Atlantis of the Sands: The Search for the Lost City of Iram

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  • čas přidán 26. 06. 2024
  • Go to curiositystream.thld.co/geogr... for unlimited access to the world’s top documentaries and non­fiction series.
    → Subscribe for new videos two times per week.
    / @geographicstravel
    Our sister channels:
    Biographics - / @biographics
    TopTenz - / @toptenznettop10
    This video is #sponsored by Curiosity Stream.
    Source/Further reading:
    The Call of Cthulhu: www.scribd.com/book/262694583
    The Rub al-Khali:
    www.britannica.com/place/Rub-...
    scholarworks.uark.edu/cgi/vie...
    books.google.co.uk/books?id=z...
    Bibliography on Iram/Ubar on Scribd.com:
    www.scribd.com/audiobook/4246...
    www.scribd.com/book/165237893
    www.scribd.com/book/87000691
    www.scribd.com/book/220492077
    Herodotus and Strabo: sourcebooks.fordham.edu/ancie...
    Biblical mentions:
    www.biblicalarchaeology.org/d...
    www.christadelphianbooks.org/a...
    www.biblestudytools.com/encyc...
    Iram of the Pillars in the Quran and the Hadith:
    corpus.quran.com/translation.j...
    tvkmuslims.blogspot.com/2016/0...
    www.al-islam.org/kamaaluddin-...
    ahadith.co.uk/whatishadith.php
    Iram in Arabic poetry and the Arabian Nights:
    www.academia.edu/38695425/A_P...
    www.scribd.com/document/87000...
    Ibn Battuta:
    tvkmuslims.blogspot.com/2016/0...
    issuu.com/journalismstudiessq...
    Philby and Thomas:
    www.scribd.com/document/87000...
    www.britannica.com/biography/...
    www.ames.cam.ac.uk/faculty-li...
    The expeditions of Clapp, Zarins and Fiennes:
    www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...
    www2.ups.edu/faculty/velez/FL3...
    www.sidetracked.com/sir-ranul...
    archive.nytimes.com/www.nytim...
    www.nytimes.com/1992/04/21/sc...

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @geographicstravel
    @geographicstravel  Před 3 lety +124

    Go to curiositystream.thld.co/geographicsdec for unlimited access to the world’s top documentaries and non­fiction series.

    • @internetexplorer1057
      @internetexplorer1057 Před 3 lety +14

      Calm down, timetraveller.

    • @YusufGinnah
      @YusufGinnah Před 3 lety +4

      @Geographics
      I'm convinced that there's more than one _Simon Whistler_
      How else can he produce so much quality content and still look so relaxed...?
      😎👍🏼

    • @lolumo
      @lolumo Před 3 lety +4

      you forgot to mention how it includes nebula for free

    • @chronosschiron
      @chronosschiron Před 3 lety +1

      im sorry we went back in time and looted it , i need soem gems for my video game

    • @je4894
      @je4894 Před 3 lety +1

      Simon, could we get a Geographics on Western Sahara. thank you.

  • @thegunpenguin
    @thegunpenguin Před 3 lety +1612

    Iram was great until Nathan and Sully destroyed it, just like all of those other ancient hidden cities.

    • @williamcrisp6032
      @williamcrisp6032 Před 3 lety +179

      How was Nate to know that destroying the crane and dropping the Urn back into the lake would cause the entire city to collapse into a sinkhole?

    • @yomama69s
      @yomama69s Před 3 lety +64

      @@williamcrisp6032 I'm replaying that one right now! awesome games. classics even.

    • @bogdanoff148
      @bogdanoff148 Před 3 lety +88

      Uncharted 3 is underrated.

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 Před 3 lety +85

      They were just following Indiana Jones' lead of destroying priceless archeological sites.

    • @yomama69s
      @yomama69s Před 3 lety +13

      @@squamish4244 There isn't an Indiana Jones video game though.. is there. Uncharted for the W.

  • @LehmannDrew
    @LehmannDrew Před 3 lety +834

    Looks like Simon has discovered the Uncharted series

  • @carbohydration9251
    @carbohydration9251 Před 3 lety +748

    "The Atlantis may have succumbed to the sands of the desert, but it sailed unscathed through the sands of time"
    Absoluetly gorgeous line. I adore it.

    • @lospolloshermandez4299
      @lospolloshermandez4299 Před 3 lety +1

      look at the eye of the sahara aka recot structure

    • @TheKamahl07
      @TheKamahl07 Před 3 lety +2

      @hinden A family member of his, Solon was exiled from Greece, traveled to Egypt and heard the story from Egyptian priests.
      The Ricat Structure isn't Atlantis though, it's my understanding that the Azores Plateau is *exactly* where Plato describes Atlantis, several days due West of the Pillars of Hercules (strait of Gibraltar)
      The isostatic pressure of the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets 11,000 years ago pushed the crusts of North America almost a mile into the mantle, this would displace areas on the edge of their respective continental plates upwards. The Azores could very easily been one *massive* island, a perfectly situated paradise as Plato laid out.
      That's about as far as I'm willing to accept the existence of Atlantis however.
      It's worth noting, Solon was even told by the same priests about a hidden tomb submerged under water just outside the great pyramids, and wrote about it. This tomb was considered fantasy as well until it was found recently.

    • @chouseification
      @chouseification Před 2 lety +1

      @@lospolloshermandez4299 is right - close to the Atlas Mountains... hmm, wonder if that name meant something. :P

    • @bojokowski
      @bojokowski Před 2 lety +1

      Eye of Sahara = Atlantis
      Y’all lying to yourself

    • @flintlockwoodhd7932
      @flintlockwoodhd7932 Před 2 lety +1

      I remember it from uncharted 3

  • @mouadchaiabi
    @mouadchaiabi Před 3 lety +258

    As a Muslim I have been wondering about the story of Iram of the Pillars since I was a child. When the internet first came I did a lot of research and found nothing but now your video gave me a sense of closure that I have been seeking for years.
    Thank you.

