Discovering the secrets of Portugal's 7,000-year-old cromlech - BBC REEL

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
  • The Cromlech of the Almendres is a megalithic complex in Evora, Portugal, dating back 7,000 years ago. This makes the sacred stone sites 2,000 years older than the world’s most famous Neolithic monument, Stonehenge.
    The Portuguese megalithic structure is believed to have been used for religious or ceremonial purposes as well as an astronomical observatory.
    Video by Izabela Cardoso & Fernando Teixeira
    Executive Producer: Camelia Sadeghzadeh
    #bbcreel #bbc #bbcnews

Komentáře • 469

  • @ministryoftruth8499
    @ministryoftruth8499 Před 2 lety +96

    The names of the cities of Évora in Portugal (where this cromlech is located), Évreux in France, and York in England all share the same Celtic etymology, 'eburos' (yew tree). These names are linguistic fossils that remind us that once upon a time, long before most of Europe was unified under the Caesars, there was a Celtic Europe.

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 2 lety +7

      "Évora" comes from the Roman name of the city, "Ebora". The reality is that the "v" instead of "b" is a phonetic change that occured in Classical Portuguese, because in Galician-Portuguese both "v" and "b" represented the same sound - and that still happens in numerous Portuguese dialects.

    • @ministryoftruth8499
      @ministryoftruth8499 Před 2 lety +16

      @@diogorodrigues747 Évora, Alentejo, Portugal
      From Celtic *ebora- 'plural genitive of the word eburos (trees)'.
      Proto-Celtic: eburos, noun (yew).

    • @ralphyork4996
      @ralphyork4996 Před 2 lety +15

      At 5,000 bc this is pre-Celtic.

    • @ministryoftruth8499
      @ministryoftruth8499 Před 2 lety +14

      @@ralphyork4996 Correct. My original comment is about the origin of the name currently in use for the place where this cromlech is located, not about the cromlech itself. The name is Celtic, the complex is Neolithic.

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 Před 2 lety +4

      Roman history can be clearly divided between before and after the sacking of Rome by the gauls under Brennus.
      It started its Italian expansion after the sacking, as if trying to build a buffer zone around the city. The Romans early expansion into celtiberia and Gaul is probably related to this scar in the Roman psyche

  • @Hallands.
    @Hallands. Před 2 lety +87

    I love that the Portuguese preserve this so well. We have the exact same burial chambers, grave mounts and boulders with little, round indentations in Denmark, but few of the standing stones are preserved and those only partially…

    • @ruidadgmailcanada8508
      @ruidadgmailcanada8508 Před 2 lety +9

      A dry climate and NOT having winters like Denmark helps preserve things.
      Much love to all,
      Canada

    • @vascoapolonio2309
      @vascoapolonio2309 Před 2 lety +2

      To tell you the truth, my friend, I think that was pure luck... Or maybe a foreigner had noticed these rock formation... Couse I'm Portuguese and I know how we work now, and have worked in the 20 century... 😂😂😂

    • @andrepereira744
      @andrepereira744 Před 2 lety +33

      @@vascoapolonio2309 "To tell you the truth" em vez de falares merdas em inglês a rebaixares os Portugueses para te fazeres de engraçadinho para os "outros" lá fora, vai estudar um bocado. Pois o espaço está preservado desde a sua descoberta em 1964 e quem descobriu foi um Português.

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety +12

      @@vascoapolonio2309 It's a shame you didn't pay attention to the video. Vai rapar o taicho

    • @LilAligator
      @LilAligator Před 2 lety +4

      É um povo que não se governa nem se deixa governar

  • @1715905950
    @1715905950 Před 2 lety +117

    In 2014 we had a chance to visit this cromlech and they neolithic burial sites that surround Evora. It’s a great exploration and Evora is a wonderful town with a wonderful Parador and great food
    Going through the Cork forest was a great experience. I was so glad to find this video as it explains a lot about these sites. Thank you so much
    A fan of Portugal

    • @BernasLL
      @BernasLL Před 2 lety

      Dafuq is a Parador? xD

    • @chuckspencer8540
      @chuckspencer8540 Před 2 lety

      @@BernasLL ?

    • @GregoryJByrne
      @GregoryJByrne Před 2 lety +1

      Message from the not so distant pas warning about the impending cataclysmic future.
      We are in the Precession END TIMES because our solar system is crossing our galaxies double torus electromagnetic gravitational plane now and for the next 1,000 years.
      Nothing new under the sun save for the Electromagnetic energy that comes from the Galactic Nucleus via the Sun.
      Grade 5 science could debunk CO2 caused climate cycles.
      Temp is rising first and Co2 follows. Cause and Effect.
      Earth is a closed CO2 loop that self regulates Co2 with LIFE by combining CO2 with H2O to capture the Electromagnetic energy from the galactic Nucleus/Bulge to create life.
      Energy is neither created nor destroyed. On this planet. All EM energy comes from and or returns to the Double Torus Magnet we call the galactic Nucleus/bulge.
      The GALACTIC Milankovitch cycles cause our climate cycles.
      With the 240,000 years rotation of the galactic bulge regulating the amount of energy our solar system receives. Trending US fro mice age at aphelion to tropical age at perihelion every 60,000 years.
      The reason the global Elitists are lying to you about the cause of climate change is because every 12,000 years NOW, half the 26,000 precession cycle our solar system eclipses crosses over our galaxies electromagnetic/gravitational plane for a 1,000 years causing the END TIMES with EMP pillars of EM fire, Z pinching, Oort cloud comet impacts and Noah’s east to west Tidal waves that wash over the continents and freeze into the continental glaciers lowering sea levels again.
      We started crossing the Milky Way in 2012 and are just experiencing the birthing pains of climate change cycles so far it is going to get a lot worst.
      Build that WALL like the CARNAC stones using 1/2 buried sea containers to channel stop the e->W tsunami’s to come.
      Build underground cities like what the people of Gobekli & Karahan tepe did with Derenkuyu & Capadoccia.
      Build more garden of Eden Znamya solar sail laser spotlight satellites
      Implement an END TIMES Marshal plan.
      Build more Ezekiel Musks VTVL rockets
      and above all else worship Jesus and speak the truth no matter how inconvenient lest the evil ones rule over you.

