Did the Ancient Egyptians Actually Walk Like…Well, Egyptians

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  • čas přidán 7. 07. 2023
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Komentáře • 859

  • @TodayIFoundOut
    @TodayIFoundOut  Před rokem +40

    Thanks to Skillshare for sponsoring today's video! The first 1,000 people to use the link will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare: skl.sh/todayifoundout07231

    • @justinanderson267
      @justinanderson267 Před rokem +1

      Speaking of Egypt, have you guys heard of the helicopter hieroglyph? They say that it's just the result of multiple "stampings" overlapping each other. But I'm not buying it.
      I'd love to see a video on this!

    • @archangel_one
      @archangel_one Před rokem +4

      @@justinanderson267 So what we all REALLY want to know is: Was King Tut really born in Arizona and buried in his PJs??
      "Buried in his jammies, Born in Arizona, moved to Babylonia, He was born in Arizona, lived in a condo made of stone-a, King Tut"

    • @thespyderwithin
      @thespyderwithin Před rokem

      If Jesus was crucified upside down, and therefore christians would use this as their symbolism, would Satanic use the right side up one? Lolz

    • @archangel_one
      @archangel_one Před rokem +1

      @@thespyderwithin Upside-down cross is St. Peter's cross -- but it depends on context. And I'm pretty sure that the really bad baddies use a blue D in a circle Ⓓ, but again, it depends on context.

    • @gabhanhome
      @gabhanhome Před rokem +1

      Just signed up. Been trying to get to grips with React and update my javascript skills. They seem to have some good courses. And I've a month free now to figure it all out! Cheers!!

  • @route2070
    @route2070 Před rokem +1282

    I'm going to guess....they did not walk like that.

    • @stumpe9662
      @stumpe9662 Před rokem +39

      Well yes...but also no

    • @BaileyM666
      @BaileyM666 Před rokem +41

      They walked like crabs

    • @mr.joshua6818
      @mr.joshua6818 Před rokem +107

      Maybe THAT'S the secret to how they built the pyramids... They had a Ministry of Funny Walks.

    • @markkarasik2211
      @markkarasik2211 Před rokem +41

      😎I’m gonna go out on a limb and say also that King Tut was not born in Babylonia or raised in Arizona and if you know that reference you’re old like me!

    • @Rastlov
      @Rastlov Před rokem +31

      Maybe they walked like the Bangles

  • @jeremyclegg3588
    @jeremyclegg3588 Před rokem +654

    So just to add something that was left out of the video that I learned years ago when studying Egyptian history. The weird representational art was designed to show as much of the human form as possible. That is why the chest is facing forward and the head is always in profile. Because heads are largly symmetrical, so you got the eye along with the torso. Also, you note that mostly they always had all of their fingers represented. This was because it was believed that the artistic representation of a figure could sustain them in the afterlife. Thus you want to get all of thier "parts" shown. That's also why you see a lot of images with the faces chipped away. It was a way to get revenge on a rival or to diminish somone from the past by their succsessor.

    • @GrndAdmiralThrawn
      @GrndAdmiralThrawn Před rokem

      Damnatio Memoriae is such an interesting thing to study. We’ll never know how many instances actually worked, if they were done thoroughly enough. Just goes to show, historical revisionism has been going on for as long as history has been recorded.
      In fact, it’s still going on today. There was a movement to refer to Donald Trump as just “45” instead of by name. They even tried to stop that, as referring to him by number validated his presidency. If history were only kept by the current administration, they would have already defaced his art and scratched out his name.

    • @thepastmaster5643
      @thepastmaster5643 Před rokem +39

      I read a short story once in which two travellers in Egypt crossed paths with a man who offered them shelter for the night in which they assumed to be a cave. Come morning and they discovered that they slept in a small tomb and that their footprints in the mud were accompanied by a third set of footprints, both being left footed. Sadly I can't remember the name of it.

    • @bunyipdragon9499
      @bunyipdragon9499 Před rokem +4

      ​@@thepastmaster5643sounds cool.

    • @jayceewedmak9524
      @jayceewedmak9524 Před rokem +3

      Thanks for the information 😊

    • @compfox
      @compfox Před rokem +12

      Just as mentioned at 4:28

  • @halia9874
    @halia9874 Před rokem +47

    The posture of the arms indicates the movement of the feet when walking. These same strokes are found in ancient Chinese calligraphy with the word "walk", the shape of the arms makes the sense of a "bike axis", indicating that when one foot rises the other descends, advancing along the route.

  • @davidbwa
    @davidbwa Před rokem +70

    Another practical reason for folding the arms of a corpse then or now is simply for making the body fit in the container (sarcophagus, coffin etc). Modern coffins are often a bit bigger but old coffins that were angled didn't have a lot of extra room to the sides. So arms would tend to be on top of the body and folding them across each other helps them stay in place a bit better.

    • @naingaung2748
      @naingaung2748 Před rokem +12

      Petition to make them smaller because the crossing arms looks cool.

  • @Victoria-dh9vb
    @Victoria-dh9vb Před rokem +124

    According to my high-school history teacher, the part of your soul that left your body when you died would try to come back to your body in the afterlife... but it was really, really stupid. So the art was meant to convey as much of the human form as possible so that the soul had the best possible chance at recognizing what it was looking at.
    Idk if that was true, but it sure as heck stuck in my head

    • @aazhie
      @aazhie Před rokem +4

      Ha ha, I beleive my teacher said the same. There are more than one soul, in Egyptian mythology, so I think that soul is the dumb one xD other parts of the soul, or souls had more of the intelligent, AFAIK

    • @TheLuftpolsterfolie
      @TheLuftpolsterfolie Před rokem

      Pretty good representation.