    • @asfandmajeed9891
      @asfandmajeed9891 Před rokem

      # me too 😂

    • @reinatycoon3644
      @reinatycoon3644 Před rokem

      The creator is a formless and infinite mass of energy and consciousness.. that the only name I can use is "The Great Spirit And Will" It will only take form as a way to communicate with people so their lesser minds can understand. It gives punishment equal to the evil committed in life there is no eternal suffering. It accepts all straight, homosexual, transgender, male and female all equally. Reincarnation is forced for those that were evil but only after they suffered in the afterlife realm for their crimes. those that were mostly good on the scale of justice will have the option to remain in the paradise realm or reincarnate. Even celestial bodies have spiritual energy bestowed by the divine Great Spirit And Will.

    • @AlphaMonkeyNips
      @AlphaMonkeyNips Před rokem

      You live close to "iram"

    • @here_we_go_again2571
      @here_we_go_again2571 Před rokem

      Didn't Mohammad
      mention a city ruined
      by some sort of
      phenomenon
      (metorite shower?)
      that "glassed" the
      site (city?) ?
      I assume that traders
      sitting around a
      campfire might have
      told others what they
      observed or something
      that their ancestors
      had witnessed.
      This was not Sodom
      and Gomorrah -- It was
      someplace in the Arabian
      peninsula.
      Geologists found nodules[1]
      of glass srewn about--
      Meteorite/astroid strike.
      This location was much
      older than Iram. I don't
      think that there were
      even recognizable
      buildings
      I don't think it was Iram
      of the Pillars (aka: "Ubar"
      as well as other names)
      Ubar was destroyed by the
      collapse of an underground
      limestone cavern (a HUGE
      sink-hole!)
      Was thid collapse caused by a
      lowered aquifer (i.e. water-table)
      level due to climate change?
      __________________________
      (1) Nodule (geology), a small
      rock or mineral cluster

    • @xx3768
      @xx3768 Před rokem +1

      ​@@reinatycoon3644 kinda of

  • @damainponce1631
    @damainponce1631 Před 3 lety +38

    The uncharted series did an amazing job covering iram as well.

  • @rogerhwerner6997
    @rogerhwerner6997 Před 3 lety +224

    The discovery of Ubar has a rather interesting backstory that I learned about through several of the study participants. In 1988, I began using a software program suite that had yet to gain widespread use in archaeology. In fact, by 1990, there weren't many universities using it for archaeology and only 3 private sector consulting groups worldwide had adopted it; my company, one based in Albuquerque, and a third in Bentonville, Arkansas (it was a small world). This commercial software, known then as Arc/INFO, permitted seemless intergration of digital vector and raster mapping, image processing and analyses, and relational databases. It was this software that aided the Bentonville company's analyses of NASA satellite images taken with SAR cameras and the subsequent identification of linear features as probably caravan routes not visible on contemporary aerial images; features that converged on a single location in the Empty Quarter. The Bentonville team had been contacted by the British who had been studying historical sources, and who had become convinced that the Ubar legend was real and of its location in the Omani interior. Arabian Peninsula archaeologist Dr. Zarins knew the Bentonville archaeologists, and together with the British and Omanis formed a consortium of specialists under the auspices of Omani Ministry of Culture, which also provided funding. One can not overstate the importance of the integration of said linear features with contemporary images and maps with a high degree of precision, without which finding the buried ruins in a sea of sand might have never occurred. I knew the Bentonville group and it was through them that I met Dr. Zarins and obtained a first-hand look at this fascinating project. At the time, I had been working on mapping projects in Israel and it was through that work that I came to know my Bentonville colleagues. Without accurate satellite-based radar imagery, powerful software technology and portable computers, painstaking historical search and faith that these sources weren't simply describing legends, hard field work by many people in difficult conditions, and substantial Omani funding and logistical support the archaeology of the Empty Quarter would still be largely unknown. Thank you to Simon and the folks at Geographics for bringing this little known to a wider audience!

    • @aneelakhan3681
      @aneelakhan3681 Před 2 lety +8

      thank you for sharing this!

    • @davidwallace1644
      @davidwallace1644 Před 2 lety +5

      Nice

    • @explorinjenkins349
      @explorinjenkins349 Před 2 lety +12

      That's some wild stuff, man. Sounds like you've had an interesting career.

    • @randomobserver8168
      @randomobserver8168 Před 2 lety +12

      One of the most interesting and informative comments I've ever read on this site or many others. Thanks for sharing all that. I had been aware of the use of new imagery tools and satellite photography in this discovery in a very general sense, you've added a lot. An amazing combination of old and new skills, of hard field work and the latest technology, to achieve one of the oldest and most fantastical goals- the discovery of a lost city. What a story.

    • @GotYourWallet
      @GotYourWallet Před 2 lety +2

      following the breadcrumbs to a sunken city

  • @YeeSoest
    @YeeSoest Před 3 lety +138

    Simon: "Nisnas...a creature with one eye, one leg and one arm"
    The Nisnas in the Image : 👀

    • @sulla175
      @sulla175 Před 3 lety +4

      Lol, you beat me too it.

    • @samyebeid4534
      @samyebeid4534 Před 3 lety

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @St.Linguini_of_Pesto
      @St.Linguini_of_Pesto Před 3 lety +7

      The last Nissan I witnessed was on the freeway, getting cut off by a Prius (color me a deep, rich shade of Unsurprised).
      It had 1 taillight, no rear passenger window (just that new shatter-proof stuff called plastic wrap + masking tape), and 1 headlight.
      I believe the Prius felt danger was close at hand.. in the form of an accident-prone Nissan.

    • @Max_Le_Groom
      @Max_Le_Groom Před 3 lety

      Timestamp plz?