    • @mafaldavalentepinto
      @mafaldavalentepinto Před 2 lety

      @@BernasLL é uma pousada.

  • @johnedwardjones999
    @johnedwardjones999 Před 2 lety +36

    Wow! Been to Stonehenge. Had no idea this place existed in Portugal. Thank you!

  • @yarrowwitch
    @yarrowwitch Před rokem +15

    Portugal's neolithic monuments - standing stones, circles, passage graves - are amazing, and so prolific! ❤

  • @alientejanopt9066
    @alientejanopt9066 Před 6 měsíci +6

    PORTUGAL ROCKS 👍
    In Portugal there are structures like these everywhere, from north to south, east to west , the oldest in the world, and that's AMAZING .
    I'm proud to be portuguese.

  • @AleaRandomAm
    @AleaRandomAm Před 2 lety +48

    Just a correction. At 1:50 she says people associate the stones with Moors, that's false. It's a very common misconception, because the words are so similar, but people associate them with Mouras from the celtic "Marwa" (which means dead) and not Moors (or Mouros in Portuguese) from the latin "Mauri" (referring to North-West Africans).
    Moors were real people who inhabited the area from the 8th to the 12th century (and some even stayed longer up to the 16th century).
    Mouras are mystical beings of the Portuguese and Galician folklore with pre-roman celtic origin. If people thought they were giants, it's most certainly referring to the mystical Mouras and not the North African Moors. There's no way people thought North African Moors were giants since they lived with them, they knew they weren't stone-laying mystical beings.

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety +3

      Yup, subscrevo. Embora se ouça mais das lendas das Mouras/Moiras no norte de Portugal junto dos castros.

    • @AleaRandomAm
      @AleaRandomAm Před 2 lety +6

      @@bulletsfordinner8307 Sim são mais populares no Norte, é verdade (são de origem galaica se não me engano) e é no Norte que melhor sobreviveram, mas existem algumas no Sul também, provavelmente devido à presença Celtici no que é hoje o Alentejo. A confusão vem do facto da grafia ser a mesma e de existirem algumas lendas sobre Mouras, neste caso falando de muçulmanas/norte-africana, como a lenda da Moura de Faro ou da Moura Salúquia.
      Mas essas lendas ocorrem no Sul do país e estão diretamente ligadas a narrativas da Reconquista, e também têm uma componente mística muito reduzida (Moura de Faro) ou até inexistente (Moura Salúquia), ao contrário das Mouras/Moiras célticas que são seres puramente místicos e mágicos.
      Eu acho bastante fácil de diferenciar as duas mas ainda há pessoas que as confudem.
      Também parece haver muitos casos de reinterpretação a posteriori, isto é pessoas que criaram novas lendas a partir de Moiras célticas, pensando que se tratava de Mouras Norte-Africana (como a mulher está a fazer no vídeo). Conheço um caso assim aqui em Monção, com povoações ligadas ao Rio Mouro.

    • @MariaCardoso-fg2it
      @MariaCardoso-fg2it Před 2 lety +2

      @@AleaRandomAm Mouras mágicas encantadas que se transformavam em animais ?Conheço lendas dessas, contadas no Alentejo .

    • @hogwashmcturnip8930
      @hogwashmcturnip8930 Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you for that. I lived in this area for 13 years and I had Never heard anyone attribute any of these sites (there are Hundreds) to Moors! But I had never heard the word Moura, so now it all fits, I did know about the giants ,so it all makes sense for me now.

    • @DavidPereira-ot2xi
      @DavidPereira-ot2xi Před 2 lety

      @@MariaCardoso-fg2it De Mouras só conheço uma (Moura encantada) agora de bruxas e bruxos feiticeiros e feiticeiras é o forte (corredor, sarrom, a deusa dos animais, a caminheira, etc.) aqui ainda existe alguns rituais, vais fazer uma caminhada por locais pouco frequentados e afastado das localidade e em cruzamentos encontrares, cabelos sangue, cabeças de animais, fruta da época, espelhos, vestuário, calçado, velas de cera, e tc. e depois a tradição no dia das bruxas (à noite) uma cabaça com o interior limpo para colocar uma vela arder, para ficar com aspecto fantasmagórico

  • @suginami123
    @suginami123 Před 2 lety +30

    A complete revelation. Love this. Presenter is very clear and precise. Thank you.

  • @luizenahte8181
    @luizenahte8181 Před rokem +12

    I went there yesterday with my family.The rocks, the land, the beautiful trees… magic. I made my prayers, touched them feeling grateful for their resilience and resistance thru time. I’ll never forget the experience.

