The Massive Megalithic Marvel Of Petra In Jordan: 7 Miles Long!

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  • čas přidán 10. 08. 2022
  • Check out our upcoming major tours: hiddenincatours.com/tours/#major
    My book about Petra: www.amazon.com/Petra-Ancient-...

Komentáře • 736

  • @stephenheath9864
    @stephenheath9864 Před rokem +4

    The geometry of that water way blows me away

  • @ZonDog
    @ZonDog Před rokem +5

    Utterly amazing.

  • @abigailwolff8334
    @abigailwolff8334 Před rokem +1

    The precious animals that do those tours everyday. Bless them.🍀🙏🍀

  • @grey8940
    @grey8940 Před rokem +5

    Wow! You aren't kidding Brien... My mind is blown by the sound of that room.

  • @ericneiman5556
    @ericneiman5556 Před rokem +32

    This is the only way I'll ever get to see these places Brien takes me to.. thanks. Love seeing it

  • @MrSnead-vp1ll
    @MrSnead-vp1ll Před rokem +2

    Fascinating, I've always been intrigued by Petra.

  • @ZafodB3
    @ZafodB3 Před rokem +21

    I was not aware that the whole Petra complex was so large. Thanks for sharing this!

  • @lilylove2021
    @lilylove2021 Před rokem +5

    Thank you SO much for not just showing the treasury.. ..
    Sara

  • @robinleeevans3150
    @robinleeevans3150 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Petra is AWESOME and it amazes me to think how it was made? Fantastic! Thanks for taking us with you,,,,,

  • @georgehunter2813
    @georgehunter2813 Před rokem +8

    Connecting the dots, global continuity. Thanks Brien.

  • @TheJeffrey575
    @TheJeffrey575 Před rokem +29

    I never get tired of watching your videos that take us back to ancient times. I don’t know why but I am still more interested in the South American megalithic structures that I truly believe to be hundreds of thousands years old.

    • @oftin_wong
      @oftin_wong Před rokem +1

      Why do you think you like to entertain such fantastic ideas?

    • @dannywayne311
      @dannywayne311 Před rokem +1

      @@oftin_wong they are absolutely much more ancient than anything we know to this day, in Petra, in Peru, everywhere there’s evidence of a global civilization that we don’t know anything about

    • @oftin_wong
      @oftin_wong Před rokem

      @@dannywayne311
      How would there be evidence of
      Something that 'we don't know anything about'
      What's the evidence ...if you really ask that question you'll see ...no evidence,
      ..you are just being hoodwinked by liars like this forester

    • @dannywayne311
      @dannywayne311 Před rokem +1

      @@oftin_wong so egyptians and native Americans and Inca, built all the 30-1000 ton megalithic architecture? And it’s from the last 2000 years rather than the last 6000-12000 years old? This stuff is the only surviving relics of events that now classify as myth but if they didn’t actually happen, why are these massive structures that we can’t recreate here to this day?

    • @oftin_wong
      @oftin_wong Před rokem

      @@dannywayne311 you seem confused

  • @conditionallyunconditional5691

    I toured Petra 20 yrs ago. Amazing place. Terracotta artifacts everywhere.

  • @tyroneharper5375
    @tyroneharper5375 Před rokem +1

    I Swear Brien Foerster Has The Best Job Ever!!

  • @thegreatresist4224
    @thegreatresist4224 Před rokem +5

    I admire your work, Brian. Your a gift, thank you

  • @JamesPanzini
    @JamesPanzini Před rokem +1

    Great singing. hehehehe. I cranked my headphones up to hear the birds singing and then I was graced with your singing. Great acoustics! Wow!

  • @diamondsutra837
    @diamondsutra837 Před rokem +8

    Thank you for this content as always ! 🙏☯️☸️🕉

  • @jackiedaniel2502
    @jackiedaniel2502 Před rokem +5

    Really enjoyed this have always been fascinated by petra

  • @TheBlackClockOfTime
    @TheBlackClockOfTime Před rokem +2

    We need like a 12 hour JRE podcast with: Ben X, Brien, Graham H + Randall C, Jimmy B, Robert S and perhaps some mainstream academics, where we systematically go through all the thematic similarities and oddities around the globe and debate each point by point.