    • @samyebeid4534
      @samyebeid4534 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Max_Le_Groom 13:58

  • @kayakat1869
    @kayakat1869 Před 3 lety +891

    You should do a Great Lakes shipwrecks/history episode.

    • @thetvbaby83
      @thetvbaby83 Před 3 lety +9

      Didn't he?

    • @kayakat1869
      @kayakat1869 Před 3 lety +17

      @@thetvbaby83 I'm not sure. I know Ask A Mortician did one that was really good.

    • @kayakat1869
      @kayakat1869 Před 3 lety +29

      @@thetvbaby83 oh wait, he did that on side projects. I think he should just do a history of the great lakes video though. Its a really unique area.

    • @xenatron9056
      @xenatron9056 Před 3 lety +3

      also in the Southern Ocean

    • @twopeaksnorth8184
      @twopeaksnorth8184 Před 3 lety +7

      What about the flooding of the st.lawrence seaway?

  • @Sublimeoo
    @Sublimeoo Před 3 lety +192

    He who controls the Spice, controls the universe

  • @motubak1622
    @motubak1622 Před 2 lety +219

    Iv been to the deserts of Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Iv seen so many random clearly very old ruins in the deserts that no one knows what they are. Also there were many instances where when people dig the foundations for their homes they would fine old tombs and ruins but the government would just swarm the scene and take everything. Literally at my grandmothers house there’s a old ruin/ tomb in the back garden but it’s illegal to try to dig it up. My uncle and my cousin tried to get through into it once and the neighbours called the police and they were both arrested. The government officials finished off the dig and emptied it. Its even illegal to just have a metal detector their. Iv seen with my own eyes a house foundation being dug and a clear very old tomb/ruin in there but again government officials just took everything and no one knows what was actually found in there. Corruption is rampant in that part of the world and government officials just take whatever artefact’s for themselves.

    • @Ashleii
      @Ashleii Před 2 lety

      House of Saud are corrupt.

    • @here_we_go_again2571
      @here_we_go_again2571 Před rokem +21

      I've always said that
      one can't plant a
      rosebush without
      finding archeological
      artifacts in the Middle
      East! :)

    • @joeyr7294
      @joeyr7294 Před rokem +34

      Probably trying to make sure the museum of Brittain doesn't come take it first tbh lol

    • @mehmetfatihcetin5932
      @mehmetfatihcetin5932 Před rokem +18

      Smilar thing happened in turkey. Around the prophet tomb in tarsus. They closed the building and put special polis to make sure no one comes. After years they said they find nothing.

    • @joeyr7294
      @joeyr7294 Před rokem +12

      @@mehmetfatihcetin5932 yet people get mad about their freedom in America..... 😂

  • @FrownyZero
    @FrownyZero Před 3 lety +41

    I'm from Oman and I visited the ruins showing at 18:39 , it's amazing to visit a place with that much history.

  • @blazeit4905
    @blazeit4905 Před 3 lety +111

    6: Have you not considered how your Lord dealt with ‘Aad -
    7: [With] Iram - who had lofty pillars,
    8: The likes of whom had never been created in the lands
    9: And [with] Thamud, who carved out the rocks in the valley?
    10: And [with] Pharaoh, owner of the Pyramids? -
    11: [All of] whom oppressed within the lands
    12: And increased therein the corruption.
    13: So your Lord poured upon them a scourge of punishment.
    14: Indeed, your Lord is in observation.

  • @baraxor
    @baraxor Před 3 lety +10

    Imram or Ubar probably gained notoriety by being the "last chance for gas"...it was the only water source for considerable distance on either side of the north/south trans-Arabian trade route, so that if a caravan wasn't willing to pay the hefty fee for water access, it would in all likelihood not survive to the next oasis. That kind of thing easily brings resentment.
    When half of the fortified town tumbles into a massive sinkhole, it's no wonder that this would be seen as an act of God to punish the unjust.

  • @onehouse4022
    @onehouse4022 Před 3 lety +221

    Hypothesis: A city that drank itself to death. Drank water until the roof of the water table collapsed. Literally swallowed up by the Earth.

    • @happybuddyperson
      @happybuddyperson Před 3 lety +28

      So a sinkhole eh? Paralyzingly terrifying, that thought is.

    • @danielduncan6806
      @danielduncan6806 Před 3 lety +21

      @@happybuddyperson I take it you live nowhere near Florida.

    • @Gilhelmi
      @Gilhelmi Před 3 lety +41

      That would be similar to what is currently happening to Las Vegas.
      Their water table has already dropped by over 100 feet in just a century. The whole region has an unsustainable water usage and will be gone within another century unless they build a water channel or reduce the number of pools.

    • @onehouse4022
      @onehouse4022 Před 3 lety +11

      @@Gilhelmi Modern examples from the news are what made me think of it.

    • @sheepdawwg
      @sheepdawwg Před 3 lety +2

      @@Gilhelmi 84% of Nevada is owned by big brother lol

  • @adamschindler5766
    @adamschindler5766 Před 3 lety +55

    "Experienced another moist moment"
    Gotta love that technical jargon

  • @Matsuiginshi
    @Matsuiginshi Před 3 lety +32

    "The empty quarter experienced another moist moment" -Simon Whistler, 2020

  • @Mark-xg3zn
    @Mark-xg3zn Před 3 lety +80

    Sic Parvis Magna. *uncharted theme intensifies !!!*

  • @live2ride18
    @live2ride18 Před 3 lety +273

    There’s so much crap probably buried in sand. As well as ocean. Man the lost history of earth. I want to know it all.
    Mostly to go get the buried treasure.

