The Guanches People and Native Plants of Tenerife (Canary Islands History, Medicinal plants)

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • I spent a month hiking and travelling around the island of Tenerife. While there, I became fascinated by the aboriginal peoples of these islands and what relationship they might of had with the land and nature. So I decided to try learn as much as I can about the Guanches people and some uses of native plants on the islands.
    Tristan Heth’s Instagram page (astrophotography)
    trischl420...
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    #guanches #Tenerife #history #medicinal plants #travel #bushcraft
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Komentáře • 423

  • @ss75691
    @ss75691 Před 2 lety +39

    I am from Puerto Rico. My 23 and me said my ancestors trace back to the Canary Islands. I had never heard of these islands until I read into it. It’s crazy how far the diaspora truly travels.

    • @krixxset2214
      @krixxset2214 Před 2 lety +19

      The natives of the Canary Islands were very fair in appearance (blond hair, pale skin) This is also how the native North Africans looked/look. There is a very vast and rich history which isn’t taught in schools because some consider it to be “politically INCORRECT”…

    • @brios327
      @brios327 Před 2 lety +3

      Same

    • @oussamatjv4216
      @oussamatjv4216 Před 2 lety +7

      @@krixxset2214 yes indeed,im native to north africa and im blonde with pale skin

    • @morishogo144
      @morishogo144 Před rokem +3

      @@krixxset2214 I'm native to Atlantis, we are invisible.

    • @birons3708
      @birons3708 Před rokem +1

      Si tu ere de PR de verdad tu deberia estar orgullosa de tus antepasados africanos que trayeron sazon a la isla. Vamo pa encima PR puñeeeeta

  • @bleulotus
    @bleulotus Před 3 lety +41

    I did my ancestry and it basically told me I’m 83% Guanche Tenerife of the Canary Islands to I’m here 😬 but I also have so Scottish in there as well so I think it’s great that you delivered this informative message

  • @Jacob-gz8jt
    @Jacob-gz8jt Před 4 lety +26

    My Mom’s Scottish and my Dad’s family is from the Canary Islands, this video was made for me :)

    • @benacrawford6245
      @benacrawford6245 Před 3 lety +2

      venga!

    • @zurdaguerrilla1014
      @zurdaguerrilla1014 Před 3 lety +3

      @@benacrawford6245 in Canarian dialect it could be..."¡vamos pa lante, coño! 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Ook1731
      @Ook1731 Před 2 lety +2

      Well u r not definitely not of my heritage nor dna! Its land u stole goofy

    • @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv
      @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv Před 10 měsíci

      @zurda
      Decir coño es primitivo, polla ^^

    • @ApproachingPerfection
      @ApproachingPerfection Před 4 měsíci

      @@zurdaguerrilla1014 thats spanish. The Guanches were not european but north african, they are very closely related to moroccans/moors/north africans/berbers. It was the evil spaniards that wiped out this history replacing it with spanish. The Canary islands were north african

  • @christopherellis2663
    @christopherellis2663 Před 5 lety +11

    Greetings from Andaluz 🇪🇸
    Excellent on the plants
    Tales of Lands across the Sea 🌊

  • @snorkherder
    @snorkherder Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks for taking us with you, Excellent and informative Vid :) ATB

  • @michellemercado1599
    @michellemercado1599 Před rokem +4

    I'm actually guanche I love love to live there with a nice log cabin.

  • @mattfinchdesign
    @mattfinchdesign Před 5 lety +9

    Really interesting,never been there,more scenic than I thought.

  • @cerberus6654
    @cerberus6654 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video Tom! And really good production values.

  • @juteliabarbarski2605
    @juteliabarbarski2605 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you !! I've been spontaneously volunteering at tenerife horse rescue for almost three weeks and came straight here. We are by la Jaca which is a very dry area and I haven't seen that much of the island yet. Much more motivated now 🙏❤️

  • @christdiedforoursins5756
    @christdiedforoursins5756 Před 5 lety +6

    Yes Tristan's photography was incredible I will check out the link that island is also such a beautiful place seems to have quite a lot of different landscapes thank you so much for the video

    • @FandabiDozi
      @FandabiDozi  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks very much. Glad you enjoyed it :)

  • @rock3tcatU233
    @rock3tcatU233 Před 2 lety +3

    That's such a beautiful place to live.

  • @burninglight
    @burninglight Před 3 lety +1

    It’s really nice to see where I came from. Thank you for sharing

  • @benwinkel
    @benwinkel Před 5 lety +9

    Thanks! I had never heard of the Guanches people. I will look more in to that.

    • @krixxset2214
      @krixxset2214 Před 2 lety +1

      Accurate information about the Guanches is hard to find as establishment academia seem to work very hard to obscure certain aspects of history because it undermines the narrative which is used to push particular political agendas.

  • @bigredwolf6
    @bigredwolf6 Před 5 lety +55

    You’re like a Scottish Steve Irwin

  • @garysalmon1519
    @garysalmon1519 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for all the great info.

