Romans in the Heart of Africa - The Expedition to find the Source of the Nile (60AD) DOCUMENTARY

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  • čas přidán 6. 08. 2022
  • In 60 AD, a Roman expedition set off for the heart of Africa to find the source of the Nile. Signup for your FREE trial to Wondrium here: ow.ly/hkb530spaYY
    In this history documentary we explore this history of ancient Africa as it was understood by the people of the Mediterranean. We begin with the stories relayed by Herodotus through his accounting of the places, animals, and people that inhabited the vast lands of Libya. We look specifically at examples of Phoenician and Greek explorers who sought to discover its secrets. We then turn to the ascendancy of the Romans and how the efforts they took to understand what lay beyond their borders.
    Part of this involves the forgotten wars of Augustus including the Roman invasion of Arabia and the Roman invasion of Nubia. These helped expand the bounds of the known world but still much remained a mystery. It is for this reason that in 60 AD Emperor Nero would launch an expedition to find the source of the Nile. We seek to reconstruct this journey of the Romans in North Africa who may have gotten as far as the equatorial regions of modern Sudan and Uganda.
    Related videos:
    Forgotten Wars - The Roman Invasion of Arabia • Forgotten Wars - The R...
    Forgotten Wars - The Roman Invasion of Nubia • Forgotten Wars - The R...
    How They Did It - Carthaginian Exploration • How Carthage Explored ...
    Sources and Suggested Reading:
    “Dialogues - Book 6” by Seneca the Younger”
    “Geography - Book 6 and 16-17” by Strabo
    “The Natural History - Chapter 6 and 35” by Pliny the Elder
    “Histories - Book 3, 7” by Herodotus
    “History of Africa” by Kevin Shillington
    “The Kingdoms of Kush” by The National Geographic
    Credits:
    Research = Invicta
    Writing = Invicta
    Narration = Invicta
    Artwork = Gabriel Cassata
    #history
    #rome
    #africa

Komentáře • 974

  • @InvictaHistory
    @InvictaHistory  Před rokem +33

    We explore another story of ancient exploration with "Greeks in the Arctic" czcams.com/video/s5ROBinkhBE/video.html

    • @ledtargaouschi5831
      @ledtargaouschi5831 Před rokem

      Dude, i'm Tunisian, and you shouldn't put "Numidia" over Tunisia in that map
      it should be "Carthage" (and during roman times, it should be "Africa proconsularis" (even though it still Carthage)
      ...thank you

    • @larsrons7937
      @larsrons7937 Před 7 měsíci

      Are there any plans of more videos on Roman exploration in Africa or other southern direction?
      Thank you for a very interesting episode. Greetings from Denmark.

  • @dylanjwagner
    @dylanjwagner Před rokem +569

    It’s so cool to delve into the less militant experiences of the Romans. Humans have always wanted to know MORE. That they sought such knowledge and thusly spread knowledge of their world beyond its natural boundaries is such a human experience.
    Antiquity was not so disconnected, only skewed by the lack of rapidity.

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim Před rokem +6

      Great rulers inspire

    • @deusvult6920
      @deusvult6920 Před rokem +5

      Of course it's "such a human experience" we are the only rational creatures on earth

    • @magicpyroninja
      @magicpyroninja Před rokem +7

      Back then men had reason to want to go out there's always a chance you can find something amazing and change your life forever claim a new kingdom and become a ruler yourself a lot of those possibilities don't exist today

    • @KD400_
      @KD400_ Před rokem

      Humans u mean men because men have the masculine instinct to go and discover and claim it as theirs

    • @not_milk
      @not_milk Před rokem +6

      Humans have always been humans. Some have a great desire to know more. Others just have a desire to preserve what is already known. And many others are fairly indifferent and just want to experience life.

  • @dayros2023
    @dayros2023 Před rokem +242

    Check out the Palestrina mosaic. It’s a massive roman mosaic located in Palestrina, a town close to Rome, that depicts the travel of a Roman merchant, at the bottom you can see Alexandria, and then going up the rest of Egypt, Ethiopia, and what they thought was the source of the Nile. I saw it in person and it iw truly magnificent.

    • @smithnigelw
      @smithnigelw Před rokem +3

      Yes, I checked it out. Very interesting. I had never heard about it before. Thank you.

  • @teddyhoffman8391
    @teddyhoffman8391 Před rokem +191

    Videos like this really help emphasize just how large the world use to be. With fast travel unlocked via planes, trains, and cars it’s really easy to forget how much time and effort had to go into exploring the world. I love stories like this or the ancient Chinese empires trying to send envoys to Rome. You read about them and realize just….how difficult it was

    • @KD400_
      @KD400_ Před rokem +7

      Yh technology has made the world extremely small

    • @dudermcdudeface3674
      @dudermcdudeface3674 Před rokem +16

      Yup. Travel times to distant places could be so long, the only equivalent today would be going to Mars.

    • @coreylouviere4466
      @coreylouviere4466 Před rokem +1

      Where did you read this? I'm interested.