    • @live2ride18
      @live2ride18 Před 3 lety +2

      @Maria Kelly lol that show lost me at season 1. I refine metals from scrap stuff so I ‘dig’ the precious metals 😉

    • @mohamedelhaddade6371
      @mohamedelhaddade6371 Před 3 lety +4

      you watched too many Indiana Jones

    • @live2ride18
      @live2ride18 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mohamedelhaddade6371 never seen one.

    • @semaj_5022
      @semaj_5022 Před 3 lety +4

      I wanna know what all is still buried in Doggerland

    • @live2ride18
      @live2ride18 Před 3 lety +3

      @@semaj_5022 never heard of that one. Where’s that at? Now I have a whole new land to learn of 🙏

  • @hertzer2000
    @hertzer2000 Před 3 lety +68

    *drags giant hair pick across Arabia*
    "We ain't found Shit!"

  • @baz6128
    @baz6128 Před 3 lety +88

    Hell, who needs Curiosity Stream when you have Geographics, Biographics, Megaprojects, Sideprojects...

    • @jean-michel_comhaire
      @jean-michel_comhaire Před 3 lety +14

      I find your lack of Business Blaze disturbing

    • @kennethallen3843
      @kennethallen3843 Před 3 lety +7

      You can also make a top 10 Simon Whistler channels

    • @Simon-eu2hz
      @Simon-eu2hz Před 3 lety +3

      Also forgot.. today I found out and top tenz

    • @St.Linguini_of_Pesto
      @St.Linguini_of_Pesto Před 3 lety +2

      @@jean-michel_comhaire and totally bypassing Highlight History is nearly unforgivable.

  • @GusCraft460
    @GusCraft460 Před 3 lety +91

    The collapse of the limestone cavern beneath the first site fits very well with the accounts of earthquakes and cities buried by the desert. I think that, plus the eight towers, plus the geographic location being corroborated by multiple sources strongly points to that as the settlement of Iram.
    They say that the intersection of two lines is inevitable, three is a coincidence, but four suggests something of note is going on. The legends of a city suddenly struck by catastrophe sinking beneath the sand is one line, the repeated mentions of pillars is the second line, the correct geographic location is a third line, the wealth brought by the frankincense trade is the fourth line, and where they all intersect is a ruin that meets all of those descriptions.

    • @Ezralite7
      @Ezralite7 Před 2 lety

      @الأزدي Yes, I’m sure a band of superstitious nomads have a firm grip on geology, meteorology, and archaeology. 😒

    • @casualcausalityy
      @casualcausalityy Před rokem +11

      @@Ezralite7 those crazy nomads building giant pyramids that align with the solstices across several continents. Have you considered that human progress isn't always linear?

    • @Darkstar-se6wc
      @Darkstar-se6wc Před rokem +7

      @@Ezralite7 - What a non sequitor! As if one needs to understand the geological processes at play in the collapse of a subterranean limestone cave to accurately describe the catastrophic fate of a city sitting atop said cave. Archeological knowledge is required of the diggers, not the historical sources that suggest where to dig. And meteorology? Not seeing where it’s at all relevant, but while nomads may not know meteorology, they have a firm grasp on the expected weather patterns of their own time period.

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@Ezralite7a similar band of nomads made Gobekli Tepe. Nomadic hunter-gatherers built Stonehenge. Your skepticsm is a thin veil for your ignorance.

  • @Ravangers
    @Ravangers Před 3 lety +43

    You got a typo at 4:28, it's Labdanum not Laudanum. Laudanum is an opium tincture, labdanum is the perfume base/ herbal medicine.

  • @Mark-xg3zn
    @Mark-xg3zn Před 3 lety +68

    *I like the ending. It's pure poetry !!!*
    "The Atlantis may have succumbed to the sands of the desert but, it scaled unscathed through the sands of time." 👌

  • @ChangedNames
    @ChangedNames Před 3 lety +170

    It's indeed very rare to see a high viewed youtube video that mentions my country's name so much.
    Al Salam Everyone, from oman!!

    • @koshie7879
      @koshie7879 Před 3 lety

      Alaikom al salam from the UAE 🇦🇪 Love you all 🥰

    • @rohankishibe8259
      @rohankishibe8259 Před 3 lety +1

      و عليكم السلام من تونس 🇹🇳

    • @hiitsme4901
      @hiitsme4901 Před 3 lety

      ikr lol😂

    • @jureklemencic7316
      @jureklemencic7316 Před 3 lety +4

      u should be proud oman is imo the best arab country

    • @ChangedNames
      @ChangedNames Před 3 lety +9

      @@jureklemencic7316 Always am, Always will be. While every nation burn their life time for quick fame, we just outlive everyone by trading and being chill.
      Just the usual fights against Persia every few centuries

  • @thatone1280
    @thatone1280 Před 3 lety +170

    As a Saudi 🇸🇦 this place is like our Atlantis, there are many evidence of the city but I don’t think a gold city would go unnoticed in 2020 but I hope I am wrong. Btw I have been to rub alkali , it a place like no ever.

    • @broteinsheikh
      @broteinsheikh Před 3 lety +4

      Why doesnt your government try to search for this city they have resourses and tools

    • @IkedaSerra
      @IkedaSerra Před 3 lety +39

      It might be a bit like El Dorado, the supposed golden city in the Americas. I think I watched a documentary that said it was a combination of a translation error, greedy conquistadors and wishful thinking.

