The Olmec Legacy

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • The Olmec were the first great civilization of Mesoamerica. Despite being late comers, they bloomed with incredible speed and left an enduring legacy across all of Central America.
    Patreon: / ancientamericas
    Facebook: / ancientamericas​
    Special thanks Marco Vingato for his permission of image use.
    Bibliography and Sources:
    docs.google.com/document/d/1B...

Komentáře • 13K

  • @MarcoPono
    @MarcoPono Před 3 lety +1632

    Greetings! Thank you for your work, I really appreciate what youre doing.
    Im a Mexican Native American and I can tell you with no doubt that the facial features carved on these heads are very native of that region. I have travelled and made friends around and have seen these features in many native peoples. It is not uncommon to have a friend teased because he "looks like an olmeca head".
    I remember that in my Kickboxing class was a guy from that region, we called him LaMolle because he looked like an olmec head and he seemed to be made of stone, you could counter with jabs and it would get you nowhere, his nose would not bleed, his eye sockets would barely swell, and he would keep fighting.
    Maybe the olmeca standard of beauty revolved around the rugged features of a warrior.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +212

      Thank you! I wish I could broadcast this comment very loud for the people in the back.

    • @e.diamond4080
      @e.diamond4080 Před 3 lety +75

      That region also has had Africans transported in since the colonial period, no? And we don't know about the pre-colonial period. It's not impossible that other people besides and before Columbus learned to navigate the oceans. In fact, it's ridiculous to think the first to America would have been the Spanish. That by no means discredits the distinguished accomplishments or dignity of the old civilizations of the American continent. In fact, the way that the most advanced civilizations have become so great is by not re-inventing the wheel so to speak.

    • @chrisgibson5267
      @chrisgibson5267 Před 3 lety +201

      @@e.diamond4080 Hello. Be honest. Brutally honest if needs be.
      So if there's compelling evidence that other peoples crossed the Atlantic to the Americas then we'd be interested to see it.
      I've seen what's been shown so far and it's not even remotely convincing.
      Your use of the word ridiculous suggests an argument from personal incredulity and therefore a logical fallacy. That's not a great place to start.
      Seafaring requires specific technologies and infrastructure. Both of these would be evidenced in the archaeologiical record and local traditions on either side of the ocean.
      It can be shown that the Vikings, the Spanish and Portuguese, and the English all made the crossing.
      Ships and shipwrecks, settlements and colonies, docks and shipyards; they all leave traces.
      So we can, for instance, disregard the flights of fantasy indulged in by Graham Hancock.
      Then there's DNA. My family has Native American DNA ( Taino Indian so I'm told ).
      I'm guessing that these ancient peoples accomplished what they did by dint of their own indigenous ingenuity and indigenous efforts.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 2 lety +14

      you are a joke you make us laugh the native people of United States Mexican they all were black people this so-called Indians anchors Myers and Ash test mloecs it's so sad I truly feel sorry for you all your family's been lying to you The Truth is Out the black people will come from their true identity I'm glad I'm not you people goodbye

    • @moofacesTV
      @moofacesTV Před 2 lety +57

      @@e.diamond4080 Not just that region try all of latin america. Do a DNA test on people who you think don't have african DNA. Who was Yanga? Etc. The blood is there just watered down the further you leave out of that region. 3 racial mixtures common in all of Latin America. And yes even in Mexico. African, Spanish and Native ancestry. Do a basic 23andme google search will tell you the average ancestry. Looks are deceiving. Slavery was bigger in Latin America than USA.

  • @user-hw9yf2wn4v
    @user-hw9yf2wn4v Před 3 lety +1090

    I am forever impressed by the OLMECS. I remember an exhibition I saw in Moscow on American ART and I immediately fell in love with the Aztecs, Toltecs, Olmecs, Mayas, and Incas. The Americas have produced such wealth and history. I have travelled in Mexico, Guatemala and Peru besides other countries of Latin America and I can't get enough of this history. They were people who left such a legacy for us that we cannot ignore them. May the spirit of those ancient Americans live on for ever.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +46

      Agreed!

    • @AZdude
      @AZdude Před 3 lety +60

      Such an awesome comment bro. Thanks, we love you too. My ancestors were very much so as important as ancient Europeans, Middle East civilizations. I myself love the history of the Rus

    • @kylenolan9679
      @kylenolan9679 Před 3 lety +30

      Why do they hide dat from teaching dat in American history I guess it would show dat Colombus didn't discover America compare da statues to da ones in Ancient Ethiopia meaning all black people didn't come on no slave ships 💪😎

    • @judaprinxbeatz.8008
      @judaprinxbeatz.8008 Před 3 lety +31

      YOU SHOULD SEE THE OTHER OLMEC HEAD CALLED 'EL NEGRO'. CLEAR DEPICTION OF AN AFRICAN MAN ;)

    • @officialdirectorscutmusicv426
      @officialdirectorscutmusicv426 Před 3 lety +12

      YOUR NAME IS "Peter Furst" you don't want Black and Brown people to have any connection to Africa.
      The white Man is Scared we Black and Brown will wake up.

  • @trevorsherwood4324
    @trevorsherwood4324 Před 2 lety +115

    “Let’s take a moment to thank the Olmecs for helping bestowing chocolate on this cruel world...”
    *chef kiss*

  • @wonkaIndian100
    @wonkaIndian100 Před rokem +124

    My Family are indigenous Zapotecs from Oaxaca and some of us have more Maya features and some of us look just like the Olmecs. Sometimes people confuse us for being Polynesian or from the Philippines because of our almond shaped eyes etc.

    • @likpit
      @likpit Před 7 měsíci +6

      Yeah i still dont understand how people dont know the connection with Polynesia and even Australian DNA and even clues to connection of the old world and new world via Keystone cuts DNA in Peru there was people in the Americas way longer than people know but something happened 11 thousand years ago where they had to rebuild again.

    • @tgraham72
      @tgraham72 Před 7 měsíci

    • @donaldnixon919
      @donaldnixon919 Před 7 měsíci +2

      The population today aren't the same population thousands of years ago

    • @wonkaIndian100
      @wonkaIndian100 Před 7 měsíci +13

      @@donaldnixon919To some degree you are correct, but our people in particular just started to integrate into western society when our parents migrated to the States from their village and all of us look like our ancestors from way back then. I and a lot of my cousins look similar to the Zapotec artifacts you see in museums or found in archeological sites. I’ve also done a DNA test and confirmed I am full blooded Indigenous American.

    • @ShapeShiftingStardust33
      @ShapeShiftingStardust33 Před 4 měsíci +6

      I can totally relate... when I was child in school and our textbook had images of the Olmec head statues in it ,my entire class made fun of me because I looked exactly like it. The resemblance was uncanny. And now as an adult I understand why it makes sense... both my parents are Mexican indigenous. One of my grandmother's spoke the indigenous language of her people. People still ask me if I am either Polynesian or from the Philippines till this day. Lol

  • @duanephillips2343
    @duanephillips2343 Před rokem +22

    This is so cool. I studied Mesoamerican culture and art as an anthropology major. I even spent a semester in Mexico in 1980 - what a great experience.

    • @jimmyjasi-
      @jimmyjasi- Před rokem +1

      These Olmecs head features are certainly not "European or African" but they may be trait of "population Y" that David Reich, Jeniffer Raff and. Skoglund discuss extensively.
      We know already enough archeology and genetics to debunk any pseudoscientific claims of pre-Columbian"white gods" or other transatlantic contacts, but we still don't really know how many waves had or how diverse population of Ancient Beringia was, we also know now from David Reich that some Native Americans even migrated back to Asia some 5000 ya. and perhaps it were Native American sailors rather than Polynesians that settled Rapa Nui first!
      Pity that so few Native People wants to get their DNA tested. Great loss for humanity

    • @JohnDoe-ih6mj
      @JohnDoe-ih6mj Před rokem

      What do you think about every retard that think they were all black

    • @Geovanni___
      @Geovanni___ Před 10 měsíci

      What are you thoughts on the purepecha ppl and their mystery of origin? Would love to know if you've found anything interesting

  • @bluefish4999
    @bluefish4999 Před 3 lety +385

    I find it sad people arguing over who made these beautiful sculptures, the indigenous population should be allowed to be proud of what their ancestors did. I've seen some of these sculptures in Mexico City at Museo Nacional de Antropología, I suggest anyone start there if you're interested in indigenous Mexican culture.