  • @alexandergutfeldt1144
    @alexandergutfeldt1144 Před 5 lety +15

    thx for sharing your view of the islands
    so interesting to see the different ways nature evolves!

  • @almath9987
    @almath9987 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video and great timing as i am watching from a neighbouring island Lanzarote on holiday👍 back on sunday to 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @gabrielg.2401
    @gabrielg.2401 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you for this video. Magnificent islands and people.

  • @TuNiSiA-TaMaZiGhT
    @TuNiSiA-TaMaZiGhT Před 4 lety +60

    The guanches in Canaryislands are ethnical Amazighs , who was forced by the Roman's back in the day to convert or die.
    We are one people Tamazgha United

    • @Shechiuata
      @Shechiuata Před 3 lety +4

      We the guanches have nothing to do with the ethnical Amazighs. That's only something like an habit used by people related to non demonstrated theories. We are the guanches, and thats all. The same people who were here before the arrive of the invaders.

    • @massinissaziriamazigh8122
      @massinissaziriamazigh8122 Před 3 lety +18

      @@Shechiuata
      You have the same script (writing style) that we have in North Africa , and you used to bury your dead in the same way as the ancient North Africans, and you also have pyramids like the one in North Africa (Algeria)
      And other evidence proving that you are a branch of the Amazigh, the Amazigh people (berbers)have many branches in North Africa, for example in Algeria there are more than 5 branches , and all we share customs, traditions and language

    • @Shechiuata
      @Shechiuata Před 3 lety +5

      @@massinissaziriamazigh8122 there are no evidence anywhere of any relationship between the guanches and the amazigh cultures. Nobody have proved such thing, never. If a scientist, historian or whatever affirms that no one should trust him or her because lacking of rigour. We don't share language. That's totally false. The translations and links between our language and amazigh that many people do overthere are simply some outrage.

    • @cyrus8886
      @cyrus8886 Před 3 lety +11

      @@Shechiuata bruh half your language is amazigh kek

    • @Shechiuata
      @Shechiuata Před 3 lety +1

      @@cyrus8886 wrong

  • @ArthursAtman
    @ArthursAtman Před měsícem

    cool stuff man thx! I read a book about the Guanches some years ago...your video tickled my imagination

  • @massinissaziriamazigh8122
    @massinissaziriamazigh8122 Před 5 lety +26

    Great video👍
    I love guanches , im from algeria , im from the indigenous people of north Africa (Berbers) , just like the guanches , thats cool 😉

    • @JIL7790
      @JIL7790 Před 3 lety +1

      I just recently found out that I had ancestors that came from the canary islands and I have Moor descent. Still doing research and would love to visit there someday

    • @Shechiuata
      @Shechiuata Před 3 lety +2

      We the guanches never have been berbers. Noone has proved that ever. That's only a tale for ignorant slaves.

    • @noway511
      @noway511 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Shechiuata well check the genetic studies and then comes talk with me, you have nothing to do with guanches. Guanches are our cousins, our history... They are not at all spanish but north africain, it was proove by genetic studies so...

    • @Shechiuata
      @Shechiuata Před 3 lety +2

      @@noway511 mejor no hables tan seguro de lo que no entiendes mucho. Que me da que interpretar estudios genéticos no va a ser tu especialidad 🙂

    • @noway511
      @noway511 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Shechiuata I don't speak spanish ☺ sorryyyy

  • @funtimehappytime9263
    @funtimehappytime9263 Před 4 lety +1

    you're awesome! This was so fun to watch.

  • @MrThelonliestpunk
    @MrThelonliestpunk Před 3 lety

    Great video ,thanks very informative.

  • @sunnybeachwalks4k2022
    @sunnybeachwalks4k2022 Před 3 lety

    Great video man keep up the good work

  • @dindings
    @dindings Před 3 lety

    Great video, thanks

  • @henriksahlin3327
    @henriksahlin3327 Před 2 lety

    Nice!! I liked this video!

  • @calmabu
    @calmabu Před 5 lety +6

    Thank you for sharing our ancient history.

  • @macmurfy2jka
    @macmurfy2jka Před 5 lety

    Looks like a nice vacation!

  • @Pirate3World
    @Pirate3World Před 3 lety +6

    Check out the Anaga mountain range (also on Tenerife). It has a different biome (lorbeer Wälder in german) which is only found on Canaries and the Azores I believe.

    • @zurdaguerrilla1014
      @zurdaguerrilla1014 Před 3 lety

      Theres a lot in the hoghest revela of the Gomera island. This ancients woods from the tertiary era is called: "Laurisilva"

    • @zurdaguerrilla1014
      @zurdaguerrilla1014 Před 3 lety

      I meant: Highest level, and in the La Palma exist too.

  • @matthewkehoe4015
    @matthewkehoe4015 Před 2 lety

    Great video 👍 thanks

  • @Emy53
    @Emy53 Před rokem +1

    Very mice video. Thank you. I have been to Tenerife in September 2019. El Teide is beautiful.

  • @iokcs
    @iokcs Před 5 lety

    just found your channel! cool stuff!