  • @garyb5796
    @garyb5796 Před rokem +7

    How did they do that?? From 15:44 to 15:54 when you paned up, did someone come along and paste a giant Blue-Print on a mountain and say dig here just follow the lines and curves? Mind Blowing is Right!! Sure they had hundreds of thousands of workers but you can only get so many workers in one place at a time. Even in that room, only so many wheel barrels and donkey carts at a time can get in and through such a small door or window. Were the scratch marks on the wall Laser or something out of this world???
    Very Cool Man!! Thanks for Sharing!!
    Subscribed & Notified

  • @drewstead316
    @drewstead316 Před rokem +10

    Thank you for all that you do, I thought I was losing my mind 7yrs ago and you helped me to know that I'm not crazy. There's just some things I could not have possibly learned in my 200+ semester units. My mother was an English teacher with a Masters as a Reading Specialist, and she can continue to think I'm crazy but there's a lot of us who know looking at the truth really means. The things I've witnessed in the last 7 years are not fully explainable by the things I learned as a scientist. A mind-blowing connection that I made after first coming across your videos was that my 10th grade physics teacher tried to explain to us how electricity actually comes in the ground when lightning strikes that makes a whole lot more sense now..,. It's the electrons that are crashing into the ground but it's the electromagnetic field that is coming out of the ground perpendicular to that.

    • @ProDMiner
      @ProDMiner Před rokem +1

      Dude I feel this! I started noticing wild shit awhile back, and other things I simply just will not share. But all of its bad , really really bad. Hope we can all survive it.

    • @josephlee4443
      @josephlee4443 Před rokem

      ​@@ProDMiner don't stress man all is good ❤

  • @Partimepeasant
    @Partimepeasant Před rokem +2

    I liked the donkey laughing at you when you yelled to slow down.😆😆

  • @MULLATO27
    @MULLATO27 Před rokem +5

    Always have wanted to go there!

  • @MarwanAbuTuraba
    @MarwanAbuTuraba Před rokem +4

    Many thanks for your informative and interesting subjects.
    Your explanations are mostly convenienced and logic .
    Appreciated 👍

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays Před rokem +1

    10:30 Donkey wants his cameo now

  • @brigitakralj6399
    @brigitakralj6399 Před rokem +1

    Thank You Brown Love You🥰🍀

  • @thisbirdisfree
    @thisbirdisfree Před rokem +3

    Such an amazing place. Hopefully one day I’ll get to see it. But 10:31? LOL

  • @Oldgreycowboy
    @Oldgreycowboy Před rokem +1

    Thank you for taking us with you on the trip. This is one of my bucket list trips. Thx !!! 👍

  • @EnforcementDronEd209
    @EnforcementDronEd209 Před rokem +3

    This site is amazing

  • @annnaegele1846
    @annnaegele1846 Před rokem +1

    This whole place blows my mind! Thanks so much Brien!

  • @roses9339
    @roses9339 Před rokem +3

    I hope they treat their animals with care and love!!! It's an incredible place thank you for the tour and comments. Cheers Rosemary Perth Western Australia (71 yrs)

  • @mazrio128
    @mazrio128 Před rokem

    That Horse is such a solid companion throughout our history

  • @DrAskildsen
    @DrAskildsen Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you for bringing us along with you :)

  • @DavidGatto
    @DavidGatto Před rokem +3

    What a great privilege it was to visit- special thanks to King Hussein for his hospitality to the Marines and Sailors of MEU 11👍🤠 INFINITE MOONLIGHT

  • @jacob18salmon
    @jacob18salmon Před rokem +2

    An absolute treasure and thank you again for bringing us along. I cant wait to go and walk and see every little thing I can soon. Stay safe and love from middle usa and stay seeking 👏🙌🖖✌ legend 🤙

  • @mohammadbino2333
    @mohammadbino2333 Před rokem

    Dear brien
    All your videos are beautiful .
    But this one of petra .... is one of a kind .
    Thanks a lot .