    • @KnivingDispodia
      @KnivingDispodia Před 3 lety +38

      @@broteinsheikh Because there are much better things to do than search for mythical cities

    • @broteinsheikh
      @broteinsheikh Před 3 lety +3

      @@KnivingDispodia no theres not they build things in dubai skyscrappers malls resorts etc they have everything they need already

    • @KnivingDispodia
      @KnivingDispodia Před 3 lety +26

      @@broteinsheikh That’s the UAE, not Saudi Arabia

  • @kelvindesilva4408
    @kelvindesilva4408 Před 3 lety +20

    Now I want to replay the uncharted series. Sure, definitely took liberties with certain facts but the games were a great way to inspire curiosity about ancient civilizations

  • @reer1877
    @reer1877 Před 3 lety +29

    Love the comparisons between the city of el dorado in the americas and Iram. All the guides give different answers

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před 3 lety +10

    1:45 - Chapter 1 - The empty quarter
    6:20 - Chapter 2 - City of pillars
    10:15 - Mid roll ads
    11:20 - Chapter 3 - City of rubble or garden of delights ?
    14:15 - Chapter 4 - The trails of dunes
    16:40 - Chapter 5 - Eye in the sky
    20:30 - Chapter 6 - Case closed ?

  • @kimjongun6746
    @kimjongun6746 Před 3 lety +354

    I don't know how Simon is managing to get these many videos done! As usual, great work 👍

  • @Rmirfin
    @Rmirfin Před 3 lety +26

    It's a tragedy that I have only just found your channel, I've been binging episodes. Absolutely fantastic!

    • @TheHortoman
      @TheHortoman Před 9 měsíci

      This channel is terrible, always gives scraps of partial information, sensationalist at best

  • @drmattconrad77
    @drmattconrad77 Před 3 lety +66

    Even if it wasn’t Iram it’s still a pretty cool discovery.

  • @alyssinwilliams4570
    @alyssinwilliams4570 Před 3 lety +11

    Simon reads, "Sent on a diplomatic mission" and my brain automatically finished it with "to Alderaan" -_-

  • @YukihyoShiraki
    @YukihyoShiraki Před 3 lety +4

    20:51 "-were all tall and powerfully built. Like pillars." *queue pillar men theme*

  • @thetiniestpirate
    @thetiniestpirate Před 3 lety +7

    That ending was remarkabley sentimental for Simon, I dig it.

  • @zora508
    @zora508 Před 3 lety +23

    The name Iram is also mentioned in the Qur'an.
    And it says in the Qur'an that Arabia was full of green
    And that Yamen was so rich and full of food that people didn't carry Supplies with them when traveling.
    Because the fruit-rich trees were everywhere
    Until they called upon themselves and said, "Our Lord, separate our travels."

    • @BlizzardWind99
      @BlizzardWind99 Před rokem +1

      People of Saba’ right?

    • @khalil8043
      @khalil8043 Před rokem +3

      @@BlizzardWind99 the people who built Iram were a tribe of giants, ppl of Saba are different

    • @BlizzardWind99
      @BlizzardWind99 Před rokem +2

      @@khalil8043 okay thanks JazakAllah Khair

  • @travellingtheworld7447
    @travellingtheworld7447 Před 3 lety +4

    4:04 Assurbanipal rocking that Rolex like a boss

  • @anishdynamo
    @anishdynamo Před 3 lety +16

    4:03 ma boy rocking those golden rolex

  • @Trabunkle
    @Trabunkle Před 3 lety +2

    Iram joins Atlantis, El Dorado, The Lost City of Z, The Lost Land of Lyonesse, Aztlan and countless more! Nuff Said!

  • @DarkGlass824
    @DarkGlass824 Před 3 lety +6

    Love the mention of Cthulhu.

    • @DarkGlass824
      @DarkGlass824 Před 3 lety

      @Draugr dark and creepy as it will always be......:)

  • @dominusetdeus060644
    @dominusetdeus060644 Před 3 lety +6

    Oh man i had never heard of this before. Thanks. This channel is a gold mine of information and entertainment

  • @Cle44139
    @Cle44139 Před 3 lety +5

    I have had to pause the video and google the information presented so many times that it's taken me nearly 90 mins to finish. Well researched sir, even for your high standards!

  • @antoniovillanueva308
    @antoniovillanueva308 Před 3 lety +56

    *"Where frankincense traders flogged their goods"*
    If that's not a euphemism, it ought to be.

  • @bakubread9308
    @bakubread9308 Před 2 lety +5

    Having never heard of this before, i genuinely did not expect this city to exist

  • @slinkbradshaw8674
    @slinkbradshaw8674 Před 3 lety +10

    Oooh real early to this one. Thanks for the great content once again

  • @djayt
    @djayt Před 3 lety +9

    Can you do a video on Shambhala? This video reminded me of Uncharted 3, then i remembered uncharted 2's shambhala.

  • @iteerrex8166
    @iteerrex8166 Před 3 lety +82

    I had never heard of this city before, but it intrigues me more then the famous Atlantis.

    • @ronindraco4194
      @ronindraco4194 Před 3 lety +7

      @شبيح Wow, interesting

    • @MrChristianDT
      @MrChristianDT Před 3 lety +4

      I guess play Uncharted 3, if you have a playstation & assuming you're old enough & your parents let you. It's not very accurate & the story isn't great, but the game is still really fun, if you can finish it.

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire Před 3 lety +7

      @@MrChristianDT Uncharted is an old game now. Why not read a book on it instead and get some facts? I mean I enjoyed uncharted, but don't see how its relevant 🤷‍♀️

    • @frankmartin2503
      @frankmartin2503 Před 3 lety

      Try reading the novel Declare by Tim Powers.

    • @valletas
      @valletas Před 3 lety

      @@Stettafire well its fun thats what he was saying

  • @zarahasan331
    @zarahasan331 Před 3 lety +50

    Its times like these I can appreciate my middle eastern heritage. Probably gonna go back to some of these verses mentioned in the Quran to do my own research too! (Thanks for the video!!!)

    • @futurewitness2862
      @futurewitness2862 Před 3 lety

      They were the people of add right?

    • @elmajraz6019
      @elmajraz6019 Před 3 lety +3

      @@futurewitness2862 yes, the people of 'Ad. He is usually linked as a son to the biblical character Uz the son of Aram (the founder of the City of Iram?).
      and the other tribe, Thamud, is usually linked as a son to Gether, another son of Aram.