    • @nomochances777
      @nomochances777 Před 3 lety +60

      Most modern day Mexicans are NOT from the original people that made all these artifacts. The original people were slaughtered and or left. The closest people to S.American meso-American culture and bloodline are the typical black American people. Dreads, Braids, Basketball and other ball games. Millions of Black people were not shipped against their will from Africa, they were already here.

    • @goingrawwithhuck3047
      @goingrawwithhuck3047 Před 3 lety +18

      Nomo Chances, that truth & facts are to much for the brainwashed society to comprehend…

    • @bluefish4999
      @bluefish4999 Před 3 lety +119

      @@nomochances777 Modern day Mexicans? There are 17-18 indigenous groups in Mexico that make up 25% of the country. I've traveled Mexico since the 70s and lived there for four years, in the 90s, you couldn't find Mexico on a map.

    • @SergioSalasP
      @SergioSalasP Před 3 lety +16

      @@nomochances777 You can still find pure indigenous people in remote areas of Mexican you dumbass.

    • @nomochances777
      @nomochances777 Před 3 lety +12

      @@SergioSalasP ... Yes I know there are so-called Black people in Mexico and those people wasn't even allowed on the National Census until 2015.

  • @surlyguvna
    @surlyguvna Před rokem +33

    Incredible video. My mother's mother came from the mountains of El Salvador. She would often talk about the story from her Great Grandmother's time. She would say they came to be there from another places. The place where the big heads that watched and told stories. You showed the Olmec's area of influence, and it makes sense now. Thank you. I wish my grandma were alive to tell her she was right. She had a small black stone head with the same motifs. It was buried with her when she passed.

  • @josepalacios843
    @josepalacios843 Před 7 měsíci +14

    Tabasco native here. Thanks for sharing this, I really enjoyed your exposition and tone/delivery. I didn't know Olmecs [possibly] originated that MesoAm calendar. There is a sense of community around the word "Olmec" in my hometown. It's weird because there is little connection with modern "peoples" so it feels like cheap/manufactured 21st century tribalism. Like Italians from Brooklyn that can't speak Italian, no offense. "You're a modern Mexican from Tabasco, not an Olmec, calm down". I saw it in another comment and can corroborate. "He looks like an Olmec head" is a common way of mocking someone's physical looks in Tabasco, even in 2023. That human face, the Olmec -face is still around in Tabasco, maybe a little bit to the south of Veracruz as well. They do not look like your median face from the Yucatan peninsula (Maya) or the Valle de Mexico (Mexica and others).

  • @SimonSozzi7258
    @SimonSozzi7258 Před 3 lety +443

    Interesting fact about the Olmec Heads is that the bottoms are flattened on a slant so that they would be naturally facing upwards towards the sky. I think they should be displayed this way.

    • @watcherspirit2351
      @watcherspirit2351 Před 3 lety +11

      The fatness of the heads is the flat part of the thrones from which they were carved.

    • @GregGarciaHouse
      @GregGarciaHouse Před 3 lety +14

      @@watcherspirit2351 yes! They recycled the stones. From the Throne to the Stonehead of the same King. There’s a lot of evidence of that

    • @judaprinxbeatz.8008
      @judaprinxbeatz.8008 Před 3 lety +26

      FUN FACT: THE OLMEC ARE PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT.

    • @GregGarciaHouse
      @GregGarciaHouse Před 3 lety +30

      @@judaprinxbeatz.8008 of course, in the same way we all are

    • @silverbubble1037
      @silverbubble1037 Před 3 lety +32

      @@judaprinxbeatz.8008 no they are not, indigenous people in this region who are clearly not of direct African descent have these facial features

  • @johnmcnulty4425
    @johnmcnulty4425 Před 3 lety +418

    Mexico is a fascinating place with stunning landscapes!

    • @harrylovato8958
      @harrylovato8958 Před 3 lety

      M

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 Před 3 lety +6

      And, tacos. Lots and lots and lots and **LOTS** of tacos. Hey, if tacos are what you're after, go no further! You've reached **TACO CENTRAL**...(ROFL)

    • @jitumenefee1323
      @jitumenefee1323 Před 2 lety +3

      Do Mexicans and other Spanish speaking Hispanics truly believe that they have any connection to these ancient Black people? If so they really don’t know their history and that’s sad 😞

    • @Andres-uw2kf
      @Andres-uw2kf Před 2 lety +14

      @@jitumenefee1323 yeah in fact we do. Do you know ur own history? Sad you claim others instead of claiming ur own heritage. Pathetic

    • @Andres-uw2kf
      @Andres-uw2kf Před 2 lety +45

      @@jitumenefee1323 they are not black. They are Amerindian.

  • @rinaldicansino56
    @rinaldicansino56 Před rokem +9

    My grand father was from vera cruz, mexico..when i see his picture, he, looks like a dark skin apache indian..He later moved to honduras were he, met my grandmother who was from belize.. My grandmother was a mulatto half black, AND half white. My father was born in honduras were he, met my mother, who also has indian features and her skin tone is is triguen~a. Im proud to be born in central america, our ancestors were a great people. Great job, thanks for the video, Blessings...

  • @toddp.3872
    @toddp.3872 Před rokem +29

    My father is from Costa Rica. The natives that I've met have VERY similar characteristics to those head monuments. Very interesting.

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Před rokem +2

      So they are polynesian?

    • @toddp.3872
      @toddp.3872 Před rokem +26

      ​@@tedolphbundler724Ah, you're one of those people. Trying to start drama in the comments. 👍🏻 Enjoy.

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Před rokem

      @@toddp.3872 Yep.

    • @SpartanChief2277
      @SpartanChief2277 Před rokem +16

      @@tedolphbundler724 no theyre natives, would u say south east asians are polynesian?

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Před rokem +2

      @@SpartanChief2277 Maybe! I hadn't thought of it, but sure.

  • @andrewfortmusic
    @andrewfortmusic Před rokem +57

    I have no real connection to ancient Meso-America, but being an artist, I deeply appreciate the complexity of their art, and I think it's beautiful that it is their art by which we remember them. Since my first inquiry into the Olmec, I've been very impressed by those infamous basalt heads: their features are so clearly defined, the carving technique so delicate and precise, and their expressions communicate so much longing and internal struggle, it's hard for me to look away. Perhaps it's projection on my part, but I think that might be the way they would want to be remembered.

    • @jj-bp3fr
      @jj-bp3fr Před 4 měsíci +1

      If your impressed and like the Olmec heads, you'll also like the colosal Toltec statues, the "Atlantes de Tula" in the state of Hidalgo. Some think they were space warriors due to the weapon carvings in their hands and also represent Quetzalcoatl. They weigh 8.5 tons and some are more than 4-5 meters in height, carved in basalt.

  • @mexico.gexperience
    @mexico.gexperience Před rokem +55

    I just found your channel, and suscribed right away. I'm a mixed mexican from Oaxaca with mostly zapotec blood. Always fascinated about our culture, some of my earliest memories are walking down Monte Albán's buildings, so every opportunity I had over the years old visiting old archeological sites I would take It. I went to architecture school in Central México and I learned more about this ancient native América civilizations.
    Almost 7 years ago I moved to Cancún and I friend of mine suggested me to start working as a guide in the area, It wasn't a difficult decision to make. I got certified and now I do private and collective tours in places like Chichén Itzá, Cobá, Tulum, Ek Balam, maya communities and more. And everytime It keeps growing the fascination and respect for my people of old. This video is one of the best I have seen about Olmec, thanks for putting a lot of work behind, I do videos myself and I know It really takes lots of sitting hours to come with something as good as this.
    Maybe we can meet if you come to this area, It would be great talking much deeper about the maya that for sure has a HUGE influence from Olmec.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před rokem +4

      Thank you! You've got great content as well! What's your favorite site to give tours at?

    • @mexico.gexperience
      @mexico.gexperience Před rokem +4

      @@AncientAmericas thanks for the complement, I try to put certain amount of effort on most things I do, but sometimes I'm so límited on time. Thanks for watching too. Right now I'm just missing 1.5 videos to finish everything you got from Mesoamerica. It's awesome so far! Thanks
      Now, answering your question, from the ones around here I would say EK BALAM, I would say It has all It needs on a Maya Classical Site even not being so large. It goes from a monumental Architecture, several writing on walls and carvings of monuments and stelas, a ball court, astronomical alignments, several visible periods of construction over the Classical and post Classical, walls, roads, stucco moldings, chultuns, and a Royalty tomb, which is a most see. Plus the fact you can still climb most buildings.
      CHICHÉN ITZÁ if you haven't visit It's also something you have to see. It unique for sure and there's a lot of things to talk about.
      COBÁ is has great interestings features to be honest and it has Jungle feeling. I would definitely also do It if you got Time.