  • @ckotty
    @ckotty Před rokem +1

    Absolutely, the belief that Nabateans built, carved, that hard rock with the available tools at the time
    Is preposterous.
    The video is a gem for those of us that haven't been there 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
    👍🏽😘

    • @HappyHappySY
      @HappyHappySY Před rokem

      Why not mentioning that Petra is an arabic name built by al anbat arabic tribal Kingdom
      Same as Palmyra with Zenobia the arabic queen and warrior
      And many other sites
      Arabs lived here long time before roman came as occupiers
      Actually many famous arabs from syria ruled roman cities as Philip the arab or Julia doumna
      Supremacist white eurocentric mentality

  • @picturesinmotion4784
    @picturesinmotion4784 Před rokem +1

    Awesome Brien! Wish I could have been there with you all! -Dustin

  • @nancyvolker3342
    @nancyvolker3342 Před rokem +1

    I love Petra it's my all time favorite

  • @rangerpartners1971
    @rangerpartners1971 Před rokem

    Brien is a CONSUMMATE PROFESSIONAL!

  • @calenlight6817
    @calenlight6817 Před rokem +69

    This city looks like it was Petrified, therefore Petra suits its name! The entire city looks like it was under flood debris for 10's or hundreds of thousands of years and due to erosion began to stick out of the faces of the debris material that got weathered down over many millennia. It may have been further excavated by the Nabateans and could go down 100's of feet. We may only be lookng at the very top of a city fully submerged in flood debris!

    • @wrlSivan16
      @wrlSivan16 Před rokem +8

      Agree

    • @amberandrews6842
      @amberandrews6842 Před rokem +8

      With bulk of the work being pre-flood. You can see by the erosion, it was sculpted first.

    • @calenlight6817
      @calenlight6817 Před rokem +6

      @@amberandrews6842 But possibly after as well, by greeks or romans who put facades of their style over the faces of the ancient structures.

    • @steveevans946
      @steveevans946 Před rokem +13

      I agree. Rather than being dug out of the bedrock, it could be the uncovered remains of a city built tens, if not hundreds of thousands of years ago. In the UK, large sections of our coastline look like ancient construction/terra-forming. If it looks built, it probably is, once you grasp the possibility that human advanced civilisations have cycled over hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of years.

    • @calenlight6817
      @calenlight6817 Před rokem +4

      @@steveevans946 Yes and even hundreds of millions of years according to quackademic chronology! They claim some of the coal seams are like 300 million years old and then all sorts of human manufactured items are found in the coal. LOL!

  • @sierraromeo1176
    @sierraromeo1176 Před rokem +3

    Fantastic video and camera work!

  • @BigBGSD
    @BigBGSD Před rokem +3

    Love your very much Brian for your work
    The videos and talks are simply outstanding
    Bless you

  • @SDeww
    @SDeww Před rokem

    please Mister Foerster make you extra long videos again,
    they are always so facinating and i cant get enough of watching those!.
    One day they will teach about you in schools all over the world!
    thank you very much,

  • @mary4011
    @mary4011 Před rokem +5

    Wow! You can say that again. Blew my mind. Beyond acoustics. I want to know where all the rock went that they had to remove? Thank you Brien.

  • @samstewart4807
    @samstewart4807 Před rokem +6

    Has anyone used ground penetrating radar to see if there are structures under the existing "floor"?

    • @samstewart4807
      @samstewart4807 Před rokem +2

      @@cashgrab3139 yes I did. so, do you know if ground penetrating radar has been used.

  • @joyreinhardt7621
    @joyreinhardt7621 Před rokem +4

    I read/heard just in the last day, or so, that certain of the 'ancients' discovered how to harden copper , so that the tools made of it lasted much longer ! This idea, does make sense to me !

    • @mazzy8216
      @mazzy8216 Před rokem

      Where is the evidence of this, and where are the tools, I live in UK and throughout my childhood and adulthood I have visited museums and asked these questions about tools and pottery...this is perplexing no tools been found ? Why is this...

  • @josephleiter9828
    @josephleiter9828 Před rokem

    good tour. many thanks

  • @ShortbusMooner
    @ShortbusMooner Před rokem

    Just breathtaking- thanks for making the trip for us!!

  • @thegreatresist4224
    @thegreatresist4224 Před rokem

    Yourvstream looks awesome on my telephone. Thank you s much, dear Brian. I love your channel!!

  • @pascalesalvia6565
    @pascalesalvia6565 Před rokem

    Thank you , Mr Foerster !

  • @michelleg4346
    @michelleg4346 Před rokem

    WoW, Thank you, Mr. Forester.

  • @gmandallas9197
    @gmandallas9197 Před rokem

    That was awesome!

