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15 Fascinating Facts About Asturias - Spain’s Last Bastion
🎥 Uncover the wonders of Asturias! Join us as we delve into its rich history, vibrant culture, and captivating heritage through these 15 fascinating facts! 🇪🇸
00:25 ⛏️ Roman Ingenuity - Discover the ancient secrets of Asturian gold mining…
01:31 ⚔️ Reconquista Birthplace - A pivotal movement in Spanish history began…
02:37 🏛️ Unique Art - Explore the distinctive architectural style found only here…
03:42 ⚱️ Saint's Tomb - Uncover a legendary discovery in Asturian soil…
04:45 🎶 Celtic Music - Hear the melodies that keep ancient traditions alive…
05:41 ⚓️ Maritime Heritage - Dive into a legacy of seafaring and celebration…
06:50 🏭 Industrial Era - See how a small region sparked a new industrial age…
07:55 👑 Monarchy Restored - Find out how Asturias influenced Spanish royalty…
08:54 🗺️ Wordwide Communities - Trace the Asturian footprints around the world…
09:53 💔 War Impact - Understand the lasting effects of a major conflict…
10:52 📜 Language Preservation - Discover efforts to keep an ancient language alive…
11:55 🤼‍♂️ Traditional Sports - Get to know the unique games played for generations…
13:02 🍲 Heirloom Recipes - Taste the history in every traditional dish…
14:06 ⛪ Cultural Emblem - Visit a site of immense cultural significance…
15:06 🏞️ UNESCO Sites - Explore the world-renowned treasures of Asturias…
Subscribe, like, and hit the bell icon to reveal more fascinating insights and Untold History! 🔔
#Asturias #AsturiasParaisoNatural #AsturiasSpain
zhlédnutí: 13 063

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Komentáře

  • @Iceland874
    @Iceland874 Před 29 minutami

    We had a Basque foreign exchange student my twin brothers’ age. Almost 40 years later we still keep in touch with him and his family. I am RH negative and have a little Basque through an immigrant ancestor on my dad’s side who came to America in the late 1600s. My mom is negative and her family has Welsh. Thank you for a fascinating and informative video.

  • @radwest86406
    @radwest86406 Před 52 minutami

    The Ainu people were probably one of the first peoples of The Americas.

  • @Dtt4
    @Dtt4 Před hodinou

    The AI voice is got to go.

  • @Iceland874
    @Iceland874 Před hodinou

    Apparently my ancient 34th great grandfather united the Celts and and the Picts- according to genealogists and Scottish history. I appreciate your video and all the informative history. Excellent! Learned a lot.

  • @Sin2omnida
    @Sin2omnida Před hodinou

    댓글 꼬라지 보니 오랑캐들의 뻘글이 너무나 많구나.

  • @restlessfae2407
    @restlessfae2407 Před 12 hodinami

    The animism part reminds me of the indigenous of north America. They believe animals, trees,etc had spirits.

  • @angr3819
    @angr3819 Před 13 hodinami

    They became strong from eating the haggis, which were plentiful then. The Haggis Wildlife Foundation has documented the different varieties of these creatures, from small to large. Some good photographs. Pity they are now either extinct or extremely rare now. My Victorian born grandparents used to make haggis fur hats and scarves when I was young. I wish I had kept mine even though fur isn't popular now. It was necessary in the cold. Saved many lives.

  • @angr3819
    @angr3819 Před 13 hodinami

    Look up the tartans of the mummies of the Tarim Basin. One is exactly the same as one belonging to the line of my paternal grandfather, except it lacks a thin yellow line. Look what the Han CCP did to stop further digs of at least hundreds more remains and artifacts. Irrigating planted trees in the desert to destroy all beneath. That is some race hate. They would have done the same whatever race wasn't their own. Even academics aren't allowed to see the mummies found without a lot of officialdom. The CCP really hate that they weren't there first.