  • @UnlimitedSithLordTCG
    @UnlimitedSithLordTCG Před 9 měsíci +21

    Mexico has such beautiful history

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Beyond beautiful.....intriguing, mysterious and perhaps a bit violent!

    • @automaticwriting4220
      @automaticwriting4220 Před 8 měsíci

      @@tedolphbundler724Fuckin every history is violent

    • @GeneralPadron
      @GeneralPadron Před 7 měsíci +1

      A beautiful history of murder sacrifice of kidnapped villagers and tribes people...

    • @tedolphbundler724
      @tedolphbundler724 Před 7 měsíci

      The North American Indians were worse-genocidal maniacs!

    • @purpleblastoise
      @purpleblastoise Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@tedolphbundler724Nothing compares to the European invaders barbarians

  • @joeanderson8839
    @joeanderson8839 Před rokem +18

    The Olmec were far more advanced than the Aztec or the Inca. I believe that we have bearly begun to scratch the surface when it comes to discovering their artifacts. I believe that they were here much longer than archeologists think. And I believe that their civilization was spread out over a much greater distance than just one corner of Mexico.

    • @mpforeverunlimited
      @mpforeverunlimited Před rokem +1

      Definitely more than inca, but idk about aztec. Aztecs built on top of olmec

    • @blackcaesar4u
      @blackcaesar4u Před rokem

      The Incas and Aztecs were the children of the black Chinese and Olmecs.

    • @11Mikuiztli
      @11Mikuiztli Před 4 měsíci +1

      You think a lot of things.

    • @MJIZZEL
      @MJIZZEL Před 18 dny

      ​@@mpforeverunlimitedAztec were very advanced and even had zoos and archeologists. They did alot of excavation of olmdc sites and incorporated much of the sciences of the Maya.

  • @adreabrooks11
    @adreabrooks11 Před 2 lety +322

    As an artist, I'm always amazed by the realism of Olmec statues! Carving lean, well-muscled figures (like those popularized by the Hellenistic Greek era) is already a difficult process. However, I can tell you from personal struggles that adding subcutaneous tissue (fat, etc.) adds an other (literal) layer of difficulty, and is very difficult to master.
    As with all art, some of the Olmec works are more masterful than others - but compare a Greek Hercules, the Olmec wrestler and a modern-day pro-wrestler or Maori haka performer. It's clear that the Olmec depiction looks much more like a real, fleshy human being that one might meet in life.
    The fact that these figures are rendered in a medium as tricky as basalt makes it even more amazing.
    And bear in mind: the Olmec was one of those progenitor societies, with (as far as we know) no preceding tradition of dedicated artistry. Sure, there were people who *made* art - but there was no long-running history of artistic tradesmanship to draw on, as there were for the vaunted Greco-Roman or Egyptian styles.
    I've always wondered why Olmec art doesn't get more recognition and praise.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 2 lety +30

      Thanks for providing an artist's perspective! It's not one I usually hear.

    • @mrrodriguezHLP
      @mrrodriguezHLP Před 2 lety +30

      More impressive yet, they carved into basalt, a very hard stone, with no metal tools. The techniques can only be imagined, but the incredulous are quick to theorize with alien lasers and ancient CNC machines. They never consider a lifetime dedicated to one single task, just might lead to ingenuity and expertise.

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 Před 2 lety +10

      @@mrrodriguezHLP Agreed! As I mentioned in my original post, basalt is a very challenging medium. My guess is that, rather than chisels, these were made by grinding away the stone - a process which would take forever, but possibly not as long as the constant maintenance that would be needed for chisels. Mind you, that's 100% guesswork on my part as, regrettably, I've never (yet) been close enough to an Olmec carving to study such tiny details.

    • @Brokentwobutton
      @Brokentwobutton Před rokem +10

      @@mrrodriguezHLP People talking about ancient CNC machines amaze me with how they could skip over real abrasive technology like bow drills, planks, cloth, or cordage used with an abrasive powder. They'll say that sandpaper won't work granite hardness material without even knowing that aluminum oxide is what makes most modern sandpaper and that, I presume, any ancient culture that could access granite could access quartz sand.

    • @pasetherichez
      @pasetherichez Před rokem +4

      I don't think there statues just imagine if they were real human heads petrified!!!

  • @calska140
    @calska140 Před 3 lety +208

    I'm probably one of very few people who finds a previously undiscovered , informative video on the olmecs, and fistpumps and shouts "WOOOO!" like they're at a sporting event.

    • @dissident_sojourner
      @dissident_sojourner Před 3 lety +2

      Here here

    • @lenaely6146
      @lenaely6146 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes but I don't know that this video is more than fluff and theory

    • @CEHM82
      @CEHM82 Před 3 lety +1

      Ditto lol

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 3 lety

      You better do, the life of the team is at a stake if they lose. ;p
      Well, we don't know if Olmecs were into human sacrifice, it was just a joking comment.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 2 lety

      are you aware the OLMECS they were in communication with the aliens and furthermore they was feeding the reptilians who are blood drinkers what do you think all of those sacrifices were about please take care of yourself peace and love

  • @skiptrace1888
    @skiptrace1888 Před rokem +12

    Thank you for a most entertaining presentation of what could have been a most dry and boring history lesson. You kept it fresh and interesting throughout! Fasinating info and completely new insights of the past! ❤😂😊

  • @OmnipotentO
    @OmnipotentO Před rokem +15

    Really incredible episode, man. Good job. The Olmecs were absolutely an incredible people, culture, civilization.
    I recommend the anthropology museum in Mexico city. Mind blowing stuff in there. I could spend entire days in there just looking at all the stuff.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před rokem +1

      Thank you!

    • @charlesyoung7436
      @charlesyoung7436 Před 9 měsíci

      Anyone else notice a resemblance between the ceremonial sunken court of Teopateluanitlan (at 22:56) and the much larger ball courts that came after the Olmecs?

  • @lucio.martinez
    @lucio.martinez Před 3 lety +410

    Yes, as a young kid in my native México, I remember these big big stone heads on the roads to Acapulco, Guerrero, on way to visit family with my abuela.
    Cheers for my people!

    • @kiinyuum8001
      @kiinyuum8001 Před 3 lety +16

      The Olmecs ....if you go CA, started, example like picture...the mańs head in the stone-- warrior stuff. Like we see now, US soldiers paint their face, Chinese, Russians...
      The Jaguar then was symbolism of strength and man becoming the Jaguar....Indians in CA look just like those stone faces.
      Don’t let anyone still our history

    • @mountain-roots
      @mountain-roots Před 3 lety

      @@kiinyuum8001 czcams.com/video/SnnMfHTDNOM/video.html

    • @middlepillar9257
      @middlepillar9257 Před 3 lety +26

      Bro if you saw a olmec in modern times you'd say it's a nigga lol let's be honest

    • @mountain-roots
      @mountain-roots Před 3 lety +2

      @@middlepillar9257 niagra falls was a tree. Now a stump

    • @moyzzhernandez5712
      @moyzzhernandez5712 Před 3 lety +2

      HOY EN DIA LAS KEBESAS OLMECAS ESTAN EN LAS CASAS DE NUESTROS POLITICOS DEL PRI, PAN. NUESTROS POLITICOS HAN SAQUEADO AL PAIS DURANTE AÑOS (FOBAPROA) Y SEGUIMOS PAGANDO.

  • @remytheroute6503
    @remytheroute6503 Před 3 lety +632

    Can't break these olmec nose.

  • @davidlee4853
    @davidlee4853 Před rokem +1

    Amazingly succinct considering a vast topic in time. You are easy to understand like having a conversation with a friend. Thanks for your simplicity.

  • @FezFindie
    @FezFindie Před rokem +15

    As I've seen it being pointed out, a main reason why so many of these ancient cultures had pyramids as a "common theme"... is because it's simply the most stable possible shape in general rather than what those conspiracy/ancient astronaut theorists would claim. Probably figured out by all these cultures without influence from others. As well as figured as a guess by anyone with slightest hint of physics or recalling playing with building blocks.

    • @gmemory9419
      @gmemory9419 Před rokem

      It's because of the fact that at one time there was on the planet a one world culture. If you believe that we are the first people to have civilization on the planet, then there is no use at all! However, there is mathematical evidence. czcams.com/video/Xw9lTB0hTNU/video.html (THIS IS NOT MY VIDEO) Get out your calculator!

    • @InvaderGIR98
      @InvaderGIR98 Před rokem +5

      Yeah honestly if there's anything that ancient civilizations, hell, even modern civilizations have taught us is that humans like to build gigantic things for art and spectacle.

