The Kassite Dynasty of Babylon

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
  • In this video we explore possibly the origins and history of the Kassite Dynasty of Babylon. Though the longest reigning dynasty of the ancient Near East, the Kassites as a people are not very well known. Despite their humble origins, their rule of ancient Mesopotamia was one of overall peace and prosperity. However, towards the end, the Kassites faced pressure from both the nascent state of Assyria as well as Mesopotamia's long-time rival, Elam. This is a story of ancient Mesopotamia that you won't want to miss.
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    #ancienthistory #mesopotamia #babylon

Komentáře • 324

  • @TheAshHeritor
    @TheAshHeritor Před rokem +5

    Those damn Elamites. Always at it!
    Can't get a rest these days!

    • @bullrun2772
      @bullrun2772 Před rokem +1

      lol yeah and Assyrians

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      ​@@bullrun2772 But the Aryans exterminated the Elam and killed them when they took control of Iran

    • @bullrun2772
      @bullrun2772 Před rokem

      @@user-cg2tw8pw7j what you mean you got any evidence

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      @@bullrun2772 The Aryan immigrants killed the indigenous people of Iran such as Elam and took control of the region

    • @bullrun2772
      @bullrun2772 Před rokem

      @@user-cg2tw8pw7j not really

  • @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156

    I love how the Kassite names have a very alien sound to them, but in a totally different way than the Assyrian names, or Babylonian names.

    • @ardd.c.8113
      @ardd.c.8113 Před 2 lety

      Sci fi writers plagiarize history like no tomorrow

  • @Eabatu
    @Eabatu Před 4 lety +16

    Whats funny is that if you did a short vid about where that statue of Marduk traveled, it would be amazing. Marduk definitely got to know the 4 winds, and the many waters of Mesopotamia, and its neighbors.

    • @Eabatu
      @Eabatu Před 4 lety +1

      Was there an explanation from, Kashtiliash The 4th, of the goings on upon the same timeline as Tukulti - Ninutra The 1st's account? I mean, Im certain TN1 embellished, but this breaking of an oath to Shammash should not be glossed over.

  • @jaymesguy239
    @jaymesguy239 Před 3 lety +5

    Thanks, I love this series. I wish I had been taught more about Bronze Age Civilizations in high school.

  • @shakiaserk4135
    @shakiaserk4135 Před 4 lety +4

    Perfect and thank you for great illustration.

  • @jumo004
    @jumo004 Před 2 lety

    I really like your channel and share your interest in ancient history. Thank you.

  • @helenafranzen9828
    @helenafranzen9828 Před 4 lety +1

    From being a people almost noone heard of you give them their right place in our (very simplified) history books. Really interesting and well presented video! Thanks a lot!

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you, I really appreciate the kind words. There's more on Babylon before this time in other videos if you're interested - check out the Babylon / Babylonia playlist for that. Thanks again for stopping by, stay safe!

  • @kkrnn1785
    @kkrnn1785 Před 3 lety +3

    From Mesopotamia they moved to Caspian and from Caspian they moved to kashmir(now conflicts land of India and Pakistan). In kasmir they have a great discovery a rice nowadays called marcy rice in Nepal which grows in cold and high altitude and extremely nutrients then normal rice. When population start to grow the land is not enough for food so they started to move Eastern parts of himalayas and went karnali (western part of nepal) and established a very powerful civilization and empire. The empire was from Afghanistan to central nepal. The empire was exist around 1100 ad. The big population of khas(kaaaites) lived in Nepal. You can search khas culture of karnali nepal in CZcams. Khas are warriors community who were first people to play war with horse. They invade babylonia in around 1800 bc. I am also from khas community.

  • @Moneyaddthenmultiply
    @Moneyaddthenmultiply Před 5 lety +57

    It’s been theorized that these guys were early Indo Europeans like the Hittites (the Mitanni are also theorized to be early Indo European rulers over a majority foreign language speaking people)

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 5 lety +33

      Yes, you're correct, that's definitely a very plausible theory. I find the one about the Mitanni fascinating too because the names of many of their rulers (Artatama, Shaushtatar, Tushratta etc) are Indo-European, so the theory is that there was an Indo-European ruling class or group of elites presiding over a mostly Hurrian-speaking population. Hard to prove definitively, but there is a good deal of evidence for this.
      Thanks though for stopping by, I really appreciate it and more to come soon!

    • @moneyflow5766
      @moneyflow5766 Před 4 lety +5

      BS you and your "European" theories lol

    • @duckblure.u.cacademy2445
      @duckblure.u.cacademy2445 Před 4 lety +3

      @@HistorywithCy if Greeks and Romans and Russians started out black. Then in what same logic would u use the word indo.

    • @annaabrams8738
      @annaabrams8738 Před 4 lety +8

      @Brian Mino Do yourself a favour and research a little bit from non-biblical sources. What you'll learn will shock you I think.

    • @Sinsteel
      @Sinsteel Před 3 lety +19

      @@moneyflow5766 Yeah haha, crazy theories backed up by whacky linguistics, craaaazy archaeology, and best of all, loony DNA evidence!

  • @ghostpasha9076
    @ghostpasha9076 Před 4 lety +15

    Great topic - I especially like learning about the Kassites, because I've been to the crumbling ziggurat at Agar Quf (Dur-Kurigalzu)... in fact I was involved in a firefight in the shadow of the structure.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +6

      Wow, that's awesome! I've always wanted to go to these lesser known places of antiquity. Most people know of Ur and Nineveh, but few know of even the existence of Dur-Kurigalzu. Super cool.
      Thanks for stopping by...stay safe!

    • @ghostpasha9076
      @ghostpasha9076 Před 4 lety

      @@HistorywithCy Thanks for an excellent channel, just found it a day or so ago.

  • @chriswhite4640
    @chriswhite4640 Před 4 lety +4

    Keep up the great work dude and please do more on ancient Greece

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you! I'll be doing stuff on ancient Greece (a lot actually) in a few months...stay tuned!

  • @rigulur
    @rigulur Před 3 lety +10

    idk if anyone else does this but when im studying about ancient history i sometimes root for specific factions, sorta making them the 'protagonists' in the story of history

    • @michaelhowze8198
      @michaelhowze8198 Před 3 lety +4

      I do this to even if I know they're about to get rolled lol

    • @chronoleviathan
      @chronoleviathan Před 10 měsíci

      I think a lot of us do this. Probably from playing too many “Civilization” games as a kid.
      I’m always rooting for Elam in these ancient Mesopotamian stories, even though their insolence was the cause of their own downfall. I tend to favor trading/mercantile peoples because that’s what I’d want to do in ancient times.

    • @Samuel42069
      @Samuel42069 Před 20 dny

      every nation/culture gets "rolled" sooner or later. ​@@michaelhowze8198

  • @quantadotonium3654
    @quantadotonium3654 Před rokem

    Thank you and I have profoundly connected . . .

  • @anarrivingwingedhussar9692

    Your videos are addictive!

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 3 lety

      Haha thanks, for me, studying history is like a drug...can't get enough! Thanks so much for stopping by, really appreciate it! More to come, stay safe!