  • @brandenaguilar2962
    @brandenaguilar2962 Před rokem +79

    Imagine walking into an Egyptian city in ancient times and all the Egyptians there are walking like an Egyptian while non Egyptians walk normally lol its a funny thought.

  • @chrisschmidt355
    @chrisschmidt355 Před rokem +32

    I had one helluva crush on Susanna Hoffs back in the day. I can't believe she would lie to me about something as important as how Egyptians walk! Our entire relationship was built on a sham. I feel so betrayed.

    • @jphilb
      @jphilb Před rokem +6

      At least you can still remember her eyes.

    • @jeffduncan9140
      @jeffduncan9140 Před rokem +2

      😅😅

    • @proto-geek248
      @proto-geek248 Před rokem

      She got even cuter in later years, but I never liked that song.

  • @fredblonder7850
    @fredblonder7850 Před rokem +58

    Note that in Egyptian art, you occasionally encounter a figure drawn in proper perspective. This will always be a god or a statue, but never a live human. Humans are the only things represented in the stylized “sideways” form.

    • @dr_crimbo
      @dr_crimbo Před rokem +1

      @tsa3b yes . but there is a lot more , there is evidence there was strong trade links with Ethiopia,. Nefertari may likely have been a Ethiopian princess , , unlike Cleopatra who was at there downfall and Greek ,

    • @IvanMoncure
      @IvanMoncure Před rokem

      @tsa3bTutankhamen was blonde tho, clearly there was some diversity there.

    • @IvanMoncure
      @IvanMoncure Před rokem

      @tsa3b Albino's don't have the features we are discussing. The forms in which we see traits like blonde hair and blue-green eyes evolved outside of africa after humans had migrated outwards. Their (minute) presence in Africa today is due to gene flow backwards into Africa from populations outside.

    • @Jim-Mc
      @Jim-Mc Před měsícem

      Cool it's like regular people were flat but gods were fully 3 dimensional.

  • @AngeliqueStP
    @AngeliqueStP Před rokem +78

    That dancer who made 'The Snake Charmer Song' popular was a famous\infamous personality performing under the name 'LITTLE EGYPT.'
    She's a fascinating character and (if it hasn't already been tackled) I'd love to see you cover her story! TYVM!

    • @llamasugar5478
      @llamasugar5478 Před rokem +24

      My mom called our ‘72 Chevy “Little Egypt” because it had a shimmy! 😂

    • @jrmckim
      @jrmckim Před rokem +4

      ​@@llamasugar5478😂

    • @williestyle35
      @williestyle35 Před rokem +1

      Thank you! I would have remembered her without your comment.

  • @colecole4779
    @colecole4779 Před rokem +28

    May I also mention that TUTANKHAMEN real name was originally TUTANKATAN. It meant son of the ATAN. Son of the sun god. At approximately 9 when his heretic father died, his Vazir TI felt it only appropriate to change his name to the name we know him as now. It was to show the people of ancient Egypt that his leadership meant the return of the many gods. Not the one. Plz, forgive me if all my spelling was not completely correct.

    • @Liethen
      @Liethen Před rokem +8

      "Umm...Actually."
      (pushes up glasses and mouth breathes heavily)
      "It means "Living Image of" not "Son of"
      (licks braces)

    • @colecole4779
      @colecole4779 Před rokem +2

      @@Liethen Thank you for the correction on the interpretation of Tut's name I always forget the full interpretation. We all have things we forget to put in to a fun fact.

    • @maggiemae7539
      @maggiemae7539 Před 11 měsíci

      Not gods. Try demons

  • @marklee81
    @marklee81 Před rokem +89

    Steve Martin's "King Tut" was inspired by the touring exhibit of King Tut in the mid to late 70s. There were a lot of other Egyptian themed things to come out of that craze. I guess the "Walk like an Egyptian" song was a bit late, but Steve Martin was definitely "walking" in that manner.

    • @miked51
      @miked51 Před rokem +5

      Yeah, back in the 70's we took many a school field trip to the Field Museum here in Chicago for that exhibit. It was pretty cool, even for 8, 9 and 10 year old's. Fast forward to the 80's and Lord Almighty you couldn't go anywhere without hearing the Bangles song. MTV played it constantly.
      The Steve Martin skit is still so funny today.

    • @laukinath194
      @laukinath194 Před rokem +5

      Born in Arizona, moved to Babylonia
      Born in Arizona - Got a condo made of stone-a - KING TUT!

    • @patriciamerry7888
      @patriciamerry7888 Před rokem +6

      @@laukinath194 He gave his life for tourism.

    • @dianefelice9730
      @dianefelice9730 Před rokem +1

      @@miked51I remember seeing the amazing Egyptian Exhibit in Chicago when I was a young teen, and loved Steven Martin dancing to "King Tut". So fun! 😍

    • @robinnicole4466
      @robinnicole4466 Před rokem

      Thanks captain obvious

  • @MoonCat49
    @MoonCat49 Před rokem +102

    Did anybody else sing The Bangles song in their head? 😂

  • @akswrkzvyuu7jhd
    @akswrkzvyuu7jhd Před rokem +38

    Simon, sometimes I think you overlook the mind-boggling amount of (important) information that is contained in your videos. The fact that the "Arabian Riff" is in Arban's Complete Method for Cornet has made the day of all trumpet players that saw this video. I checked and it is indeed in the 68 Duets section.

    • @steveparker9361
      @steveparker9361 Před rokem +4

      Thanks for that - saved me 20 minutes of page-turning to find it!

