OverSimplified - The First Punic War(Part 1) REACTION | DaVinci REACTS

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  • čas přidán 23. 10. 2022
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    The First Punic War - OverSimplified (Part 1) by OverSimplified
    Original video: • The First Punic War - ...
    #Oversimplified #PunicWar #History #Reaction
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Komentáře • 26

  • @TenOfTwenty
    @TenOfTwenty Před rokem +22

    So, about the Carthaginians sacrificing their children to Baal. It mostly happened. We have found ancient graves near the ruins filled with the skeletons of children. Multiple historians and writers at the time made note of it as well, and these were academics from across the Mediterranean. Also, it was only their first-born children that were sacrificed.

    • @purpleemerald5299
      @purpleemerald5299 Před rokem +5

      Ah, ancient times…when children were pumped out so consistently you could afford to literally throw their lives away on a whim.

    • @TenOfTwenty
      @TenOfTwenty Před rokem +2

      @@purpleemerald5299 I understand what u are saying but that wasn't true. A huge number of children would not live to see adulthood due to illness. It was common for societies in ancient times to be around 50% children to offset the difference. Plus, the rate at which women would die in childbirth was astronomical compared to what it is today. Women had to focus on giving birth as much as possible in order to keep populations growing. It is sad that this was a necessity, but we should be thankful to live in a time where this is no longer necessary.

    • @purpleemerald5299
      @purpleemerald5299 Před rokem +1

      @@TenOfTwenty THAT JUST MAKES SACRIFICING THEIR FIRST BORNS SOMEHOW EVEN WORSE!

    • @TenOfTwenty
      @TenOfTwenty Před rokem +4

      @@purpleemerald5299 I'm going to be quite honest, I didn't realize you were being sarcastic with your first comment lol.

    • @cegesh1459
      @cegesh1459 Před rokem +1

      @@TenOfTwenty There is no evidence for it happening. In fact the children graves have greek letters and names in them. The graves of small children are more likley becauae a lot of children died, even during / aftwr birth. We have found regular children graves, not sacrifices. Maybe it did happen sometimes, but evidence is lacking.
      After all human sacrifices were rather common at the time, the Romans did it too.

  • @artembentsionov
    @artembentsionov Před rokem +9

    Saturn is the Roman equivalent to Cronos. Cronos was a Titan (who are the same “species” as the Greek gods) who was foretold that one of his children would overthrow him, so he began eating them as soon as they were born. When Zeus was born, his mother swapped him out with a rock and gave the rock wrapped in a blanket for Cronus to eat. Later on, Zeus grew up and came to work for Cronos as a servant. Then he cut Cronos’s belly open with a scythe, and all his siblings came out. Cronos and the other titans were cast down into Tartarus

    • @PaulXPZ
      @PaulXPZ Před rokem

      And years later, Kratos finished him off for good, and Zeus, and pretty much every other greek god. He had anger issues you see...

  • @amberswafford9305
    @amberswafford9305 Před rokem +5

    Saturn was called Cronus & he thought he ate Zeus but it was a stone bc those 2 are very similar lol. Then later there was the Titanomachy war which the Olympians won. Yep, that information is useful to me all the time 🤣

  • @astrobullivant5908
    @astrobullivant5908 Před rokem +1

    @9:24,
    It's complicated. We think of a Greco-Roman paganism today where the Greeks and Romans prayed to the same gods and just gave them different names, but originally, they were pretty different religions. At first, the Roman pagan religion was only distantly related to the Greek pagan religion, and the two religions were pretty different. Originally, the Roman pagan religion didn't have Titans, only the Greek one did. Before the 5th Century BCE, when the Romans absorbed elements of the Greek pagan religion, they changed the figures a lot. For instance, the Roman story of Hercules was pretty different from the Greek story of Heracles. In the 4th and 3rd Centuries BCE, the Romans began heavily changing their religion to correspond with the Greek pagan religion. When we think of Rome in its heyday from 200 BCE - 200 CE, its religion was heavily influenced by the Greek religion and Saturn was identified with Cronus, but originally, the Romans didn't make that connection. So, before the 3rd Century BCE, the Romans weren't usually teaching that Saturn ate his children; that was just the Greek story of Cronus.

  • @alexortiz7425
    @alexortiz7425 Před rokem +3

    Was waiting for this reaction...keep it up homie

  • @DJsupasmash2ndChannel

    Here's Ricky Gervais on a comedy show called "Trust Us With Your Life" that #DaVinciReacts could tackle:
    - Part 1: czcams.com/video/CWOwQ3-snlg/video.html
    - Part 2: czcams.com/video/2yKsHvctIwI/video.html

  • @tonygacs6249
    @tonygacs6249 Před rokem

    Und ich dachte schon diese Reaction würde gar nicht mehr kommen. Ich hatte mir schon Sorgen gemacht. 😅

  • @Dnichols619
    @Dnichols619 Před rokem

    Saturn is Chronos (sp? Kronos?) Zeus's father. I dunno the Roman version, but in the Greek version he ate all his kids until Zeus mother saved him by tricking Cronos (maybe).

    • @Dnichols619
      @Dnichols619 Před rokem

      Oh and yeah he was a Titan. I might have heard that he was the Roman God of time but I'm not super familiar with Roman mythology. I just know which ones are which Greek God lol.

  • @kemal1232
    @kemal1232 Před rokem +3

    Great Video can you react to Geography now Turkey aswell? I think you wanted to watch it once it dropped

  • @cegesh1459
    @cegesh1459 Před rokem +1

    Fun fact: Romans learned a lot about farming from Carthaginians. They praised a Carthaginian book about acriqulture.

  • @whispermason8052
    @whispermason8052 Před rokem

    OK well I put this in my default websearch engine and something totally different came up. Or wasthat the pornhub search bar? Whichever brings up body hair trimmer ads.

  • @cegesh1459
    @cegesh1459 Před rokem

    There is no evidence for it happening. In fact the children graves have greek letters and names in them. The graves of small children are more likley becauae a lot of children died, even during / aftwr birth. We have found regular children graves, not sacrifices. Maybe it did happen sometimes, but evidence is lacking.
    After all human sacrifices were rather common at the time, the Romans did it too.