  • @tommyK313
    @tommyK313 Před rokem +2

    Brilliant! Thanks Brien 👍

  • @wordzfailmebro
    @wordzfailmebro Před rokem +1

    Excellent thank you sir. 👽👍🐨👍

  • @milanpencic6635
    @milanpencic6635 Před 8 dny

    Great video, I'm blown away.

  • @hawkeye1370
    @hawkeye1370 Před rokem +1

    Great video, next best thing to being there!

  • @carlafarigu2503
    @carlafarigu2503 Před rokem

    Absolutely stunning.
    Thanks 😊

  • @teucap5965
    @teucap5965 Před rokem

    thank you so much Brien! As always!

  • @claudemontezin911
    @claudemontezin911 Před rokem +15

    Thank you so much Brien! I have 17 years of property management, handyman and construction. I keep thinking practical questions, like Petra is very out of the way, Why live among so much rock? Protection and safety for the original occupants, comes to mind. The Biblical Lot and his two daughters found refuge there, although it seemed to have been abandoned even back then. As you pointed out, it all seems quite functional (you want to see "fancy" for no reason, go see Versailles). How did they feed themselves? It's easy to conceive that these long "water collection" troughs, way back when the climate was probably less arid, would easily collect enough to water plants and crops somewhere and anywhere in these nooks and crannies. 20:14 the entire bottom part is damaged. But by what? Not water; there is an angle to it. At 7:10 the columns are also marked by something. On either sides, the cliffs are also darkened superficially. 15:49 Wow. The bottom and top part of the facade are heavily "scraped off" but the middle was largely spared. Can't imagine this, being damaged by enemies using some tall scaffolding. Wonderful presentation, as always! I'll be definitely waiting for more from you. Cheers!

    • @LofiCameron
      @LofiCameron Před rokem +1

      While I am not sure of the exact climate of the time, however I know for most of its time Egypt was mostly tropical without the massive sand dunes overtook it due to climate change, Petra in the video has grass in 2022, so I can imagine it was probably a lot more lively back in the day with farmland and ect

    • @LofiCameron
      @LofiCameron Před rokem +2

      and you must think for the entire city to basically be fed by carved water channels and beautifully done, that they had to by literal death understand how to use and manipulate water, which hydroponics (basic version at least) near the city/inside at areas and their knowledge would have boosted their crops by a decent amount if you check other advanced water farming methods (mexican,asian) comes to mind

    • @oftin_wong
      @oftin_wong Před rokem

      Petra was located at an important trade route intersection that no longer exists, they never grew crops ...(simple explanations are king)

    • @TheDAT9
      @TheDAT9 Před 7 měsíci

      Of course they grew crops the climate was different over 12, 000 yeras ago. @@oftin_wong

    • @oftin_wong
      @oftin_wong Před 7 měsíci

      @@TheDAT9 petra isn't 12000 years old, it's 2000 years old

  • @tonysaint6749
    @tonysaint6749 Před rokem

    fantastic, never seen this before, thank you with all my heart. God bless you and your work.hiya from Australia🙃

  • @thesweseyfile
    @thesweseyfile Před rokem +1

    I appreciate all you do, great video.. very informative. 👍🏻

  • @anim8torfiddler871
    @anim8torfiddler871 Před rokem +24

    Thank you, Mr. Foerster. Another gorgeous video, jam packed with excellent views and insights.
    Knowing now about the vast underground CITIES like Derenkuyu in Türkiye, and the thousands of even better-known apartments and multi-room dwellings carved in the conical volcanic tuff hills of Cappadocia... Along with the countless European covered structures like the Grange in Ireland, all the Dolmens, "Temples" of Malta and Sicily ... I can't help wondering how many of those date to the periods when the Sun went through a chaotic period of violent instability, flaring and flashing, sending broiling blasts to sear and scorch the inner planets for maybe a decade or more.
    Doctor Anthony Peratt, after working with Los Alamos labs for decades, began to analyze Ancient Rock-wall Petroglyphs with the insights gained from studying high-energy Plasma Physics and the shapes that emerge from those energies. He has shown that many of the petroglyphs interpreted by archaeologists as Bird men and humans dancing with odd dots astride their torsos *_are in fact uncannily accurate depictions of the vast shimmering Energy Patterns that would have straddled the Sun's Darkened Disk, in the hours and days leading up to TITANIC Energy Blasts, that may have repeated in deadly cycles for months or even years._*
    "Orthodox" historians flinch at the idea that any story they do not control might have unfolded during the 300,000+ years of humanity's journey on this planet. They are terrified that knowledge might emerge which is not subject to their management and authority.
    Too Effing Bad.
    The universe doesn't give a Crap about their Pinky-Sworn Construct of history.