  • @peteharper2687
    @peteharper2687 Před rokem +18

    The name Tutankhamun is actualy 3 words meaning Living image of Amun. Amun being one of the pantheon of Egyptian gods. The name is writen backwards Amen-tut-ankh. Ankh is also a symbol representing life and Tut strong or courageous, possibly both.

  • @Loralanthalas
    @Loralanthalas Před rokem +30

    I have wondered this an alarming amount of times throughout my lifetime

  • @JohnMcCulloch75
    @JohnMcCulloch75 Před rokem +50

    This episode is an absolute tour de force in waffling. Respect, Simon. We have much to learn from you.

    • @Thefan
      @Thefan Před rokem +6

      The waffling is part of why we watch any of Simon's videos, where he goes off script on a tangent are some of the best parts.

  • @jergarmar
    @jergarmar Před rokem +48

    5:26 It's interesting that women are "usually" depicted as standing with their feet together... but in this scene what is shown is a statue of a women with her left foot forward. And in fact if you look it up, when women are in positions of power, they are also commonly depicted with their left foot forward. This includes women pharaohs, of course, but also women like Nefertari, the influential Great Royal Wife (principal wife) of Ahmos I. So I think the video is a bit misleading at this point; being depicted with the left foot forward is not a masculine trait, but simply shows power... and usually men were in power.

    • @KryssLaBryn
      @KryssLaBryn Před rokem +5

      Not inherently.

    • @user-dd5eh5lu3o
      @user-dd5eh5lu3o Před rokem +11

      @@thatoneguybones8036 You see it as masculine but power can be had by both women and men. Just because men took power more often doesn't mean that it is an inherently male trait. If you believed that, you might also think that the male body, because it is depicted as the template for all bodies, was the actual biological template for human beings when in fact every embryo starts life as female and only once the Y chromosome is introduced, the embryo them mutates into a male (something of an inside out female body). The template is female, and males also must have an X chromosome from their mother, whereas women do not have a Y at all. Male bodies have nipples because their mothers have nipples (males also have mammary glands and can lactate -- thank you, Scientific American). Males have breasts and can get breast cancer. (I know males don't like to call their breasts "breasts" because they're terribly afraid of that word, but if you look at old texts you will see such references to the "breast" of men over and over, such as when one strikes his breast three times in penitence (mea culpa, mea culpa...) or music soothes the savage breast (it's breast, not beast, sorry not sorry.) Your understanding of what is "masculine" appears quite flawed.

    • @cobblestonegenerator2183
      @cobblestonegenerator2183 Před rokem

      ​@@user-dd5eh5lu3oMen taking power more often establishes it as a masculine trait. If it was gender neutral then women would be just as represented as men. Thinking that the guy you responded to meant that women could never have power so much that you had to bring up breasts, chromosomes, and all that woman-splaining defensive posturing is why women aren't trusted with power by the way.

    • @AJWRAJWR
      @AJWRAJWR Před rokem

      ...And power is a masculine trait. A female in power is exhibiting her masculine side.

    • @AJWRAJWR
      @AJWRAJWR Před rokem

      ​@@user-dd5eh5lu3oLooks like your woke schooling has got you all muddled up.

  • @stitcher64
    @stitcher64 Před rokem +16

    How many words does Simon say in a minute? He must be the fastest talker on CZcams.

  • @pakde8002
    @pakde8002 Před rokem +112

    I was thinking it's odd that not one of the stock photos depicted the iconic walk like an Egyptian pose😅
    Today I found out why.

    • @alexander-mauricemillamlae4567
      @alexander-mauricemillamlae4567 Před rokem +6

      Nah don't listen to Simon it's actually copyrighted by the Office for Copyright Protection of the Galactic Federation (OfCPGF)

  • @oldyoldenough7327
    @oldyoldenough7327 Před rokem +6

    When the Arabian riff was played my brain reflexively filled in: "Even old New York was once New Amsterdam" 1:48

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh Před rokem +1

      Why they changed it, I can’t say - people just liked it better that way.

    • @dr.a.w
      @dr.a.w Před rokem +1

      @@hebneh It has to do with the British taking it over from the Dutch in 1664.

    • @ruemistressofyeets
      @ruemistressofyeets Před rokem

      @@dr.a.w Really? Our tour guide in Turkey said it was renamed by Kemal Ataturk when he modernized the country: "Istan" meaning "people" (thus why the names of so many countries in that part of the world end in -istan) and "bul" the equivalent of the Greek "polis", or city. So instead of being a leftover of the Byzantine Roman empire, it became the City of the People.

  • @laurieforsythe8724
    @laurieforsythe8724 Před rokem +12

    I believe Steve Martin also used the riff in “King Tut.”

    • @michaeldriggers7681
      @michaeldriggers7681 Před rokem +3

      That's what comes to mind every time I hear "walk like an Egyptian" even though I know it's a separate song.

    • @skyden24195
      @skyden24195 Před rokem +2

      he certainly did.

    • @stephenschroeder6567
      @stephenschroeder6567 Před rokem +4

      He also did a bit of the Walk like an Egyptian moves in the SNL original skit/performance. Great stuff!

  • @ImCarolB
    @ImCarolB Před rokem +10

    I've never heard that the snake charmer song was connected to the Egyptian stance. I know the famous belly dancer at the 1893 World's Fair was called Little Egypt, but I didn't think that she did ancient Egyptian poses. You learn something new every day. Most people in 1893 had a sketchy view of history. I still think of that song as having to do with what French people wear instead of pants.

  • @EricLS
    @EricLS Před rokem +24

    “Walk like a stylized modern interpretation of Egyptian traditional religious representation of the human forrrm” -The Bangles

    • @aaronleverton4221
      @aaronleverton4221 Před rokem +4

      - The rigid, ornamental unisex jewellery designed to be worn on the wrist or ankle, occasionally on the upper arm, plural.