    • @gradualuprisintheory
      @gradualuprisintheory Před 9 měsíci

      Knowledge passed down.

  • @no_biggie_smalls
    @no_biggie_smalls Před 3 lety +90

    I've lived in Tres Zapotes for two years when I was 10. It's still one of my favorite places in the world

    • @lucio.martinez
      @lucio.martinez Před 3 lety +1

      What state is that in?

    • @no_biggie_smalls
      @no_biggie_smalls Před 3 lety +1

      @@lucio.martinez Veracruz Mx

    • @lucio.martinez
      @lucio.martinez Před 3 lety +1

      @@no_biggie_smalls Órale, jarocholandia.
      Donde todo en Veracruz, es bello!
      Saludos Guerrerenses!

    • @no_biggie_smalls
      @no_biggie_smalls Před 3 lety +2

      @@lucio.martinez saludos bro, yo soy de Hidalgo pero Jarocholandia es bello al igual que todo Mexico 🙌🏼🙌🏼

    • @petecarroll3949
      @petecarroll3949 Před 3 lety +1

      Me No TV what-so-ever

  • @melissafreeman7416
    @melissafreeman7416 Před 2 lety +126

    I love learning about all of my Native American “brothers and sisters” here in the America’s. Thank you for this video.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 2 lety +7

      Your welcome!

    • @LuisRios-bf9vn
      @LuisRios-bf9vn Před 2 lety +12

      Are you black because according to black people Olmecs we're black and so we're the native American

    • @melissafreeman7416
      @melissafreeman7416 Před 2 lety +59

      @@LuisRios-bf9vn no, I’m an actual and true Native American who is indigenous to the America’s. I’m not just a person who is black or other with just a wishful theory who thinks they are truly indigenous to the America’s but aren’t.
      But thank you anyhow for asking. Goodbye.

    • @LuisRios-bf9vn
      @LuisRios-bf9vn Před 2 lety +6

      @@melissafreeman7416 I'm sure you heard of black people saying that they are the true native Americans and also claim that the Aztecs and Maya's were also black

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 2 lety +2

      it is time for you to look up to find out where did your brothers and sisters come from due to the fact this is not the mother planet go to your computer Library Museum and look up the face found on Mars now you're being educated

  • @hh4826
    @hh4826 Před 8 měsíci +4

    The quote near the end from Michael Coe really hammers it home. Impactful

  • @seiko9361
    @seiko9361 Před rokem +10

    One of the main reasons that the Olmec culture grew late compared to other civilizations due to various problems. Unlike other civilization areas, Native americans were new arrivals in mexico and it took them many time to settle well in a very unpredictable enviornment. Pre dynastic egypt, for example, was better and more fertile than modern, however mesoamerican lands, even though being better than other areas, is was still a challenging place to due unpredictable fierce rains, volcanoes, flooding and storms etc. Further domestication also must have played an important role in late development since all other cradle of civilizations (except Peru) domesticated burden carrying, and milk and wool providing animals like bovids, goats, sheeps and horses etc, something they lacked; it must have been a problem in early settlement as limited trade (trade plays an important role in development since an area cannot fullfil all needs). External influence is another problem. Even though major civilizations are independently born, still they were influence as one of the best example is that the Egyptian and Indian written language wasn't indeginous to them, that was rather imported!
    So i think these factors played a great role for the late developement in Olmec civilizations compared to others:
    1. More unpredictable and nasty enviornment than those of other civilizations.
    2. Late arrival in lands.
    3. No good animals to be domesticated.
    4. No external influence.
    If these conditions improved, i believe that they would also rival others in chronology. Anyways, its a more facsinating fact that they and peru, unlike others, grew and developed wholly independently.

    • @charlessmith4009
      @charlessmith4009 Před rokem +3

      Wonderful..spoken like a true European Historian..grew independent only influence was with trade..so on and so on..that the people in south America are aboriginal to the lands you speak.

    • @seiko9361
      @seiko9361 Před rokem +1

      @@charlessmith4009 Thanks.

  • @yayagazab4449
    @yayagazab4449 Před 3 lety +179

    A Cancun Chechen-Itza tour guide told our group that the chewing gum company Chiclets derived its name from a Mayan, possibly Olmec, word “chi-cle” which is the sound made when they would chew the rubber harvested from the trees. An American businessman that visited Chichen Itza in the 1920’s asked the locals what they had in their mouth & he got the idea of Chiclets from his visit. This is what I remember hearing.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +48

      That's correct! The gum came from the chicle sap. Eventually the chewing gum companies figured out how to make artificial gum. There's a whole history behind the boom and bust of the Chicle business.

    • @linnymaemullins3319
      @linnymaemullins3319 Před 2 lety +2

      Cool👍😊

    • @JuanGonzalez-cg8fk
      @JuanGonzalez-cg8fk Před 2 lety +2

      as I remember chicle comes from the tree call Xitle and the guys name who commercialized it was Mr Chiclets as with this fact I have no science to back it up. It is what I heard from my father..

    • @joedoe5738
      @joedoe5738 Před 2 lety +3

      Just like Pepsi,the sound when you open the bottle or can!!! Pep-sssii

    • @Halcon_Sierreno
      @Halcon_Sierreno Před 2 lety +13

      The whole world owes a lot to the ancient people's of Mexico.

  • @JuanLopez-qo7yq
    @JuanLopez-qo7yq Před 3 lety +43

    So from what I can see the Olmecs where like the Sumerians of America. Once they didn’t have to worry about food thanks to farming they applied their minds to writing, art etc. And the civilizations that came after them build upon their work.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +5

      A very good comparison.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 2 lety

      they never came after they bridge in and destroyed for it is their nature this is why we were told not to Mingle socialize or mixed our blood with other races

    • @nycg801
      @nycg801 Před 2 lety +7

      Mexicans of today of been heavily mixed with European Spaniards. The Mexicans living today are a watered down version of ancient Mexicans like the Olmec,Maya,or Aztecs.

    • @teresafernandez9849
      @teresafernandez9849 Před 2 lety

      @@nycg801 there are millions of full Native ppl in the Americas. The USA is very misinformed about Native ppl. They are obsessed with the word extinct!! There are full Native Maya ppl all over Mexico and South America!! It's a scientific fact, other than registered full Native ppl, Mexican Americans and México carry more Native DNA than any other group! South America ain't no slouch either! Mexican on both sides of the border marry and have kids, that Native DNA keeps getting stronger and the other weaker. We have started stressing our kids not to mix!! Not to hate, but the importance of keeping it Native!! We r going to stress, not to hate Afros,but to tell them about their culture vultures delusions!! If u bring a fox into the hen house, the hens will disappear!! Let one culture vulture in, they will want the whole tribe!!

    • @AmericanKash
      @AmericanKash Před 2 lety

      @@teresafernandez9849 I thought you guys were hit with the small pox they devastated you guys plus the onslaught by the Spaniards adding the admixture and subjugation of your culture and civilization how are there full bloods still out there ? And why haven’t they revived their culture and civilization??

  • @joseangelesmaderovilla4554

    Fun fact, our current president Lic. Andres Manuel López Obrador aka AMLO is native from the state of Tabasco cradle of the Olmecs. He is the only president in our history that came from Tabasco. And he is very popular and beloved among mexicans especially in the southern states such as Chiapas, Oaxaca, Tabasco and Campeche... Vivan los Olmecas!🇲🇽 Y tu canal también por su maravilloso contenido! 👏🏽

  • @anandkkpr
    @anandkkpr Před rokem +2

    Very educational and very, very appreciated. Thank you for your efforts!

  • @gameros2012
    @gameros2012 Před 2 lety +262

    I like the way you speak about them, it feels like you've very careful not to fall into the eurocentric perception of the Americas, props to you, squad, nice vid.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 2 lety +13

      Thank you!

    • @kgraham023
      @kgraham023 Před 2 lety +18

      Until he started dismissing Van Sertima's theories. Even went so far as to call him uneducated. My bad, he called the scholars who disagreed with him far more intelligent. That's when his eurocentric bias slipped in.
      Not to mention how many European nations ran through the African continent distroying any traces of evidence that could show cocoa use on the continent.

    • @kgraham023
      @kgraham023 Před 2 lety +1

      Among other things.

    • @gameros2012
      @gameros2012 Před 2 lety +33

      @@kgraham023 Wasn't Van just absolutely delusional and got debunked by several African and american anthropologists? His stuff just sounds like Across the atlantic ice levels of batshit theory tbh.