  • @hamedbrn446
    @hamedbrn446 Před 2 lety

    Good job👍🏼

  • @HVLLOWS1999
    @HVLLOWS1999 Před 4 lety +14

    If you watch Olie bye's video on ancient Mesopotamia you will see how long the Kassites ruled Babylon. I was suprised at how long they did.

  • @madderhat5852
    @madderhat5852 Před 3 lety +3

    Very enjoyable and educational episode. I would love if that statue of Marduk still existed.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 3 lety +4

      Hi, thanks for stopping by, really appreciate it! That's an interesting question, honestly I don't think anyone has found it. There is an instance during the Achaemenid period almost 1000 years later when king Xerxes melted down a statue of Marduk after a Babylonian revolt, but I don't know if that was the same statue (there may have been several of them in the Easagila). Maybe it'll be found some day, who knows. Thanks so much for stopping by, really appreciate it...stay safe!

  • @Sarke2
    @Sarke2 Před 4 lety +4

    Great episode, Kassites are really an enigma i think they were early indo european peoples simillar to Hittites and Mittani.

  • @bredmond812
    @bredmond812 Před 3 lety +1

    Can you do videos on the Amorites in all their shapes and forms?

  • @guylenejoseph43
    @guylenejoseph43 Před 4 lety

    Very well

  • @panpap9735
    @panpap9735 Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent job on the period. I would like to have some comments on the museum findings of this Era. I am not referring to the tablets, which were explicitly covered

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +1

      Hi, thanks for stopping by. I'm going to be putting out another version of this video... I"ll keep your suggestion in mind. Thanks!

  • @kaarlimakela3413
    @kaarlimakela3413 Před 4 lety +4

    Kara-Indash using ancient (to him) Sumerian for this official proclamation reminds me of Medieval Western Europe's adapting/adopting Latin for official formalities of all sorts.

  • @dp803dp
    @dp803dp Před 2 lety

    Hmm... Good video

  • @ivanstrydom8417
    @ivanstrydom8417 Před rokem +2

    ''Dark age'' does not mean ''stagnation/lack of innovation''. ''Dark Age'' refers to ''Lack of information about that time period. As stated by yourself, during the Mesopotamian ''Dark age'' the regions still flourished under the Kassites.
    The exact same applies to the Medieval ''Dark Age''.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před rokem +3

      Yes, you are correct... the Kassite era was actually a stable and prosperous time overall for Babylonia. The Dark Age should be in reference to lack of written sources, at least in comparison to other periods of Babylonian history. Thanks!

    • @ivanstrydom8417
      @ivanstrydom8417 Před rokem +1

      @@HistorywithCy Highly enjoying your videos good sir.

  • @kaarlimakela3413
    @kaarlimakela3413 Před 4 lety +1

    My ears equate the sound of Kassite king names to Hittite king names ... looking at the time and general place of origin you noted, some possible connection occurred to me, and wouldn't surprise me.

  • @TheIxF3ARzz
    @TheIxF3ARzz Před 4 lety +1

    What would say were the top 5 most important or most powerful Mesopotamian dynasties ?

  • @esrarengiztayfa3090
    @esrarengiztayfa3090 Před 4 lety +5

    Good as always. Forgive me if i'm wrong, but as far as i remember "dark ages" indicates a period that we don't have many written records. That's why it's called dark ages, if i'm not wrong.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +6

      Hi, and thanks for your comment. Yes, you're correct, that essentially is the definition of a "dark age." In future presentations, I"ll be sure to be more clear about this. Thanks for stopping by and please let me know if you have any other questions or comments. More to come, stay tuned!

    • @rangerbobcat
      @rangerbobcat Před 4 lety +1

      @@HistorywithCy Over on the channel for the Penn Museum there is a great term that is used for times which were called 'Dark Ages' in the past. It is 'Less complex times'. I like it because there is no value judgement in the term.

  • @biljanamilanovic1682
    @biljanamilanovic1682 Před 4 lety

    Molto, molto i teressante, grazie tante!

    • @hermescarraro3393
      @hermescarraro3393 Před 4 lety

      Non penso che sappia l'italiano Biljana...
      😅

    • @biljanamilanovic1682
      @biljanamilanovic1682 Před 4 lety

      @@hermescarraro3393
      Ti sbagli! Lui mi ha scritto che capsce italiano perche' conosce portughese e spagnolo e che quando gli scrivo in italiano, lui migliora suo italiano.
      Comunque ti ringrazio che mi hai contatata. Sonp sicura che anche a te piaciono tanto le sue lezioni.
      Tanti saluti,

    • @hermescarraro3393
      @hermescarraro3393 Před 4 lety

      @@biljanamilanovic1682
      Ah.
      In questo caso.
      Ok.
      Errore mio, scusa.
      👋👍

    • @biljanamilanovic1682
      @biljanamilanovic1682 Před 4 lety

      @@hermescarraro3393
      Non c'e' problemma. Anche se italiano non e' una lingua importante come tedesco, francese, portughese, spagnolo, inglese, ruso, oramai anche cinese, la gente studia italiano perche' gli piace, perche' e' bellissima lingua. Io sapendo questo ho scritto in italiano e avevo ragione.
      Tanti saluti,🙋‍♀️

    • @hermescarraro3393
      @hermescarraro3393 Před 4 lety

      @@biljanamilanovic1682
      Anche a te.
      👋👋👋

  • @Jack2000-fq7ph
    @Jack2000-fq7ph Před 2 měsíci +2

    Kassites, Gutians, Cyrtians, Hurrians and Medes are the ancestors of modern Kurdish people. This explains why the much of the Kurdish dna is traced back to the Zagros mountains or what do you think?

  • @stylus2253
    @stylus2253 Před 4 lety +1

    Saddam Hussein dreamed of making Babylon a bustling seaport and the book of Revelation (future history) references the sea. Perhaps in the future the Euphrates is dredged out right up to the city. It says she will have economic relations with merchant-kings worldwide.
    Fascinating history-- where do you find this stuff?

  • @Sinsteel
    @Sinsteel Před 3 lety +7

    Kassites introduced horse and chariot to the area, and their leaders and gods had Indo-European names. They were likely a ruling elite who ruled over people with a different language groups.
    For sure they were Indo-Iranian.

  • @sebolddaniel
    @sebolddaniel Před 2 lety

    Love the linguistic background. If you can't figure out what language family they came from, you will never understand their wars.

  • @mitannie1033
    @mitannie1033 Před 3 lety +3

    We still have those Kasside and Mitannies name in KURDISH LANGUAGE.
    By the way KUREGALZU Means “son of GALZU “ in Kurdish KARDU is KURDI NOW . Even those cities are own by Kurdish people still . And Kurdish Language is about 4000 years old . So please study in Kurdish you will see .
    Even now by Persian Arabic and Assyrian language they still Call KURDISH people KARDU - KARDA - KORDA so it’s real just study on please .
    S.Miran Mardini

  • @pachanoii8657
    @pachanoii8657 Před 4 lety +8

    I'm really surprised that a nomadic mountain people were able to so successfully administer the large urban centers of Mesopotamia. Wouldn't their political/organizational systems have been vastly different from pre-Kassite-Babylon's? Or did they just more so focus on "international" matters like relations, war, and trade, while leaving the management of urban affairs to the locals?