  • @ninjamoves3642
    @ninjamoves3642 Před 2 dny

    fascinating

  • @mrfrano100
    @mrfrano100 Před 3 lety

    great video. i am there right know. and now know more

  • @massinamezian6035
    @massinamezian6035 Před 4 lety +22

    Beautiful raw island and like the rest of the native North Africans the Guanches have been opressed and slaughtered by their colonizers to then be forgotten.
    ⵜⵉⵔⴻⵍⵉ ⵉ ⵎⴰⵔⴰ ⵉⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⴻⵏ
    Thirelli i mara Imazighen

    • @azzzanadra
      @azzzanadra Před 4 lety +7

      The amazigh were never slaughtered if dna tests are to be believe, the vast majorit of north africa are amazigh, and who ever claims otherwise are claiming so from a culture standpoint

    • @massinamezian6035
      @massinamezian6035 Před 4 lety +10

      @@azzzanadra I never said we vanished. Of course the North Africans have Amazigh dna despite the fact the majority today identifies as arab but the colonizers: romans, vandals, arabs, french and spanish have slaughtered numerous native Imazighen throughout the years. You can't deny that.

    • @azzzanadra
      @azzzanadra Před 4 lety +1

      @@massinamezian6035 and? What does this information benefit me?

    • @massinamezian6035
      @massinamezian6035 Před 4 lety +7

      @@azzzanadra What does it benefit you? Who says it was meant to benefit you? You were the one who reacted to me and I answered you, very simple. No one is trying to benefit anyone.

    • @azzzanadra
      @azzzanadra Před 4 lety +3

      @@massinamezian6035 so you are just stating pointless facts?

  • @Sam-fz3mx
    @Sam-fz3mx Před 4 lety

    Cool video!

  • @jacklloyd4744
    @jacklloyd4744 Před 5 lety +1

    cool video, never even heard of these people

  • @Gavriel-og6jv
    @Gavriel-og6jv Před rokem +4

    Well my comment is that I just read a more than interesting article that says, with accuracy of details as to the direction to find the place based on the original story's author, that Atlantis could have been a massive island whose mountains are now Madeira and Canary islands. Too bad CZcams does not allow to paste a website address here. The name of the site is Answers in Genesis.
    That aboriginal statue in the thumb looks pretty much Greek to me.
    Plato says "All that is left of Atlantis are some islands as 'skeleton' of what once was, but the soft and good land has fallen".
    I am looking here and there to see if undersea explorations have been done between these islands.

    • @ninastar5833
      @ninastar5833 Před rokem +1

      Thanks Gabriel!

    • @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv
      @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv Před 10 měsíci

      UNDERSEA EXPLORATIONS is the most important keyword. This is hardly taken seriously to this day! You can explore so many secrets of lost civilizations with it, also using Underwater LIDAR!
      We need underwater researchers like James Cameron, James Ballard, Clive Cusslers Numa and Franck Goddio to investigate all this riddles, if the state dogmatists don't make their job.

  • @TW_SlingStone
    @TW_SlingStone Před 4 měsíci

    I can’t believe you didn’t try the shepherds leap! It would be a grand skill for anyone with a good stick with them

  • @super-intelligentastrology3572

    I was there just few days ago. I also love herbs.

  • @lamykaswiccanpodcast
    @lamykaswiccanpodcast Před 5 lety +35

    Super educational. You can hear all the women weep after you said “I’m here on vacation with my girlfriend” 😂 Safe journey man 👍🏽

  • @rolandas77
    @rolandas77 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Guanches were Vikings settlements. Blue eyes, blond hair :) Vikings thousands of years ago reached very distant places....

  • @guambianthunderbolts905
    @guambianthunderbolts905 Před měsícem

    Im puerto rican. Wild we have common ancestors. Islanders unite.

  • @Joy_56
    @Joy_56 Před 5 lety +2

    I really enjoyed the vid, I've read up a wee bit about the Guanches, a fascinating history, and great to get a rundown on the local flora , I hope there's more !! ( Hi to your lovely girlfriend )

  • @Atkrdu
    @Atkrdu Před 5 lety

    Fandabi Dozi: Would you mind explaining & showing how to do some of the stuff from the book "Born Fighting"? I remember one with the Picts supposedly being able to go all day on something the size of a bean & I think that has to do with that plant you showed that was used as an appetite suppressant. There seems to have been training to handle the weather & water of the area, too.

  • @islandvibez
    @islandvibez Před 2 lety +3

    The children of Maroc, having blood ties to the Amazigh. Power to the indigenous people.

  • @ziblot1235
    @ziblot1235 Před 3 lety +7

    Fascinating. Please more about the Guanches. Has any DNA studies been done? LAnguage? Alphabet? Cant get enough about these people.

    • @revinhatol
      @revinhatol Před rokem +3

      With ALL honesty, their language is Guanche Tamazight and their alphabet is said to be Tifinagh.