    • @nelsonpleasant2112
      @nelsonpleasant2112 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kgraham023 yes I concur, that attitude is detrimental to the nation, attachments is always paths to darkness.

  • @rebecastevens8892
    @rebecastevens8892 Před 3 lety +285

    All of those ancient sculptures are breathtaking. Visiting the pyramids in Palenque is like being transported back to those ancient times. The jungle sounds, the mist, it’s a spiritual experience. I’m so proud of my Mexican heritage🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽

    • @fiaestebanlara6092
      @fiaestebanlara6092 Před 3 lety +6

      Straight up

    • @LaReinaPrieta
      @LaReinaPrieta Před 3 lety +6

      Your shit is Bs! You have nothing to add! Quik lying!

    • @charlesmarshall8965
      @charlesmarshall8965 Před 2 lety +10

      I've been to Palenque many times. Mushroom tripping & enjoying the cascades below the ruinus. I very much miss it.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 2 lety +19

      excuse me Madam unfortunately you are not Mexican please do some research do not believe me or anyone else do some research and you will find out the original Mexicans were black people before your kind came out of the woods the Jungle the forest the caves and begin to mix in with the original people as usual with all nationality whiten out the original people and this is the reason all over the planet they was treated very badly because your ancestors knew who we were the fruit of bright intelligent civilized human beings on the planet Earth nonetheless you have a right to exist and you have a right to do research dig deep to find out who you are

    • @nyclassic4ever130
      @nyclassic4ever130 Před 2 lety +40

      @@davidtyson6869 Bro stop reading the pseudo ghetto literature. I DO believe the olmecs were possibly black...i do know other waves of migration of blacks came after....but not to say all original mexicans were black. Come on now...

  • @jackjones9460
    @jackjones9460 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Thanks for your video! I’m fascinated by older and ancient cultures. I want to see how they’re connected to one another as well as to later civilizations.

  • @georgeachimbi4692
    @georgeachimbi4692 Před rokem +3

    Bravo!! Really well researched and presented. Only thing that continues to bother me is why I can’t find well researched videos like this calling out those that continue to claim that the ancient Egyptian civilization is not African.

  • @rce6411
    @rce6411 Před rokem +110

    May the legacy of this great ancient civilization never be forgotten. Viva Mexico

    • @perceptionmanagement2116
      @perceptionmanagement2116 Před rokem

      Mex is a shit hole. It should be colonized be White people.

    • @rce6411
      @rce6411 Před rokem

      @@perceptionmanagement2116 lol Shut the hell up

    • @lalacanamar
      @lalacanamar Před rokem +4

      It won't dissappear.... I found put thru Ancestry,that I am a descendant

    • @Frommerman
      @Frommerman Před rokem +3

      @@lalacanamar Basically everyone with any ancestors vaguely in that region is.

    • @shaolin1derpalm
      @shaolin1derpalm Před rokem +2

      If you don't mind me asking, how do you feel about the popular fringe assertion that olmec were actually black?

  • @matthew_thefallen
    @matthew_thefallen Před 2 lety +47

    I remember when I went for my first lesson at university about mesoamerican cultures that I was in awe discovering the symbologies they used and handed down generations after generations influencing the cultures that came after! The underworld concept is so fascinating!

  • @jensennevells21
    @jensennevells21 Před rokem +2

    this video was super helpful plz keep up the good work!😄😄

  • @Llerme
    @Llerme Před rokem +1

    Congrats on your first million views! Great video

  • @elcochipit
    @elcochipit Před rokem +20

    A friend of mine is exactly like the statue at 27:27, he´s originaly from Tabasco state, all mesoamerican fenotype, not african. That mouth shape is very comon in south México and Guatemala. Olmecs are fascinating. NIce video.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před rokem +4

      Thank you!

    • @katielieson
      @katielieson Před 4 měsíci +4

      How would you know if their ancestors didnt come from Africa?

    • @tesmith47
      @tesmith47 Před 3 měsíci

      good try, but these features are so obviously AFRICAN, I HAVE NEVER SEEN MESOAMERICAN FOLKS LOOKING LIKE THIS!!

    • @vamoneygroup
      @vamoneygroup Před 2 měsíci

      Literally Honduras and Guatemala are known for their African ancestry. Mexicans today still joke about it. Im neutral in this conversation but you just made what seems to be the most ignorant comment.

  • @nicolewildman8976
    @nicolewildman8976 Před 3 lety +120

    This video made me realise how much I missed learning about mesoamerican history and culture. I was able to see an Olmec carving of the colossal head in the Mexico city museum of Anthropology. It was an overwheming feeling standing next to a sculpture that was so ancient, it was carved with so much precision, you can just tell they paid attention to detail. They were very talented. Thank you so much for sharing this video....ps...I am deeply grateful to them for giving the world corn and chocolate.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +3

      I agree!

    • @makisjnx007
      @makisjnx007 Před 2 lety +9

      And vanilla

    • @ChillWill2050
      @ChillWill2050 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, it’s been pretty much proven that those heads are Amero- Egyptian.
      czcams.com/video/KMAtkjy_YK4/video.html

    • @victorrenderos4635
      @victorrenderos4635 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes. Nicole....but dont forget. that. All these. Olmec Heads.. pyramids...stellas..etc...were found. Buried..and. took..years..to. clean...organize..and study..all about..these.advance culture.....Olmec. Mayas. Toltecs and else....describe a global flood..and. no trace.of any carving tool was ever found....to explain how. These heads were made.....THERE'S a lot to talk about. It but. Wish you luck. piecing together..this amazing Culture

    • @gladeloy3341
      @gladeloy3341 Před rokem +1

      & potatoes

  • @saulledesmap-n-sanemas
    @saulledesmap-n-sanemas Před rokem +2

    This is dope!! I’ve been passing this video up for a year or two..
    I’ve had it saved in my Watch Later..
    Glad I started it.. 9:15

  • @HienBuiMobile
    @HienBuiMobile Před 8 měsíci +1

    Very insightful information, I watched it to the end. I read some other stuff and you don't seem bias like the others. You had a lot of facts that kept me interested. Thanks you

  • @capmidnite
    @capmidnite Před 3 lety +311

    What's fascinating about meso-American civilizations is that while Old World civilizations could borrow and learn from each other, the meso-Americans started from scratch.

    • @capmidnite
      @capmidnite Před 3 lety +36

      @cewilliams26 And you have proof of this? Citations from reputable authorities? Do you also think the Pyramids were built by aliens from outer space?

    • @capmidnite
      @capmidnite Před 3 lety +10

      @cewilliams26 I hear the earth is flat.

    • @Likexner
      @Likexner Před 3 lety +5

      @@capmidnite "reputable authorities"

    • @juanme555
      @juanme555 Před 3 lety +10

      @@capmidnite
      Phoenicians setting up Carthage around 1000 B.C.E is common knowledge wtf .-.

    • @mauiwauidank
      @mauiwauidank Před 3 lety +2

      @@capmidnite Wrong

  • @f_youtubecensorshipf_nazis
    @f_youtubecensorshipf_nazis Před 3 lety +89

    the americas have such a rich culture and so many people reject it to pretend we're europeans

    • @cattycorner8
      @cattycorner8 Před 3 lety +2

      I think many/most west coast Americas indigenous are originally Asian (Polynesian, Thai, Malay, Filipino, etc.) from way, way back -

    • @jennifs6868
      @jennifs6868 Před 3 lety +4

      @@cattycorner8 of course, like how the oldest people of south america look exactly like australians, and have been pushed to the end of patagonia, and are only very few remaining.

    • @YusufGinnah
      @YusufGinnah Před 3 lety +6

      The depth of the culture and history in this region is so often overlooked, yet this maybe the most diverse and unique but the least pursued, generally speaking.
      People think romantically of Egypt and India but there's so much here.
      With Quetzalcoatl and his legends to Sascayhuayman and Machu Pichu.
      I hope to visit these sites some day and experience this firsthand.
      😎👍🏼

    • @cattycorner8
      @cattycorner8 Před 3 lety +2

      @@YusufGinnah You will be richly rewarded!

    • @butchmitch731
      @butchmitch731 Před 3 lety

      ♥️😎⚘

  • @Fogaata
    @Fogaata Před rokem

    Very much appreciated this video!

  • @amarisankofa2003
    @amarisankofa2003 Před rokem +3

    To sail from Africa to the Americas it is exactly 1,866 miles. Using the ocean current it would take you a few weeks. Later in history, the Spanish and Portuguese travel that same current to get to the Americas. The Cape Verde islands, were an excellent docking station. It cuts the travel from the 1866 down to 1,558 miles.
    I was taught that you must study everything in order to have your own opinion .