    • @mohdsyahrulazmanmdsaru6909
      @mohdsyahrulazmanmdsaru6909 Před 3 lety +1

      @@elmajraz6019 thanks! No wonder Quran always relate and links people of Aad and people of Thamud

    • @elmajraz6019
      @elmajraz6019 Před 3 lety

      @@mohdsyahrulazmanmdsaru6909 welcome. it's a pleasure.

    • @elmajraz6019
      @elmajraz6019 Před 3 lety

      @george james I will try. What is your question?

  • @TheTombree
    @TheTombree Před 3 lety +10

    Uncharted 3 music kicks in :

  • @corynorell3686
    @corynorell3686 Před 3 lety +9

    Learned about this through the Uncharted series. In fact, those games are what got me into history. And people say games are a waste of time.

    • @katiemartin487
      @katiemartin487 Před rokem +2

      Same here, along with the Tomb Raider games, high school for me was a drag, since they only focused on wars and depressing stuff throughout history, so I had to learn through video games, Uncharted 3 and 4 are my favorites in the franchise, because of Iram and Libertaila set in the games.

    • @train_go_boom2065
      @train_go_boom2065 Před rokem +1

      Call of Duty and Uncharted helped me get into history

    • @AFGsultanZ
      @AFGsultanZ Před 9 měsíci

      Uncharted, Assassin's Creed and Age of Empires are what got me into history. I do think a lot of people can relate to it as well.

    • @AFGsultanZ
      @AFGsultanZ Před 9 měsíci

      @@train_go_boom2065Call of Duty World Wars and Black Ops I’m assuming? That’s very cool. Uncharted, Assassins Creed, and Age of Empires is what got me into history.

  • @citizena8501
    @citizena8501 Před 3 lety +1

    One of my favourite videos you've made, keep it up!

  • @ice4077
    @ice4077 Před 3 lety

    Thanks Simon. Great video!

  • @dinolover
    @dinolover Před 3 lety +11

    I love this place cause one of my favorite games has it as its focus. U3 baby!

  • @KRJayster
    @KRJayster Před 3 lety +18

    You know, considering the desert environment, civilization located between two disparate civilizations in Europe and China, and mysterious vanishing in a night of tragedy that is considered by some to be a punishment by a god, I'm wondering if Hiromu Arakawa had heard of Iram when she came up with the city of Xelkses for Fullmetal Alchemist.

    • @tayjaytesla1142
      @tayjaytesla1142 Před 3 lety +5

      Very probably, wasnt Xelkes meant to be quite wealthy/ beautiful?

  • @russellfitzpatrick503
    @russellfitzpatrick503 Před 3 lety +2

    As ever a fascinating video on a subject totally unknown to most, but one that has its own tale to tell. Thank you

  • @zachdietrich4648
    @zachdietrich4648 Před 3 lety +10

    so, "limestone cavity" likely means a drained aquifer. the reason there was an oasis there, likely, was an aquifer. and the overuse of the resource over time caused the water level to drop enough to change how pressure was distributed. causing cavity collapse. ending site viability.
    so, in a sense, they were a victim of their own success.
    strangely, my impression was that Ubar and Iram of the Pillars were different places. but that could be me confusing Wallace Stevens and Historicity.

  • @timbrwolf1121
    @timbrwolf1121 Před 3 lety +16

    Red silver? So walls of pyrargyrite? That would look awesome!

  • @tehbonehead
    @tehbonehead Před 3 lety +52

    "There is nothing in the desert, and no man needs nothing."
    -Faisal

    • @Darkest_matter
      @Darkest_matter Před 3 lety +1

      Faisal who?

    • @tehbonehead
      @tehbonehead Před 3 lety +1

      @@Darkest_matter Faisal I bin Al-Hussein bin Ali Al-Hashemi... to be specific.

    • @aliyanZedit
      @aliyanZedit Před 2 lety

      @@Darkest_matter your Daddy

    • @ibrahimidrees328
      @ibrahimidrees328 Před 2 lety

      @Deez Nutz I’m not exactly sure so I might be wrong but at that time the people of aad were very big and tall

  • @ChrisBrackman
    @ChrisBrackman Před 3 lety +2

    I got three ads for some resort called Atlantis while watching this. The connections the algorithm makes make me smile.

  • @billharm6006
    @billharm6006 Před 3 lety +27

    One of your more informative.
    I've known of "Ubar" for years. I've know of some of the legends and sources for years. Still, this video presented related information that I had not known before. I appreciate the research that went into creating this presentation.

  • @jackmanley1473
    @jackmanley1473 Před rokem +19

    I'd love to see you gusy tackle the city of Mogadishu on the channel at some point. It was arguably the most important city on the planet 650-750 years ago due to its ideal location at the center of the Indian Ocean trading zone. That it was so highly coveted for centuries, only to fall to an absolute nadir at the dawn of the 21st Century, has always fascinated me. It makes sense why many of the ancient trading cities collapsed, but Mogadishu had possibly the most going for it geographically of any trading city in existence at the time

  • @ssa6227
    @ssa6227 Před 3 lety +7

    I went to Salalah Oman. They have ruins of past city. Very impressive indeed. I only later found out how important that city was historically.

  • @xvsj5833
    @xvsj5833 Před 3 lety +2

    Great work !!!

  • @skeetsmcgrew3282
    @skeetsmcgrew3282 Před 3 lety +6

    I find the ubiquity of lost cities to be kind of suspicious. I'm sure many cities over the millennia have been lost, but the idea that they are always fantastical cities that nobody actually remembers just doesn't grok IMO. You're telling me they were responsible for effectively millions or billions of dollars worth of commerce and nobody has direct records of them? Idk, maybe I should take it as a lesson of how easily we can be forgotten instead of not believing it existed at all.