    • @AngryAndNegativeHistoryProject
      @AngryAndNegativeHistoryProject Před rokem +1

      I just did a video on Columbus referring to the Canary islands people as looking like the American islands people. I go through a few articles and references. It's all still theory

    • @amanece777
      @amanece777 Před 4 měsíci +1

      el idioma era el amazigh, la escritura la tigfinal y si, se han hechos estudios de adn y queda mas descebdencia aborigen de lo que dicen. como somos blancos es difícil ver la mezcla, se ve en las bocas, dientes y estructura facial sobretodo

  • @MegaDonzee
    @MegaDonzee Před 2 lety +2

    Very interesting as I recently found my mitochondrial dna links me to the haplogroup H1cf which I found was related to the Guanches. All my g-grandmothers on this line were French Canadian. I also have farmed lavender for the farmers market for many years.

    • @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv
      @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv Před 10 měsíci +1

      What has french canadian to do with guanches?! Probably both groups descend from one source, for example Aryans, Hyperboreans, Atlanteans.

    • @ApproachingPerfection
      @ApproachingPerfection Před 4 měsíci +1

      its related to the Guanches but comes from North Africa. the guanches genetically were north africans who made their way to the islands thousands of years ago. the H1cf lineage is restricted to Central North Africa.

    • @amanece777
      @amanece777 Před 4 měsíci

      Como hiciste ese estudio?

  • @g.o.skywalker9970
    @g.o.skywalker9970 Před 4 lety +3

    Good video. Just to mention it -
    In Güímar (south Tenerife) are six pyramids.

  • @Yet1moreUtuber
    @Yet1moreUtuber Před 5 lety +2

    You went to the Canary Island and you didn't invite me! Thanks LOL *GREAT VIDEO*

    • @FandabiDozi
      @FandabiDozi  Před 5 lety

      Sorry buddy! Next time ;) haha! Thanks!

  • @victordopeish8904
    @victordopeish8904 Před rokem +1

    I found out I'm a 4 generation los Islenos from ST Bernard from my dad side from Gomera and my mum is from Glasgow Scotland met my dad on the plane to America for him returning from visiting family her moving to America met my dad on the plane ride over

  • @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv
    @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv Před 10 měsíci +1

    Hope someone will finally make a true and thrilling movie about the magic history of the guanches, beginning with the Atlantis cataclysm in the Younger Dryas period!

  • @revinhatol
    @revinhatol Před rokem +5

    You wouldn't believe it, but the Guanches have a language that is part of the Berber (Tamazight) branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family.

    • @lina.555
      @lina.555 Před 6 měsíci +1

      do you reckon that before the guanche population inhabited the canary islands (before 500bce), that they may have originally been moroccan ?

    • @revinhatol
      @revinhatol Před 6 měsíci

      @@lina.555 Apparently.

    • @ApproachingPerfection
      @ApproachingPerfection Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@lina.555 not moroccan as morocco did not exist then, the correct term would be north african/berberid or canaarid/

    • @lauriekline178
      @lauriekline178 Před 2 měsíci

      @@lina.555no. This would have been prior to Arabization west Asian conquest.

    • @Lach_Udrak
      @Lach_Udrak Před 14 dny +1

      Antes de los españoles, junto con los guanchos, también vivían allí los eslavos, tenían ojos azules y cabello claro. Huyeron de las tierras del🤫 actual Marruecos. La historia está encubierta por el Vaticano.

  • @Rebornproductions17
    @Rebornproductions17 Před 5 lety +16

    Wonderful video!! i travelled around Tenerife several times and learnt that the sap of the dragon tree (a.k.a Dragons blood) is a really good astringent when applied to the skin, a natural preservative, used a lot in aromatherapy . Its toxic if eaten though. There are also several small Pyramids dotted around Tenerife, Gran Canaria and La Palma. The most famous being at the town of Güímar in Tenerife. Their worth seeing. There's alot of debate as to who built them and why but a society as ancient and mysterious as the Guanches were more then capable, still great vid!!

    • @FandabiDozi
      @FandabiDozi  Před 5 lety +1

      Awesome! Yeah I wasn't sure whether to mention to pyramids, but since I couldn't get sold info about them I decided not too. Very interesting though

    • @Rebornproductions17
      @Rebornproductions17 Před 5 lety

      @@FandabiDozi Very true thanks for sharing the info that you did :)

    • @slowgomera5611
      @slowgomera5611 Před 5 lety +2

      no debate really,been proven by local university that structures are not so old.fred Olsen company came up with this "theory" about ancient whatever to promote its theme park!fake history.

    • @Rebornproductions17
      @Rebornproductions17 Před 5 lety

      @@slowgomera5611 Thanks, there are Moroccan sources stating there were ruins of large structures on Tenerife but id like to read what the local universities have uncovered

    • @AshleyOulton
      @AshleyOulton Před 4 lety +6

      I visited the stone structures and archaeological sites on La Palma at La Zarza and La Zarzita, in Garafía where there are ancient spiral rock carvings although the authorities like to pass them off as signs of 'good pasture and nearby sources of water to feed the animals'. I personally do not believe that explanation as there are too many of them together (29 in total). I also believe that the 'authorities' do not want to recognise them as significant as they do not want to encourage the Canarians to want to start connecting with their routes. This was particularly relevant during Franco's dictatorship and during the period when the Canarians were looking for independence from Spain.