    • @adityanawani8134
      @adityanawani8134 Před 3 lety +4

      Mongols administered China.

    • @LanMandragon1720
      @LanMandragon1720 Před 3 lety +11

      @@adityanawani8134 Nomads took over agricultural civilizations literally all the time. It only stopped when gunpowder became widespread. The idea that they couldn't run cities is well ridiculous.

    • @JohnDoe10350
      @JohnDoe10350 Před 7 měsíci

      Not surprising at all, considering that these civilizations were pretty much designed to have a ruling class of "barbarian" origin.
      Sargon of Akkad was probably Amorite - who were desert-dwellers.
      Hammurabi of the old Babylonians as well.
      The Aramean nomads took over most of the Fertile Crescent.
      Gutians' and Kassites' ancestors were mountain dwellers.
      The Mitanni were Indo-Iranian nomads.
      It was more of a rule than exception. Nomads were militarily superior to farmers but waited for times of weakness to become the new ruling class of the settled communities.

  • @monfared1
    @monfared1 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for ur great content .
    The hypothetical origin of kassites in zagros mountains , is western Iran , not north west .
    Lorestan province , has many ancient cave which unfortunately due to lack authorities had been looted by smugglers .
    Examples are kalmakareh Cave , most famous .
    Doshe cave , kogan cave , so goes on .

    • @JohnDoe10350
      @JohnDoe10350 Před 7 měsíci

      Some of the Manneans in north-west Iran had Kassite names.
      The Neo-Assyrians referred to the Diyala/Sirvan river valleys of north-east Iraq and north-west Iran as the land of the Kassites.
      In the Bronze Age, the area of Lorestan appear to have been Gutian land, because they say that the Urmia Basin was the land of the Turrukeans, south of them(Kermanshah) were the Lullubi and south of them were the Gutians.

  • @KMac329
    @KMac329 Před 4 lety +3

    I really enjoy this series. You do a great job. (Just one minor criticism: Could you refrain from uttering "Uh" so often?)

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +2

      Hi and thanks for your comment! Yes, I think I may even redo this video... or at least parts of it and release it. Thanks so much for the constructive criticism, I'll do my best to watch out for that in future!

    • @iAmEhead
      @iAmEhead Před 4 lety +4

      @@HistorywithCy It's really hard for some people not to use fillers like "uh", myself included. Personally, I much prefer a natural and extemporaneous style of speaking, even if it includes "uhs", to a more polished but stiff and unnatural style that sounds like someone reading a Wikipedia article. So, I think you are doing just fine.

  • @GeorgeKovacs-re2qo
    @GeorgeKovacs-re2qo Před 23 dny

    The Kassie’s and the Elamites were both from the Zagros mountains in modern Iran and possibly spoke related languages, that by itself never prevented armed conflict though.

  • @scottnunnemaker5209
    @scottnunnemaker5209 Před 3 lety +1

    I can only learn about history and see modern times. Like take Babylon and replace it with Iraq and the stability Iraq represented in the region being between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Like Saddam was a horrible person, but a strong Iraq helped keep the peace a bit in the region, and all the chaos of various groups trying to get control of the region after the fall of Iraq is like what happened after the sack of Babylon. It’s the old history doesn’t repeat itself, but it rhymes.

  • @shzarmai
    @shzarmai Před 5 měsíci +1

    shoutout to the Kassites ❤

  • @drswag0076
    @drswag0076 Před 2 lety +1

    oh the places Marduk has been and the things he's seen. too bad he didn't bring back souvenirs though.

  • @jesussaves1875
    @jesussaves1875 Před 4 lety

    The following names of cities were translated to English from Hebrew; not all will be the same but there are many that are similar (also note that after their languages changed their names and the names of their gods changed - as noted also in the oracles of ancient Greece - also quoted below)
    Theophilus to Autolycus - Theophilus of Antioch wrote:
    "The first city was Babylon, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh, in the land of Shinar (Mesopotamia - which means "land between the rivers" i.e. the Tigris and Euphrates). And their king was called Nebroth [Nimrod]. From these came Asshur (Asshur built Nineveh) , from whom also the Assyrians receive their name. And Nimrod built the cities Nineveh and Rehoboth, and Calah, and Resen, between Nineveh and Calah; and Nineveh became a very great city. And another son of Shem, the son of Noah, by name Mizraim, begat Ludim, and those called Anamim, and Lehabim, and Naphtuhim, and Pathrusim, and Casluhim, out of whom came Philistin. Of the three sons of Noah, however, and of their death and genealogy, we have given a compendious register in the above-mentioned book. But now we will mention the remaining facts both concerning cities and kings, and the things that happened when there was one speech and one language. Before the dividing of the languages these fore-mentioned cities existed. But when men were about to be dispersed, they took counsel of their own judgment, and not at the instigation of God, to build a city, a tower whose top might reach into heaven, that they might make a glorious name to themselves. Since, therefore, they had dared, contrary to the will of God, to attempt a grand work, God destroyed their city, and overthrew their tower. From that time He confounded the languages of men, giving to each a different dialect. And similarly did the Sibyl (oracle of ancient Greece) speak, when she declared that wrath would come on the world. She says: --
    "When are fulfilled the threats of the great God,
    With which He threatened men, when formerly
    In the Assyrian land they built a tower,
    And all were of one speech, and wished to rise
    Even till they climbed unto the starry heaven,
    Then the Immortal raised a mighty wind
    And laid upon them strong necessity;
    For when the wind threw down the mighty tower,
    Then rose among mankind fierce strife and hate.
    One speech was changed to many dialects,
    And earth was filled with divers tribes and kings."
    And so on. These things, then, happened in the land of the Chaldæans. And in the land of Canaan there was a city, by name Haran. And in these days, Pharaoh, who by the Egyptians (also known as the land of Mizraim by the ancient Hebrews) was also called Nechaoth, was first king of Egypt, and thus the kings followed in succession. And in the land of Shinar, among those called Chaldæans, the first king was Arioch, and next after him Ellasar, and after him Chedorlaomer, king of Elam, and after him Tidal, king of the nations called Assyrians. And there were five other cities in the territory of Ham, the son of Noah; the first called Sodom, then Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboiim, and Balah, which was also called Zoar. And the names of their kings are these: Bera, king of Sodom; Birsha, king of Gomorrah; Shinab, king of Admah; Shemeber, king of Zeboiim; Bela, king of Zoar, which is also called Kephalac. These served Chedorlaomer, the king of the Assyrians, for twelve years, and in the thirteenth year they revolted from Chedorlaomer; and thus it came to pass at that time that the four Assyrian kings waged war upon the five kings. This was the first commencement of making war on the earth; and they destroyed the giants Karnaim, and the strong nations that were with them in their city, and the Horites of the mountains called Seir, as far as the plain of Paran, which is by the wilderness. And at that time there was a righteous king called Melchisedek, in the city of Salem, which now is Jerusalem. This was the first priest of all priests of the Most High God; and from him the above-named city Hierosolyma was called Jerusalem. And from his time priests were found in all the earth. And after him reigned Abimelech in Gerar; and after him another Abimelech. Then reigned Ephron, surnamed the Hittite. Such are the names of the kings that were in former times. And the rest of the kings of the Assyrians, during an interval of many years, have been passed over in silence unrecorded, all writers narrating the events of our recent days. There were these kings of Assyria: Tiglath-Pileser, and after him Shalmaneser, then Sennacherib; and Adrammelech the Ethiopian, who also reigned over Egypt, was his triarch; -- though these things, in comparison with our books, are quite recent."
    Taken from ~ biblehub(dot)com/library/theophilus/theophilus_to_autolycus