  • @TheMirageQuest
    @TheMirageQuest Před 13 hodinami

    I liked them until I heard they killed their bear who is their friend. Don’t find that respectful

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před 11 hodinami

      It is a Siberian bear worship animist practice adopted by the Ainu. The Ainu raise a bear cub and keep it as a family pet for 2 years then sacrifice it to release its spirit to the bear god that they worship. For us its cruel, but not much different than Native American Plains Indians who worshipped the buffalo spirits after a hunt to thank them for feeding and clothing them, or ancient Israelites who offered animal sacrifices and Mayans and Aztecs -- who offered Human Sacrifices!!! The Bible condemned the Israelites who followed the Canaanite (Palestinian) practice of infant sacrifice (after-birth abortion) to their god Molech (Ba'al). A large metal idol of Molech was fired up in a furnace in its belly and the newborn was placed on its outstretched arms and burned alive. The priests would drown out the shrieks with loud drumming. It's believed that this tradition gave us the expression "fire in the belly."

    • @TheMirageQuest
      @TheMirageQuest Před 10 hodinami

      @@Jomon50 yes I don’t like any of those human practices either… the mayans even buried their children alive. The spirits might have been demons - what else could they have been? Humans are stupid and unable to discern everywhere

    • @TheMirageQuest
      @TheMirageQuest Před 10 hodinami

      @@Jomon50 I think Baal most definitely was a demon. That’s horrific and anyone who did that should live in whatever hell is for an eternity. I’m not Christian or anything it’s just how I feel

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před 9 hodinami

      @@TheMirageQuest Well your feelings are very instinctive because many people believe that those ancient demonic spirits are still with us today and are still being "worshipped" in manifestations of different modern cultural practices. Yikes!

    • @TheMirageQuest
      @TheMirageQuest Před 9 hodinami

      @@Jomon50 yes I know they are. I was raised in a cult so I was forced to notice these things even though I didn’t want to! Also I’m extremely curious about everything so it’s my fault a bit also :) I will try to make my life useful somehow

  • @AngryGenXer
    @AngryGenXer Před 14 hodinami

    Wake up Spain. Madrid will soon be a caliphate under sharia law. Re-start the reconquest! Long live the spirit of Covadonga!

  • @mrparkerdan
    @mrparkerdan Před 17 hodinami

    Joseon also had the 1st McDonalds 😉

  • @HummelJaeger
    @HummelJaeger Před 17 hodinami

    And, as seen at 1:36, their isolation has introduced unique physical adaptions such as six-fingered hands (or three-fingers for women). :-)

  • @asturiasceltic3183
    @asturiasceltic3183 Před 17 hodinami

    10:07 ...Why would there be a African man with a fro in 1930s Asturias during the Spanish Civil War? If you want to choose an actual victim of the Spanish Civil War depict an Asturiano like the one in my thumbnail from the Picos of Asturias, who did die in the Spanish Civil War when a firing squad went after him for writing pamphlets against Franco and Fascism.

  • @asturiasceltic3183
    @asturiasceltic3183 Před 17 hodinami

    Most of those cartoon people look nothing like the men in Asturias.

  • @asturiasceltic3183
    @asturiasceltic3183 Před 17 hodinami

    Asturias was founded as a sanctuary for Visigothic nobles. The people are mainly celt-iberian and go back as far as Neantherdal days. Asturias is one of eight celtic nations including Galicia.