    • @teddyhoffman8391
      @teddyhoffman8391 Před rokem +2

      @@coreylouviere4466 at this point I don’t remember which source was the first one. It’s been a few years and they blend together and I forget names. I’d say start with CZcams channels that are trustworthy and google….I really need to make a list of stuff

    • @coreylouviere4466
      @coreylouviere4466 Před rokem +1

      @@teddyhoffman8391 it's cool, now I know there are accounts I can find it on my own. I understand when references blend together over time.

  • @RenMagnum4057
    @RenMagnum4057 Před rokem +920

    Did the Romans ever venture deep into the Volga River from their Outposts in Crimea?

    • @Fatherofheroesandheroines
      @Fatherofheroesandheroines Před rokem +236

      I believe they traded with Sarmatians so yes

    • @solomonthefoolish
      @solomonthefoolish Před rokem +158

      I bet their traders did at the very least!

    • @senorsombrero1275
      @senorsombrero1275 Před rokem +110

      I’m sure they tried
      Did they come back? Thats another question…

    • @Fatherofheroesandheroines
      @Fatherofheroesandheroines Před rokem +139

      @@senorsombrero1275 they did indeed. They had extensive trade routes all over the known world even when they warred with the Parthians and the Sassanids.

    • @karatejoe6332
      @karatejoe6332 Před rokem +13

      @@Fatherofheroesandheroines not all over, like the didn’t go to North east Eurasia or south east asia

  • @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016
    @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016 Před rokem +161

    I love these. Back in the day when I wanted to know about this expedition there was only a brief Wikipedia article and some song (infuriatingly) titled "Nero's expedition up the Nile."

    • @Gorboduc
      @Gorboduc Před rokem

      Check out the song though, it's by Moondog!

  • @ByronC900
    @ByronC900 Před rokem +205

    "Men with no heads, with their eyes in their breasts." I can't help but wonder if this is an ancient description of some type of ape.

  • @allonzehe9135
    @allonzehe9135 Před rokem +144

    I want to hear about those other Roman expeditions in to the Sahara!

  • @lausdeo4944
    @lausdeo4944 Před rokem +117

    The story around 6:20 is very interesting. There is linguistic evidence the Pygmies of Africa were once more widespread before being driven into small pockets of the Congo.
    Not only that, but the legend of "men who speak in squeaks (from the Herodotus' rumors) may very well be a garbled reference to the clicking languages of the Khalahari Bushmen. These Bushmen (and their language) may have also extended beyond their home in the extreme south.

    • @chingchongmypenisislong790
      @chingchongmypenisislong790 Před rokem +25

      And the river they described was probably the Niger

    • @jasonmatthewoliver3810
      @jasonmatthewoliver3810 Před rokem +20

      The language that you're referring to regarding the Kalahari Bushmen (Khoisan) is actually part of a language group that extends further north, as well. The language family is called Khoe-Kwadi, however, some of these languages are extinct. It is possible that they'd encountered similar dialects, considering that Africa has an incredible variety of dialects. In my country (South Africa), we have 11 official languages.
      Africa has some amazing cultural diversity. It's just sad to see how rampant corruption is throughout the continent. Not to mention how most African people still retain a level of wariness around foreigners (but, who can blame them, considering their history). There are also issues of xenophobia within the African communities, as well. Africa has never been able to heal properly.

    • @siphomnisi3842
      @siphomnisi3842 Před rokem +11

      Future advice : don't call the KoiSan Bushmen. It's found to be deragatory similar to how native Indians would be called r-- people

    • @lausdeo4944
      @lausdeo4944 Před rokem +8

      @@siphomnisi3842 Sorry, just using the terminology from _Guns, Germs, and Steel._

    • @lausdeo4944
      @lausdeo4944 Před rokem +4

      @@siphomnisi3842 It's where I heard the ideas I mentioned above.

  • @Andrewsatkowski
    @Andrewsatkowski Před rokem +93

    What a GREAT plot for a movie or a TV series. "Marcus Felix Tullius I order you by the command of the Emperor Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus to seek and find the origin of the Mother of all rivers the Nile". Marcus is a war hardened centurion who is recovering in Rome from an arrow through the eye. Oddly, he is literate. His father was a scribe in Germania who lost his head in some un-named raid. Escorting a senator's son on this expedition with a cohort of soldiers is his duty.

    • @jacobpeters5458
      @jacobpeters5458 Před rokem +9

      lol gonna plagiarize this for a novel and make millions thx

    • @crispinjulius5032
      @crispinjulius5032 Před rokem +14

      It ain’t me! It ain’t me! I ain’t no senators soooooon! No!

    • @sivartb7273
      @sivartb7273 Před rokem

      @@crispinjulius5032 bellum porcus

    • @crispinjulius5032
      @crispinjulius5032 Před rokem

      @@sivartb7273 And to think, even in the 1st century, some armor and weapons smithy was making bank and greedily looking at a map of the known world, hoping that the Roman juggernaut continued on forever.

  • @keiththomas1180
    @keiththomas1180 Před rokem +132

    You need to cover the later Roman expeditions into Central Africa via Libya, that would be interesting too, or even the expedition north via the Don and Volga Rivers!

    • @lorddervish212quinterosara6
      @lorddervish212quinterosara6 Před rokem +4

      They did an expedition in easter europe? mind sharing any sources plz

    • @justinian-the-great
      @justinian-the-great Před rokem +1

      I'm pretty sure that Romans never reached Volga. I'm interested into knowing where did you read that they reached Volga?