    • @jesussaves1875
      @jesussaves1875 Před 4 lety

      Another note: The top of Mesopotamia is not far from the mountains of Ararat where the Ark landed - The flood was about 4400 years ago (ie 2344BC - this date is worked out in Lunar years of 360 days)

  • @catboy8137
    @catboy8137 Před 4 lety +8

    I believe the city of kashan in the zagros mountain in iran is a place they might have originated from.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +4

      Yeah I've heard other people say that too. I though know the exact place of origin, only that most scholars cite it to be somewhere in the Zagros mountains.
      Thanks for stopping by, I really appreciate it!

    • @kurdisumeri1526
      @kurdisumeri1526 Před 3 lety +1

      @@HistorywithCy and zagros mountains was kurdish mountains!

    • @Yarkanlaki
      @Yarkanlaki Před 3 lety +1

      @@HistorywithCy kardan-iash Kurds

    • @herooja
      @herooja Před 3 lety +5

      @@kurdisumeri1526 Kurds seem to be obsessed with connecting themselves to all the ancient Mesopotamian peoples, despite being the most recemt arrivals to Northern Mesopotamia along with Turkmens, one would think there would be more indications and references to them or ancestors in the 10s of thousands of inscriptions all over the place.

    • @herooja
      @herooja Před 3 lety +3

      @NS funny, when were Kurds 1st mentioned in history?

  • @Yetizrach
    @Yetizrach Před 4 lety +2

    Nazi-Bugash... Thank you History with Cy!

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you for stopping by, I really appreciate it!

  • @beauregardduquesne3831

    Where would the City of UR be on a modern day map?

  • @erfancurufinwe8356
    @erfancurufinwe8356 Před 3 lety

    The Cassians lived around the Caspian Sea. Mostly in the land that is located in Qazvin and Gilan today.
    Many people in this area consider themselves Kasis. Also, traces of them have been found. The name of the ancient city of Kashan in Iran is from these people.

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      No indigenous people were killed when the Aryan immigrants came

  • @vaishnavnegi9640
    @vaishnavnegi9640 Před 2 lety

    Are these people the same as Khas or Khasiyas of Himalayas ?

  • @physbang
    @physbang Před rokem

    I think the term dark ages, in this case at least, refers to the paucity of written material. Much of the written material by the Kassites is inaccessible in that they are in very fragile conditions and difficult to recover without destroying the tablets.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před rokem

      Yes, you're correct... theirs was the longest ruling dynasty but there are relatively few contemporary documents and inscriptions from that time (save for kudurrus and bits from Assyrian annals) that tell us much about them. In large Babylon video I think I go into that in more detail. Thanks for watching, appreciate it!

  • @bogdannocracy
    @bogdannocracy Před 5 lety +7

    Great video. I personally see the Kassite - Babylonian relationship as similar as that of the Romans and the Greeks, and as the Turks and the Arabs, and even the Arabs of the 7-th century and Sassanian Persians.
    A less civilized but militarily far more competent people conquers the territory of a far more civilized people but militarily way past its golden age. But then, instead of destroying the civilization, it co-opts it and makes it its own, thereby saving it for the future.
    P.S: What happened to tie History of Assyria series? Will there be a new video, covering the last century of the empire and its demise?

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 5 lety +4

      Yeah, that's how I tend to look at it as well - there are so many examples in history like this, some of which you mentioned. Macedonians/Greeks and Persians could also be another example.
      Speaking of the Assyria series, yes, I want to wrap it up by this summer, probably end of June. The reason is that after the first week of June, I'll have much more time to devote to those. When I started that series, what now seems like eons ago, I had no idea how much I didn't know. I just keep learning so much more interesting stuff about Assyrian history that I want to incorporate; so it's taking a bit longer than I had expected. I have the outlines for the final five in the series - Sargon II, Sennacherib, Esarhaddon, Ashurbanipal and finally one on the end of the Assyrian empire. I know it's been a while since I put one out but hopefully the wait will be worth it!
      Thanks again for stopping by the channel, I really appreciate it! More on Babylon, Assyria and others coming soon!

    • @michaelhowze8198
      @michaelhowze8198 Před 3 lety

      Ahh the Chinese strategy very nice

  • @bookmankdw8669
    @bookmankdw8669 Před 2 lety

    I believe 4th kassite king was named Abi-Ratta (Abhiratha)

  • @maskman7203
    @maskman7203 Před 3 lety +1

    Iam from eshnunna {Diyala}

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 3 lety +1

      Oh awesome, that's really interesting. I've only seen the ruins of Eshnunna in photos, would love to explore the site one day. Thanks so much for stopping by, really appreciate it. More to come, stay safe!

  • @nabintimalsina9156
    @nabintimalsina9156 Před 3 lety +9

    The Kassites may be a branch of semi nomadic Kas tribe that wandered from Kosovo (or even west) to Nepal . There are many places like Kashi (India) , Kasi (China) , Khasan(Nepal), Kashmir , HinduKush , Kazakhastan , Caspian Sea , Caucasus Mountain , Khazaria and Upto Kosovo . And remember that Kashmir was part of Dardistan or Balkh region and Kosovo was part of Dardania or Balkan region . The names are pre Islamic . I am a Nepalese Khas .The name Nepal(Kathmandu City) and Napoli don't only sound similar but have same meaning too (New City) . Kathmandu , although getting destroyed by major earthquake once every 70-80 years still has far higher density of heritage structures that can easily surpass most of European cities which is very uncommon in South Asia. Nepalese Khukuri and Greek Kopis are similar . We say Tuppo to Tip ,Poko to Packet , Falam for Iron( Ferrum in Latin) , Jamara to Germinated seedling , Aran to working place of metalsmiths(Iron came from same word) , Joon to Moon ( Junius and Lunius both are same) , Khola to tiny river (Qala in Maltese) , Damaha to Drum and so many words that are not found in Sanskrit or Indic languages (except Himalayan) . Many of our festivals are similar to Iranian festivals of Navroz and even Halloween that is not found in Gangetic planes of India . This video made me more proud of our history . Kassites are not but Khas people that are semi nomadic that live from SouthEastern Europe to Nepal .

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha, no, they were European Semites, they weren't sophisticated, and they were just cavemen.