    • @williestyle35
      @williestyle35 Před rokem +3

      And here we see why the Bangles went with the simpler title.
      😁

    • @jayceewedmak9524
      @jayceewedmak9524 Před rokem

      ​@@williestyle35😂

    • @boston_octopus
      @boston_octopus Před rokem

      This is great!

    • @Finn_MacCool
      @Finn_MacCool Před 5 měsíci

      So what? It's fun and cute.

  • @modelermark172
    @modelermark172 Před rokem +81

    As a model builder, I've often wondered if the wooden figures - like those shown at 3:27 - on Egyptian model ships and in dioramas depicting daily activities, (such as making bread or brewing beer,) that were buried in royal tombs were required to be built to a standard scale? If so, does anyone know what this scale was, and if so was there was any religious significance to the scale chosen? Alternately, did the artisans just build their tomb models based on the amount of raw materials provided at the time of the model's commissioning?

    • @fredblonder7850
      @fredblonder7850 Před rokem +20

      These are “ushabti” ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ushabti ). These are meant to serve the deceased in the afterlife. Like the sculptures of food that were meant to magically turn into real food, ushabti were meant to magically come to life to perform whatever task they were depicted doing. So basically, they were robots.
      Early ushabti were quite detailed and ornate, but over time they became simplified and eventually evolved into simple mummy figurines.
      I am not aware of any standardized scale for these, though those I have seen all seem to fall into the range of four to six inches tall.

    • @williestyle35
      @williestyle35 Před rokem +12

      The answer as depicted by the original artists and archeological studies is, mostly yes*. The models and dioramas of "everyday life" like boats, animals, people, etc. are of generally the same size ( especially true within each Dynastic era ). Other wooden tomb objects like the "ushabti" also generally follow similar sizes in each era ( as commented above ). Not sure if anyone has found there to be religious significance in the size or scale used. But knowing the Ancient Egyptians, it is certainly possible. Do not forget the games, furniture, and other "personal items" in tombs would usually be wood as well - though those were most always "life size", used or new real items.

    • @modelermark172
      @modelermark172 Před rokem +9

      @@williestyle35 Thank you. That is fascinating. While most models and dioramas today are the product of individuals, I wonder if the Ancient Egyptians were more 'specialized' modelers, with model ship builders obtaining crew figures from figure modelers, to be integrated in the main project at the workshop. This same figure modeler would also supply the figures for the farming, baking and brewing dioramas as well, and so everyone was on the same page, a specific scale was agreed upon, or specified, in advance.
      The Ancient Egyptians always impressed me with their modeling skills, so the idea that they would have an agreed-upon scale (or scales) the way we do today would not surprise me. Given that to the Ancient Egyptians, everything had significance, I also suspect there was some underlying reason for the scales chosen for their models; especially those for funerary purposes.
      As an aside, in modern times, popular scales include 1/144th, 1/72nd, 1/48th, and 1/32nd for aircraft models. Car models are usually built to 1/43rd, 1/64th, 1/32nd, and 1/24th or 1/25th. Military subjects tend to be 1/76th, 1/72nd, 1/56th, 1/48th, 1/35th, and 1/32nd. Popular ship scales include 1/700th, 1/600th, 1/350th, 1/200th, 1,100th, 1/96th, 1/64th, and some larger scales. Many of these are based on how easily they are divided by SAE measurements. For example, in 1/72nd scale, an inch is six feet, and in 1/48th, an inch is four feet. But I suspect Ancient Egyptian modelers had some deeper meaning in the scales they chose for their models.

    • @stephsexoticpets
      @stephsexoticpets Před rokem

      what is a model builder??

    • @mkv2718
      @mkv2718 Před rokem +3

      @@stephsexoticpetsa person who builds models as a hobby, you know, like small models… sometimes plastic, or clay, or wood.
      you do know what a model is… right? 🤨

  • @mr.honeycomb
    @mr.honeycomb Před rokem +9

    I came here for the Bangles references.

  • @Peter_Channel
    @Peter_Channel Před rokem +5

    1:52 Not just the pose was ‘Bizarre’, but the ‘Adventure’ too 🧔🎩🔮🌎👦🗡🐶🦍👑

  • @huntercollum869
    @huntercollum869 Před rokem +30

    Never ceases to amaze me that we had masterfully crafted Michelangelesque marble statues of the gods a millenia and a half before we figured out how to draw with any amount of realism

    • @LondonMoonie
      @LondonMoonie Před rokem +8

      Michelangelo was largely painting in the 16th century, but I assume you are referring to the classical period (Greeks and Romans) who come AFTER the Egyptians on a timeline. Given that these are all VERY different cultures in very different cities and times, you can understand that these different people made art for different reasons, thus resulting in art that looks different to each other.

    • @huntercollum869
      @huntercollum869 Před rokem

      @@LondonMoonie Did I get responded to by a fucking one world AI? What sort of pointless reddit sounding nonsense is this? Did I say something implying that the Egyptians came to power after the classical period?