  • @pspdude2316
    @pspdude2316 Před 3 lety +3

    This seems more plausible than atlantis because it can just be covered up by sandstorms

    • @Docmain3
      @Docmain3 Před 3 lety +1

      What? And atlantis just fell into the sea...

  • @golddragonette7795
    @golddragonette7795 Před 3 lety +11

    Having been to Wadi Rm, I'd love to hear the evidence for Aram being there - the towering pillars are natural cliffs there, and it was definitely part of the frankincense trade route heading north to Petra

  • @lookatcha
    @lookatcha Před 3 lety

    brilliant video!! thank you

  • @MrAndrew941
    @MrAndrew941 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Yeah, imagine how well preserved to say it would be not destroyed by war, but just engulfed by sand.

  • @lastword8783
    @lastword8783 Před 3 lety +19

    "Iram cannot be allowed to have chariots of mass destruction"

  • @Theggman83
    @Theggman83 Před 3 lety +6

    4:05 that's a sick watch...

  • @Coffee_Charly
    @Coffee_Charly Před 3 lety

    awesome, we need more of this.

  • @somethinglikethat2176
    @somethinglikethat2176 Před 3 lety +6

    Video idea: the Canal of the Pharaohs. It was an ancient version of the Suez Canal and connected the Nile River to the Red Sea.
    Also the Great Dam of Ma'rib would be awesome too.

  • @ArcAudios77
    @ArcAudios77 Před 3 lety +8

    Credit for a well researched & excellently delivered narrative on the lost City of Iram.
    Learned from it, appreciated. Geographics is a quality use of anyone's time.

    • @williamprosser7637
      @williamprosser7637 Před rokem

      I believe the round stone columns around the stone gate were the pillars or towers ... They were used until the early medieval time.. they actually found a early medieval chessboard there inside one and the Italians came and rebuilt some of what you could already see to give a more visual reference.

  • @ScooterDoge
    @ScooterDoge Před 2 lety +5

    Pre-Islamic Arabia sounds like a dream.

  • @gregdeon705
    @gregdeon705 Před 3 lety +1

    Hi Simon , was enjoying this episode and a conversation ensued , a friend asked " I wondered how much from all these channels , he retains " .

  • @dafttool
    @dafttool Před 3 lety +13

    Desertification manmade? The area is prone to drought cyclically due to the wobble of the earth, going from desert extremes to monsoon extremes every 15,000 or so years. Same goes for the Sahara. It was also wet back 5000 bce, & then became desert when the winds changed

    • @user-rz9vb8vj5u
      @user-rz9vb8vj5u Před 3 lety +7

      That's right
      Arabia and north africa was more habitable during this time between 10000 and 5000 yrs ago
      as monsoon retreat to south

    • @fyeahusa
      @fyeahusa Před 3 lety +2

      Extensive irrigation also results in desertification and likely also affected the region while the climate changed naturally as well.

    • @dabo5078
      @dabo5078 Před 2 lety +2

      @@fyeahusa Unlikely intense irrigation can cause desertification. By the time irrigation is not possible in the area there will still be plenty of nutrients for basic shrubbery, however if the climate dries up, (or like in Mesopotamia the Euphrates and Tigris changed course) than desertification is inevitable. Besides you need some extremely intensive agriculture in the scale close to what we have in the modern world to affect such drastic changes. I have doubts neolithic farmers had the technology or the population to do such intense agriculture.

  • @mm4u1986
    @mm4u1986 Před 3 lety +29

    (ألم ترى كيف فعل ربك بعاد* و إرم ذات العماد) سورة الفجر

    • @Ali-qk3xw
      @Ali-qk3xw Před měsícem

      نقلك غير صحيح إرم ذات العماد بدون حرف (و)

    • @user-zj3ho1xd8g
      @user-zj3ho1xd8g Před 36 minutami

      لا لم نرا 😂😂😂😂😂 كلام خرافي وأساطير وكذب بدو الصحراء

  • @jacobhuff3748
    @jacobhuff3748 Před 3 lety +40

    Just be sure to not to drink the water here. Sir Francis Drake and Nathan Drake learned the hard way what brought about the end for this great society.

    • @SamuraiGhostGirl
      @SamuraiGhostGirl Před 3 lety +2

      Best game in the series.

    • @jacobhuff3748
      @jacobhuff3748 Před 3 lety +4

      @@SamuraiGhostGirlThought Thief's End was best in terms of story but Drake's Deception refined the classic game play the most.

    • @SamuraiGhostGirl
      @SamuraiGhostGirl Před 3 lety +4

      @@jacobhuff3748 maybe. I like all of the games, but the third was my favourite.

    • @valletas
      @valletas Před 3 lety

      @@jacobhuff3748 well i love uncharted but absolutely hated the gunplay so i am here more for the setting
      I like all of them but i think 4 has the best one

  • @aalhard
    @aalhard Před rokem

    This was an info dense episode, in the extreme!
    Awesome

  • @UKinQ8Gaming
    @UKinQ8Gaming Před 3 lety

    I feel like this idea was a great one! Wow im amazed!

  • @Robbie_S
    @Robbie_S Před 3 lety +54

    Never realised the term "Ajib-o-Gharib" to describe "strange and unbelievable", was derived from two brothers Ajib and Gharib.

    • @nejm612
      @nejm612 Před 3 lety +1

      Where did you hear that term?

    • @NadDew
      @NadDew Před 3 lety

      @Tay Stan urdu borrow too much from Arabic anyway it's a common phrase in arabic but u never thought about its origins.

    • @AymenDZA
      @AymenDZA Před 3 lety +10

      It's the other way around, the brothers are named after the adjectives

    • @M.W.H.
      @M.W.H. Před 3 lety +1

      Correction: Ajib means "marvelous" or "wondrous", not "unbelieveable".