    • @Mr0rris0
      @Mr0rris0 Před rokem +2

      What a trip

    • @by_dikaprodikapro3092
      @by_dikaprodikapro3092 Před 7 měsíci

      Kassites kürtlerin atalardır

    • @HansWurst1569
      @HansWurst1569 Před 2 měsíci

      😂😂 okay dude pass the joint already

  • @ZA-fo7ly
    @ZA-fo7ly Před 7 měsíci

    My ancestors ✊🏻

  • @kaarlimakela3413
    @kaarlimakela3413 Před 5 lety +2

    I note the value of continuing local tradition after you've successfully invaded a country like Babylonia ... if I may use the word country loosely ...
    The rootless Latin speakers establishing Rome admired and adopted much from Greek and Etruscan cultures.
    The Hittites were thought to have been IndoEuro folks who adapted themselves to, as the ruling class, a great deal of local gods, and added more to their pantheon with every conquest ...
    And also the Kassites in Babylonia?
    Begs the question ... how easy is it to drop the culture, if any, you rode in on?
    The mutineers from the Bounty were happy to go Native ...
    So do some invaders lack whatever they find in these settled places?
    Or they just admire so much more the uniqueness, or the resources, the weather, the crop yields, the appearance of the local ladiez....😉

  • @ahmonguniform
    @ahmonguniform Před 2 lety

    Looks like the stone letters appears to look like ancient Chinese script like the Xia dynasty

  • @E4everything.
    @E4everything. Před rokem

    I am kasi and we still in quetta pakistan we have long history

  • @Tealck
    @Tealck Před 7 měsíci

    It’s quite interesting that 40M Kurds that live in that exact area and have done so for millennia never get mentioned. Some of it caused by the politics of WW1 and a bit after. Sadly, if you don’t have your own country you don’t have ownership of your history. I suggest a more scientific approach going forward. Kurds are a huge part of the Neolithic revolution and its aftermath that re-shaped the world forever.

  • @ReinholdOtto
    @ReinholdOtto Před 5 lety +4

    Do you know the term "Kassite trash"? I read that this is what the Assyriologists call the tablets of the Kassites, as they are often quite broken/decayed. No idea if that is a coincidence.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 5 lety +3

      Haha no I don't actually remember ever reading that term, but it makes sense and see why Assyriologists would use it. One type of artifact that I didn't talk about in the video because it would have made it too long (though I showed images of them) are the kudurru stelae from the Kassite era. Those are really fascinating objects and some of the images carved onto them are quite beautiful.

    • @humblehurrian205
      @humblehurrian205 Před 4 lety +2

      The tablets of the Kassites pose a problem for "assyriologists", because they show a people that conquered not only through war, but through their words and their deeds. The Kassites came from the Himalaya, and they brought their Gods with them, making a very uncomfortable truth be confronted by people who are trained by pro zionist historians, and you'll not find the Kassites in the Bible...which tells you much

    • @HVLLOWS1999
      @HVLLOWS1999 Před 4 lety +3

      @@humblehurrian205 can you elaborate further? If you want just asking man. Im a bit thrown off by what you said. Do the Kassite tablets say they came from the Himalayas. Because most views of history source them in the Zagros.

    • @humblehurrian205
      @humblehurrian205 Před 4 lety

      @@HVLLOWS1999 well many if their words and names are actually of vedic deities and they often refer to names of mountains such as Meru. Also...the land of Kashmir is known to the Hindus as a place named for them...after their ancestral god Kassu. I suspect this to be Kishar...grandmother of Anu.
      Reality is far more interesting than fiction

    • @HVLLOWS1999
      @HVLLOWS1999 Před 4 lety +1

      @@humblehurrian205 I see. So what does this have to do with Assyria/Semetic peoples and the Bible? I genuinely want to know im not trying to be nit picky.

  • @bookmankdw8669
    @bookmankdw8669 Před 2 lety

    1st kassite king was named Gandaš (Gandha)

  • @Hermesborugerdian
    @Hermesborugerdian Před 2 lety +2

    I’m from where this civilization originated in Iran 😍

    • @MuhammadKhan-cc4pr
      @MuhammadKhan-cc4pr Před 2 lety

      Is there any Shinwari tribe in Lorestan. Do they have native lands and villages in Iran?

    • @Hermesborugerdian
      @Hermesborugerdian Před 2 lety +1

      @@MuhammadKhan-cc4pr Not in Lorestan province to my knowledge. Where are you from?

    • @MuhammadKhan-cc4pr
      @MuhammadKhan-cc4pr Před 2 lety

      @@Hermesborugerdian i am from Shinwari tribe living on Pakistan and Afghanistan border.

    • @Hermesborugerdian
      @Hermesborugerdian Před 2 lety +1

      @@MuhammadKhan-cc4pr Are you Pashtun?

    • @MuhammadKhan-cc4pr
      @MuhammadKhan-cc4pr Před 2 lety

      @@Hermesborugerdian yes i am pashtun. Shinwari is said to be son of Kasi who separated from its mother tribe and migrated northwards. Kasi is a tribe living in Balochistan. I dont know if its the same kassites or not. But shinwari and kasi have traditional foods similar to that of Persians.

  • @kittengray66
    @kittengray66 Před 4 lety +1

    Why does everyone want Babylon all the time? What is so important there? And more important, Is it Still There?

  • @suupuhtaaksi-podi
    @suupuhtaaksi-podi Před rokem

    One does not simply walk into Babylon

  • @SuleimanTheMagnificent71618

    War for statue (that one)

  • @musicnotrumours3183
    @musicnotrumours3183 Před 4 lety +3

    the makers of civilization, the Kassite or the Hettites or the Khasis or the Kasi or the Khasi; The Khasi are stil living and thriving in the North Eastern Hills of Meghalaya, the people called the Khasi. The only people who still erect monoliths and Megaliths, and the only people who claims to have erected monoliths and megaliths; these people are the starters of civilization and the Sumerians, the Phoenicians are decedents of the Kassites; just to mentioned that the Kassite and the Hettites is just a variation of name however they are one of the same people!

  • @ReinholdOtto
    @ReinholdOtto Před 5 lety +2

    Normally, a "dark age" is one where we lack knowledge, which is the case in early Kassite Babylon, in the Greek centuries between 1200 and 400, and the early middle age in Europe. Of course, this term is reguarly mis-interpreted as denoting an age of cultural and civilisatory decline. Which often go together, if you come to think of it, because such a decline leads to less remaining records.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 5 lety +1

      Yes, you're absolutely right and I totally agree that the lack of knowledge about a certain period of time is what more or less defines a "dark age." I think what I was trying to convey is that in the past, I've fely that many historians/Assyriologists tend to have some sort of bias against the Kassite Dynasty. Granted there has been less information uncovered about them, but I feel that the Kassites overall have been viewed as culturally or intellectually inferior to say the 1st Dynasty of Babylon (Hammurabi's family), the 2nd Dynasty of Isin and the Chaldeans. This along with the fact that the Kassites were originally outside the Sumerian-Akkadian sphere of Mesopotamia in my opinion has given the term "dark age" in reference to their time on throne as having a deeply negative connotation. I wanted to counter this towards the end of the program by highlighting what I thought were a couple of their major achievements and contribution to Babylonia in general.
      Thanks again for stopping by the channel and for your comments. I really appreciate and learn from them! Please always feel free to comment and correct me at any time. Thanks again!