    • @dantecaputo2629
      @dantecaputo2629 Před rokem +9

      @@lorddervish212quinterosara6
      Roman merchants occasionally visited what is now Poland and the Baltic states as part of the amber road. Baltic amber was highly sought after, and we even have an account from a merchant sent by Nero to report back on the trade. Roman legions also would sometimes march into what is now Poland on power projection and recruitment missions, same with Ukraine. We have found Roman artifacts in both

    • @AT-gu8by
      @AT-gu8by Před rokem

      They never reached central Africa.

    • @BrazilianImperialist
      @BrazilianImperialist Před rokem +1

      @@AT-gu8by They did

  • @judsonwall8615
    @judsonwall8615 Před rokem +46

    I highly recommend a trip down the Nile on google earth. Make an hour or two out of it. Really zoom on and follow the journey, it’s super fascinating. After having done so myself, I think it’s clear that these Romans made it to the South Sudan jungle area of the Nile. You can tell, just on google earth, how impassable it must’ve been, particularly if it was high water season.

    • @zzzm1k3zzz
      @zzzm1k3zzz Před rokem +2

      I have done the same in the past on google earth, apparently with the same curiosity as the Romans did. Got lost basically at the same point as the Romans as well lol. It must have been such a challenging expedition. It also really sheds a light how blessed we are in this time of age with all our knowledge.

    • @hayatimofire4852
      @hayatimofire4852 Před rokem +1

      It's called the water hyacinths which prevented Egyptians from going further up to East africa.

  • @albertlowe9510
    @albertlowe9510 Před rokem +158

    Thanks you so much for your serious look into the Roman attempts into exploring Africa. As someone who enjoys history of both the Roman and kushite/Ethiopian empire your video was well done and informative.

  • @nathanpangilinan4397
    @nathanpangilinan4397 Před rokem +89

    Considering that Herodotus talked about men who talked like bats, do you think he was talking about click consonants?

    • @mirandagoldstine8548
      @mirandagoldstine8548 Před rokem +5

      Maybe. There are languages that involve the clicking of the tongue.

    • @nathanpangilinan4397
      @nathanpangilinan4397 Před rokem +34

      @@mirandagoldstine8548, and the click consonants associated with the Khoisan might have been more common in Africa before the Bantu Expansion.

    • @yoboiboy4182
      @yoboiboy4182 Před rokem +3

      Idk about that. Click consonants are far in the south in Khoisan and Shona languages.

    • @chino3796
      @chino3796 Před rokem +1

      Another Roman historian called them "Troglodytes" said they spoke in clicks and whistles.

    • @PraveenJose18551
      @PraveenJose18551 Před rokem +7

      @@yoboiboy4182 yea, the common theory is that Southern Bantus got that feature from Khoi-San, it's highly unlikely Romans went that far down South.

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Před rokem +52

    We want more coverage on the expeditions by all civilisations and how far they’ve discovered.

    • @crazychase98
      @crazychase98 Před rokem +1

      Crazy how modern civilizations don't really have anything left to discover only rediscover

    • @SOULAANI_
      @SOULAANI_ Před 10 měsíci

      @@crazychase98 we do, just now our exploration is towards the cosmos where we will have an infinite amount to explore!

  • @Frenchylikeshikes
    @Frenchylikeshikes Před rokem +6

    You most definitely, absolutely have one of the best History channel on YT currently.

  • @bigmonke7661
    @bigmonke7661 Před rokem +36

    Imagine how cool a movie about this would be just Roman’s in Ethiopia

    • @comradecam9530
      @comradecam9530 Před rokem +7

      The story would make for a great movie in the vein of Aguirre, the wrath of god. A bleak and atmospheric look at the human condition set against the backdrop of the harsh natural world.

    • @090giver090
      @090giver090 Před rokem +1

      @@comradecam9530 Or the adventure mouvie about roman embassy to China (Yes, that happened. Twice)

    • @heruy8274
      @heruy8274 Před rokem

      It would not be an intresting movie. Rome was a trading partner of Axum and most Roman people in Axum were just traders.

    • @jacobpeters5458
      @jacobpeters5458 Před rokem

      @@comradecam9530 funny you mention that, I barely discovered the movie a few weeks ago. The cannons are looking a bit rusty!

  • @wolfcharlie3771
    @wolfcharlie3771 Před rokem +10

    Shoutout to atun shei for also telling this obscure story to others. And thank you guys for putting more light into the subject aswell

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ Před rokem +22

    Great video! It's fascinating to learn of Rome's explorations, not just conquests.

  • @macarronconqueso1939
    @macarronconqueso1939 Před rokem +8

    What a great story!! Hope to see more in the future

  • @Gorboduc
    @Gorboduc Před rokem +16

    I think the failure of this expedition also gets a passing reference in the beginning of Lucan's Pharsalia, written about four years later. It's from the intro when he's grieving the costs of the civil wars in terms of conquests foregone:
    "What lands, what oceans might have been the prize
    Of all the blood thus shed in civil strife!
    ...Long since barbarians by the Eastern sea
    And far Araxes' stream, and those who know
    (If any such there be) the birth of Nile
    Had felt our yoke."