    • @lastword8783
      @lastword8783 Před 3 lety +2

      We have the same term in pashto as well

  • @jayjones9125
    @jayjones9125 Před 3 lety +8

    They thought Iram was Las Vegas. It turned out to be Reno.

    • @octayveon4938
      @octayveon4938 Před 3 lety

      What???? I thought this was by egypt or some shit

    • @Vandyno
      @Vandyno Před 2 lety

      @@octayveon4938 Please tell me you were some sort of impaired when you made this comment

  • @domhuckle
    @domhuckle Před 3 lety

    Fantastic - my wonder of the world never fails to ignite with the watching of these videos

  • @mauricewilks1974
    @mauricewilks1974 Před 3 lety

    Brilliant, do more like this please

  • @rain0aldwaib
    @rain0aldwaib Před 3 lety +7

    the city of iram was also mentioned in the quran along with the story of the saba queen with the prophet solomon and it was a very rich,fertile, and strong kingdom named the kingdom of Saba

  • @economicurtis
    @economicurtis Před 3 lety +3

    I've been to the empty quarter. It's amazing.

  • @robertsollory7475
    @robertsollory7475 Před 3 lety +2

    A good place to do a geographics on would be the amazing transformation of Shenzhen. From a humble fishing town to the manufacturer of the world's electronics.

  • @Perceptious37
    @Perceptious37 Před 2 lety +2

    i'd love to see you dig deeper into the history of the silk road trade route.

  • @xxGhostXIIIxx
    @xxGhostXIIIxx Před 3 lety +3

    i remember this place from uncharted 3 the city's water supply was poisoned by this hallucinogenic stuff that brings your worst nightmares to life and drives you insane

  • @jacksavage4098
    @jacksavage4098 Před 3 lety +9

    Great video, love Simon in the well spoken non raging.
    There is recent archaeology I read somewhere a possible massive sinkhole opened after the oasis below its aquifer dried up taking with it a city in the collapse. Anyone recall this?

    • @tevis3
      @tevis3 Před 3 lety +2

      Nah dude, all Blaze all day.

  • @johnwhite5217
    @johnwhite5217 Před 3 lety

    Fantastic episode great job ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @johnathonherring2583
    @johnathonherring2583 Před 3 lety +1

    Could you please do one on the Vanderbilt Biltmore Estate?
    Love everything you do!

  • @cmdr_thrudd
    @cmdr_thrudd Před 3 lety +3

    I lived in Oman as a child. Got to meet Sir Ranulph Fiennes and got a signed map of one of his expeditions. :)
    I didnt know why he was there at the time so it's interesting to now hear what the mission was.

    • @maxt4138
      @maxt4138 Před rokem +1

      المفروض ينذكر اسم المكتشفين العرب والعرب المفروض يكتشفوهة مو خواجات

  • @neocomixx5128
    @neocomixx5128 Před 3 lety +5

    curiosity stream is rad, except for one small problem: You can't tell what year something was made. So there's nothing quite like starting a video about space science, only to see a video in 4:3 aspect talking about science that's been completely rewritten since the video was produced...if you could filter, or even just see, the creation date of the videos, it would be a vast improvement.

    • @Q_QQ_Q
      @Q_QQ_Q Před 2 lety

      You wouldn't see if they did .

  • @Ryan98063
    @Ryan98063 Před 3 lety

    This was a really good episode

  • @Anubis-hm7ro
    @Anubis-hm7ro Před 3 lety

    Thank you 🙏🏽

  • @RichardCranium321
    @RichardCranium321 Před 3 lety +4

    Sir Randolph Feines recently returned with his nephew to retrace his expedition from Bedouin tribes up the nile to the pyramids in Egypt

  • @absolutelynoone7171
    @absolutelynoone7171 Před 3 lety +24

    So many tales of lost cities due to disaster. It's almost as if this happens quite often and frequent throughout our history. Yet it's considered a crazy idea that human civ goes back way way further back.

    • @valletas
      @valletas Před 3 lety +2

      Well nobody is saying that human civilisation isnt a old think in fact its a old as humas itself it just changed a lot

    • @absolutelynoone7171
      @absolutelynoone7171 Před 3 lety

      @@valletas true. I agree. But I'm saying well before the ice age old. Hundreds of thousands of years ago.

    • @CircumcisedUnicorn
      @CircumcisedUnicorn Před 3 lety +2

      @@valletas But people assume that our oldest civilisations were simple Hunter-gatherers when in actual fact, they could’ve been a lot more technologically advanced than us for all we know.

    • @valletas
      @valletas Před 3 lety +1

      @@CircumcisedUnicorn nah not more tachnologically advenced if that was the case we would have records and other things about that
      Humans arent really that old
      BUT they could have use some primitive technology that we never did

    • @CircumcisedUnicorn
      @CircumcisedUnicorn Před 3 lety +1

      @@valletas This is the thing, we're quick to assume that there are a lack of records, or structures, of past civlisation technological feats. But in between a catalysmic event around 12,000 years ago, followed by severe globlal flooding, any pieces of evidence would've been either completely destroyed or buried underwater. Are you aware that we've explored less than 5% of our oceans? If entire expeditions were funded for this, I am positive that we will find a lot more than we could even imagine. Our current narrative of earlu humans is that they were basic and incompetent hunter-gatherers only 10,000 years ago. If this is the case, how did they manage to build the 10,000 year old site of Göbeklitepe? This monolithic complex with vast pillars and underground networks shouldn't have been remotely possible if early humans were mere hunter gatherers. There is so much more that we simply do not know about the past civilisations and it's not far fetched to assume that some could've existed with technology that is even superior than ours.

  • @irinaivanova7416
    @irinaivanova7416 Před 3 lety

    Great video as always. But somehow this time the music in the background drives me crazy!

  • @BlueBirdsProductions
    @BlueBirdsProductions Před 3 lety

    I've been waiting for Simon to make a video on this