  • @jenniferbreaux7385
    @jenniferbreaux7385 Před 18 hodinami

    Assimilation sounds more like cultural eradication

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před 11 hodinami

      You hit the nail on its head! The Japanese proverb is: The nail that sticks up gets pounded down. In 701 CE, the Chronicles of Japan recorded a Yamato military campaign to eliminate the last Jomon tribes: descendants of ancient South Asians (India, Bangladesh) who settled Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and Japan 30,000 years ago. By 800 CE the Jomon are no longer mentioned in historical records and to this day their culture is extinct in Japan (about 5 Jomon words exist in Japanese). However, the Ainu are the last remaining Jomon tribe who survived the Genocide because Hokkaido was not part of Yamato Japan. (A 2019 Ainu DNA study found 79% Jomon DNA. A 2010 study found that 80% of Ainu men carry Jomon D-M55 Y DNA. Jomon M7 Maternal DNA is also common.) Other Jomon tribes included the Emishi, Kumaso and Hayato. (The Jomon also settled Okinawa 9,000 years ago.) The Japanese called the Ainu "Eizo" (or Yezo which is old Japanese meaning Hokkaido) and the Ainu Homeland encompassed the adjacent northern Tohoku region of Honshu island, Japan. 1,000 years after the Jomon Genocide, Japan annexed the "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido in 1869 and instituted a forced assimilation policy to solve its "Ainu problem." Measures included banning the Ainu language, the tatooing of women, hunting and salmon fishing. Because of assimilation and the traditional Ainu custom of adopting Japanese orphans (girls were favored) Ainu began to resemble Japanese as they do today. Hokkaido was finally designated an official Prefecture in 1947.

  • @EnochMoeller
    @EnochMoeller Před 22 hodinami

    Your AI image generation is off. Check out the young woman farming at about 18:14

  • @kpreno
    @kpreno Před dnem

    WOW! Amazing... ALL of it! Thank you <3 :) <3

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT Před 20 hodinami

      You are very welcome. So glad you enjoyed the video! 😊

  • @ThePaigowboy
    @ThePaigowboy Před dnem

    You forgot to mention that the Joseon Dynasty practice Slavery and a very strict caste system with an isolationist mindset. If you want to see what society is like during the Joseon Dynasty, see North Korea today.

  • @ramondelgado4927
    @ramondelgado4927 Před dnem

    What i find super interesting is that people often make comparisions between Ainu and the natives from North and South america , while the treatment may seem similar , the context is very diferent , natives in america were subjugated by eropeans that arrived less than 200yrs ago at best , very recent history , while the ainu were subjegated by Yamato and Jomon people that have been living in the japanese archipelago since around 2K yrs ago , they were not opressed by "invaders/conquerors" like most others , but by the very people already living there , they are all japanese , none are more or less japanese than the other A closer comparison i think , would be like macedonia subjugating (assimilating) greece and Rome later on doing the same to them and so on thru history , the issue here is than japan isolation cause it to endure into modern times I always had a love for their clothing , ever since an uncle gifted me a book about japan which had (unexpectedly) a chapter dedicated to them , im glad they are having a resurgance in life

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před dnem

      Ainu were absolutely not subjugated by the Jomon because they are the northernmost and sole surviving tribe of Jomon (D-M55 Y DNA and M7 mtDNA), an ancient South Asian race (India, Bangladesh) who migrated to Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and settled Japan 30,000 years ago. A 2010 DNA study found that 80% of Ainu men carry D-M55 DNA. The Ainu were called "Eizo" (or Yezo, old Japanese meaning Hokkaido). The Eizo (Ainu) homeland encompassed Hokkaido and the adjacent Tohoku region of Northern Honshu island (Japan). Some scientists believe the Ainu lived throughout Japan and their DNA (with the specific G mtDNA marker, a late 500 BCE migration from Central Asia) is even found far south among Okinawans, who are also Jomon descendants. Other Jomon tribes were the Emishi, Kumaso and Hayato. The Chronicles of Japan recorded a 701 CE Yamato military campaign to eliminate the last Jomon tribes. The "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido was annexed 1,000 years later in 1869, but not designated an official Prefecture until 1947. So, the Hokkaido Ainu survived the Jomon Genocide of Japan.