  • @MichaelSmith-ij2ut
    @MichaelSmith-ij2ut Před rokem +25

    As an African with a heart myself, this is fascinating

  • @dukesilver702
    @dukesilver702 Před rokem +9

    I love Invicta videos. They always turn my dumb day into a day where I feel smart.

    • @slavenarkaimovski3897
      @slavenarkaimovski3897 Před rokem

      Last time when i have wached invicta video Illyrian Revolt,i was so upset by it,that i wanted to kill invicta with my bare hands.And for good reason to,becouse the number of lies that invicta has sed about illyrians was disturbing.The Illyrians in his fake history video are described either as the ancestors of the albanians,or as uniqe people,but not as slavic serbs that they realy are.And this is problem with every youtube history chanel,they acept antislavic propaganda as actual history,that has been writen by history falsefiers from nordic history school.The same lies about slavic people can be found on sama youtube chanel,but slavic truth is more glorious than the bible's children tales.And that truth has come to light in 1980,when germans has admited that slavic history has been falsefied on berlin congress in 1890.The germans has even donated 500 page book to serbian sanu academy,wich tells real slavic history.And for the end,the roman empire would never existed,if slavic emperor from 2025BC Nino Belov,haven't went to first aryan conquest to india.And people that has lived in italy before romans,was slavic etruscans,rashany,and ladini.And rome was named after serbian word ruma,from whom english word room comes from.PS:The youtube history chanels are hanging places for idiots,liers,and slav haters,so don't go there.

  • @chrish9698
    @chrish9698 Před rokem

    Fascinating story and wonderful video!

  • @Russia-bullies
    @Russia-bullies Před rokem

    Thanks for the good & interesting show.I love any show on the historical exploration of Earth.

  • @stevenicholas5651
    @stevenicholas5651 Před rokem +4

    Very awesome video. Would love to see more about the expeditions through Libya

  • @TomLuTon
    @TomLuTon Před rokem +40

    How far north could Roman ships go? Would they be able to explore the Baltic? Go up the coast of Norway to North Cape?

    • @erwin887
      @erwin887 Před rokem +12

      Romans found their way up to denmark untill teuroberg so it would not shock me traders went to southern sweden

    • @paulrockatansky77
      @paulrockatansky77 Před rokem +5

      If I'm not mistaken, Roman trade routes took them north across modern day Poland to the Baltic shore where they acquired amber.

    • @neutronalchemist3241
      @neutronalchemist3241 Před rokem +4

      The biggest archaeological source of Roman silverware is actually Denmank. They reached it at the time of Augustus, and remained in friendly terms with the tribes there.

    • @aaronjefferson279
      @aaronjefferson279 Před rokem

      Romans were not really good sailors. Sailing within the Mediterranean was hard enough for them. Their ships and skills notoriously were not well suited for harsher waters like the Atlantic and its smaller seas. I seriously doubt they’d be able to make it up the Norwegian coast or to the Baltic.

    • @neutronalchemist3241
      @neutronalchemist3241 Před rokem +3

      @@aaronjefferson279 There were Roman commercial outposts in southern India. Don't mistake warships with commercial ships.

  • @HellenicWolf
    @HellenicWolf Před rokem +1

    Great work man and Invicta team! Keep it up!

  • @Uzair_Of_Babylon465
    @Uzair_Of_Babylon465 Před rokem +1

    Fantastic video keep it up your doing amazing job

  • @miguelmontenegro3520
    @miguelmontenegro3520 Před rokem +3

    Not early enough to explore the world and not to late enough to explore the stars... but just in time to know about most of the past and secure the chance to know the future

  • @davidbalogun7569
    @davidbalogun7569 Před rokem +6

    Just realised the river from the story in the middle of the video is likely the Niger. So wild to think Mediterranean people got that far south in ancient times

    • @nataliajimenez1870
      @nataliajimenez1870 Před 2 měsíci

      Well, there were cross-Saharan caravans that connected Lybia to the rest of Africa, so you can see some Romans joining one of those caravans to scout the region. Even paying some of the traders for info about the region

  • @knowthyselfinstitute
    @knowthyselfinstitute Před 5 měsíci +1

    Fascinating. Thank you for the research and presentation!

  • @rpower1401
    @rpower1401 Před rokem +1

    Great video, nice to learn about a little less discussed realm of history

  • @kubhlaikhan2015
    @kubhlaikhan2015 Před rokem +13

    Interesting that the Nasamoneans encountered the Pygmies, confirming that they lived much further north and west than they do today. The climate must have been wetter, and the advance of the desert as well as the massive expansion of the Bantu later forced them back into the Congo - much reduced in numbers. A sad story.

  • @TheGoldennach
    @TheGoldennach Před rokem +10

    The world used to be such a big and magical place...😍

  • @JuliusCaesar888
    @JuliusCaesar888 Před rokem +1

    Awesome video man.

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting, informative and worthwhile video.

  • @jonny-b4954
    @jonny-b4954 Před rokem +63

    It's honestly SUPER surprising to me that's as far as they went. I mean, just with how powerful and expansive they were. The land they had conquered in it's very self, it's surprising to me they hadn't at least sent exploration expeditions out just as far. Crazy. I mean, they knew of China and traded with them. So it's not an unheard of distance.