  • @sacriptex5870
    @sacriptex5870 Před 2 lety +23

    in my grandfather little vilage (Near Bragança) theres a lot of Celtic Dolmens and old celtic stones... There´s a fresh beautiful feeling around that place... something like a old dorment pagan Europe

  • @margarethinton3840
    @margarethinton3840 Před 2 lety +22

    So happy to see this video since at age 90 I won't be able to visit. I believe more like these stone circles will be 'discovered' since early peoples lived all over the globe. I would be delighted to hear of any new 'findings' in Portugal - there MUST be more.

    • @sancho_panca
      @sancho_panca Před 2 lety +3

      There are more cromlechs in the area, much smaller, but just as beautiful as this one. I recomend you to search for the Cromelechs of Portela de Mogos, Vale Maria do Meio and Monte das Fontaínhas. They're all amazing!!!

    • @bluebird3281
      @bluebird3281 Před 2 lety +1

      They are using LIDAR technology and finding circles and squares of stone in the Amazon. If you don't know about them already you may like the documentaries on those.

    • @wendylow5748
      @wendylow5748 Před 2 lety +2

      90!!! What's your secret to a long healthy life?? Besides staying away from doctors? LOL

  • @vitorjpereira2547
    @vitorjpereira2547 Před 2 lety +11

    I Am So Proud Of My Ancestors From 7,000 Years Ago. 🇵🇹🇵🇹🇵🇹

    • @MariaCardoso-fg2it
      @MariaCardoso-fg2it Před 2 lety +1

      Olá. Os meus tb. Sou desta região.

    • @vitorjpereira2547
      @vitorjpereira2547 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MariaCardoso-fg2it Olá Maria.
      O Alentejo é Mesmo Maravilhoso. ;)

    • @MariaCardoso-fg2it
      @MariaCardoso-fg2it Před 2 lety +1

      @@vitorjpereira2547 Ola'.Ta' bom? Eu adoro, sou de perto de Évora .A natureza ,pôr do sol ,visão privilegiada das estrelas, amplos horizontes ! Não esquecendo as comidinhas saborosas!

    • @MariaCardoso-fg2it
      @MariaCardoso-fg2it Před 2 lety +1

      E as pessoas são simples,humildes ,amistosas genuínas e filósofas !

    • @MariaCardoso-fg2it
      @MariaCardoso-fg2it Před 2 lety +1

      Nao estou la' mas tenho imensas saudades!

  • @presbiteroo
    @presbiteroo Před 2 lety +23

    I visited this place with Ebora Megalíthica, the group that this woman is part of. It was extremely interesting. So nice to see them here!

  • @brixcosmo
    @brixcosmo Před 5 měsíci +4

    Thanks! Best Regards from Portugal!

  • @luisalmeida1391
    @luisalmeida1391 Před 2 lety +7

    Thank you, BBC, for showing our treasures to the world.

  • @o.portista
    @o.portista Před 2 lety +7

    Somos Grandes 🇵🇹🇵🇹🇵🇹

  • @zipinha
    @zipinha Před 2 lety +9

    What an amazing communicator!
    Her English is perfect!
    Congratulations!

  • @stephanieyee9784
    @stephanieyee9784 Před 2 lety +42

    I love this video, it I'd so interesting and the information given is good. I would love to visit this site, I think it would feel magical. I visited Portugal way back in about 1984 and I loved it.

  • @emilymcfadden4360
    @emilymcfadden4360 Před 2 lety +15

    Genetic haplogroups from peoples still living in the area and northwest Spain are also found in the western isles of Scotland, Wales, the West and Northwest of Ireland. There also you find similar structures pre dating the obvious similarity to England's Stonehenge.

    • @andalacomessenome
      @andalacomessenome Před 2 lety +2

      People from this area went to those places after the ice age so they are Iberian too :)

    • @viveanaalmeida7854
      @viveanaalmeida7854 Před rokem +1

      Portuguese people have nothing to do with brits Irish anything if u look at our haplogrouo it's still different to british Isles also Portuguese people just don't look like any Irish or English person I've seen just cause we are European doesn't mean we are all the same let us have our own history

  • @mariadaluzmoutinho5701
    @mariadaluzmoutinho5701 Před 2 lety +24

    Este local é fascinante e o torna especial porque é a etapa mais antiga do desenvolvimento cultural humano...Que histórias poderiam revelar se estas pedras pudessem "falar"?! Que interessante explanação e conhecimento...mas os mistérios continuam!!

  • @whosewineisitanyway3184
    @whosewineisitanyway3184 Před 2 lety +6

    Really cool to come across this video. This couple from Puerto Rico and I took a tour to Evora from Lisbon and it was amazing! We went to the temple of bones and the sites shown in the video here. Very interesting stuff.

  • @jjohnson5014
    @jjohnson5014 Před 2 lety +19

    Well done presentation!

  • @prof.cecilycogsworth3204
    @prof.cecilycogsworth3204 Před 2 lety +2

    That was a lovely start to my day. Thank you very much.

  • @manic2360
    @manic2360 Před 2 lety +4

    The same style cup marks at the top of the stone, are found on top of the T-stones at Gobekli Tepe and Karahan Tepe.

  • @paulskillman7595
    @paulskillman7595 Před 2 lety +6

    Today I think it is difficult to realize how important it is to tell what season it is. Very long ago people needed to know when to plant their crops. Stone Henge allowed them to look at the stars to see when to plant their crops by the position of the stars.