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před rokem +2

      Yeah, it's definitely possible for someone from Africa to make that trip. I wouldn't dispute that. The question is whether or not it happened regularly and if so, what impact did it have and we currently don't have a good answer to that question.

    • @jajajaja2624
      @jajajaja2624 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@Nin10dofan8But it DONT mean it did happen

    • @jajajaja2624
      @jajajaja2624 Před 6 měsíci

      The Portuguese and Spanish sailed northern latitudes and longitudinal currents not southern ocean .

    • @jajajaja2624
      @jajajaja2624 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@AncientAmericasThe Spanish openly said there was African's in South America when arrived it's in the log books .

    • @vamoneygroup
      @vamoneygroup Před 2 měsíci

      ​​@@AncientAmericasWho is this "we"? I would say you and the community around the "discovery" of megalithic structures dont have any answers to anything. So any speculation by anyone would just as credible as speculation by yourself or any "official" person.

  • @Operador2281
    @Operador2281 Před 3 lety +189

    Man i'm glad you don't Support the pseudo-scientific stan that olmecs were african, as a native mexican that idea is one of the most ridiculous i've ever heard

    • @swanm3ta850
      @swanm3ta850 Před 3 lety +1

      You are a mongoloid mixed breed, not indigenous. And guess what? If you were born in the Americas, you are a Native American. Anybody can be a Native American.

    • @Operador2281
      @Operador2281 Před 3 lety +3

      @@swanm3ta850 mongoloid? Don't cut yourself with your copy of mein kampf idiot xD, and no one can be native american but the natives, if you are white living in the continen then you are euro-american or if you are black then you are afro-american, the true americans of this continent are the native peoples.

    • @swanm3ta850
      @swanm3ta850 Před 3 lety

      @@Operador2281 and your an idiot that doesn’t even know what Mein Kampf was about. Hitler admired how the U.S. displaced the indigenous people and used it as a blueprint to use on the “small hats.” It had nothing to do with what your talking about. Do your research before making yourself look like a fool. It is a known fact that there was a land bridge that connected Siberia to the Americas and that’s how your ancestors got here. Cope...

    • @swanm3ta850
      @swanm3ta850 Před 3 lety +10

      @@moosa9850 I have and all of his info is some pro-white fake info BS.

    • @moosa9850
      @moosa9850 Před 3 lety +7

      @@swanm3ta850 There's always 2 sides to a story, his followers can say the same about the out of Africa theory, as being fake which he repeats many times. People like him give us another point of view on things. The more we research the more truth we discover

  • @larsedik
    @larsedik Před rokem +35

    I've noticed a lot of people from eastern and NE Oaxaca who have features that look exactly like the Olmec heads. I did not notice it so much in Vera Cruz, however, but I've spent much more time in Oaxaca than I have in Vera Cruz. I prefer the food in Vera Cruz and Yucatan to Oaxaca, but I like Oaxacan (Zapotec) art the best.

    • @armanddumont3959
      @armanddumont3959 Před rokem +1

      Lars M- So, do you call those people in Oaxaca "Neegaz" too?

    • @roblogs7168
      @roblogs7168 Před rokem +24

      @@armanddumont3959 you seem salty

    • @mr.motivation3797
      @mr.motivation3797 Před rokem +16

      ​@@armanddumont3959 probably not considering they're not black.

    • @lewisc6539
      @lewisc6539 Před rokem

      This is is true, many Oaxaquitas have such features. But usually, they’re very low IQ and rarely can speak Spanish.

    • @Imoldman
      @Imoldman Před rokem +1

      You are entitled to your likes and dislikes, but man o man! Nothing like Mole from Oaxaca.🥰

  • @TheAnonymousDoctor-cw6bg

    Thank you for this video! It's beautiful!! You are saving millions of people!

  • @Elsanta666
    @Elsanta666 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Im a direct decedent of olmecs, from veracruz

  • @Jesse.UR77
    @Jesse.UR77 Před 2 lety +9

    AA. I just wanted to thank you for taking the time to view and heart everyone's comments and even respond to a lot of them. So awesome of you!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 2 lety +1

      You're welcome! I'm a servant to forgotten history and I'm just doing my part.

  • @jamesearlcash7725
    @jamesearlcash7725 Před 2 lety +52

    Same with the Aztec, that’s not what they called themselves. They were actually called the Mexica, pronounced “Mesheka”.

  • @johannesswillery7855
    @johannesswillery7855 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Come on man, that could be Jim Brown!

  • @richyhu2042
    @richyhu2042 Před měsícem +3

    Im floored by the wild conspiracies around the Olmecs being Africans and that anything MesoAm is just African. It has the same exact energy as European explorers finding Angkor Wat and saying that there is no way the natives were advanced enough and it was actually Alexander the Great who built it because he conquered eastwards.
    History is such a rich panoply of cultures and development. I LOVE reading about how people interacted instead of the "everyone was isolated and had no contact with anyone they couldn't directly see". But insinuating that anything good or cool made by the Olmecs and by extension MesoAm was solely due to magical transatlantic Africans is insane. Extraordinary claims demand Extraordinary evidence

  • @SyriusStarMultimedia
    @SyriusStarMultimedia Před 3 lety +24

    I like how you asked questions for me that I didn’t know I wanted to ask or have answers to! Great video!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +3

      Thank you!

    • @lorriebrown1243
      @lorriebrown1243 Před rokem

      His assertions or am answers were biased. Watch this video that speaks of the Olmecs from an objective perspective based upon thorough research:
      czcams.com/video/K-FG2oWl-2k/video.html

  • @brianmccarthy5557
    @brianmccarthy5557 Před 2 lety +93

    I used to work with a guy from El Salvador. He looked exactly like those Olmec statue heads. A lot of people noticed this. On a vacation to Mexico who got a tourist souvenir small statue head he kept on his desk. Some naive people thought the thing was sculpted just for him.

    • @perceptionmanagement2116
      @perceptionmanagement2116 Před rokem +2

      Great story Brian. Any other lies you'd like to tell?

    • @fernandoarista3302
      @fernandoarista3302 Před rokem +28

      You work construction long enough in the US, you're gonna see a bunch of dudes that look like this.

    • @leonlittle7660
      @leonlittle7660 Před rokem

      So he must of been Black then?

    • @chrisgarcia5462
      @chrisgarcia5462 Před rokem +27

      Plenty of people who look just like the stone head in Mexico. The Toltec people blood line also still exists. They have unusual large heads and can eat Habanero peppers like a kid eating skittles.

    • @patricknorton5788
      @patricknorton5788 Před rokem

      Awesome video. Thanks so much.

  • @fernicusmaximus9282
    @fernicusmaximus9282 Před rokem

    Thank you for this, very informative.

  • @Juanpag93
    @Juanpag93 Před měsícem

    Traveling to La Venta Museum in Tabasco in two weeks. Glad I came across this channel beforehand!

  • @lumptydumpty6992
    @lumptydumpty6992 Před 2 lety +19

    What gets me on that pyramid thing is how, after having the thought about them being influenced by the Egyptian Pyramids, how could you not think 'Wait thats just a really stable and relatively easy base structure for early peoples to build large monuments?'
    (also where tf does the question mark go there? That hypothetical thought isn't a question, the whole statement about how one wouldn't reason that is.)
    The sad part is i'm college educated.

  • @jjgdenisrobert
    @jjgdenisrobert Před 2 lety +14

    The fact that new and old world agricultural products remained separate until the arrival of Europeans argues convincingly against any sort of pre-Colombian extended contact.

    • @p4h10oso
      @p4h10oso Před 2 lety +1

      Lookup "cocaine mummies".

    • @gyozakeynsianism
      @gyozakeynsianism Před 2 lety +1

      True. The same with germs like smallpox.

    • @jjgdenisrobert
      @jjgdenisrobert Před 2 lety +3

      @@p4h10oso lookup “contamination”

    • @PLATINUMARCH
      @PLATINUMARCH Před 2 lety

      Lies. Trade was going on when Europe was stuck in the dark ages relearning longitude and latitude.

    • @gyozakeynsianism
      @gyozakeynsianism Před 2 lety +4

      @@PLATINUMARCH Not lies. History.

  • @philipthornhill2337
    @philipthornhill2337 Před rokem +1

    Good. Good delivery. And informative.

  • @petenutt
    @petenutt Před rokem +1

    This is excellent work.

  • @billfry6566
    @billfry6566 Před 3 lety +40

    This guy does his homework. One of the best, and comprehensive presentation of the Olmec. Thanks!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +2

      You're welcome!