  • @manguy1386
    @manguy1386 Před 3 lety +2

    Heard Nazi Bugash wasn't a big fan of Judea

  • @abdullamawlood5688
    @abdullamawlood5688 Před rokem

    Kurigalzu, kuri means son "gal" means great "son of great zu"

  • @soheildian371
    @soheildian371 Před 4 měsíci

    in luri laguage from lorestan homeland af kassit pepole both words kur and kar means boy and man. even today we say kurilur , means son of lurs. and this words are indo europian . in norwigian kar means man. i think the kassit people were early scythians.

    • @arabianinferno6918
      @arabianinferno6918 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Lurs are tribal Persians.
      Only the name is different. Some lurs who went South and took the geographical name Persia thus becoming Persian.

    • @soheildian371
      @soheildian371 Před 2 měsíci

      @@arabianinferno6918 I agree

  • @physbang
    @physbang Před 4 lety +2

    I think that the Mitanni are likely of the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-Europeans. Also, though the Kassites had traits much like Indo-Europeans, their language does not appear to belong to the same family.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +3

      Hi, thanks for stopping by! Yes, many do believe that the Mitanni, at least the ruling class, were of Indo-European origin. There's a very interesting treaty between the Mitanni king (I think Artatama, not sure) and Suppiluliuma where many Vedic gods along with others are invoked as witnesses. In future I'm going to explore these links and see what I can find. Once again, thanks for stopping by, I really appreciate it!

    • @physbang
      @physbang Před 4 lety +2

      @@HistorywithCy I should have mentioned that I find your historical presentations very impressive. I was pleased to see that you have kept up to date with the latest scholarly work and brought it together into a clear and thorough summary.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +2

      @@physbang Thank you! I'm actually redoing this video... the newer version should be out in a couple of weeks, stay tuned and thanks!

    • @hawarrokzadministries9891
      @hawarrokzadministries9891 Před 3 lety +1

      Kassites are also Origins , ancestors from US Kurds

    • @umax870
      @umax870 Před rokem

      Recently they found sample from near border of iraq which was ruled by mitanni and they have harappan ancestry no steppe ancestry in that.mitanni are indo aryan not indoiranian.

  • @Memorial_Memory
    @Memorial_Memory Před 3 lety

    Every nation thinks other nations are more savage it’s pride. The native Americans in North America were a lot smarter than we teach.

  • @timomastosalo
    @timomastosalo Před 4 lety +3

    No links are found between the Elamites and Kassites? There's something similar there. Also, later Persian names have something similar in them. Though I'm not saying the Kassites were Indo-Europeans. Nor am I excluding the possibility. Yet mountain ranges can contain many different populations, like we see in the Caucasus even today.

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      No, Elam, and these were Semites, O clever one, but when the Aryans appeared, they killed them under the leadership of Achaemen, the leader of the Persians and the Medes

    • @shutruk-nahunte3309
      @shutruk-nahunte3309 Před rokem

      ​@@user-cg2tw8pw7j elamites were not semite

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      @@shutruk-nahunte3309 The inhabitants of Elam were dark-skinned, but the Aryans, Persians and Medes, had white skin

    • @shutruk-nahunte3309
      @shutruk-nahunte3309 Před rokem

      @@user-cg2tw8pw7j who said they were aryan? They were indigenous group their language is not semetic I'm a susian myself

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      @@shutruk-nahunte3309 My brother, the leader of the Persian tribe, Achaemen, killed all the inhabitants of Elam

  • @addalavenkataratnam5449
    @addalavenkataratnam5449 Před 6 měsíci

    Mesopotamia or sumerian dynasties ?

  • @IraqiSniper
    @IraqiSniper Před 3 lety +1

    thanks for this video , Kassites were an Iranian ethnic group and lived in the Zagros Mountains. Although the origin of Kassites is not certain, many scholars, according to archaeological, linguistic studies, and ancient written sources, have tended to target the Zagros Mountains (it is probable Luristan province) as their original homeland. They ruled Babylonia almost continuously from 17/16th to c.1155 BC. The Elamites conquered Babylonia in the 12th BC. Individual Kassites occupied important positions in the kingdom of Babylonia and even Karduniash. In accordance with the history, archaeology, and art of the Kassites, significant studies have been conducted outside Iran and the results have been published in books and articles, but no appropriate research has been done in Iran during this period. The discovery of a Kassite group of seals in Greece probably indicates cultural-political exchanges in that region. This paper studies the Kassite seals reflecting on the so-called Thebes treasure (Greece) and its findings referred to the Kassite group of the Late Bronze Age. The research method is descriptive-analytical (content) which is based on library studies. Many questions are addressed in this research, but the main questions are consisting of 1- Why and how were the Near Eastern Seals imported to Thebes into an Aegean palatial centres? 2 - How were the chronology and the usage of the seals? 3 - Were they also intended to be used as raw material? 4 - Was it because they were considered to be simple jewellery or because of their amuletic character? The seals are coming from various regions (Mesopotamia, Syria, Hittite Anatolia, Cyprus) and perhaps preserved all together in a wooden box. The meaning of this collection is enforced because of the other precious objects found with the seals revealing how this treasure represents the most important finding of Kassite archeology outside the Mesopotamia and its strong impact on the Greek culture. and Kassites and Elamite are the people whom named today LURS OR LURESTAN PEOPLE in east of Iraq and West Of Iran , , our Great Grandfathers are Sumerian (whom moved to south of iraq ) , Kassite and Elamite , Old Persia Cradle of Civilisations .. , in both Iraq and Iran ...

    • @IraqiSniper
      @IraqiSniper Před 2 lety +1

      @Muslim terrisost, The Kassites and Elamite are the people whom named today LURS OR LURESTAN PEOPLE in east of Iraq and West Of Iran , Long Life Luristan and lur Ethnic , our Great Grandfathers are Sumerian , Kassite and Elamite , Old Persia Cradle of Civilizations .. Long Life Luristan and lur Ethnic , in both Iraq and Iran ...

    • @IraqiSniper
      @IraqiSniper Před 2 lety +1

      @Muslim terrisostno you are wrong , sumerians said they came from near mountain besides many other evidences show they are from west of iran before iran became a country or name persia existe

    • @IraqiSniper
      @IraqiSniper Před 2 lety +1

      @Muslim terrisost The Sumerians came from western Iran and eastern Iraq from the Kurdish and Kurdish tribes in the cities of Kermishnah, Ilam, Khanaqin, Kalar and Greater Lorestan, eastern Iraq and western Iran, as they are the Sumerians who lived in southern Iraq. Iraq and others, and on it, for example, we take the opinion of the specialists, especially the orientalists who studied the history of nations according to what was discovered in the middle of the land of Iraq, and not the opinion of ordinary people on this matter, since the scholars of history and the evidence of European orientalists confirmed that the basis of the Sumerians from this spot is my agency.
      Hindcock, it is likely: ((The Sumerians came from the Elamite Bata'iah region from Zakrost to Lorestan, where the Sumerians and the Elamites spoke a strange non-Semitic language, and both of them inherited from the ancestors of the Elamites one common culture, and both of them used cuneiform writing)) Hindcock was not satisfied with this opinion, but goes further, saying : ((As for the cuneiform writing, we do not know who was the one who used the cuneiform writing before