  • @smonline631
    @smonline631 Před dnem

    they are the missing cultural link between cultures of Central Asia, Siberia and Latin America. I wonder whether they are haplogroup C or Q

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před dnem

      Not a missing link but a different racial lineage. Ainu are Jomon people with ancestral Haplogroups M7 and D-M55, an ancient South Asia race from India and Bangladesh from Arabia out of Africa. They migrated to Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and settled Japan 30,000 years ago. Central Asian and East Asian foreign DNA admixtures came much later when ice sheets connected Siberia to Hokkaido 14,000 years ago.

  • @gueviemoncor328
    @gueviemoncor328 Před dnem

    Actually, a unified nation is defined by one language, common culture and religion. BTW, Spain is not a nation, Spain is country. But a colonial country as it changed the name of its oppression region (Castela) language to fake a common language, to fake being a nation. Galicia, Catalonia are nations, forced into regions by the “central” government. Spain recognized Palestine (which is the result of arab colonization of the region) but does not recognize Catalonia which had a referendum to be independent - why? Because Spain is not a nation, it’s a colonial state (country). Nation is a very well defined political science term, and Spain does not fit it.

    • @BBarNavi
      @BBarNavi Před dnem

      Cope, Free Palestine

    • @sarenartanis1752
      @sarenartanis1752 Před dnem

      Then Portugal it's not a nation too, but a country because all the national identity was taken from the old Galicia Kingdom and from Asturias Kingdom.

    • @xtomxtrem9201
      @xtomxtrem9201 Před dnem

      Zionist detected...😂

    • @jamesunderwood9100
      @jamesunderwood9100 Před dnem

      BAM 💥💥💥💥

    • @chucklira8885
      @chucklira8885 Před 22 hodinami

      Agreed, Cope. Free Palestine. By the way, more Catalans now want to remain part of Spain.

  • @o4evidez254
    @o4evidez254 Před dnem

    The author of the video are fast to critisise the Japanese government. How about Russia? Did they do any better job?

  • @Photor
    @Photor Před dnem

    Their look and style is just like Eskimos and Pacific Northwest American natives...

  • @Queenfan1961
    @Queenfan1961 Před dnem

    As a 6 ye wast old child, I spent a year on the farm in Luarca in Asturias. As an American, I have many fond memories growing up in that region and to the state, have family and friends there. Having revisited in 2012, it’s a beautiful region with beautiful people and amazing architecture.

  • @alfreddaniels3817
    @alfreddaniels3817 Před dnem

    Interesting topic but annoying style of narration. Please try to improve this pompous academic semi-intellectualism by throwing 50% of your redundancy bla bla out. Then tell the remaining as if you would talk to a child or a lower educated person. Success 👍👍

  • @dubyah8824
    @dubyah8824 Před dnem

    Did Japanese adopt the Ainu word “kamuy” as kami, ie spirit or god? Or was it the other way around, or am I totally off-base?

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před dnem

      Excellent question! That has been debated for decades. A 2024 linguistic study has concluded that the etymology of "kamuy" is Sino Tibetan based on a 2016 study that classified Ainuic as a proto-Sino Tibetan language. So the Japanese (Nihongo) word "kami" is evidently derived from the Ainuic "kamuy." Linguists now describe Nihongo as a composite language or shared language of the migrant Korean (Yayoi 1,000-300 BCE) rice farmers and Han Chinese (Yamato) conquerers of Japan during the Kofun ("ancient grave") Period 250-550 CE. The Yamato created the Shinto Religion in 400 CE and Nihongo in 500 CE -- also the Yamato Dynasty, Imperial Family and 1st State called Yamato in 600 CE. The Chronicles of Japan recorded a military campaign in 701 CE to eliminate the last Jomon tribes in Japan. The "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido was annexed 1,000 years later in 1869, but not designated an official Prefecture until 1947. The Ainu are the northern most and sole surviving Jomon tribe. Kyushu Jomon settled Okinawa 9,000 years ago and Okinawans also have Ainu DNA (marked by the distinctive Maternal G DNA -- a late 500 BCE migration from Central Asia unique to Hokkaido).