    • @CapricaSoul
      @CapricaSoul Před rokem

      Interesting except earth is not a planet. Space is fake.

    • @adrianariaratnam5817
      @adrianariaratnam5817 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/Yvn4Em8OLTo/video.html

    • @jeremyhorne5252
      @jeremyhorne5252 Před rokem

      The plasma cosmology of Peratt is not supported by observation.

    • @claireellis8242
      @claireellis8242 Před rokem +1

      Graham Hancock. Magicians of the Gods. Explains it all.

  • @helgeisonline2300
    @helgeisonline2300 Před rokem +10

    The question is, what was produced in histrory in a very great mount and worth to build a storage system with 10miles store rooms. In all times it costs a lot to build it. So where is the rouble and might are there some broken tools inside? Where ever something discovered?

  • @bradleysmith9253
    @bradleysmith9253 Před rokem

    Thanks for taking me via CZcams to the Magnificent spectacle. I enjoyed it ❤️immensely. Cheers 😎🏄‍♂️🌈🇦🇺

  • @LBG-cf8gu
    @LBG-cf8gu Před rokem

    love this channel!

  • @Jowls2024
    @Jowls2024 Před rokem

    That ceiling! Stellar..

  • @hawkeye1370
    @hawkeye1370 Před rokem +1

    The tool marks @15.35 are very intriguing, it really makes you wonder what kind of a tool would make those marks, it definitely has the appearance of some kind of mechanical tool, and not something hand held.

  • @BADSEED13
    @BADSEED13 Před rokem

    @14:43 Mind blown...I had no idea of the area Petra covered. This is a fabulous post. Thank you.

  • @cable-xc1ex
    @cable-xc1ex Před rokem

    amazing brien

  • @longt.standing6607
    @longt.standing6607 Před rokem +4

    Brien,
    I appreciate your testing the OM frequency.
    Seriously we are missing a huge chunk of our humanity. There are no accidents when it comes to resonating tuning of OM. None.

  • @flywheel9759
    @flywheel9759 Před rokem +1

    What is a truly amazing, is that most of what is now called Petra, is blowing like sand in the wind.

  • @tyrssen1
    @tyrssen1 Před rokem

    Wow -- terrific Brien, thank you!

  • @wannapostacomment
    @wannapostacomment Před rokem

    Love the sweater and your work!

  • @raymondtonns2521
    @raymondtonns2521 Před rokem

    excellent Brian!

  • @rascoln7330
    @rascoln7330 Před rokem

    Thx for taking me to Petra made feel that I was there.

  • @greglemieux9809
    @greglemieux9809 Před rokem

    Great video. I always enjoy your content. 👍👍

  • @mrjolieguy8673
    @mrjolieguy8673 Před rokem +1

    That channel that was shown here reminds of Bolivias water channel found at the Camino de la Muerte
    Very cool interesting video
    Thanks for sharing your adventures

  • @Sonny_V
    @Sonny_V Před rokem

    Brien Never Disappoints...Awesome Stuff

  • @culturescience8458
    @culturescience8458 Před rokem

    Amazing. I had no idea

  • @yvettekosta7994
    @yvettekosta7994 Před rokem +14

    When you were in that large acoustic hall, what did you think of the odd marbled coloring of the vast flat ceiling as well as the upper back wall of the arches. Did you see those consistent tool marks there, as you pointed out on one wall? Because the ceiling looked very smooth, you say layered sandstone, but out of the pink, mauve, beige and gray, the black looked very oddly angular. Seaweed deposits? I understand that if stone is cut horizontally it's layers will look different from those cut vertically, but the archway wall is at a vertical angle from the ceiling and looks the same. Though both look very different from the rest of the walls and floor. And what does the weathered damage on the lower part of the facade look like to you? The columns are just crumbled off like they were in several feet of flowing water for repeated and long periods of time. I understand that this area was prone to severe flooding at certain times, and this was a big reason for the sites abandonment, because they couldn't keep up with the water chanel repair and flood control. Plus evidence of earth quake at the upper regions of cliffs surrounding the city where there was a lot of water management structural damage.
    Also, what are those square holes all in rows high up on the walls? Were they used to attach something? I don't see soot marks from torches!
    And lastly, the great acoustics as well as the design of the great hall makes me think of a temple or mosque where a leading voice would chant or sing and lead the gathering in a prayer chant. But why is the back of the hall fenced off so people can't examine the strange features in the arched alcoves closer ?!!?