  • @josephsmyth3281
    @josephsmyth3281 Před 3 měsíci

    The actor Anthony Ramos Martinez just discovered on finding my roots on PBS he is a descendant of a king from the island

  • @neymarsenna787
    @neymarsenna787 Před 10 dny

    The Canaries used to be connected to mainland Africa until the end of the last ice age and rise of the sea level separated the land into an archipelago

  • @lionfire3359
    @lionfire3359 Před 5 lety +3

    I like watching these videos of rare cultures of Africa especially of white or Caucasoid like skin and features. fascinates me like the Egyptians.

  • @kodiandroid8821
    @kodiandroid8821 Před 5 lety

    where i come from tom you would be called TAM ,atb from glasgow

  • @davidwilner4553
    @davidwilner4553 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Great video! absolutely love how you portrayed the history of the guanches. The Canary islands at nowadays are still seen through a colonial lense, being mass tourism the latest form of erasing past history.
    One very interesting fact of the old Canarians is that they moved up and down mountains using long spears with which they could jump from 30 metres: czcams.com/video/WpAj_WFOJng/video.html&ab_channel=NationalGeographic

  • @amaliastar1244
    @amaliastar1244 Před 3 lety +2

    Took a dna test and ot said I'm a decendant of these ppl. Very interesting.

  • @alaskankare
    @alaskankare Před 5 lety +1

    was that an aquifer you were walking on?

    • @FandabiDozi
      @FandabiDozi  Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah. In some areas they are unofficial walkways that tourists and locals use :)

  • @benacrawford6245
    @benacrawford6245 Před 3 lety +1

    Dude-
    I really like your video, I have not looked at any other of your stuff but I will - the quality and succinct manner were excellent. Of course I am biased ....
    I am Scottish living in canaries for 2 years and I am never out of the Barrancos and what hey hold..
    I was just spending last night in the Barrancos and the amount of knowledge and lore in them is something.
    There are also a lot of mushrooms in La Palma I recommend going here to Barrancos like Fagundo where you can see many Guaunches housing... however there they are called another name beginning with A- sounds like Agua....
    Go to La Palma
    Followed and dontated

  • @iml58
    @iml58 Před 3 lety +2

    amzigh 🙌

  • @AuditorsUnited
    @AuditorsUnited Před 5 lety

    i was wondering when it got to the part where someone came in and killed them all.. i don't see many people in you video its only 3:50 into the video we will wait and see

  • @uppercut1200
    @uppercut1200 Před 3 lety +14

    What is the connection of a Canary Islands to the continent of Atlantis?

    • @traveller4434
      @traveller4434 Před 2 lety +2

      Good question

    • @onlythetruth4039
      @onlythetruth4039 Před 2 lety +4

      Herodotus said that Atlantis was situated beyond the Hercules Gates, wisch was the name of a location between north of Morocco and southern Spain, a region that lead to the Atlantic ocean who took its name from the Atlantis legend.

    • @jm-7953
      @jm-7953 Před 11 měsíci

      Absolutely none.
      Atlantis is Tartessos: Cádiz and Guadalquivir river

    • @puerhispaniarum1497
      @puerhispaniarum1497 Před 10 měsíci

      @@jm-7953 xDDD

  • @dfwisem
    @dfwisem Před 5 lety +7

    Entertaining and very informative. You should introduce your girlfriend and include her more in your videos.

  • @Happy_HIbiscus
    @Happy_HIbiscus Před 3 lety +1

    😊😊😊😊🌺🌺🌺

    • @officialVozie100
      @officialVozie100 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm apache native American and yeah they could be related with us some don't believe they are just Berber

    • @Happy_HIbiscus
      @Happy_HIbiscus Před 2 lety +1

      @@officialVozie100 😊😊😊

    • @Happy_HIbiscus
      @Happy_HIbiscus Před 10 dny

      🌺🌺🌺🌺

  • @opportunisticobserver
    @opportunisticobserver Před 7 měsíci +1

    Dna shows these people are from north africa and are amazigh people as a moroccan its nice to see sadly the spanish whiped them out

  • @zurdaguerrilla1014
    @zurdaguerrilla1014 Před 3 lety +4

    The real name of the island is Zen Zen ("resonance.") Guanche is the spanish deform of "wa-n zen": the (person) that´s is from Zen. in Tamazight.The people of Canary islands were indigenous not Aborigins because its certaicn that thee come to the islands from north africa, like american natives it´s know come throw the Bering Pass from Asia. Tenerife means in bereber lenguage "desert or wasteland of Snow": Tenere-idfel. from the visión of the naturals of the La Palma island over the sea of clouds. The great volcano, arrased land and, in the winters, snowed. Teide come of "Taidit:" female dog (of inferno) and the demon who inhabit in in her entrails was called "Guayota". in Tamazigh the verbe ut- ot wut is hit or kick someone o some thing. the traducción is: wa-wiut (the (demon) that´s hit. surely by volcanic tremors and earthquakes.