    • @antonionotmyrealnamo6333
      @antonionotmyrealnamo6333 Před rokem +3

      Distances were important. Armies are required and raising them far from home was impossible, convincing them to traipse away from home also impossible. Why march to distant lands when you could march on Rome and become Emperor?

    • @jonny-b4954
      @jonny-b4954 Před rokem +16

      @@antonionotmyrealnamo6333 Well, I'm not talking about marching armies. I'm just talking about small exploration parties like the video mentioned Nero sent.

    • @mondaysinsanity8193
      @mondaysinsanity8193 Před rokem +4

      @@jonny-b4954 as far as we know no roman ever reached china they just knew of eachother second hand though i believe china has A merchant go to rome himself

    • @snookers3075
      @snookers3075 Před rokem +13

      @@mondaysinsanity8193 An official delegation (or a group of merchants claiming to be) reached the Han emperor during the time of either Marcus Aurelius or Antoninus Pious

    • @mondaysinsanity8193
      @mondaysinsanity8193 Před rokem +4

      @@snookers3075 freal? I hadnt come across that and i looked into it at one point. Also i thought qin dynasty were rome contemporaries...just googled it..chinese dynasties dont last very long i guess lol. And seems theres actually was quite a bit of direct trade huh

  • @allonzehe9135
    @allonzehe9135 Před rokem +10

    Full video on the Sahara expedition of Cornelius Balbus please.

  • @andrei19238
    @andrei19238 Před rokem

    Fascinating video very good

  • @danilo4631
    @danilo4631 Před 15 dny

    Gracias por tu trabajo!

  • @jonbaxter2254
    @jonbaxter2254 Před rokem +36

    Romans got well far into Africa. They set up trade routes all the way past the Sahara and had a few run-ins with Ehthiopia. I feel like there's a whole video on Africa and Rome.

    • @makeytgreatagain6256
      @makeytgreatagain6256 Před rokem +2

      But that’s coastal Eastern Africa which was t unknown to the world. Africa is like a cross between the new world/Oceania and the old world. Most if it was unexplored and unknown yo outsiders and vice versa but some parts like west Sahel and east Africa coast were known. It’s NA intresting dichotomy and explains why even colonialism of the continent was much later and differnt to when Europeans took Oceania and Americas

    • @jonbaxter2254
      @jonbaxter2254 Před rokem +6

      @@makeytgreatagain6256 Not really. Romans crossed the Sahara many times to trade, and ancient Greeks got all the way to Ethipia. Makes sense they could have made it further, Europeans have been in Africa for literally thousands of years.

    • @makeytgreatagain6256
      @makeytgreatagain6256 Před rokem +3

      @@jonbaxter2254 no because the Sahara deserts too vast and harsh, Europeans literally die in tropical Africa, trading on the horn coast of Africa isnt “equatorial Africa” there’s a reason why Africa was the last explored continent and a big reason for that is due to to the harshness and inhospitability of africa to non natives which lack of he genetic defences to not due within a week. European slave traders had a life expectancy of 1-2 weeks and they were on the west African coast not even inland and they still died to the illnesses and parasites that plague the land. The romans would have at most made it to the desert regions but no further into west Africa

    • @jonbaxter2254
      @jonbaxter2254 Před rokem

      @@makeytgreatagain6256 Lol, no they don't. Do your own research, not my job to educate you. Do you think Black people break down in Europe? No, so why would white people suddenly die in Africa?

    • @makeytgreatagain6256
      @makeytgreatagain6256 Před rokem

      @@jonbaxter2254 because Africa is Australia on steroids. Europe is a predictable calm land, no harsh parisites, plenty of fertile soil, huge Penensulas, no messed up diseases and animals such as mosquitos and the Tse fly which not only murder humans at such a rate groups have to literally evolve to combat it such as Sickle cell these same animals destroy certain livestock like horses which is why horses weren’t found in places like central Africa and at most they were in southern Nigeria but kept within cities and sheltered from the outside.
      I suggest you look up what Quinine is and learn how that one medicine prevented Europeans from dying within a couple weeks after stepping foot in Africa. www.polyprep.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/nhd-essay2-william-l-r.pdf

  • @mekatronik_albo
    @mekatronik_albo Před rokem +3

    Invicta(Oakkley) I have been following you since your humble beginnings as total war player.Please do a video about illyrian society.Keep up the good work :)!

  • @jdiaz4877
    @jdiaz4877 Před rokem +1

    Well done!

  • @mrhernandez739
    @mrhernandez739 Před rokem

    Very well done

  • @allonzehe9135
    @allonzehe9135 Před rokem +3

    I've been waiting for this video!

  • @Warmaker01
    @Warmaker01 Před rokem +26

    There was some history video that talked about the brief Roman conflict with Nubia. The problem for Rome was that the distances were so far and logistics so problematic, and Nubia being hotly defended that the conflict ended and both powers just made huge money trading with each other.

    • @getbetter973
      @getbetter973 Před rokem +12

      That and Nubia was one of the greatest military powers in the ancient world. The empire as told by some Africans encapsulaed the entire Horn of Africa and some of the land to the west of Egypt.