    • @STICKlaPISSSE
      @STICKlaPISSSE Před rokem

      I am so sory but your logic is a total crap! What are you trying to say? That farmers didnt know the diference between spring and winter? That they need to build cromeleques in order to look at the stars and then plant crops?
      The moon and the sun are the true engines of agriculture. If you were a farmer you would know this! This were monuments for rituals! Those rituals served to agregate the neolithic people into some kind of unity, passing the clans and family levels.

  • @MotoTvWoodsFarm
    @MotoTvWoodsFarm Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for making this movie available. i enjoyed watching it and it brought back many memories of visiting the area, we weren't able to understand fully at the time what we were looking at when we were there. i am looking forward to returning there again later this year

  • @picksalot1
    @picksalot1 Před 2 lety +12

    Cool. Never heard of this place before. What condition was it in when found? It looks well-preserved. The "smile" reminds me of the crescent moon. Perhaps the depressions in the Cromlech are for placing offerings on the rounded stones or are some sort of calendar.
    Very interesting. I hope to hear more about this. Thanks 👍

  • @lydiawaterreus
    @lydiawaterreus Před 2 lety +7

    From the south of Europe.. along the coasts…Portugal, Spain, France, Britain, Ireland, Denmark and the south of Sweden (Ales Stenar) they stand there. Our history of the Celts

    • @truthismycause2800
      @truthismycause2800 Před 2 lety +4

      These monolithic structures pre-date the celtic diaspora. They were built during neolithic age, not Bronze or Iron age when protocelts and Celts spread throughout Europe. Their connection with the Celts is merely because the celtic tribes acknowledged them as holy or mystical sites from ancestral cultures.

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety

      @@truthismycause2800 they are proto-keltic that is correct. We even have found writings that haven't yet been decoded, or so called "rosetta stones". There were also humanlike sculptures found that suggest some kind of different cult where people painted themselves all around the face some even tattooing

  • @tlacahetl
    @tlacahetl Před 2 lety +13

    Why is this not common knowledge!! Its amazing what the ancestors built.

  • @etraudnoslen
    @etraudnoslen Před 2 lety +17

    amazing video. BBC could do a proper documentary on this. Extremely interesting subject, particularly because of its age and size.

    • @PanglossDr
      @PanglossDr Před 2 lety +6

      They never will because of the myth that Stonehenge is the oldest and most important pre-historic monument in the world.
      I took my Father to see Stonehenge. Our guide made the statement above. When I challenged him saying the Pyramids were older he got furious and insisted 'No, Stonehenge is far older.
      To put the BBC in perspective, when they did a series years ago on the Celts, who arrived in Britain about 1500 years after Stonehenge was built, what picture did they use at the beginning of every episode? You guessed it.

    • @queroemigrar4154
      @queroemigrar4154 Před 2 lety

      This is not 7000 years old

    • @PanglossDr
      @PanglossDr Před 2 lety +4

      @@queroemigrar4154 Quote your source please.

    • @queroemigrar4154
      @queroemigrar4154 Před 2 lety +2

      @@PanglossDr Quote your fake source.

    • @PanglossDr
      @PanglossDr Před 2 lety +4

      @@queroemigrar4154 It is readily available on the internet. Ever heard of using research rather than ignorant opinion?

  • @olgierdogden4742
    @olgierdogden4742 Před 2 lety +6

    Loved the slight uncertainty from our narrator who keeps a valued interest in the myth’s come history which is tantalisingly just out of reach, and as it should be.. drawing more intrigue and shaping the ghosts of the past..

  • @thevisit630
    @thevisit630 Před 2 lety +9

    Great knowledge Thanks BBC Real❤️👍

  • @TheZombieGAGA
    @TheZombieGAGA Před 2 lety +6

    beautiful places in Alentejo

  • @jpmtlhead39
    @jpmtlhead39 Před 8 měsíci +2

    7.000 years old... Uauu.👍👍

  • @debbiehenri345
    @debbiehenri345 Před 2 lety +7

    I'd heard there were other stone circles in Europe besides the numerous, much-publicized British ones. Interesting to see there is one in Portugal, and remaining in such good condition.
    I wonder if those cup-shaped markings identify with certain Neolithic settlements, clans, or families instead of constellations (because I'd have thought that it would have been quite easy to relate the marks to groups of stars).
    Perhaps it's where the clan can make personalised offerings or it marks out where each settlement/family gathers during important events like a solstice.

    • @Predatorkick
      @Predatorkick Před rokem +3

      There is much more than jus one of those in Portugal. In fact there’s more like this in Portugal than in England

    • @Ptls68
      @Ptls68 Před 16 dny

      There has been more than 50.000 of those moathillgraves with Stones in the structure in denmark but lots has been destroyed by farming but i thing there are still about 10.000 left

  • @akashsolenkar7545
    @akashsolenkar7545 Před 2 lety +4

    Those stone called shiva linga's humans developed energy points they also in India. Specifically energy points made by black stone in also India

  • @pbohearn
    @pbohearn Před 2 lety +3

    I just saw the Dolmens in Andalusia, Spain today. 2 mounds with a hallway into a room built of huge rocks. So cool! 5k years old!