    • @benacrawford6245
      @benacrawford6245 Před 3 lety

      amazing where did you find all that have you got any more?

    • @zurdaguerrilla1014
      @zurdaguerrilla1014 Před 3 lety +1

      @@benacrawford6245 Maybe its gonna be better for you to see these videos
      czcams.com/video/1IJg2y2ND0g/video.html

    • @zurdaguerrilla1014
      @zurdaguerrilla1014 Před 3 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/rH7nslyjKrY/video.html ("Atis Tirma": It the expression guanche of "better the colective suicide before rendition to the spanish army)

    • @zurdaguerrilla1014
      @zurdaguerrilla1014 Před 3 lety +2

      The ancients berbers names of the islands: czcams.com/video/1IJg2y2ND0g/video.html

    • @zurdaguerrilla1014
      @zurdaguerrilla1014 Před 3 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/qxXv7TBe6_c/video.html The canary people sleved by Spanish.

  • @WeirdSide
    @WeirdSide Před 5 lety

    Do you live in Scotland?

  • @Pleittor
    @Pleittor Před rokem +5

    Dear Tom, the Canary Islands are not a Spanish colony! The Canary Islands are an autonomous region of Spain with their own parlament and the people of the Canary Islands are Spanish and have the same the Spanish people of the peninsular. I would as you, is Gibraltar a colony of UK? Still, good video!

  • @elbadaliyassine8331
    @elbadaliyassine8331 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazigh people...

  • @ReidGarwin
    @ReidGarwin Před 4 lety +15

    I wish the Guanches people flourished and survived through colonialism with their culture. I am fascinated in these Atlantic Islanders. Most islanders like this today live Pacific side

    • @ReidGarwin
      @ReidGarwin Před 4 lety +2

      @J T those populations are saturated with information, places with less have more mystery

    • @jorgej.cruzhernandez9247
      @jorgej.cruzhernandez9247 Před 2 lety +5

      We still have a lot of Guanche's traditions (mainly agricultural stuff and some foods such as gofio), still have Guanche's original names for peoples and places, animals, plants and foods... We are mestizos now, but we haven't forgotten about our aboriginal heritage...

    • @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv
      @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv Před 10 měsíci

      @jorge
      No sois mestizos: mestizos son solo los resultados de una mezcla entre blancos e indios

    • @ApproachingPerfection
      @ApproachingPerfection Před 4 měsíci

      @@jorgej.cruzhernandez9247 the spanish wiped out nearly all of the guanches heritage do not lie. They were gentically north african not european at all and they were nomadic.

    • @jorgej.cruzhernandez9247
      @jorgej.cruzhernandez9247 Před 4 měsíci

      @@ApproachingPerfection the percentage of north African heritage in my DNA isn't a fucking lie. My whole mother's side of my family was born in Tenerife for as far as records of families were made, they don't look "white"... The nerve of some of you people...
      What the actual fuck do you know about my culture? Do you even know what Guanche means?

  • @indirectsiinreluare233
    @indirectsiinreluare233 Před 3 lety +4

    A hypothesis of the origin of the native population of the Canary Islands.
    The guanches.
    The Phoenicians have an older history of their existence in navigation in the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. The Phoenicians were looking for lands and populations with which to trade, they were not fighting for conquest. They built ports where they came periodically to exchange goods with the native populations. When they circumnavigated Africa, the journey took a long time, they landed on a fertile shore and planted wheat, leaving after the harvest. Trade in unknown areas was done by leaving on the shore what they had in exchange and receiving with them the native goods being at a distance. Only if they agreed with the parity did they take the goods, otherwise they waited for the quantities or goods to change. That means they were peaceful and fair. So it seems that discovering the Canary Islands most likely populated them with people to meet their trade and supply needs for their long journeys in the area. So they taught them to grow wheat, to salt fish, to produce garum, which was very expensive, to produce purple. The people of that time had embalming techniques, built pyramids, so they were in contact with Egyptian civilization. They could also come from the slave trade in the Mediterranean basin. Why is this hypothesis very plausible? Because it was later found that these people did not know how to navigate (they were brought by good Phoenician navigators), caves were discovered by the ocean used as grain depots, had the technique of mummification, built pyramids, terraced the islands for agriculture, had the science of irrigation. After the destruction of Carthage by the Romans, the islands were visited by the Greeks and then by the Romans. After the fall of the Roman Empire, the islands were forgotten and returned to the primitive stage, when they were conquered by the Spaniards after more than 1000 years of isolation.

  • @cristiangerardinobilityhou5410

    Small percentage of my DNA is from the Guanches. Not sure which parentage.

  • @Emy53
    @Emy53 Před rokem

    It's not pronounced the way you named that mountain. It's a volcanic area, and it's call El Tei-de. I hyphenated the word so you can pronounce it correctly. It doesn't have an "A" sound at the end.