    • @comradecam9530
      @comradecam9530 Před rokem +3

      Yep. The terrain was difficult for an army to navigate as well. I think the Romans decided that ultimately it wasn't worth the effort. Taking a territory is one thing, keeping it is another.

    • @yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649
      @yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649 Před rokem +6

      @@getbetter973 im not sure, the egyptians defeated the nubians most of the time, maybe the later nubians were better

    • @luchamiomaridekakio6429
      @luchamiomaridekakio6429 Před rokem +8

      @@yoroshikuonegaishimasu8649 no Egyptian and Nubians defeated each other, it was back and forth, not really lopsided one way

    • @MsCwebb
      @MsCwebb Před rokem +4

      @@getbetter973 Rome was way more powerful of an army and nation than Nubia and it wasn't even close.

  • @uprightape100
    @uprightape100 Před rokem

    Thank you.......that was lovely.

  • @benusmaximus3601
    @benusmaximus3601 Před rokem

    Brilliant video - I’d love to see one on the Roman expedition to Lake Chad!

  • @eyesofisabelofficial
    @eyesofisabelofficial Před rokem +31

    I am always fascinated by these tales of exploration.
    I highly recommend the 1990 film "Mountains of the moon"
    Top Gear launched one such expedition and James May is credited with discovering the actual source itself.

    • @professoroak7545
      @professoroak7545 Před rokem +3

      I mean they basically chose a tributary and followed it to a spring, there are a huge amount of tributaries that feed into the lakes and through to the nile. Its just not as romantic to say that the nile as multiple sources.

    • @AldousHuxley7
      @AldousHuxley7 Před rokem

      What episode!?

    • @eyesofisabelofficial
      @eyesofisabelofficial Před rokem +2

      @@AldousHuxley7 Africa Special (Not the one in Namibia)

    • @AldousHuxley7
      @AldousHuxley7 Před rokem

      @@eyesofisabelofficial Thanks!

  • @54032Zepol
    @54032Zepol Před rokem +15

    I hope they make it home before it rains in Africa, maybe they'll hear the drums and follow the stars towards salvation

  • @emysimo
    @emysimo Před rokem

    This is so interesting!!!

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Před rokem

    Super interesting.

  • @anggellos87
    @anggellos87 Před rokem +4

    Love your videos always learn something new:)

  • @pontusrosholm
    @pontusrosholm Před rokem +4

    Hey love the videos you do. I think it would be really interesting if you also did a video on the Roman exploration of west Africa

    • @ojofrank9394
      @ojofrank9394 Před 7 měsíci

      I don't they did that,or did they?🤔

  • @travishighbaugh5245
    @travishighbaugh5245 Před rokem +2

    I love videos like this.

  • @tylerhaigler7409
    @tylerhaigler7409 Před rokem

    Please more videos like this

  • @TheSaneHatter
    @TheSaneHatter Před rokem +7

    This idea BEGS to be made into a movie!

  • @Fatherofheroesandheroines

    I hear Toto playing in the background... Mr. Livingston I presume...

  • @stronghand9932
    @stronghand9932 Před rokem

    @Invicta Great research. Good visuals. Good sequencing. Can't complain. Tons of content. Thanks so much! Just wondering, though, if you can you get that other narrator back?

  • @0mn0mable
    @0mn0mable Před rokem

    very cool topic.

  • @InvictaHistory
    @InvictaHistory  Před rokem +39

    You can learn more about the Kingdom of Nubia:
    Nubian Archers - czcams.com/video/qvO3_kYRRw8/video.html
    Nubian Invasion of Egypt - czcams.com/video/GIwPxoUuEsU/video.html
    Roman Invasion of Nubia - czcams.com/video/5u6oQ6rI74Y/video.html

    • @jacksteed7199
      @jacksteed7199 Před rokem

      I'm sorry but I did not come from africa there are so many types of humanoids that are not homo sapien your old school aproach is so wrong. The fact people think were the only one to evolve and not have variants is wrong im sure spider monkey's are the only species of monkey like gorillia is ape if this is the case cause humans are not an ape were closer related to pig's. why is that cause every type of animal in this world has variant copy of each animal.. like look at marsupial you have a completely different path of evolution just from one island to another. bear looking marsupial wolves, tigers, devils... like look at how killer whales are the only whale species that has k-9 dna... cause not all whales are same mammal....

    • @brokenbridge6316
      @brokenbridge6316 Před rokem +2

      Nicely done video. I wouldn't mind seeing video's on other Roman explorations. This is a subject not talked about enough.

  • @saratmodugu2721
    @saratmodugu2721 Před rokem +11

    Are you going to do Roman expeditions into the Niger River, forest region of Nigeria, and the agisymba kingdom of lake Chad

  • @zachbonvallat6586
    @zachbonvallat6586 Před rokem

    Great history.

  • @michael.bremer
    @michael.bremer Před rokem

    Great stuff - now I have to read another Seneca ..🤗

  • @lordofutub
    @lordofutub Před rokem +9

    Please do an episode on the Roman conquest of Thrace. I've found so little on it

  • @p_pattedd5477
    @p_pattedd5477 Před rokem +10

    Sadly they didn't have James May, discoverer of the true source of the Nile, and two other blokes.