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety

      Yes the people spread out in large groups all through the peninsula! Check out the castros and the legends associated with them. Those are more to the northern parts, Atlantic but also interior. It's magical

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety

      *When I mention Castros, from Castreja Culture I mean Hill forts but here usually built in very mistical spots

  • @ilidioalves7
    @ilidioalves7 Před 2 lety +10

    the only thing bad about this site is the fact that it still technically sits in private property, in a huge ranch estate, typical of the South of Portugal, called 'herdade', and so only the site of the Cromlech, the menhir and a small dirt track that connects the two and the main road (with fences on both sides) is accessible, because you are in someone's farm. I pity the Portuguese state in all these years haven't realized the huge importance of this site - the oldest megalithic site in Europe, the blueprint to all the others you see in Western Europe - and hasn't put more of an effort to secure it, by buying out more of the surrounding area, building an interpretation center, in short making it more accessible and not making you feel like you're trespassing when you go there.

    • @ChrisShortyAllen
      @ChrisShortyAllen Před 3 měsíci +1

      Zzzzzzzz

    • @luciatheron1621
      @luciatheron1621 Před 2 měsíci

      I think it's a good idea. Those who really want to see them, will respectively. No huge impact of indifferent tourists.

  • @JTCGiantz56
    @JTCGiantz56 Před 2 lety +9

    It's crazy this was only discovered in 1964 for a relatively small country such as Portugal.

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 2 lety +13

      They actually knew about this before, however this was a very remote site until some decades ago and the owners of these lands didn't care that much about history. Even nowadays they close down megalithic monuments to every people (even historians) because "those are their lands and no strange should enter on them"!
      This happens when 95% of the country is private land, and in the case of Alentejo they are very rich and influent people - no politician wants to say no to them, and they have lots of support from most locals!

    • @cmarq817
      @cmarq817 Před 2 lety +13

      “Discovered” means only studied by academia.

    • @brunoamaral4759
      @brunoamaral4759 Před 2 lety +2

      @@diogorodrigues747 maravilhoso ver que nós no Brasil herdamos os problemas portugueses também 😂

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 2 lety +2

      @@brunoamaral4759 Normal quando a própria família real era portuguesa e os terrenos privados do Brasil ainda hoje são geridos por pessoas descendentes das famílias dos jesuítas colonos, maioritariamente portugueses!

    • @SpectrumX9
      @SpectrumX9 Před 2 lety +3

      There are several of these stone circles around Portugal territory although not so big. There is also Perdigões, still being digged and may be the cherry in the cake.

  • @tacodias
    @tacodias Před 2 lety +4

    Time to visit Évora!

  • @namibianodetombua
    @namibianodetombua Před 2 lety +3

    In the Évora region there are, as far as I know, 2 more megalithic structures like this one. The Cromlech of Xerez, near Monsaraz and another one, which do not know the name, not far from Évora though.

  • @Alfablue227
    @Alfablue227 Před 2 lety +5

    Fascinating stuff...

  • @josecarlosfernandez3619
    @josecarlosfernandez3619 Před 2 lety +5

    Excelente sitio!

  • @chipwalter4490
    @chipwalter4490 Před 2 lety +10

    How were these "discovered" in the 1970's?...
    Were they unearthed due to being buried? Or maybe were they so remote in the vast Portuguese landscape that no modern person had yet stumbled upon them?
    Please do another video where this is explained.

    • @devojah9512
      @devojah9512 Před 2 lety +1

      They won’t

    • @mariorosario4428
      @mariorosario4428 Před 2 lety +10

      In the 60’s, the Portuguese government carried out a nationwide survey regarding geological charts and many prehistoric sites were discovered in the process, including the Almendres Cromlech.

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 Před 2 lety +3

      @@mariorosario4428 that would not result in such sure being discovered, rather, in it being officially cataloged.
      Consider Stonehenge for example
      "Roman coins and medieval artefacts have all been found in or around the monument but it is unknown if the monument was in continuous use throughout British prehistory and beyond, or exactly how it would have been used. Notable is the massive Iron Age hillfort known as Vespasian's Camp (despite its name, not a Roman site) built alongside the Avenue near the Avon. A decapitated seventh-century Saxon man was excavated from Stonehenge in 1923.[41] The site was known to scholars during the Middle Ages and since then it has been studied and adopted by numerous groups."
      It never was "lost" to be rediscovered

    • @eduardoserrao7372
      @eduardoserrao7372 Před 2 lety +12

      They were known by local people but not by scientists.
      The same is true for the Foz Coa engravings.

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety

      @@rogeriopenna9014 muito interessante. Adoro a cultura castreja e todas as lendas que a rodeiam.

  • @crookedpaths6612
    @crookedpaths6612 Před 2 lety +21

    Couldn’t nomadic persons also observe the rising on the moon or sun too? Nomadic tribes usually settle for the summer and migrate for the winter. It doesn’t mean they can’t return to same places again and again. A lot of assumptions being made.

    • @anthonygustafson4713
      @anthonygustafson4713 Před 2 lety +15

      I understand what you're saying. But think you missed the point they're making on this. One would have to be in the exact same spot consistently to make precise astronomical alignments. One couldn't do that just eyeballing it and hoping for the best.

    • @malavoy1
      @malavoy1 Před 2 lety +7

      @@anthonygustafson4713 True, but then there's Gobekli Tepe 5000 years earlier than this and a good 2000 years before farming which itself was 1000-2000 years before nomadism. This is another wonderful puzzle piece in the mystery that is prehistory.