  • @trejodanny8329
    @trejodanny8329 Před 5 lety +2

    FIRST

  • @antoniosantana6
    @antoniosantana6 Před 3 lety +1

    3000 years, no, the estimate is about 2000 years or shortly before

  • @witchhazel3927
    @witchhazel3927 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi Fandabi Dozi .I would like to give you some observations regarding the information you've provided in your introduction as a Native from Tenerife. First, the Canary Islands are 13 years short (1833) to have become a Province of Spain 200 years ago. Although the Berbers are the closest identifiable relatives of the Guanches, it is deduced that important human movements (e.g., the Islamic-Arabic conquest of the Berbers) have reshaped Northwest Africa after the migratory wave to the Canary Islands" and the "results support, from a maternal perspective, the supposition that since the end of the 16th century, at least, two-thirds of the Canarian population had an indigenous substrate, as a missing genoma not present in the Continental side regarding a mtDNA haplogroup U subclade U6b1 is Canarian-specific and is the most common mtDNA haplogroup found in aboriginal Guanche archaeological burial sites. Plus on Tenerife and La Palma aborigines found the majority of mt-DNA haplogroups belonging to the Eurasian clades such as H/HV/U*/R. on Tenerife Aborigines used a total sample of 71 aborigines and found that the frequency of the Cambridge Reference Sequence (CRS) which belongs to the European haplogroup H2a2 was between 21.12% and 30.98%. Berber tribes ended up with marriage practices that were present in the Canary Island by XV century. Women could have several husbands which was a common practice among Guanches to keep the genepool fresh.

    • @aroundtheworld2813
      @aroundtheworld2813 Před 2 lety +1

      lol we north africans are still majority berber you re the mixed one who lost his culture and everything them having old european is expected since they spilt of north africa thousands of years ago so they are more unmixed than us you know that north africans middle easterners and europeans share a common ancestor

    • @WHISPER-band
      @WHISPER-band Před rokem +1

      The Canary Islands are still a Spanish colony although Spain is more interested in calling it a province. But they are African islands

  • @nabil9772
    @nabil9772 Před 3 lety +1

    6:30 blown down or cut down by Christian zealots?

  • @TGDCChannel
    @TGDCChannel Před 4 lety +3

    They are island Berbers

  • @MartinAhlman
    @MartinAhlman Před 5 lety +1

    Very interesting! How about living viking life in Sweden? Contact me.

    • @FandabiDozi
      @FandabiDozi  Před 5 lety

      Will do man. I love Sweden and would love to go back one day :)

  • @dooleyfussle8634
    @dooleyfussle8634 Před 5 lety +4

    I was there this past winter and was surprised to find that the "Canary" name is from Canus, Latin for dog, not the bird.

    • @FandabiDozi
      @FandabiDozi  Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah I was surprised too! I heard one theory it was named after the dogs the Guanches brought over that then went Ferrell

    • @archifiras
      @archifiras Před 4 lety

      No, Canarias is for amaziɣ kaanuri tribe.

    • @TheVermifuge
      @TheVermifuge Před 3 lety +1

      Dog? Are you Sirius? 😉

  • @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv
    @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv Před 10 měsíci +3

    These guanches look so much like this were german tribes members. For me there are only 3 possibilities, why they look so:
    1. they are survivors of Atlantis cataclysm in the Younger Dryas period, where the sealevel was up to 160 m deeper, before the comet debris smashed into the earth crust and released all the water stored in it.
    2. they are descendants from the seapeople of the northsea, that fled from the famine caused by the islandic volcano Hekla into the mediterranean sea about 1200 bc. The fenicians and philisters are also their descendants.
    3. both possibilities. The first refugees mixed with the later refugees, but all from Hyperborean, Atlantean or Aryan genetic origin.

    • @ApproachingPerfection
      @ApproachingPerfection Před 4 měsíci +1

      they were north african canaarids/berberids. No connection to germany at all, they left north africa thousands of years ago to the islands.

  • @zakariaabedin5259
    @zakariaabedin5259 Před 4 lety +29

    It's not a "colony" it's officially a part of Spain so the term colony doesn't work

    • @zakariaabedin5259
      @zakariaabedin5259 Před 3 lety +5

      @Unicorn 12 Gibraltar isn't an official part of the "UK" it's a dependency, whereas the canaries are an official part of Spain

    • @DBDYAKU
      @DBDYAKU Před 3 lety +3

      By your logic andalusia either its moroccan

    • @TuNiSiA-TaMaZiGhT
      @TuNiSiA-TaMaZiGhT Před 3 lety +6

      It's ethnic Amazigh land area

    • @Shechiuata
      @Shechiuata Před 3 lety +1

      It is of course a colony. And thanks very much to the author of the video for saying that clearly.

    • @Dom-fx4kt
      @Dom-fx4kt Před 3 lety

      Well then that means French guiana isn't a colony by that logic because it's a French territory.