    • @TSIRKLAND
      @TSIRKLAND Před rokem +2

      From what I know of art from the classical Greek and Roman eras, this is true. Statues were made with EXTREME realism and detail. Modern museums and full of beautifully sculpted Marble statues depicting the human form with exquisite detail: muscles, fingers, faces, dynamic poses, likenesses of specific people. Yet two-dimensional art from the same time and place was not nearly as realistic, but rather more stylized. Depictions of humans on pottery, for example: very silhouette, almost (though not quite) as stylized as Egyptian art. Awkward poses ,stylized line work, more uniform 'generic' features. Why? One reason may be practical. A sculpture is meant to be seen from all sides: walked around, seen from every angle. A 2-D representation, especially on a bowl with only two colors (black and ochre, for example) has to convey complex information more simply. If arms and legs are all a jumble, it's difficult to see. A body in silhouette is more visual.
      Modern "iconography" is similar- bathroom signs for "men" and "women." "Walk" and "don't walk" signs. "danger," "do not feed the bears," "caution hazardous electrical equipment," etc. Those are all a stark black silhouette of a very simplified human form, because it is the most generic and universally understood. If a "caution" sign were painted in oil paints using chiaroscuro lighting and contrapposto figure placement, it would take precious moments to decipher. A plain black silhouette is easier to read in two dimensions. That being said, there are murals, mosaics, etc. that do contain more realistic human figures, in complex poses, using a primitive perspective, with features that are unique, possible portraits. So they could do that, when they wanted to.
      It is interesting how the course of art in The West took many avenues. Art of the medieval period was quite stylized, even crude, by Greek or Roman standards. Every time and place has their own style; it's not a linear progression from "primitive" to "sophisticated." The use of mathematically linear perspective didn't come into Western, European, art until quite late. But even the Greeks had some, if not quite as mathematically precise.

    • @apostately3384
      @apostately3384 Před rokem +1

      @@TSIRKLANDsome very good points. I’d like to note that, some eras of art might seem more “crude”, or “primitive”, than others, until you start to really look at the details. For example, medieval drawings don’t seem so crude when you pay attention to the wonderful facial expressions. They’re just as subtle and artful as any modern comic masterpiece.

    • @RochelleHasTooManyHobbies
      @RochelleHasTooManyHobbies Před rokem +1

      What's interesting to note about this topic is perhaps that they did it entirely on purpose.
      Some of the oldest (via carbon dating) prehistoric cave paintings are more realistic than the ones dated a few hundred years later from similar regions, even though the techniques themselves became MORE precise (finer lines, more colors, etc.).
      Sometimes, as with Van Gogh, capturing the ESSENCE of what you're depicting is more important than making it photograph perfect.
      And then, as they said in the video and a few comments above, not all art has the same purpose. And if you're covering an entire building with graphic instructions.... Well. You're not going to sit there and make it photorealistic.

  • @jonathandewberry289
    @jonathandewberry289 Před rokem +16

    yes, it's really worth reminding people that art had different points and purposes in different times and be careful about superimposing our expectations on it. This is correct that (many times and places) art and depictions were like iconic representations NOT intended to be a 'realistic police sketch of the subject'. Yes, in some cultures these have proper religious and spiritual 'rules' and conventions and/or are can be like advanced hieroglyphics in the sense they communicate a story or event and not for 'amusement' or 'pleasure viewing'.
    You can think of modern 'graphic instructions'. This and much more with art through the ages. (actually, not really 'art' but graphics)

    • @LondonMoonie
      @LondonMoonie Před rokem +1

      Very well said, and I think your comparison to "graphics" is very apt, especially when thinking of instructional guides such as Egyptian funerary wall paintings.

    • @peters8512
      @peters8512 Před rokem +2

      Tell that to the "Humans were genetically engineered by giants" crowd. Gods big in art = gods big.

    • @andysawyer647
      @andysawyer647 Před rokem

      ​@peters8512 I wasn't going to say anything, but he is not really close on why they move tge way they do or why they face the way they do. Geb (Male aspect of earth) and Nut (female aspect of the sky) had to be separated by Atum so Shu (air) and Tefnut (moisture) had to be placed between them to prevented unitened creation. They are describing scie ce through parable

  • @welshpete12
    @welshpete12 Před rokem +3

    The most beautiful art of a human being, I have ever seen was in a tomb in Egypt . It looked as fresh as the day it was painted , it had wings like an angel . Which were out stretched protecting one of the corners of the tomb of the Pharaoh . I would have loved to have been able to take a photograph of it . But it was very dark in there and the flash my camera was not good enough . But the memory of it will stay with me for the rest of my life !

  • @Yezpahr
    @Yezpahr Před rokem +2

    Destroying childhood memes, a true genre upon itself.

  • @henokabraha250
    @henokabraha250 Před rokem +44

    Based on the music industries, all the musicians danced very well such as
    The Bangles - walk like Egyptian
    Michael Jackson - Remember the Time
    Katy Perry - black horse
    and so on the cartoons and comics.
    We enjoyed very well walking like Egyptians since our childhood.😊

    • @zacharycollins9485
      @zacharycollins9485 Před rokem +6

      Also: in Rush Hour 2, Chris Tucker does the "Egyptian-style Kung Fu."
      Lolz 😂

    • @llamasugar5478
      @llamasugar5478 Před rokem +7

      The OG: Steve Martin’s “King Tut” (c. 1975)

    • @chrislong3938
      @chrislong3938 Před rokem +6

      @@llamasugar5478 ... gotta condo made of stona!

    • @vojacked305
      @vojacked305 Před rokem +2

      It's jojo

    • @llamasugar5478
      @llamasugar5478 Před rokem

      @@chrislong3938 😂 . . . Gave his life for tourism . . .

  • @cycoholic
    @cycoholic Před rokem +16

    I actually did that when was in front of the Great Pyramids in Egypt back in the late 80's. 🤦‍♂️

  • @Jourell1
    @Jourell1 Před rokem +2

    As a kid I was a fan of the Asterix and Obelix comic series. I remember a scene in Asterix and Cleopatra where the titular queen is presented with a portrait of herself.She says that she tires of seeing herself in profile and requests the next one be in 3/4 face. Though, of course, he doesn't say anything aloud, the artist mentally makes a disparaging comment about "modern art"

  • @Games_and_Music
    @Games_and_Music Před rokem +11

    8:18 Gotta love Simon's rushing and name butchering.
    Possibly the most well-known pharaoh, and popular old era warfare strategy: "Two-tank Come on".
    Okay i made that last bit up, but that's what i thought of when i heard him say that.