    • @IraqiSniper
      @IraqiSniper Před 2 lety +1

      @Muslim terrisost The opinion of the orientalist Frankfurt:
      Frankfort supports what Hindcock brought and says: ((The swamp dwellers in western Iran still live today on the shores of the great lake of the Karun River in Lorestan, Khuzestan and the Bakhtiari areas. They build boats and huts from reeds, fish and keep buffaloes and cattle. It was prevalent in many parts of Persia at this period, and immigrants from such areas were always fully prepared to face life in an area such as the Euphrates delta. They brought it from western Persia, and at first they retained the highly interwoven geometric drawings that they used in their country of origin.)
      Dr. Ahmed Soussa's opinion:
      As for Dr. Ahmed Susa says about the Sumerians: ((The Sumerians were not the oldest settlers in Mesopotamia, meaning that there were other peoples who preceded them in settlement, especially the Semites)). But they represent a culture in the correct terms from western Iran.” Then he concludes by saying that “the language of the Sumerians is a foreign language alien to the region, so the Sumerians must have brought this language from a place other than Mesopotamia, which has a Semitic language, which we think is a place It is the region of Lorestan and Elam Al-Bataahiyah adjacent to the marshes region in southern Iraq and similar to it in its natural environment. There are no boundaries separating them, with evidence that the origin of the Sumerians is closer to the life of the marshes than the life of the countryside).

    • @IraqiSniper
      @IraqiSniper Před 2 lety +1

      @Muslim terrisost Dr.'s. Fawzi Rashid:
      Dr. Fawzi Rashid says:
      (We believe that they are residents of the northeastern sections of Iraq and western Iran, who came to the southern part of it in the form of immigrant groups from the areas of Al-Lar, due to the increase in population that occurred in the northern sections, which became disproportionate to the amount of food produced by the region, and this increase led to the migration of the surplus And after each migration, the population increase begins anew until it leads to another migration, and each migratory group lived in a specific area of ​​the southern section, and the areas inhabited by these migratory groups grew, developed and formed the well-known Sumerian city-states, and because the Sumerians came to the southern section of Iraq occurred in a period preceding the emergence of writing, so it is not possible to prove what we have mentioned conclusively.

  • @buckwheatINtheCity
    @buckwheatINtheCity Před 7 měsíci

    These people were cousins to the Hittites. 😊

  • @Ardonbb
    @Ardonbb Před rokem +2

    Kurds🌞👑.
    Do please auf Parthian sassanid ayubid thanks 🙏🏼

  • @jesussaves1875
    @jesussaves1875 Před 4 lety

    Urzi"guru"mash - it sounds like Indian crossed with Japanese O.o

  • @arturmarashi2410
    @arturmarashi2410 Před 3 lety

    Kish mins church Dorian not twistin kashat

  • @tishirina8993
    @tishirina8993 Před 4 lety +2

    it seams to me that the name kardashian sounds very babylonish...
    thanks for the video .

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +2

      haha that's funny... Karduniash! Kardashian is an Armenian name...not sure what it means though. Thanks for stopping by, more to come soon!

    • @bredmond812
      @bredmond812 Před 3 lety +1

      Apparently, a lot of names that end i -ian are Armenian names. That is why when i was watching Game of Thrones, my friend is like "What is with these Armenian names?". My thoughts on that are that Robert E Howard might have made a subtle contribution when he contrived Conan the Barbarian. He called Conan a Cimmerian, and Cimmerians were from north of Armenia. Howard had coalesced much of his research into other books of fables and such, and might have inadvertently inspired a tradition of having exotic fantasy people with Armenian names that later writers used when they adopted many of the tropes of his work in their own creations.
      Then again, I could be totally wrong, but there you go.

  • @sisterkathleen
    @sisterkathleen Před 3 lety

    All the videos you do are about the Giants. See Bible & book of Enoch.

  • @hazemm440
    @hazemm440 Před 4 lety

    I find irony between the Kassites foreign invasion and rule/take-over of Babylonia vs that of Hyksos and Egypt (also foreign take over of Egypt at about the same time period).
    Haneans? That’s new to me. Do you have a video on them?
    Thanks again!

    • @carlosaugustodinizgarcia3526
      @carlosaugustodinizgarcia3526 Před 3 lety +1

      End of Middle bronze age were a time of migration and invasions.The Mittani settled in the near east around the same time,maybe a century before.

  • @simachmasgof8445
    @simachmasgof8445 Před 5 lety +3

    those guys names sound like orc names

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 5 lety +4

      haha yeah I suppose they do...I love Lord of the Rings!

    • @humblehurrian205
      @humblehurrian205 Před 4 lety +5

      Kassite sounds far more elegant than the Akkadian they adopted. Kulassina Bel, means "they were all lord". Not very orc like.

    • @simachmasgof8445
      @simachmasgof8445 Před 4 lety +3

      @@humblehurrian205 first use of we wuz kangz 😂

  • @seaislevel7233
    @seaislevel7233 Před rokem

    You say it is unknown where, or of who they originated from. Actually if you read and understand the Bible, and the book of Enoch our great great great great great great grandfather you would know exactly where and who they originated from.

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      The book of Enoch is a book authored and not one of the holy books, and it is a book that contains magic from the jinn and demons

    • @seaislevel7233
      @seaislevel7233 Před rokem

      @@user-cg2tw8pw7j The fact that your using the word jinn leads me to believe you have read the Quran which was authored by the Catholic church. The Fact that you say jinn and demons leads me to believe you dont realize jinn and demons are the same thing, which would imply that you are ignorant. BUT what matters is the FACT that the original book of Enoch was alluded to in the book of Jude. Which tells you not only did it already exist when Jesus walked the earth but it was also accepted as truth written by our great great great great grandfather Enoch. The book of Enoch actually tells you how the jinn were created and why they are the evil ones not our great grandfather Enoch. I dont know how you can possibly get that backwards and totally wrong but I suspect its because you follow the false teachings of the evil Catholic church, who it is clearly documented fact created the Islamic religion.

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      @@seaislevel7233 Idris has books but this book has huge amounts of magic written by demons

  • @ranapratapsingh3416
    @ranapratapsingh3416 Před rokem +2

    Kassites kings initially could be language Indo-Aryan speaking since they aren't Iranian Elamite speaking kings. Eventually they assimilated into the local Sumer speaking or Akkad speaking language people.

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem +1

      No, the Aryans did not migrate from their homeland of Siberia or western Mongolia at this time. Those Semites like Elam, don't lie.

  • @Sinsteel
    @Sinsteel Před 3 lety

    Would it be that hard for them to conquer a city already in flames? And control the area? They had horses which are like an ancient superweapon and high speed train if no one else has them!

  • @E4everything.
    @E4everything. Před rokem

    Yes zargos is our history iran iraq border

  • @user-sn1oy4dk1b
    @user-sn1oy4dk1b Před 11 měsíci +2

    Where is the Kurds✊
    KARDUnyash

  • @nathanthing8789
    @nathanthing8789 Před 2 lety +2

    We kassites are still alive, we call ourselves khas aryans , we moved eastwards from babylonia, to iran and move east to kashgad/kashmir area, both named after us, we moved more east inside the himalayas inside nepal. we still call ourselves khas aryans and we are 30% of the population of nepal, i am not sure about other places.