  • @thirstyralph6996
    @thirstyralph6996 Před 5 lety

    *inserte foto de ignatius*

  • @JamzYamz7
    @JamzYamz7 Před 2 lety +1

    Did a DNA test & I share DNA with the discovered mummies

  • @gwenmayor4862
    @gwenmayor4862 Před 3 lety

    Hi thank you for your comment quote ( because Africa is a continent not a colour )
    However I was talking about the original Guanches, who came from Africa before invaders. If the Spanish were the first Europeans to invade the canary’s, why do the Guanches look like Europeans. However I realise you don’t make the pictures, and did enjoy your video.

    • @yowhatsdis
      @yowhatsdis Před 3 lety +6

      Many North Africans do have light skin. In Africa there's more than one "race" if you wanna call it that way.

    • @officialVozie100
      @officialVozie100 Před 2 lety

      Some guanches not all guannches look native American as well it's interesting

  • @AuditorsUnited
    @AuditorsUnited Před 5 lety

    bet that sanchus is a opioid or opiate like and a pain aid like wild lettuce

  • @Rotebuehl1
    @Rotebuehl1 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The Canarian Islands are no colony of Spain!
    It is autonomous and integral part of Spain

  • @burninglight
    @burninglight Před 3 lety +1

    This is so interesting I did my dna and I have am 93% from Canary island 5 American Indian and rest from Africa. I have the same genegroup of the mummies they have exhumed. Not happy about them digging up my Ancestors and displaying them. I guess i don’t have any control over it or rights to them.

  • @nolasway878
    @nolasway878 Před 4 lety +1

    Omgosh. I've just found out that my Archeogentics are from here...mind blown. I have aboriginal DNA?

    • @khalilbn
      @khalilbn Před 4 lety

      Lone Tesar so u are Berber ?

    • @nolasway878
      @nolasway878 Před 4 lety

      @@khalilbn Guanche...from the Canary Islands. LOLOLOL. Bizarre!!

    • @khalilbn
      @khalilbn Před 4 lety

      @@nolasway878 yeah but there is planty of studies that assume guanche ppl are from north africa and related to berber ppl

    • @nolasway878
      @nolasway878 Před 4 lety

      @@khalilbn Really? My results also show Kenya Deloraine Farm...I don't know much about Berber people. Gosh...in fact that was the stronger archaeogenetic DNA makeup KDF? New to all this, so thanks for the info.

    • @FoufouBe
      @FoufouBe Před 4 lety +2

      @@nolasway878 yep, guanches were amazigh (berbers). They were just very isolated. While berbers from mainland were connected to other mediterranean people, guanches remained alone

  • @AuditorsUnited
    @AuditorsUnited Před 5 lety +1

    you use the word aborigine the way we use the word native when i hear it i think australia .. learn somthing everyday if your lucky

  • @DPG214
    @DPG214 Před 2 lety +1

    I have Guanche DNA, via Jamaica.

  • @thawsief91
    @thawsief91 Před 2 lety +1

    Guanche are Real inhabitant of North African they are Atlantis people

  • @azofa2012
    @azofa2012 Před 28 dny

    Sorry mate , we're no a spanish colony, we are a Spanish region, maybe Scotland is an English colony, but we're not..

  • @Fairyviewroad
    @Fairyviewroad Před 8 měsíci +1

    The Guanches were white even though they were North African?

  • @turtlewolfpack6061
    @turtlewolfpack6061 Před 5 lety

    Ild imagine that the original islanders may have arrived during an ice age, no boats were needed then although why they didnt develop later is a bit odd.

    • @slowgomera5611
      @slowgomera5611 Před 5 lety

      first wave of islanders was as you say probably during an ice age.then it seems thousands of ears later another wave..as he said Tenerifes islanders were know as guanches other islands had other "tribes".there is a possibility that romans planted people on some islands (from north africa) possibly as a slave incubator or as a war strategy while conquering territories in africa...la gomera has the highest "native" surviving DNA amongst population..

    • @ApproachingPerfection
      @ApproachingPerfection Před 4 měsíci

      @@slowgomera5611 the guanches were nomadic they came to the islands on their own

  • @nabil9772
    @nabil9772 Před 3 lety

    So they came over by boats but forgot how to build boats after time? The Spanish love their aboriginal bashing don't they?

  • @TuNiSiA-TaMaZiGhT
    @TuNiSiA-TaMaZiGhT Před 4 lety +9

    Canary islands, melilla and cetua Are ethnical Amazigh's...

    • @cherrypiekn4963
      @cherrypiekn4963 Před 4 lety

      I wonder if they recognize that. Do they consider themselves Amazigh, or they’re now Europeans...? Anyone to answer. I have no knowledge in this topic

    • @skepticm6169
      @skepticm6169 Před 4 lety +2

      @@cherrypiekn4963 yes they consider themselves as berbers

    • @dontletherspeak7575
      @dontletherspeak7575 Před 3 lety +1

      Nope, they belong to spain, you lost brah, deal with it.

    • @BlitzOfTheReich
      @BlitzOfTheReich Před 3 lety

      @@cherrypiekn4963 eh I am a descendant of Gaunches. I consider myself mainly European.

    • @noway511
      @noway511 Před 3 lety

      @@BlitzOfTheReich because you are spanish and not à real descendant of guanches since they've been vanished