  • @reneekazezian3476
    @reneekazezian3476 Před dnem

    Jaime bien ce peuple

  • @edwardfernandez5354

    Beautiful, creative, smart, and very talented People! Very descriptive and informative documentary. Loved the way they were globally cultured, and Faith aware, yet they kept their Christian faith alive and many of their culture heritages, and language. The industralization and neutralization periods they adjusted to and did remarkably well, I've heard with very prolific outcomes , and in many different educational and business successful areas. The hope and renewal efforts to restore and place things in order, after difficult times serve them to have a title of well disciplined and hardworking group of people! Thank you for sharing!

  • @PortugalCarp
    @PortugalCarp Před dnem

    There seem to be many similarities between the Ainu and the indigenous Pacific North West American people. In some of the men you could even go as far as saying they have some similarities with the indigenous Australian's.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před dnem

      Ainu are Jomon, a 50-65,000 year old South Asian (India, Bangladesh) race who settled Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and Japan 30,000 years ago-- making them an older race than East Asian Mongoloids, who are the ancestors of Northwestern Native Americans (D4, B2 DNAs). A DNA study of the Ainu found genetic alleles (mutations) of Europeans and Middle Easterners associated with forming facial features, which explains why 19th century accounts described the Ainu as a non-mongoloid race with Caucasian features. (Archival photos of unassimilated Ainu corroborate Caucasian features.) However, due to later admixtures and assimilation -- and the Ainu custom of adopting Japanese orphans (mainly girls), Ainu began to exhibit Mongoloid features as they do today. Australian Aborigines have ancient DNA from the migration out of Africa into Arabia and along the coast of South Asia (Southern India still has ancient Black races) into Malaysia before splitting off into 3 DNA related groups of ancient Black races: Australian Aborigines, Black Pygmies of the Philippines ("Negrillos" on the island of Negros) and Melanesians of Papua, New Guinea.

  • @ManoloAlvarez-pz4lz

    Los britanicos siempre con sus secreciones,en fin,viva irlanda,escocia,,libres y fuertes

  • @ManoloAlvarez-pz4lz

    Pues si es la parte mas autoctona y luchadora,repasa tu adn, probablemente tengas descendencia nuestra,si eres celta ,de gales,irlanda,escocia,menos ingles

  • @KP11520
    @KP11520 Před dnem

    Went to Spain and visited their area and if all I ever traveled to was Basque Country again, I would be QUITE happy. Food is beyond special as well.... San Sebastion in Basque Country is a TOP City of culinary schools in Europe, and if food is important when traveling, This is the vacation for you! And we really enjoyed everyone we met there too. Can't wait to return. Gonna bring my appetite for sure.

  • @erikm8372
    @erikm8372 Před dnem

    …what in the hell does that mean, “Spain's last bastion”? 🫤 Um, I mean… "bastion" of what, Spanish culture? When you say "Spain's last bastion", and no other information is given, it does sound that way…as if it’s the country’s last “place” or purest location. So it’s best to be more specific in titles like that… I know this channel is one of those that is devoted to A.I. content, strangely, but some editing by a conscious person is needed.

    • @ManoloAlvarez-pz4lz
      @ManoloAlvarez-pz4lz Před dnem

      Mira,bastión,por muchos motivos,la resistencia a otras tribus,a roma,y el resto de guerras,es la reserva natural,ni francos,ni nórdicos,astur celta,casi no hay descendencia romana,

    • @dizdirasamira
      @dizdirasamira Před dnem

      Exactly. By this logic you could say with equal reason that Granada was the last bastion of Spain.

  • @EduardoHernandez-wj6uu

    Lizarraga!

  • @anitaglasgow8275
    @anitaglasgow8275 Před 2 dny

    Isn't the game hai ali and the court a fronton?

  • @yeqingzhu6028
    @yeqingzhu6028 Před 2 dny

    That is funny! Since when Panda bear lives in Japan? And is connected to Ainu people?