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 2 lety

      this guy is a liar and you are a liar supporter that you can build up false hope and keep all the benefits as a result of your ancestors wickedness and Theory of Everything . it will not change anything my people are awake now and they know what you and your kind have done I can only hope they would not be a revolution a civil war however it seems you people are not going to stop you people won't get back anything you stole and you people rather die and see your offspring lauded and booted into streets before you would share something that is rightfully mine and my kind thank you

  • @joeyc9418
    @joeyc9418 Před 2 lety +10

    Pyramid conspiracies really piss me off, the whole design philosophy is so simple yet genius. The taller a structure the more unstable it is, think about this for more than 5 minutes and anyone should be able to find out the same solution. Taller structures need a wider base... look at a damn mountain if you're still lost... why is a space fairing species so necessary for something so obvious

    • @kevinnewton6399
      @kevinnewton6399 Před 2 lety

      I think the pyramid is a praise to volcanoes the creator of all life

    • @farqitol
      @farqitol Před rokem

      But what about the inter dimensional lizard people that consume the blood of virgins in American high schools.....
      Ok, they starved out.

  • @plumbummanx
    @plumbummanx Před rokem +2

    Excellent discussion, I am interested in MesoAmerican history. I'm familiar with the name Toltecs and their sculpted heads but nothing else. Thank you for that information.

  • @xxxencryptacion
    @xxxencryptacion Před 7 měsíci +2

    Another great video - much appreciate the Olmec pre- amble to the other Mesoamerican cultures ❤

  • @tonywestbrook9876
    @tonywestbrook9876 Před 3 lety +71

    Great video. I live here in Mex. Thank you for the info. Everytime i pass through that part of Mexico. I always want to slow down and discover more. There are regions that look untouched with jungle that looks impassable from a distance. The locals know everything, of course. Timeless

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +7

      Wish I could see it myself!

    • @theodoresmith5272
      @theodoresmith5272 Před 3 lety +7

      People fail To realize just how diverse and untouched many parts of Mexico are.
      When I stayed in palenque, its in the jungle. 1 minute outside of town and it was pretty natural. It made the ruins there some of my favorite in the world. Lizards, monkey, butterflies, and all kinds of birds. We had monkeys at my jungle camp i stayed in. Very nice people and very safe. Lots of native Americans live there and around there if you want to visit a town. Waterfalls are pretty as all get out. I will say when it rains, it rains.
      Really I love the parts of Mexico ove been. The silver country and highlands are cool. San cristabol was awesome.
      Mexico city was super way more then I thought so I rebooked my flight to get 4 more day on that trip.

    • @sierra5713
      @sierra5713 Před 3 lety

      How do you know English if you live in Mexico?

    • @theodoresmith5272
      @theodoresmith5272 Před 3 lety +5

      @@sierra5713 people often speak and can write multiple languages. Ive met europeans that can speak 7 languages. Most can speak like 3.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 2 lety

      it will be very interesting if you do some research on the Olmecs and their sacrifices and taking the bodies into the cave are you aware of the reptilian do you believe in aliens it is more than what meets the eye

  • @eezyclsmooth9035
    @eezyclsmooth9035 Před 2 lety +9

    Olmecs, Mayans , Aztecs , Incas , Toltecs , Nazca Lines ,Machu Picchu , Pyramids .
    Fascinations and Mysteries galore !

  • @user-tc4oy6su8x
    @user-tc4oy6su8x Před 9 měsíci +1

    As a sculptor olmec is a go to forsure..thank you Very much!

  • @leminjapan
    @leminjapan Před rokem +1

    I only clicked on this because I recognized the statue from Animal Crossing, now I've learnt some fascinating stuff. Thank you!

  • @sherrywallis7718
    @sherrywallis7718 Před 2 lety +60

    The city of Houston was loaned an Olmec head. I remember being amazed at it as it stood in front of the Museum of Fine Art. Sometimes, flowers and offerings were left there. Eventually, it was returned. I miss seeing it still.

    • @ddgddg7918
      @ddgddg7918 Před rokem

      Wow. When was that? I would have liked to see it.

    • @sherrywallis7718
      @sherrywallis7718 Před rokem +1

      @@ddgddg7918 I think it was in the late 1950s or early 60s. They've been gone for a long time.

    • @tesmith47
      @tesmith47 Před rokem +3

      I saw that head ! I was shocked that it looked pretty strongly African to me!

    • @mr.motivation3797
      @mr.motivation3797 Před rokem +10

      ​@@tesmith47 they would if you dont know many Natives or Mexicans. Black people are not the only ones with large noses and lips and not all black people have larger noses and lips. I know plenty of people in Texas that resemble those statues and they are not African at all. I actually doubt they are African. 2 reasons. Informed, educated Africans were near Egypt. The rest were and in many cases still are exactly as they were then. Simple minded people that build and do very little in the way of innovative or technologically advanced construction. So it's doubtful they are African. Have a good day. 🙌🏼

    • @tesmith47
      @tesmith47 Před rokem

      @@mr.motivation3797 you do know the early progenitors of western civilization, Greeks, sent their children to African university's for advanced studies, , greater Zimbabwe is still there, and the library was old ,before there was any European civilization. Get better educated

  • @Bshipbuilder
    @Bshipbuilder Před 3 lety +11

    Great content! Have always been most curious about the Olmec.

  • @brixcosmo6849
    @brixcosmo6849 Před rokem

    Great InfoVideo! Best Regards from Portugal! ❤🇵🇹

  • @phlebgrl6064
    @phlebgrl6064 Před 4 dny

    This was a great video on the history of the giant Olmec stone heads! I enjoyed this from Orange County, NY and am a new subscriber. Thanks for sharing this well done video!

  • @wiley7563
    @wiley7563 Před 2 lety +7

    Excellently researched, written and produced documentary. Be proud of your work! Signed: Subscribed.

  • @DaLostProfit420
    @DaLostProfit420 Před 3 lety +4

    Want to say... you make very informative videos and I enjoy them a lot very well put together and presented thank you for your hard work and time as many will appreciate them in due time

  • @adriancano3991
    @adriancano3991 Před rokem +11

    I worked with a Mexican about 15 years ago. When I looked at him I knew he was a descendent of the Olmecs. Fat lips and I mean huge lips, fat nose, and Indian Hair. His ancestors come from South Mexico he explained. I believe him

    • @user-ux4ki7xt9i
      @user-ux4ki7xt9i Před 3 měsíci

      And their genes came from Africa

    • @vamoneygroup
      @vamoneygroup Před 2 měsíci

      A lot of people in South Mexico are from other places like Honduras or Cuba.

  • @CandiceMMartinez
    @CandiceMMartinez Před 7 měsíci

    Such a great video! I love learning the history of my people ❤

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 7 měsíci

      Thank you!

    • @gastonneal724
      @gastonneal724 Před 2 měsíci

      Your people?, if your picture is you, you are more European than anything. Just an honest observation. I’m African, what this proves is that Americans and Africans have been kicking it for a very long time. And your last name, I have European names too, but if you saw me. I look like those statues. Or the statues looks like me, I would wager, my DNA is older than that head.

  • @Galbanolli
    @Galbanolli Před 3 lety +187

    Thank you for defending mesoamerican history. All those speculations of asian, european or african influence are beyond ridiculous

    • @jamintruth5719
      @jamintruth5719 Před 3 lety +22

      Mansa Musa said he had an ancestor that visited the Americas and wrote about it constantly so it's a possibility.

    • @facade538
      @facade538 Před 3 lety +38

      Actually, I'm Amerindian I don't doubt the science that says ancient paleoamericans ancestors came from Asia, DNA proves this. We're our own people separated for thousands of years. Mesoamerican history belongs to Mesoamerica. Major academics don't believe that Europeans and Africans were here. And Amerindian cultures don't belong to Asia. Even ancient Asians were different from modern Asians: The Ainu are the indigenous people Japan and Eastern Siberia, but their land was taken by modern Japanese and Russians. Now the Ainu on the verge of disappearing.

    • @wejuggernautentertainmentl3156
      @wejuggernautentertainmentl3156 Před 2 lety +10

      How Abu Bhakar visited The Americas in the 1200s and Mansa sent 2000 ships to the America! Please do more research!

    • @wejuggernautentertainmentl3156
      @wejuggernautentertainmentl3156 Před 2 lety +14

      @@jamintruth5719 no it’s not a possibility it happened but the Westernized world won’t admit to true African history!

    • @facade538
      @facade538 Před 2 lety +34

      @@wejuggernautentertainmentl3156 A story is not enough to be considered definitive evidence, physical evidence must be found to verify the story.