    • @free22
      @free22 Před 2 lety +5

      @@DianaAtena It’s incredible the variety of monoliths that have been built across the world. Europe, Middle East, the Americas, Africa, Asia. It heralds back to our similar origins as humans.

    • @free22
      @free22 Před 2 lety

      @Pertinax You don’t have to dream. Monoliths are made out of stone. See for yourself. Get out of your house and travel sometime. It’ll be good for you.

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety

      @@malavoy1 observe Gobekli Teppe, it has all animals and adoration and first humanlike figure representation. But of all the sculptures are of the wildlife before farming and shepparding. There's another site north to Gobekli that I believe has more evidence of this new places of cult. Cromeleques de Almendre was to record data regarding other things, and of course to gather too. I love Gobekli Teppe and everything they are discovering finally

  • @user-tk1ti1wx8e
    @user-tk1ti1wx8e Před 5 měsíci +1

    I salute u from Northern Portugal ,Tras-os-montes
    Pagan still

  • @alexgabriel5423
    @alexgabriel5423 Před 2 lety +5

    Quite amazing, but under-reported. Portuguese archeologists or reporters should write a book> Neolithic Portugal. You ll get tourists for these sites.

    • @hogwashmcturnip8930
      @hogwashmcturnip8930 Před 2 lety +1

      There are Hundreds of Neolithic sites in that area and across the border in Spain. Valencia de Alcantara has 147 identified dolmens. You can't get to most of them! Lost opportunities. Yet they keep saying they want Eco tourism! Makes no sense to me. By their nature, these places are not going to attract the guiris. They will attract people who respect the land. They have rare, endangered species, historic towns and cities, with everything from the Neolithic through to the Conquistadores (Merida has more Roman sites than anywhere but Rome) yet you can drive past bits of Roman column lying in fields! A Camino de Santiago cuts straight through it. Not the one that has become the Holy Benidorm, one most people have never heard of. The Ruta de Plata. Used by the Romans to get all their purloined silver to Seville and back to Rome. Later used by pilgrims coming from the other way and from North Africa. The landscape is amazing. In a way I am glad it is 'Lost' but in another it needs visitors, if only to preserve it.

    • @STICKlaPISSSE
      @STICKlaPISSSE Před rokem +2

      So now that 8 months have passed, I hope you have google it and bought the most recente book about the portuguese Neolithic! Btw go look and study about Bell Beackers from Portugal, I garanty that you will get one of the biggest treats in archeology, since the british think bell beakers came from North and Eastern Europe... Dumb things!

  • @selfiekroos1777
    @selfiekroos1777 Před 2 lety +2

    Italy, Coliseum Pantheon and temples
    Egypt, Pyramids Sphinx and temples
    Greece, Parthenon Temples
    Spain, Homos and Chile con Carne
    Portugal wine and giant stones

  • @legitbeans9078
    @legitbeans9078 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Shes great! Give her a show 😁

  • @marcelobarefoot3549
    @marcelobarefoot3549 Před 2 lety +1

    I wish you could present legends in portuguese...thank you!

  • @RosaLux776
    @RosaLux776 Před 2 lety +3

    Very interesting! I live in Portugal but didn't know about this site. It's on my agenda now!

  • @MissRenee_X
    @MissRenee_X Před 5 měsíci +1

    Portugal has exquisite untold history. We have some of the highest history of rh negatives

  • @nelsonsoares2975
    @nelsonsoares2975 Před rokem +1

    I believe who ever built these beauties in Portugal also built Stonehenge , it must be connected some how or its possible some other peoples came across these in Portugal 2000 years later & copied the idea & then built a bigger Stonehenge in England ... I read 4 years ago that investigations into Stonehenge showed a high probability that an Iberian culture built it (human bones & artifacts found under & around the complex).. whatever the case they are here to stay & we so called know it all's :)))) have lots to learn still not to mention giving more credit than we have to our ancestors ... One more point,, tests were done for 10 years to find the most unique blood & DNA , the Portuguese blood & DNA came up as the most unique , they even found Neanderthal DNA in the Portuguese blood , if that's not interesting I don't know what is.. Portugal not only is 1st or 2nd oldest country - culture in Europe but may also have the oldest blood line in Europe today or at least a higher percentage than any other blood line...,... this is very interesting stuff.

  • @bulletsfordinner8307
    @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety +2

    Adorei visitar à uns anos! 😍😍😍 Foi especial porque apanhamos um belíssimo pôr-do-sol e ficamos para a Lua e as estrelas! Muito lindo e misterioso! Há muitas "gravuras" nos cromeleques, não sei se existe um registo de todas as gravuras, se não existe devia! ❤️

  • @algueiraovelho
    @algueiraovelho Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this awesome video.

  • @Chompchompyerded
    @Chompchompyerded Před rokem +1

    Were the stones sourced locally, or did they bring them from a distance away?

    • @XofHope
      @XofHope Před rokem +2

      They're local, you can still see where some were cut from the larger rock formation.

  • @fernandoveiga0738
    @fernandoveiga0738 Před 4 měsíci

    Another point. When She says that is a face, a mouth and the nose, its note. Its a observatory, if you see with open eyes that is one representation of one face of the Moon.

  • @lf1496
    @lf1496 Před 2 lety +1

    The Stone Megaliths in Sudan at Napta Playa are 11-13,000 years old. They chart the Orion Star Constellation

    • @ricardo82carvalho
      @ricardo82carvalho Před rokem

      Napta playa circles were built around 7000 bc that's 9000 years!