    • @fredblonder7850
      @fredblonder7850 Před rokem +4

      The Egyptian hieroglyph ANKH ( ☥ ) means “mirror” or “reflection”. You can see that the mirror is the polished round part at the top, and the handle the vertical part below.
      Akhenaten’s named his son “The image of Aten” or Tut-☥-aten. After his death, the priests restored the old religion and made Akhenaten’s son Pharaoh, changing his name to Tut-☥-Amun, Amun being one of the old gods being restored.
      So Tutankhamun simply means “Guy who looks like Amun”.

    • @Games_and_Music
      @Games_and_Music Před rokem +1

      @@fredblonder7850 Thanks for the history lesson, haha.
      I am aware of who Tutankhamun was, Simon's butchering of his name just amused me.
      I've heard it said many different ways, usually emphasizing on the "amun" part, but i don't think i had heard the "tank" part emphasized before until Simon came along.

    • @mikesands4681
      @mikesands4681 Před rokem

      Simon makes like 10 videos a week in various platforms. No time to look up pronunciation. Besides, British people traditionally aren't required to be correct.

    • @ClickClack_Bam
      @ClickClack_Bam Před rokem

      ​@@mikesands4681Yea he's concerned about quantity not quality.
      He's become a greedy FUCK.

  • @trawetsj
    @trawetsj Před rokem

    Great episode. Super info packed. Love the Bangles bit.

  • @johnkuhn8718
    @johnkuhn8718 Před rokem

    woah what a great video! I'm about to check out more of your stuff! I'm looking forward to this rabbit hole

  • @johnwmarsh
    @johnwmarsh Před rokem +1

    Great video. I've appreciated everything I've seen from you guys so far.
    Also, majestic beard sir, well done.

  • @solidghost4525
    @solidghost4525 Před rokem +1

    I had no idea you were a content creator. I thought you were just the guy that reads the script. I learn something new every day.

  • @Jiambo
    @Jiambo Před rokem +24

    As someone who just got back from Egypt i can confirm that they not only walk like this, but sleep like this as well. This unfortunately knocks their pillows away so they often wake up with sore necks.
    Ive started a charity for medical research to cure these people from their suffering.

    • @Marlin123
      @Marlin123 Před rokem

      Your doing god's work ❤

    • @daerdevvyl4314
      @daerdevvyl4314 Před rokem +2

      Marlin123 Just so you know, you should always capitalize the word God when referring to God as a name and not "a god." To do otherwise is disrespectful. Unless of course you mean to be disrespectful of God, as many do.

    • @Marlin123
      @Marlin123 Před rokem +2

      no.

    • @cloudzack1090
      @cloudzack1090 Před rokem +2

      ​@@daerdevvyl4314god God god God god God

    • @ogun9645
      @ogun9645 Před rokem

      Pp u met in modern egypt are not anicet egyptians but turk/ottoman childrens

  • @aprildawnsunshine4326
    @aprildawnsunshine4326 Před rokem +3

    That was alot of information very quickly. I had to replay the part about the Lazarus sign 3x to be sure I heard it right. So freaky!

  • @MrTruck1012
    @MrTruck1012 Před rokem +2

    Side note: That pharaoh he mentioned that introduced monotheism was the 2nd oldest son of the famous Jewish exodus pharaoh who drowned in the Red Sea, and older brother was killed by the Angel of the Passover. His mom actually did most of the “ruling” but he brought in monotheism. Of course being a child when the Jews lived and left Egypt, he didn’t get it quite right. (They did worship the “sun” just not the actual Son.)
    And now you know the rest of the story

  • @BaybieK
    @BaybieK Před rokem +3

    Archaeologists have discovered that break dancing was rather big in ancient Egypt.

  • @EmilyCheetham
    @EmilyCheetham Před rokem +4

    Actually the reason Akhenaten was drawn in the specific style choice we have found from research and genetics that due to the families in breeding Akhenaten would have had these feathers (larger hips, elongated head). King Tutankhamen had them too. It was also down to the in breeding that most likely was the reason king tut was unable to produce an heir (just the 2 premature still born babies buried with him).

  • @Mulavi
    @Mulavi Před rokem +2

    A portion of a recently discovered tablet written in cuneiform has been translated into "1. Walk Like a Sumerian". The heading on the tablet was "TOTP". The second entry and only remaining translatable portion was "2. Never Gonna Give You ..." History just repeats itself.

  • @szpoti
    @szpoti Před rokem +4

    An impressive amount of work went into this one! Kudos!

  • @vertigq5126
    @vertigq5126 Před rokem +3

    This was fascinating! Thanks

  • @thefrecklepuny
    @thefrecklepuny Před rokem +2

    I think Wilson Keppel & Betty had a lot to do with this supposed Egyptian pose during their Sad Dance routine. At least here in the UK.

    • @flamencoprof
      @flamencoprof Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/JPhCm6KufKM/video.html

    • @drewmurray2783
      @drewmurray2783 Před rokem

      Thank heavens - I was looking for somebody to mention them. They were the reason we think that Egyptians danced like that and they took the classic art pose, held it and danced that way. Clever, amusing and started the trend. Shame this video got that aspect so wrong.

