Medieval people were NOT FLAT EARTHERS or all died before 30 | Medieval Misconceptions REPLY

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • This is a reply video to Shadiversity's video on flat earth and the Medieval period. Here is a link to the original video I'm replying to so go check it out!
    • Medieval people were N...
    What is the true story behind the concept of flat earth? Did Medieval people really believe that the earth was flat? or did all people know that it is a globe? How can we know and what did Medieval monks, scribes and scholars tell us about this situation? Was there some sort of overall understanding of scientific facts in the Middle Ages? Or was everyone just igonrant? And what was the position of the church on this matter?
    Let's find out!

Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @shadiversity
    @shadiversity Před 2 lety +2106

    Absolutely spectacular video mate! Man, I *loved* the additional references and insight you added. Love your work and content mate, thanks for sharing your knowledge.

    • @udahfickt
      @udahfickt Před 2 lety +104

      Ah Lord Shad is here. All hail king Shad

    • @metatronyt
      @metatronyt  Před 2 lety +359

      My very pleasure and really great choice of topic! I'm glad you liked my reply and keep up the good work!

    • @Tim_Dervish
      @Tim_Dervish Před 2 lety +64

      @@metatronyt You guys should definitely do a video together as you both bring so much knowledge to the table!

    • @ailediablo79
      @ailediablo79 Před 2 lety +6

      Why nobody mentions the signature signficant influence of the Arab world and muslim world. Those info are primarily originally come from Muslim world in Baghdad or Granada or Damascus or Cairo or Isfahan. The monks and Catholic church until 1650s it just copy Muslim world science and discoveries for most of the time. Even the Americans is discovered first by the Muslims in Spain and later by Ottoman Empire before Columbus did ,but they didn't act abone it. Columbus used the Muslims maps and guides to reach America. A topic like this is a must to mention the superpowers of the time around Europe of the Muslim world, due to their massive science and the true Golden age that Europe is based it is science on and Industrial revolution and modern day. It can't be overstated how important to mention the link and influence as well as the context properly. The bible verses are not wrong if you are talking about the universe in all, the monks just deal it with something they can't understand yet. Earth here means the 7th heaven or lowest heaven or from human perspective first heaven bottom. Heaven i would say in sometime it means a universe or in other aspects it can means near God area where the angels or the heaven where the guardians and the price for the believers in God of mankind. Heven too can refer to the sky as well. It depends on the context. The Church didn't fight knowledge but they did fight many sciences from Muslim world and they did hide science from non church officials and high Nobility to control the masses. The idea that the church didn't fight science is also a misconception. You need to be in the middle. They fought science infront of the common folk whom most are not educated in academic.

    • @ailediablo79
      @ailediablo79 Před 2 lety +1

      @@metatronyt Why nobody mentions the signature signficant influence of the Arab world and muslim world. Those info are primarily originally come from Muslim world in Baghdad or Granada or Damascus or Cairo or Isfahan. The monks and Catholic church until 1650s it just copy Muslim world science and discoveries for most of the time. Even the Americans is discovered first by the Muslims in Spain and later by Ottoman Empire before Columbus did ,but they didn't act abone it. Columbus used the Muslims maps and guides to reach America. A topic like this is a must to mention the superpowers of the time around Europe of the Muslim world, due to their massive science and the true Golden age that Europe is based it is science on and Industrial revolution and modern day. It can't be overstated how important to mention the link and influence as well as the context properly. The bible verses are not wrong if you are talking about the universe in all, the monks just deal it with something they can't understand yet. Earth here means the 7th heaven or lowest heaven or from human perspective first heaven bottom. Heaven i would say in sometime it means a universe or in other aspects it can means near God area where the angels or the heaven where the guardians and the price for the believers in God of mankind. Heven too can refer to the sky as well. It depends on the context. The Church didn't fight knowledge but they did fight many sciences from Muslim world and they did hide science from non church officials and high Nobility to control the masses. The idea that the church didn't fight science is also a misconception. You need to be in the middle. They fought science infront of the common folk whom most are not educated in academic.

  • @Robert08010
    @Robert08010 Před 2 lety +285

    The biblical reference to "The four corners of the earth" is exactly like referencing "From the North to the South to the East and to the West". Its a poetic was of saying in every direction as far as you can see.

    • @Matth_M
      @Matth_M Před rokem +28

      And we still use the expression "all corners of the world" tho we all know it is spherical. That's just stupid

    • @cp1cupcake
      @cp1cupcake Před rokem +24

      There are also Biblical phrases which call the world round/spherical, but the exact transaction will probably depend on who is translating it.