  • @farielzouioueche2180
    @farielzouioueche2180 Před 2 lety

    Ils ne sont mystérieux que parce que nous sommes ignorants de leur histoire.cessez donc d'utiliser le mot mystère en histoire.

  • @mafabarzani9621
    @mafabarzani9621 Před 4 lety +5

    The Kassaite are one trip of kurds today and the language also the geography where they lived is the same where the kurds live today. Mountain and brave race of indo-Eouropean people.Let the historian ,DNA,specialist must follow the kurds in Middle East where they live in Turkey,Iran,Iraq and Syria so this geography is important for ind European race today.The kurds are still resisting against all who persecuting them today.

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před rokem

      No, they are Semitic Aryans, they did not appear in the region during this period

  • @kurdisumeri1526
    @kurdisumeri1526 Před 3 lety +5

    Kassitis was kurd proud

    • @dikshachettri5026
      @dikshachettri5026 Před 3 lety

      Really ? Even the Khas people in Nepal. 😃

    • @kurdisumeri1526
      @kurdisumeri1526 Před 3 lety

      yes kassiti was kurd

    • @kurdisumeri1526
      @kurdisumeri1526 Před 3 lety +1

      @@dikshachettri5026 and kurds are medes and sumarian and hurria and rawadi and shadadi and guttia and mitani and sasanid and ayubi and babani and lolo and hititis and kassiti and cardoxi and carduen and we Kurds until now using our medes name and language and our hurria and guttia land and our sumeri words and Sumer language and kurds language have more more similar 469 common word and glgamesh was kurdish gil means nation or people and gamesh means the female of ox and read soran hama rashid book then u know that Sumeri was Kurd.

    • @bloodshedthehuman
      @bloodshedthehuman Před 3 lety

      @@dikshachettri5026 hora, haha

    • @fogshadow9112
      @fogshadow9112 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kurdisumeri1526 wtf is wrong with you people.

  • @cosmicgal2323
    @cosmicgal2323 Před 2 lety +1

    Kurdish

  • @user-um5bt1hi3s
    @user-um5bt1hi3s Před 2 měsíci

    Kassites hurrians gutians are all the same people

  • @NETKINGSHUBHO
    @NETKINGSHUBHO Před 4 lety +2

    KASSITES came from Kashi, India.. search about it

    • @NETKINGSHUBHO
      @NETKINGSHUBHO Před 4 lety

      all the names in your kings list are North Indian local names

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 4 lety +6

      Hi, thanks for your comment. My family is also from India, specifically Mumbai. Hypothetically simply using similarity of their name to places, by that logic, couldn't they have also come from Kashan, Iran? It's definitely closer to Babylonia and would make more sense. I'm not saying that I believe that, but the point is that there are many places that people speculate the Kassites could have come from due to their name alone. These things are hard to if impossible to prove. That's why generally I use the info from professional archaeologists and historians who have devoted their life to studying these things. They use evidence that may or not disprove certain assumptions. Thanks though for comment... I'll take a look at Kashi, India.

    • @BURAQ7JABBAR7
      @BURAQ7JABBAR7 Před 4 lety +1

      Director Shubho Mukherjee herodotus referred to the kassites as “ethiopians from above egypt”. India was the child of the kush empire

  • @kkupsky6321
    @kkupsky6321 Před 11 měsíci

    Geez man. Slow. I’ve gotta look for the links to the other things just to hear you. And to this day we do not know if cy is cy or Cyril or syd… some things are just lost to history. Chris young? We’ll never know.

    • @HistorywithCy
      @HistorywithCy  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Yeah this was one of my first videos where I was still learning how to record and create visuals. I could probably take this one down now as most of this info is in the more recent 3 hour Babylon video. Haha and it's neither Cyril or Syd... lol.

    • @kkupsky6321
      @kkupsky6321 Před 11 měsíci

      @@HistorywithCy hope you know I was joking. Great video.

  • @sergeyyeremyan1586
    @sergeyyeremyan1586 Před rokem +1

    КАДЖ касид предки Армен каджанц тан

  • @Itsme-um3vj
    @Itsme-um3vj Před 3 lety

    .

  • @atreyudarkblade7540
    @atreyudarkblade7540 Před 4 lety

    So who or what are the goo tians?

  • @TarihKralliklar
    @TarihKralliklar Před 3 lety +2

    Kassites Kurds

  • @vi11236
    @vi11236 Před 4 lety

    Kardashian....well can they have evolved from here..can be as its an armenian surname

  • @djoledjole5007
    @djoledjole5007 Před 4 lety

    Tracks are hiding all the time. Even today west blood lines want to divide rich teritories like midle east, central Asia, Siberia etc. Kas means midle run of horse. Kashka are the similar people with Kassites. Indoarians. Zagoras or Zagorje in main fact mean maountin range in serbish language. Laristan in Iran is a part where Sarbatic tribes onse lived. Lari represent house patrons that later become Saints in christianity. This cult of ancestors is preserved in Serbian culture till today, others have patrons of village. Sarbatic "Tropolj" (three-field empire)....Baltic, Balcan, Caucasus-Iranian Platou. All this tribes were part of arian insurgence to midle east, and India. Hittites are indoarian, sarbatic-schitian people mixed with Arabs, the same like Hurrits. They had Arian ruling families but also the Arian gods, like Indra nad others. Assyrian Sargon was also from northern teritories, former Urata (Arata culture) mixed with R1A Schitians. Sea people are also from Balcan peninsula (R1A and I group). To remind you, Alexander the great was Macedonian (not Greek), that conqer Greek lands moved on third arian "visits" to India. More than 50% of his army was of Sarbatic origins, only part of it consists of Doran Greeks who also came from Sarbatic lands (Roman provinces Iliria, Thracia, Dacia) few houndreds years earlier as sea people that destroyed Micean Minor-asian statehoods. Phrygians are exactly Brigians or Bregians that mean Mountain people. Minoans were part of Balcan Vinca culture (I group plus R1A) that were destroyed by R1B celtic and germanic tribes 4500 years ago (reduced man population for 12x). Together with Terra eruption this was the reason why Miceans filled the empty space of once Belazgians (Belas means whites) teritory but later pay the price to revenge. The same like Hitites who fight against Luwians. Arzawa means Rzav or redhaired people. Modern Greeks are partialy of Slavic and partialy of Minor-asiatic (Micean, Hitites) origins. Old Parthians, Iranians are similar to this people. Pashtuns (Sarbats are one of tribes), Balochi, Tajiks are the part of this people. These represents rest of Alexander army mixed with R1A Margiana Schitians, later Arabs and finaly Turks.

  • @SteelDriving
    @SteelDriving Před rokem +1

    This series is the kind of history that makes people dislike learning history. You're listing names and dates, then more dates and names.
    Step back and find the larger themes of the history. Tell us WHY all these names are doing the things they're doing. Then the interminable lists of names and dates and names and dates will make sense. Then they'll be interesting.

    • @bullrun2772
      @bullrun2772 Před rokem

      i sort disagree with this channel imo