  • @tomriley5790
    @tomriley5790 Před rokem

    Amazing story! Looking forwards to the other stories of atempted exploration! Even now those are non-trivial expeditions

  • @Epsilonsama
    @Epsilonsama Před rokem +2

    Fun fact, 2000 years ago the Sahara was more hospitable than today and the desert was not as big as it's today. There were more Oasis and there were also more grassland in between deserts. It was still a pretty harsh Desert but more livable than today.

    • @LawlTwins
      @LawlTwins Před rokem +1

      Ye that's still not common knowledge unfortunately. It makes total sense too when you think about supplies. He said it was 5-6 men right? The more hospitable the land, the less water needed ect... Would be tough to haul multiple wagons for a possible year+ journey. Even if they had horses pulling them you'd need to find fodder for them.

    • @Grimcrawler
      @Grimcrawler Před rokem +2

      Yeah if you go back 10 000 years the desert wasnt even a desert it was forest younger dryas most likely changed it

  • @MrBalkanx3Mix
    @MrBalkanx3Mix Před rokem +5

    They should have used the scouting perk to cross two fields at ones and extra visibility range.

  • @AncestorEmpireGaming
    @AncestorEmpireGaming Před rokem +5

    The last time I was this early…..
    hoverboards actually hovered.

  • @samdumaquis2033
    @samdumaquis2033 Před rokem

    Interesting

  • @awesomehpt8938
    @awesomehpt8938 Před rokem +13

    Did they listen to Toto while they were there?

    • @possumpatrol45
      @possumpatrol45 Před rokem

      They heard only whispers of some quiet conversation...

  • @eddolous
    @eddolous Před rokem

    This could be a great movie

  • @vazak11
    @vazak11 Před rokem

    Wow!

  • @AldousHuxley7
    @AldousHuxley7 Před rokem +12

    Thats wild my 92 yo grandpa was just telling me at lunch today how Teddy Roosevelt went to Africa with a huge team of naturalists to discover the source of the Nile! He also supposedly killed over 10,000 animals of all kinds to send abroad.

  • @rhyscouser9449
    @rhyscouser9449 Před rokem +3

    Does anyone have any resources on the book he references in ~8:40 of the video, titled "The Aethopica?"

  • @AlexandreAuCambodge
    @AlexandreAuCambodge Před rokem +2

    For those asking about relations between Southeast Asia and the Romans. The name of that old port in the Mekong delta is Óc Eo.
    Wikilink:
    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%93c_Eo

    • @AlexandreAuCambodge
      @AlexandreAuCambodge Před rokem

      Which might have been "Cattigara":
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattigara

  • @richjordan6461
    @richjordan6461 Před rokem +2

    7:17 The famous journey of Henry the Navigator? I didn't think Henry ever went anywhere himself

    • @kjsdpgijn
      @kjsdpgijn Před rokem

      You misheard. HANNO The Navigator, not Henry
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanno_the_Navigator

  • @Nerdvanna98
    @Nerdvanna98 Před rokem +3

    My guess about the whole "Nile flowing across the west" thing is that the explorers most likely misinterpreted the Niger river for the Nile.

  • @CarlJohnson-oq1oj
    @CarlJohnson-oq1oj Před rokem +14

    For the glory of Rome

  • @lavykalava1149
    @lavykalava1149 Před rokem

    can we get a link to the map at 1:47. without the overlay. i really love that map

  • @KraNisOG
    @KraNisOG Před rokem +4

    Imagine how much more exploration, and how much more advanced the Romans would be if they weren't locked in their struggle with Germania, if Arminius didn't betray Rome, we would probably have many more tales, and definitely more sources, and writings to look at.

    • @neutronalchemist3241
      @neutronalchemist3241 Před rokem +8

      They weren't locked in a struggle with Germania. For much of the Empire, Germania had been occasionally a nuisance. Still in late 4th Century, Emperor Julian, after having beaten the Alamanni at Argentorarum, decided to campaign in Persia. Until the battle of Adrianople, the Romans didn't consider the Germanics a real treat.

    • @JcoleMc
      @JcoleMc Před rokem

      Imagine how much better X would be if Y didn't happen is most redundant and useless saying ever

  • @Pompomatic
    @Pompomatic Před rokem +2

    Love these non-war history videos

  • @robwalsh9843
    @robwalsh9843 Před rokem +4

    I'm guessing some hungry nile crocs ate well when a bunch of out-of-towner Romans appeared in their rivers.

  • @iDarkfigure
    @iDarkfigure Před rokem

    ...Small One Man Craft : Shows two guys paddling a Reed Canoe.
    Narrator's Voice right near the edge of "Fingernails on a Chalk Board" in tone...
    Must've missed the part as to exactly how long the round trip took...
    As it seems to be told... not a single loss of life during the entire expedition... Amazing!

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Před rokem

      Could be that this kind of detail just didn't make it into the second-hand sources we have. With the amount of tropical illnesses these men had no immunity for, it would indeed be a spectacular amount of luck if no one died.

  • @mosta8965
    @mosta8965 Před rokem

    Mind = blown

  • @kazemizu
    @kazemizu Před rokem +3

    It really makes me wonder why nothing was done with the sea a relatively short distance east of the Nile...