  • @SL-sd3sg
    @SL-sd3sg Před rokem

    What an amazing place!

  • @crossdissolve7649
    @crossdissolve7649 Před rokem +2

    I love this channel.

  • @brigitakralj6399
    @brigitakralj6399 Před 5 měsíci

    OLD OLD OLD PETRA HISTORY 😂❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @johndaugherty4127
    @johndaugherty4127 Před rokem +2

    One clue to the builder's might be the size of the doors and ceilings. As usual, a fascinating piece of work. I am so glad you showed the ceiling, I had seen a photo of it before and it is breathtaking.

    • @artfuldodger6031
      @artfuldodger6031 Před rokem

      Hard to bring large statues and sarcophagus in a small door.

  • @55giantsfan22
    @55giantsfan22 Před rokem +1

    So cool

  • @Vegathlete
    @Vegathlete Před rokem

    Thanks!

  • @stanlindert6332
    @stanlindert6332 Před rokem

    That sound did blow my mind

  • @annierichards7367
    @annierichards7367 Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @anjaknatz7157
    @anjaknatz7157 Před rokem

    Till now I did not know at all what Petra really was and is! Thank you so much Brian!!

  • @szabolcskomaromi
    @szabolcskomaromi Před rokem

    Love these vids!

  • @hobostovepipe2199
    @hobostovepipe2199 Před rokem

    So much enjoy.

  • @geoffreycstevenson226

    Love it:)

  • @islamkamrul97
    @islamkamrul97 Před rokem

    Lots of love to present the petra of Nabatian Civilization in details with its past history 👍👍🙏

  • @igordrakulovic6857
    @igordrakulovic6857 Před rokem +1

    Those '' tool'' marks, damn !

  • @sld7262
    @sld7262 Před rokem

    I had no idea this even existed. Amazing!

  • @pandakicker1
    @pandakicker1 Před rokem

    As someone who’s ancestors come from Jordan, I am glad that my ancestors’ achievements were so amazing that you attribute them to someone else or lost tech. It’s kind of a compliment when I ignore the obvious insult to them. xD

    • @pandakicker1
      @pandakicker1 Před rokem

      I will never understand why modern humans’ hubris leads them to underestimate the ingenuity and ability of people who put their minds to their task without electronic tech.

  • @massoudkaykha2200
    @massoudkaykha2200 Před rokem

    Brian, you are the best (Massoud from Iran)

  • @hannahelisemiller7350

    PS. I like putting a face to the voice! Thank you for sharing the amazing content! 💕

  • @armanflint
    @armanflint Před rokem +1

    The earliest Corinthian capital was found in Bassae, dated at 427 BCE. (Corinthian capitals are the carved decorative acanthus leaf motif on the tops of columns). Romans enslaved Greeks, Etruscans..., to carve, sculpt, paint, decorate architecture in their cities. Roman columns (Corinthian order) are specific dimensions by design called, "canon." (κᾰνών/Kanon = Greek for, "measuring rod"). They integrate specific dimensions so that the column height are a 6 to 5 ratio. (If a column were 6 feet tall with the Corinthian capital on top, the column without the capital would be 5 feet tall). In art, the canon for sculpture or painting a figure, (specifically in Roman times) are to make the figure 6 head lengths tall to figure idealized proportions. Leonardo Da Vinci confirms the canon with his drawing called, The Vitruvian Man where the head is measured from about the collar/top of chest to the top of the head which equals 6 head lengths from head to foot. SO, IF the columns were carved in by Roman Greeks, the measurements are usually a dead give away of who made the columns.

  • @TarpeianRock
    @TarpeianRock Před rokem

    Another hilarious instalment from the man who’s In The Know.