  • @Purple_Kinetic
    @Purple_Kinetic Před rokem +2

    I tryed walking like that :
    1 _ its a bad way of walking
    2_ its a good way to get attention

  • @CaskillsElliptic
    @CaskillsElliptic Před 3 měsíci

    Excellent video. Thanks!

  • @grayhatjen5924
    @grayhatjen5924 Před rokem +1

    "Being performed on kitchen utensils" - that had to have influenced some of the percussion stuff they used, the names of which, other than cowbell, I can't remember. The percussion for that song is so freakin fun.

  • @kdefensemartialarts8097
    @kdefensemartialarts8097 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for your videos.

  • @karenjarrett8904
    @karenjarrett8904 Před rokem +1

    Simon you always have such interesting material. Today’s was no exception. Thank you.

  • @sandybarnes887
    @sandybarnes887 Před rokem +1

    Steve Martin. Cool King Tut dance

  • @BBQDad463
    @BBQDad463 Před rokem

    Thank you for this video. Excellent information.

  • @060steve
    @060steve Před rokem +2

    Started singing Ke$ha when that Arabian riff played 😭

  • @ellen4956
    @ellen4956 Před rokem +5

    Maybe not, but if you look at a lot of the Egyptian paintings, some definitely invented the "vogue" pose.

  • @archangel_one
    @archangel_one Před rokem +3

    Next Video: "NO, it's NOT another Manic Monday."

  • @hugotavaresgomes9539
    @hugotavaresgomes9539 Před rokem

    04:39 hey, they are sharing icecream milkshake.

  • @cardinalgin
    @cardinalgin Před rokem +6

    I find your videos very interesting, Simon, but my first language being French and I being quite fluent in English, I still have some difficulty following your comment, due to speed, which is sad because it all feels very instructive (and reading cc's isn't fun, because then I miss the images). Is it because there is just so much time allowed for these kinds of videos and just too much info to put in?

    • @eloisesmith6467
      @eloisesmith6467 Před rokem +2

      Under the gear icon there is a place to control playback speed. You might find it useful. 🙂

    • @cardinalgin
      @cardinalgin Před rokem +1

      @@eloisesmith6467 Thank you very much ! I'll try it. 😊

  • @counterfeitsaint7479
    @counterfeitsaint7479 Před rokem +4

    Today I Found Out that sometimes Simon uses very old photos of himself for the thumbnails and it can be very confusing.

  • @OUTSIDER40
    @OUTSIDER40 Před rokem

    Thank you for making this video 👍

  • @joyfully_living
    @joyfully_living Před rokem

    I now have that song stuck in my head. Thanks Simon, lol. 😂

  • @diyeana
    @diyeana Před rokem +6

    Finally! Answers to the question I've had nearly my entire life! Thank you Simon & TIFO team!

    • @mlh4711
      @mlh4711 Před rokem

      eh? U ddin't watch it did u hahaha.

    • @diyeana
      @diyeana Před rokem

      @@mlh4711 lol I did. I left my comment prior to watching the video, then didn't update after. 😆

  • @coreymasoy7034
    @coreymasoy7034 Před rokem

    Awesome episode ❗🔥💯⚡👍

  • @eros5420
    @eros5420 Před rokem +1

    I saw a documentary where they used the magic of the drawings coming alive to play a card game where they would send people to the shadow realm.

  • @CoreKatalyst
    @CoreKatalyst Před rokem +1

    When you played the “Arabian riff” it struck me that it is the *exact same melody* that’s in Ke$ha’s song Take it Off. Dead ass just “there’s a place downtown where the freaks all come around”

  • @fandomgaming9072
    @fandomgaming9072 Před rokem

    Whenever talking about ancient Egyptian art it’s useful to remember the massive time scales we’re working on.
    Very often when examples are shared they’ll be massively separated by hundreds of years, but it will not matter because they’ll be similar anyways.
    Aside from individual expression and that brief shift during the reform by Akhenaten, ancient Egypt held a nearly unchanged art tradition for thousands of years.
    The temporal span ancient Egypt covers will never cease to amaze me.

  • @ghost_undead
    @ghost_undead Před rokem

    This put that song back in my head. (Walk like an Egyptian)

  • @WayOfAges
    @WayOfAges Před rokem +2

    The androgyny of Amarna period art has also been explained as the realistic depiction of royalty after centuries of close inbreeding.

  • @PhattyMo
    @PhattyMo Před rokem

    1:48 - Ohh,I was thinking of The Bangles.

  • @smrk2452
    @smrk2452 Před rokem

    Now you got me singing that song by The Bangles

  • @jmmahony
    @jmmahony Před rokem +7

    I'm surprised you didn't mention Steve Martin's famous 1978 SNL appearance where he did a song "King Tut". At the time, the remains of Tut were making a very well-publicized tour of American museums. The song starts with the Arabian music, and Steve and some dancers do the classic Egyptian dance moves. The song became a hit on radio, and the skit is certainly on most lists of top 10 original-cast SNL appearances.
    czcams.com/video/FYbavuReVF4/video.html

    • @maggiestrasser9815
      @maggiestrasser9815 Před rokem

      Now when I die, don't think I'm a nut...
      Don't want no fancy funeral, just one like ol' King Tut!

  • @rays7805
    @rays7805 Před rokem +2

    This video only needs to be five seconds long. "Did the ancient Egyptians really walk that way? Yes."

  • @millbean13
    @millbean13 Před 11 měsíci

    “There’s a place in France where the naked lady’s dance, and a hole in the wall that the boys can see it all”. That’s what I think we I hear that tune.

  • @jimiwills
    @jimiwills Před rokem

    Love the bangles!