  • @ericthompson3982
    @ericthompson3982 Před 2 dny

    Romans: "Hey, you know what? Let's just put a wall there, and then never *ever* bother the neighbors."

  • @ricardodesantiago4008

    czcams.com/video/xcViHyCWrHo/video.htmlsi=8jSnjEaDc3KbX4AB

  • @Sal-fn1pm
    @Sal-fn1pm Před 2 dny

    Interestingly it shares its uniqueness with many other local cultures.

  • @flaviopitanga65
    @flaviopitanga65 Před 2 dny

    Long live ❤Astúrias. Defenders of Christianity. Without it Iberia would be a musilim nation

    • @ManoloAlvarez-pz4lz
      @ManoloAlvarez-pz4lz Před dnem

      Europa sería islámica,era una cruzada,los paramos en iberia,Lepanto(la mayor batalla mundial,naval y en muertos)destruida a los turcos,(imperio otomano)

  • @dizdirasamira
    @dizdirasamira Před 2 dny

    Asturias was not "Spain last bastion". It was the last bastion of Christianism as state religion. Al-Andalus was Spain too. A nation is not defined by its religion.

    • @gueviemoncor328
      @gueviemoncor328 Před dnem

      Actually, a unified nation is defined by one language, common culture and religion. BTW, Spain is not a nation, Spain is country. But a colonial country as it changed the name of its oppression region (Castela) language to fake a common language, to fake being a nation. Galicia, Catalonia are nations, forced into regions by the “central” government. Spain recognized Palestine (which is the result of arab colonization of the region) but does not recognize Catalonia which had a referendum to be independent - why? Because Spain is not a nation, it’s a colonial state (country). Nation is a very well defined political science term, and Spain does not fit it.

    • @sarenartanis1752
      @sarenartanis1752 Před dnem

      ​@@gueviemoncor328Then Portugal it's too a colonial country because Madeira Island it's outside their territory. Moreover, Algarve had to a muslim identity steal it by the portuguese...

    • @Darrius996
      @Darrius996 Před 14 hodinami

      Nations are frequently defined by their religion. The only reason Canada exists is the Catholic religion and its conflict with protestantism. A fact we are not taught in schools, you can look around the world and see how religion shapes the fabric of most cultures. It could be said that it is the MOST important factor

  • @MaliciousMollusc
    @MaliciousMollusc Před 2 dny

    The Ainu reminds me of the native Filipino tribes. There's a lot of very interesting parallels. 😊

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před 2 dny

      Ainu are Jomon, an ancient race from South Asia (India, Bangladesh) who migrated to Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and settled Japan 30,000 years ago. Filipinos are a mixture of indigenous Black Pygmies ("Negrillos") from Malaysia, Austronesians (Southeast Asians), Chinese and Spanish.

  • @robertlyon8876
    @robertlyon8876 Před 2 dny

    Very interesting article

  • @richarddamasco4979
    @richarddamasco4979 Před 2 dny

    Good evening Japan😊❤😊

  • @KP11520
    @KP11520 Před 2 dny

    Preserving their past is going to be a pillar in all of Japan's future. Their very deliberate harmony is a very significant way of life that will help work with Earth for all to exist without greed, which would sabotage that balance. Make room for it and let it flow naturally. All will benefit.

  • @luciefayre7370
    @luciefayre7370 Před 2 dny

    It wasn't that great if you were born as a woman or very poor.

  • @MissNArismendezX
    @MissNArismendezX Před 2 dny

    5;30 imjin war 1590s

  • @MissNArismendezX
    @MissNArismendezX Před 2 dny

    Watching from Keizer Oregon USA 🤟🏻😀

  • @woodsmn8047
    @woodsmn8047 Před 2 dny

    the art is similar to the native people of the Alaska coastal regions yet according to this are not related

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 Před dnem

      Ainu also settled the Kuril islands in the Okhotsk Sea and assimilated Kamchatkan sea mammal hunters similar to Inuit.