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  Před rokem +8

      There was tons of trading going through the red sea which made Egypt extremely rich. However facilities on that side of the coast are in fairly inhospitable terrain and the sea itself has rough shores with unfavorable winds. I believe that's why the Persian Gulf was somewhat favored

  • @thehashslingingslasher6443

    imagine seeing crocodiles and hippos as an ancient roman.

    • @privatebandana
      @privatebandana Před rokem +6

      They knew very well about crocodiles and hippos because of african traders prior to this

    • @Zvabh
      @Zvabh Před 3 měsíci

      They knew about all these stuff

  • @m.o.bentertainment8582

    would love to see an I shouldn't be alive episode for a Roman in some distant land way past the border

  • @jamesblackshaw132
    @jamesblackshaw132 Před rokem

    Imagine marching all them miles on foot seems daunting driving that far

  • @stc3145
    @stc3145 Před rokem +3

    It would not be until 2012 when James May and two other blokes found the true source of the Nile

  • @ramenbomberdeluxe4958
    @ramenbomberdeluxe4958 Před rokem +154

    Well obviously they found the source of the Nile through the old footprints of the wise general Snoopus Doggus, who once led the invasion of the Kushites some eighty years ago! How else would they have found it, if not for the old general's wisdom on his long and smoky journey?

    • @Fatherofheroesandheroines
      @Fatherofheroesandheroines Před rokem +19

      What most people don't know is that he also had that great explorer Tupacius Shakuris with him and they discovered the lost City of Angels

    • @ramenbomberdeluxe4958
      @ramenbomberdeluxe4958 Před rokem +11

      @@Fatherofheroesandheroines Truly a tragedy that the city remained lost after the ganja fire…

    • @mhdfrb9971
      @mhdfrb9971 Před rokem +8

      @@ramenbomberdeluxe4958 Mortals have made up their minds to name two forms, one of which they should not name, and that is where they go astray from the truth. They have distinguished them as opposite in form, and have assigned to them marks distinct from one another. To the one they allot the fire of heaven, gentle, very light, in every direction the same as itself, but not the same as the other. The other is just the opposite to it, dark night, a compact and heavy body. Of these I tell you the whole arrangement as it seems likely; for so no thought of mortals will ever outstrip you.

    • @Fatherofheroesandheroines
      @Fatherofheroesandheroines Před rokem +6

      @@ramenbomberdeluxe4958 yes well the Great Cataclysm of the Burning Grass truly made us lose a lot of history ...it was a HIGH event.

    • @Fatherofheroesandheroines
      @Fatherofheroesandheroines Před rokem

      @@mhdfrb9971 ?

  • @jackieking1522
    @jackieking1522 Před rokem

    You showed a picture of Murchison Falls which is indeed between two crags but not hard to port around ( avoiding crocodiles ) while Kabalega Falls are much less impressive, without any constricting crags and probably rather a long portage to get around.

  • @12vscience
    @12vscience Před rokem

    cool

  • @yes619
    @yes619 Před rokem +7

    Romans visited the coast of Somalia frequently for trade on their way to India

    • @NoRockinMansLand
      @NoRockinMansLand Před rokem

      Really???

    • @yes619
      @yes619 Před rokem

      @@NoRockinMansLand you did not know this? Ancient Greeks came even before this. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periplus_of_the_Erythraean_Sea

    • @NoRockinMansLand
      @NoRockinMansLand Před rokem

      @@yes619 cool stuff, yeah I heard about the land of Punt so I know it happened. Are you Somali?

    • @yes619
      @yes619 Před rokem

      Yep

  • @bedouinknight9437
    @bedouinknight9437 Před rokem +12

    Can you talk about Romans Scientific discovery ? If they exist

    • @Fatherofheroesandheroines
      @Fatherofheroesandheroines Před rokem +9

      They do indeed. Romans figured out a type of concrete we only now are figuring out for instance. Also their roads were wonders as well.

    • @PraveenJose18551
      @PraveenJose18551 Před rokem +4

      Too broad of a topic tbh

    • @zacmarulo8721
      @zacmarulo8721 Před rokem +4

      @@PraveenJose18551 just split it up into a series that's all. More episodes for us right?

    • @mondaysinsanity8193
      @mondaysinsanity8193 Před rokem +1

      Its mostly greek discoveries tbh rome themselves kinda saw greece as their "science nerds" much as greece was largely romes farm

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Před rokem +4

      Not really any discovery, like the greeks, they thought that everything was invented. Where they shine is in their ability to synthesize multiple databases of knowledges among the conquered people into one cohesive whole. They were the organizers of what was already discovered among their expanding empire.

  • @olowrohek9540
    @olowrohek9540 Před rokem

    Wow very interested
    Do we know what DNA have had ancient Romans

  • @erinknightingale251
    @erinknightingale251 Před rokem

    Could you please do a video on the experiences the greeks has on the coast of Africa, particularly somalia?

  • @mfaizsyahmi
    @mfaizsyahmi Před rokem +6

    I bet the story about the travellers who went past the Atlas Mountains found the Niger River instead.

    • @090giver090
      @090giver090 Před rokem +1

      Agricola (yes, that one) once led an expedition south from Roman Mauretania (modern day Morocco) south and believed to reach somewhere around modern day Senegal or Gambia.