  • @JJGuccione
    @JJGuccione Před 2 lety +5

    Your personal observation on chocolate was spot-on!

  • @renelopez8227
    @renelopez8227 Před rokem +2

    I think I might have an actual Olmec relic in my home. My house was originally owned by a mining engineer who worked at mines across Mexico in the 1920's. Tucked away in an old wooden drawer in my closet, wrapped in mid century newspaper; was 6 red beans (or seeds) and a small stone Olmec face that seems like it was chipped off a wall

  • @1fredricka
    @1fredricka Před 11 měsíci +3

    fun learning!! love the chocolate stories!!

  • @r0b546
    @r0b546 Před 2 lety +183

    I give you credit for giving the Native people of Mexico and Central America the respect they deserve with out staining it Eurocentrism and Afrocentrism.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 2 lety +11

      Thank you!

    • @dchief2924
      @dchief2924 Před 2 lety +33

      Exactly I’m Apache and I agree with you strongly. Olmecs are indigenous Americans

    • @JC-4A53
      @JC-4A53 Před rokem +2

      Right on!

    • @boyo3sxope36
      @boyo3sxope36 Před rokem +28

      These are melinated human black people who is found in all corner of the world,know this

    • @valintinadiaz6347
      @valintinadiaz6347 Před rokem +21

      @@boyo3sxope36 they aren’t black

  • @fireworksfactoryshow
    @fireworksfactoryshow Před 3 lety +5

    Great video! For all of you D&D 5E DM nerds out there I am running The Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan adventure and I would highly recommend using this video as a resource. Without spoiling anything many topics discussed here make an appearance in the game.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you!

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 3 lety

      who are you what are you where are you from and why are you here on this Earth Hunter and gatherer

  • @hermit7903
    @hermit7903 Před rokem

    This was a great recap!

  • @WhereRaul
    @WhereRaul Před rokem

    Thanks for the video

  • @caoyuann
    @caoyuann Před 2 lety +5

    I love your channel! I'm obsessed with Mesoamerica and your videos are so interesting!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 2 lety

      Thank you!

    • @caoyuann
      @caoyuann Před 2 lety

      @@AncientAmericas No problem! I can't wait to see where this channel goes!

  • @StefanMilo
    @StefanMilo Před 3 lety +6

    This was a great video!

  • @DaimonAnimations
    @DaimonAnimations Před rokem +22

    What is the most impressive thing is, Meso American cultures did not depend on the Sumerians or Egyptians, they developed on their own (most likely) since they were separated by the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean.
    However it is intriguing that the art style and architecture is very similar to the Egyptians and/or Indonesians.

    • @teddyjackson1902
      @teddyjackson1902 Před rokem +1

      Most impressive thing is they never invented the wheel.

    • @enrique6001
      @enrique6001 Před rokem +21

      @@teddyjackson1902 They knew about the wheel but there was not a real use for it, they geographic place was not wheel friendly and didn't have work animals. The only use they had for the wheel was in toys

    • @teddyjackson1902
      @teddyjackson1902 Před rokem +1

      @@enrique6001 nah, they didn’t invent the wheel and to the contrary of your bizarre assertion they had very nice roads.

    • @herbertthepervert9129
      @herbertthepervert9129 Před rokem

      @@teddyjackson1902 The Ancient Egyptians didn't have a wheel until the middle kingdom around 1,500 BC when it was introduced by invading peoples from the middle east. The great Pyramids of Egypt were built during the old kingdom around 2,700 BC before the wheel was introduced in Egypt. The ancient Celts, Germanics, and Slavic tribes of Europe had the wheel but they didn't build any architecture that was on the same level as that of the Mayans, Aztecs, and other Meso-American civilizations. The Wheel is an overrated invention pushed by eurocentric white supremacists.

    • @teddyjackson1902
      @teddyjackson1902 Před rokem

      @@herbertthepervert9129 lmao, kid the Aztecs didn’t last but a few centuries. The Egyptians and Aztecs had slaving civilizations in geographic regions with optimal climates. There’s nothing white supremacist about the wheel unless you recognize it’s a peak technology and give white people credit for its invention because they’re superior. By the way, the people’s of Egypt, Europe, Asia and the Americas came out of the same migratory branch in southern India. The Egyptians were a group of humans that took a left out of India and the Western Europeans went a little further north before hanging a left. It’s a human story that racists like yourself who seem hung up on nonsense don’t seem to understand. Europeans and the ancient Egyptians/Phoenicians/Canaanites/Persians are from the same genetic stock.
      You ever wonder why you’re mad at history and why you feel the impulse to invent strange and illogical fictional narratives in your head? Is it self loathing?

  • @Silverback_GMT410
    @Silverback_GMT410 Před rokem +4

    I absolutely loved this video! Proud to be Mexican and I love the knowledge I found here. History has always intrigued me. On a lesser note, I’m I being anal for stating that Mexico is not technically Central America or am incorrect? Modern maps obviously depict it as North America.

  • @mrniceguy7168
    @mrniceguy7168 Před 3 lety +13

    4:59 that is an awesome little sculpture

  • @danielcross434
    @danielcross434 Před 3 lety +4

    thanks for including sources. And excellent use of maps thanks it really helps

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Před 3 lety

      You're welcome!

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 2 lety

      anything to make you feel good give me you. Hope 85% of this lies you know it and you know I know it and you know the black people waking up oh uh oh

  • @stevenserna910
    @stevenserna910 Před rokem +1

    Maize....no, Ma-i'z.
    If wheat is the European staple crop. Maiz (corn) is the New Worlds staple crop. How fortunate for Europeans that wheat, could grow in this hemisphere.
    How fortunate for all of us that we all have corn bread. Delicious. Beans, greens, chicken, chilies, all go great with cornbread. Love it!

  • @paulawells817
    @paulawells817 Před rokem +1

    The truth will set everyone free; we don’t need any more deceit. We are all human beings and need to take care of each other and our beautiful planet.

  • @hackermusic3355
    @hackermusic3355 Před 3 lety +13

    The main problem I always had with theories of transatlantic contact is wheels weren't used in the Americas.
    If I were to visit a place where people were dragging things around the first thing I would do is say, Hey bud, let me show you how to make that easier.

    • @hackermusic3355
      @hackermusic3355 Před 3 lety +5

      @@jhowblackman There are plenty of uses for the concept of a wheel that have nothing to do with animals. The most obvious is the potter's wheel because that was actually used for a long time before somebody thought of using the concept for moving objects. Another is rollers.

    • @macarde10
      @macarde10 Před 3 lety +8

      @@hackermusic3355 technically they did have the wheel, as reflected in toys. However I do like your point.

    • @hackermusic3355
      @hackermusic3355 Před 3 lety +1

      @@macarde10 Yeah, hard to figure why somebody didn't put two and two together with the toys and bigger uses. Then again I feel pretty sure I wouldn't have even figured out that the seasons were a cyclical thing. :)

    • @mfun503
      @mfun503 Před 2 lety

      @@hackermusic3355 probably because they didn't need them. They clearly figured out better ways to transport things. They certainly weren't dumb and I'm sure if they would have needed them, they would have made things with wheels.

    • @salaialexander7022
      @salaialexander7022 Před 2 lety +2

      The aztecs and mayan had wheeled toys. Investing the wheel and axel independently from the rest of the world. Not only that, but their calendar incorporated cogged wheels..SMH, prior to eastern contact

  • @ruthnovena40
    @ruthnovena40 Před 3 lety +26

    This was most interesting, we may never know what they called themselves. but one can see the influence.Each group adding another layer that became the whole.

    • @trueprofit724
      @trueprofit724 Před 3 lety

      I dig that

    • @origineeman6421
      @origineeman6421 Před 3 lety

      They were most likely called "The Guardians of Earth" in their ancient language.

    • @iansahleen1173
      @iansahleen1173 Před 3 lety

      Reminds me of how we may never know what certain Greek and Chinese civilizations called themselves

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe Před 3 lety

      - Hey hey hey. Don't swear. We're werejaguars, not Swear-Jaguars. What are we?
      - Werejaguars, not Swear-Jaguars.

    • @davidtyson6869
      @davidtyson6869 Před 3 lety +1

      excuse me we definitely know what we called our self Gods and we will reclaim our throne

  • @jennifermendoza9414
    @jennifermendoza9414 Před rokem +2

    I believe you, it's quite fascinating and mind blowing. Thank you for your contribution towards humans.

  • @anthonymanderson7671
    @anthonymanderson7671 Před rokem

    Really interesting and educating video!