  • @giuseppersa2391
    @giuseppersa2391 Před 2 lety +2

    Happily not caged in as is Stonehenge 🧙‍♂️

  • @wadeparker8695
    @wadeparker8695 Před 2 lety +2

    What I like is that main stream archaeology is so often wrong, narrow sided and it’s a lot of guesswork. In the end we do not know how old these things are and that is the fact of it.

  • @sophiasummers1637
    @sophiasummers1637 Před 2 lety +5

    The pock marks might be small grinding areas for different herbs used in worship or healing ceremonies.

    • @mariorosario4428
      @mariorosario4428 Před 2 lety

      I’ve been to the Cromlechs and the first time i’ve seen the holes I thought exactly the same thing.

    • @sophiasummers1637
      @sophiasummers1637 Před 2 lety

      @@mariorosario4428 Interesting. I just thought of things that have been used in ceremonies before and if the preparation was done at the holy site, then it might become a holey site. 😂

  • @AugustinTomasOBrienCaceres

    Portugal and Ireland then have the oldest human constructions on earth

  • @JPVillalobos27
    @JPVillalobos27 Před 2 lety +1

    Those types of oval shaped stones were also sacred in ancient Ireland… In India they’re Shiv Lingams.

  • @theaquariancontrarian3316
    @theaquariancontrarian3316 Před 6 měsíci +1

    You dont need logs to move stone. Just make the stones round and roll them.

  • @diasgoncalvesportugal6533

    PORTUGAL the port of the GRAAL.

    • @1770-p9p
      @1770-p9p Před 2 lety

      I was just going to say this. To my brother and everybody I'm trying hard to beat this thing I'm facing Giants right now.

  • @jaridkeen123
    @jaridkeen123 Před 2 lety +8

    I dont think ancient humans were thinking "lets make a Dirt Uterus to burry our friend" Its probably more of a Shrine

  • @michaelshaw5019
    @michaelshaw5019 Před 2 lety +6

    Are the indentations on the stones not remains from hitting the stone to make different tones? This has been established with other similar stone pieces elsewhere in the world from a time before.

  • @abrahamboniface6305
    @abrahamboniface6305 Před 2 lety +2

    I believe Early humans were more in touch with nature and their individuality creativity. And appreciated everyone's contributions to community.

    • @FranciscoSmirsley
      @FranciscoSmirsley Před 2 lety +1

      Something we have lost, alas, looooong time ago.

    • @jeanlundi2141
      @jeanlundi2141 Před rokem +1

      History is circular. Yes, there were times when we lived very differently. For better and for worse as well.

  • @Schfe
    @Schfe Před 5 dny

    "Scholars can find answers to many of their questions in Magyar Adorján's work, titled 'Az Ősműveltség' (Ancient Culture)."

  • @tunaofacasfilmes
    @tunaofacasfilmes Před 2 lety +2

    We call them "covinhas"

  • @DaisyMaeMoses
    @DaisyMaeMoses Před 8 měsíci

    I wish we could be in the minds of our ancient ancestors and figure out what the reason was for these structures. They are in many places in Western Europe. I would love to know the purpose for them.

  • @ellejane6667
    @ellejane6667 Před 2 lety +2

    do you know what is also bananas shaped, the coast line, and the pitting is fishing holes

  • @jpribeiro7694
    @jpribeiro7694 Před 2 lety +1

    Did she really say the the banana shape was an ancient stone smiley face??? Ummmm... Coastal people, I`m going to go with it`s a boat hull and the corresponding shape above is not a nose but is instead the mast and sail. I love this part of the country, also around Sintra.

  • @colinellicott9737
    @colinellicott9737 Před 2 lety +1

    Putting rocks in a pattern ... have you ever watched a young child playing with their toy blocks?
    Gobekli, Stonehenge, Pyramids of _____ (fill in the blank).
    Now we build space ships.
    Science good.

  • @Amitdas-gk2it
    @Amitdas-gk2it Před 2 lety +1

    Nice

  • @aleisterseverusgrey3778
    @aleisterseverusgrey3778 Před měsícem

    Directly west is Escoural Cave.

  • @fernandoveiga0738
    @fernandoveiga0738 Před 4 měsíci

    Hello. I have problably the solution to the constellations and the Holes, "Covinhas in Portugueses". Yes they are constellations if we remember that cromlech its a observatory.
    If any part can reach me i have the pleasure to say what i found.
    Best regards,
    Fernando Veiga

  • @TalkToMeInTagalog
    @TalkToMeInTagalog Před 2 lety +3

    Wait a sec, let me phone Giorgio Tsoukalos. 😁🛸

  • @ingemarolson3240
    @ingemarolson3240 Před 2 lety +15

    Wait ... 0:40 this site was discovered in 1964?? What does that mean? That for thousands of years no one knew that this hill had a LOT of huge stones on top? Huh?

    • @cat_pb
      @cat_pb Před 2 lety +7

      The local population for sure knows, but it’s just a part of legends for them so they didn’t announce it, only from 1960’s did the government start to officially document and look for these structures in an organised manner as to document and study them.

    • @differous01
      @differous01 Před 2 lety +7

      Gobekli Tepe in Turkey was identified in 1963, but its stone pillars were only discovered during 90s excavations, having been deliberately buried c8000BC. Bulgaria's Staro Zhelezare Cromlech was only discovered in 2001 for the same reason. Almendres Cromlech may have been under a 'tell' - subsequently eroded to expose it - though the archaeologists didn't find (or didn't look for?) evidence for this, and assume it was so overgrown that soil levels rose over it.

