of the material that was used in the construction of the item in question. Nothing else. So if they carbon dated the stones used in the building, then they figured out how old the stones were. That doesn’t make the building that old. Stones that may be millions of years old could be used to build a building that’s FAR, FAR newer (obviously, as there weren’t any buildings, or people for that matter, around a million years ago).
@richardpierce4680
@richardpierce4680 Жыл бұрын
U can't carbon date stone do a little research
@richardpierce4680
@richardpierce4680 Жыл бұрын
Yes there were humans 1 million years ago
@JonathanTownson
@JonathanTownson 11 ай бұрын
Never heard of the Nap of Horror in the Orkney Islands off the north of Scotland, Skara Brae however is a one of Britain's most fascinating prehistoric villages. Archeologists estimate it was built and occupied between 3000BCE and 2500BCE, during what's called the 'Neolithic era' or 'New Stone Age'.
@clintcountryman4849
@clintcountryman4849 Жыл бұрын
Why is the channel not called Top 15?
@joncaulkett5198
@joncaulkett5198 Жыл бұрын
some of these are Roman; not that old
@vickilindberg6336
@vickilindberg6336 9 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Thank you. However, aqueducts predate the Romans & recreations at Skara Brae indicate a sort of domed looking top that would allow residents to well exceed 5 feet tall.
@arno3191
@arno3191 Жыл бұрын
Why there is no order in place ? The first place is 12,000 years old and the the second and third maxmimum 4,000 , i mean we except to see the newest at the beginning and the oldest in the ending but it seems like there is no order to them . And why the age of some of the places has not been mentioned in the video ? I mean if your team have investigated all of them so there shoud be statistics and numbers and years for every place that you mention
@wilburwood8261
@wilburwood8261 Жыл бұрын
not only that, there is no LOCATION. no COUNTRY, no MAP, nothing. for example, shot-them-hoolio (or whatever), the video never mentions where it is. I find that most frustrating.
@marijanas7507
@marijanas7507 Жыл бұрын
Bad comercial video, thats why
@popguy2815
@popguy2815 Жыл бұрын
The local climate for some of these locations was somewhat different from today thus how they worked isn't so obvious.
@franward6851
@franward6851 Жыл бұрын
A child crawling, an adult on 2 feet, and an older person with a cane.
@melanielawler3344
@melanielawler3344 Жыл бұрын
Oedipus was the first to answer the riddle of the Sphinx and the answer is man. First crawling, then walking and finally using a cane.
@andi5262
@andi5262 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I was looking for this.😊
@craigbhill
@craigbhill Жыл бұрын
FALSE ADVERTIZING! These are NOT the oldest buildings in the world, they are 15 famous old buildings, but not the oldest.
@taebundy658
@taebundy658 Ай бұрын
I was gonna say the same thing
@DarthMR
@DarthMR Жыл бұрын
Not clear why the Temple of Garni is in this list since the present building is a reconstruction from the 1970s.
@SuperCoccyx
@SuperCoccyx Жыл бұрын
The aging of a human - Oedipus answered it first.
@chestermicek
@chestermicek Жыл бұрын
Here's my answer to your riddle: Man. When a man or a woman is a baby, they crawl around of all fours. When they are old enough, they switch to two legs, and then, when they are too old to have enough strength & balance to walk on two legs, they use a cane, i.e., three legs. Of course, it is necessary to think of morning, noon, and night as infancy, adulthood, and old age, but it's a riddle so metaphors are to be expected.
@jeannieheard1465
@jeannieheard1465 Ай бұрын
Get lost, Chester.
@rodolfoayalajr.8589
@rodolfoayalajr.8589 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for this educational video friend . Amen 🙏.
@anthonyvandyk5150
@anthonyvandyk5150 3 ай бұрын
Wrong info all incorrect
@classiclife7204
@classiclife7204 Жыл бұрын
Interestingly, the oldest structures are among the most original. Almost everything from ancient Egypt on is a near-total reconstruction.
@curtisbrown8971
@curtisbrown8971 Күн бұрын
Great video narrator sounds like Charlie sheen😂
@user-wb4tx5ry4c
@user-wb4tx5ry4c 8 ай бұрын
In England and the UK as a whole, people have rocks in their back yard older than all of these (they put their cicarettes out on them and get on with their day). Im from St Louis but my family is from England. Ive been MANY times and im shocked at how old things are. I went to a pub called the Golden Fleece Inn and half the pub is buried underground from thousands of years of growth on the Earth. Only the upstairs windows are visible. I went to a beach on the Jurassic Coast near Old Harry's rocks and there were fossils in the rocks on the ground from the Jurassic period millions of years ago. Gobsmacked.
@juanlapuente833
@juanlapuente833 8 ай бұрын
Video is nice, but title is missleading. You started well with Gobekli Tepe, then just continued with famous and beautiful places that are not the oldest, in any sense
@successisurs
@successisurs Жыл бұрын
Missed Newgrange and other constructions around the Boyne Vally
@caddothegreat
@caddothegreat 25 күн бұрын
Gobekli Tepe. I noticed one or more of the carved stones are carrying the purse or hand bag seen on Sumerian carvings.
@catherineshoemaker9106
@catherineshoemaker9106 Жыл бұрын
An infant... A viral man.... An elderly man
@andrewsimmers8273
@andrewsimmers8273 Жыл бұрын
I enjoy all your content and keep them coming
@Stephonya1215
@Stephonya1215 Жыл бұрын
The colosseum isn’t one of the 7 wonders.
@peterbreis5407
@peterbreis5407 Жыл бұрын
These are not the oldest buildings in the World they are a random list of old buildings, most not so ancient in human terms. Who was this aimed at? Poorly educated Americans?
@ankhpom9296
@ankhpom9296 Ай бұрын
Probably.
@Scouseviking1990
@Scouseviking1990 11 ай бұрын
The Grand Canyon is very very old and holds many secrets my ancestors guided me there and I seen things no one else has
@jennifer-joey
@jennifer-joey Жыл бұрын
Lol we finally translate that billboard "live laugh love" lol
@danielobrien1571
@danielobrien1571 Жыл бұрын
How long do you wear your hair? I find that attractive, describe how it looks?
@HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey
@HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey Жыл бұрын
Number 2 was nonsense no matter when the original was built it ceased to exist and what we saw was a 1970's building. What about going to the Necropolis in Ireland built before the pyramids were even thought of and still to be admired.
@jimmydodds9659
@jimmydodds9659 Жыл бұрын
What about oldest building lived in?
@marcmoris3590
@marcmoris3590 Жыл бұрын
that's not the 15 Oldest Buildings, some are very young
@michaelrindebo7485
@michaelrindebo7485 8 ай бұрын
I would have liked the video to be about oldest buildings still in USE. I don’t really see a ruin as a building. Maybe a future project?😉
@TroyMason-zu7rd
@TroyMason-zu7rd Жыл бұрын
How did the colosseum make this list? Not only is it not very ancient, it's not even the oldest building in Rome.
@goheen1701
@goheen1701 Жыл бұрын
Old as "Time Itself"? None of these even come close, but 10's of thousands of years is impressive for humans. The 14.5 Billion years since the beginning of Time can't even see the speck of 10K years...
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