  • @Sucha_Hufflepuff
    @Sucha_Hufflepuff Před rokem

    I'm sorry to say it's been awhile since I've watched this channel. I swear I don't remember you talking so fast in the past, did you always and I just don't remember? Still love your content 😊

  • @KingfisherTalkingPictures

    I never realized how realistic their sculpture is and how stylized the drawing is.

  • @J.A.Smith2397
    @J.A.Smith2397 Před rokem

    Informational, tks

  • @Jiuhuashan
    @Jiuhuashan Před rokem +2

    One of the most fun TIFO episodes ever.

  • @Moondog-wc4vm
    @Moondog-wc4vm Před rokem +1

    Wilson, Keppel and Betty was strangely not mentioned. The modern cultural impact of that act is important on our view of ancient Egypt. As is the cultural impact of what they believed at the time. Neither is correct, but the popular belief is important to understand in order to know how to seperate fact from fiction. The popular song, the sleuth story on the Nile, many other even more fantastical stories (I'm looking at you Fraser) reflect our fascination with ancient Egypt, but the truth is, we know very little about a civilisation that was so compelling that it dominates entire university departments worldwide today and has done for more than a century.

  • @JoseTheRover
    @JoseTheRover Před rokem +2

    1:30 of ads is wayyyyyyyyyyyy too much. Do they know that most of us skip through all of it?

  • @eldraque4556
    @eldraque4556 Před rokem

    actually wondered this the other day

  • @contessa.adella
    @contessa.adella Před rokem

    It was probably an ancient Egyptian version of Tik Tok dancing by ancient Gen Z.

  • @theconqueringram5295
    @theconqueringram5295 Před rokem +1

    Now I am going to listen to that 'Walk Like an Egyptian' song.

  • @sharvo6
    @sharvo6 Před rokem +1

    No way Snake Charmer Song!! Totally Bangles' Walk Like an Egyptian!!!

  • @alansilverman8500
    @alansilverman8500 Před rokem

    "I'm a little teapot
    Short and stout...
    Here is my handle
    Here is my spout !"

  • @jrmckim
    @jrmckim Před rokem +1

    Over the years I wondered about this probably too much.. but today I found out.

  • @listenhere1623
    @listenhere1623 Před rokem +1

    I'm disappointed Walk like an Egyptian by the Bangles wasn't the next recommended video

  • @philpots48
    @philpots48 Před rokem

    The song "Egyptian Ella" (11/1931) Jack Hylton & His Orchestra
    Vocal chorus: Pat O'Malley

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 Před rokem

    The explanation that made sense to me is that weird art styles become dominant when people use it more verbally than visually. They consider it trivial and empty to just copy what something looks like, and instead use standard images to state a position.
    Tends to happen when a culture convinces itself that it already knows everything about nature, so is bored by immediate facts of living. Like they think reality is mostly meaningless "clutter" that hides the truth. And the reverse is also true: If they convince themselves they're brand new in the world, they become obsessed with "capturing" moments and directly translating experience into visual form, as if they're the first person ever to see a thing.
    The latter has a lot more possibilities though, so way more interesting.

  • @DiscoCatsMeow
    @DiscoCatsMeow Před rokem +1

    " Walk Like an Egyptian" by the Bangles.😁 Best song ever.

  • @joe3eagles
    @joe3eagles Před rokem

    Thank goodness for closed captioning and playback speed control. With Simon's 10x normal speed speech, I wouldn't be able to understand 20 percent of what he's saying without it.

  • @seanspartan2023
    @seanspartan2023 Před rokem +8

    TL;DR... No, they didn't

  • @nbarnes6225
    @nbarnes6225 Před rokem +3

    Awww....this makes me miss my Art of Ancient Egypt class. ❤

  • @edwardnedharvey8019
    @edwardnedharvey8019 Před rokem

    LOL @ brick wall outro

  • @roodbennett
    @roodbennett Před rokem +22

    Simon, my favourite CZcams presenter.

    • @AJNpa80
      @AJNpa80 Před rokem +3

      Rumour has it he's a cyborg - machine from the waist down - making videos 24 hours a day, for a constantly growing list of channels, from a secret basement lab somewhere in Eastern Europe. Machine below the desk, man grown in a test tube from brain cells alone from the waist up - but a beard hair fell into the petri dish and now it's grown like wildfire. Ex Soviet scientists from the ministry of education created a content making machine. Cranking out clips, only pausing for the scientists to cut back his ever growing beard, which stole the follicular growth potential from his head, which is able to keep cool through any workload as a side effect. They must continue carefully slashing and burning it back between videos so it doesn't expand and absorb the rest of the internet, and Europe itself.
      Also, he's proof, everywhere you can go with a plane, a boat, a 4wd and a hike, you'll find a Brit, even a secret lab in Eastern Europe. Every time I thought I went far, the 3rd village after I entered the jungle, a village only accessible by rowboat near the equator, after days of travel seeing only locals, after arriving at my destination, every time I thought I was truly out there, I'd sit down for a meal or a think and a lone British person would pop up as if conjured out of the wind itself.

    • @roodbennett
      @roodbennett Před rokem

      @@AJNpa80 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @kurtwinter4422
      @kurtwinter4422 Před rokem +1

      I prefer the host of Megaprojects

    • @roodbennett
      @roodbennett Před rokem

      @@kurtwinter4422 😂😂😂

  • @AirForceChmtrails
    @AirForceChmtrails Před 11 měsíci +1

    I recall Steve Martin's King Tut.

  • @melaber77
    @melaber77 Před rokem

    That song is gonna be stuck in my head for the rest of the night!

  • @runrickyrun157
    @runrickyrun157 Před 11 měsíci

    When a creator is doing the sponsor's ad and they talk about the difficulty of modern life or anxiety, it feels so much like "Fifteen Million Merits."