    • @patriciahammett4197
      @patriciahammett4197 Před 2 lety +1

      The thing that go to me was 7000 years old when the earth was only created around 6000 years ago.

    • @pffftnames9047
      @pffftnames9047 Před 2 lety +9

      @@patriciahammett4197 The one created just 6000 years ago is Earth 2.0.
      Earth version 1.0 was created some 4.5 billion years ago.

    • @patriciahammett4197
      @patriciahammett4197 Před 2 lety

      @@pffftnames9047
      I respectfully disagree, I go by what the Bible says.

  • @brucestrachan7873
    @brucestrachan7873 Před 2 lety +1

    5:58: crescent moon,
    not a happy face emoji.

  • @marcusviniciusborgesesilva7629

    Bom demais

  • @hannobaalii_makendalii
    @hannobaalii_makendalii Před 5 měsíci +1

    The ORIGINAL MERs/MOORs were Melandigenous Giants.

  • @MrDerebail
    @MrDerebail Před 2 lety +1

    Circle of Life

  • @ivanbarbosa81
    @ivanbarbosa81 Před 2 lety

    adoro.

  • @AhJodie
    @AhJodie Před 2 lety

    Cool looking.

  • @alexgabriel5423
    @alexgabriel5423 Před 2 lety

    Mrs Sira Camacho says that Neolithic people had logs...what did they cut the logs with?? They had no saws! How long does it take to find logs of the same size??

    • @bulletsfordinner8307
      @bulletsfordinner8307 Před 2 lety +2

      Did you not watch the tools they showed that were found on the sites? Come to Portugal those are preserved in the museums but you can see them, stone axes

  • @hilarykirkby4771
    @hilarykirkby4771 Před rokem

    Ring and cup markings such as these are found also in Scotland, usually on rising ground. The most convincing theory I've heard is that the depressions were filled with fat and ignited, to communicate with neighbouring peoples.

    • @XofHope
      @XofHope Před rokem

      They're too small to be able to produce a fire visible from the distance. The area is quite flat and, considering the vegetation, they'd hardly been seen from even 1 km away.

  • @rd9831
    @rd9831 Před 2 lety +2

    7000 yrs ago , due to precession of the axis of rotation, the alignment of stones had to be quite different from todays orientation. So the stones would not be correctly aligned for todays solstices.

    • @mariorosario4428
      @mariorosario4428 Před 2 lety +9

      Precession doesn’t affect the ecliptic or the angle between the celestial equator and the ecliptic. As a result, it doesn’t affect the Sun’s position relative to the horizon.

  • @cleverclogs2244
    @cleverclogs2244 Před 2 lety

    Those dents would stop something slipping - like a pile of clay, so you could create a headdress from flowers and leaves... just a thought...

  • @romanzelgatas
    @romanzelgatas Před 2 lety

    In my own studies, it seems most stones were connected to moon & tide sequences, as in when sea levels were higher, the boats could see the stones via within water inlets & guide them thru natural channels during high tides, Do they measure in "megalithic yards"??

    • @ciarandevaney385
      @ciarandevaney385 Před rokem

      Presenter is very unusual looking

    • @XofHope
      @XofHope Před rokem

      Not a chance this was seen from the ocean or even a river.

  • @HypoliteMaindron
    @HypoliteMaindron Před 2 lety +2

    the banana-shape looks more like a moon-fase
    they didn’t have smileys then 😀

  • @theaquariancontrarian3316
    @theaquariancontrarian3316 Před 6 měsíci

    Maybe the Egyptians had round and cylindrical boulders then cut them down to size once in place???

  • @benwilson6145
    @benwilson6145 Před 2 lety +1

    Similar age to the Stones of Stenness.

  • @boredgrass
    @boredgrass Před 2 lety

    The back and forth between subtitles and narration is extremely annoying. Often, I watch but stop after one or two minutes and look for other videos about the subject. If one activates “cc”subtitles, one gets different fonts in very different sizes. That's no fun to deal with either. My suggestion: Continuous subtitles, your subtitles are much better to read on a phone screen than the “cc” provided by CZcams and uninterrupted narration. The content I have seen would be worth the effort!

  • @GiannisVeronis
    @GiannisVeronis Před 2 lety +1

    @3:30 try to do what you describe as the method they did it now with the same way...I bet you wont be able as this has been debunk already for all the rest of the megaliths around the globe

  • @Sirikazy
    @Sirikazy Před 2 lety

    Porque a guia fala em inglês? Não existem subtítulos para os inglês o franceses? E já agora bom exemplo a guia da ao tocar a pedra. Que bom! já vou aí colocar "eu estive aqui ..."

    • @999carlosjorge
      @999carlosjorge Před 7 měsíci

      talvez porque a BBC é Inglesa,jà deve ter ouvido falar da BBC?? ....eu explico ......

  • @bok3360
    @bok3360 Před 2 lety

    Come to meghalaya u will find thousand of monoliths and the tallest one is 8 meter and 2 meter widths

  • @GSSurry
    @GSSurry Před 2 lety +1

    Could be a great documentary without the annoying background music

  • @thealexprime
    @thealexprime Před 2 lety +1

    Legal

  • @devojah9512
    @devojah9512 Před 2 lety +1

    found all over Africa !!!