    • @laninthomasma8814
      @laninthomasma8814 Před rokem +3

      @@cp1cupcake "He sits upon the circle of the earth".
      Interestingly, I think the Four Cardinal Directions are really only relevant on a spherical earth. On the pizza model, east and west have to curve to make it around the flatnet. East and West cannot be a straight line - EVEN THOUGH WE PERCEIVE THEM AS STRAIGHT. Sound familiar?

    • @dosidicusgigas1376
      @dosidicusgigas1376 Před rokem +3

      I think its a reference to maps

    • @taqresu5865
      @taqresu5865 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@laninthomasma8814 the original hebrew word here better translates to "round." It could technically refer to a circle, but could just as easily refer to a sphere or other round shape. So it doesn't prove that Christians or Jews necessarily believed in a Flat Earth.
      Not to mention that ancient Greeks, as early as the 3rd or 4th century BC believed the Earth was round, and even accurately measured the circumference of the Earth centuries before Christ was born.
      Also Noah's Global Flood isn't compatible with the Flat Earth theory.

  • @kacperwoch4368
    @kacperwoch4368 Před 2 lety +311

    All we really need to know is that people in the past were just like us. There was logic, reason and there was ignorance and superstition. Feeling superior to our ancestors is the peak of ignorance.

    • @jackcarl2772
      @jackcarl2772 Před 2 lety +37

      My major at university was history...you just stated something far more profound than any of my professors ever did.

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Před 2 lety +29

      Feeling superior to our ancestors was a popular fashion in the Victorian Era. If there's one thing we can learn from them, it's not to assume your own age is the pinnacle of reason and technology.

    • @juliantheapostate8295
      @juliantheapostate8295 Před rokem +2

      @@wolf1066 on the contrary, the Victorians overly romanticised their ancestors

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Před rokem +18

      @@juliantheapostate8295 They romanticised some *aspects* of their ancestors - but not their ability at science and technology.
      The Victorians actively made fake historical artefacts - like torture devices that were never actually used, chastity belts which were also never used... the catalogue of Victorian forgeries of historical things is quite extensive.

    • @tijgertjekonijnwordopgegeten
      @tijgertjekonijnwordopgegeten Před rokem

      Except that there was more ignorance and superstition simply because there was less education.

  • @stevenmcdonald1901
    @stevenmcdonald1901 Před 2 lety +89

    When I went to school, the flat earth columbus story was taught as a historical fact. I went back home that day and talked to my grandpa. He never filtered anything, told me that was complete bs and if I really wanted to learn anything I should do my own research. I think that was the day I started thinking for myself and stopped believing that anything put in a text book was an irrefutable fact.

    • @lasagnasux4934
      @lasagnasux4934 Před rokem +2

      I was forerunner enough that we had a science teacher who ran the planetarium at the high school who taught about this to all of us 3rd graders on our field trip.

  • @snuppssynthchannel
    @snuppssynthchannel Před 2 lety +730

    Pffft, everyone knows the world is a disc being held up by four elephants, flying through space on a big sea turtle!

  • @flamewingsonic
    @flamewingsonic Před 2 lety +632

    Just expanding on this: 15:31 "We, modern people, use reason and logic, medieval people were superstitious and stupid"
    A lot of people today are superstitious and stupid, and a lot of people in the medieval age used reason and logic. Medieval people also probably had a sense of superiority over those that came before, just as we do nowadays. And in both cases, the sense of superiority is probably not merited.
    It just goes to show that people haven't changed at all in the intervening centuries.

    • @Knoloaify
      @Knoloaify Před 2 lety +131

      I don't know about medieval people having a sense of superiority over people preceding them. Medieval Europeans had a LOT of respect for the Antiquity and loved to read about ancient Greeks and Romans. In Medieval thought, it was also often common for people to think that there was a "golden age" in the past that was simply better than the times they were living now.
      So yeah, I don't think Medieval people had the same sense of superiority over the people who preceded them, mainly because they culturally gave a lot of importance to everything ancient.

    • @fransbuijs808
      @fransbuijs808 Před 2 lety +64

      @@Knoloaify
      That's right, people in the Middle Ages knew about the great philosophers of antiquity and they knew they were standing on the shoulders of giants.

    • @bearistotle2820
      @bearistotle2820 Před 2 lety +84

      I would even go so far as to say the medievals were better in touch with the human experience than we are. They also wouldn't throw out the lessons of their ancestors at the drop of a hat, as others have mentioned.

    • @IIARROWS
      @IIARROWS Před 2 lety +14

      I disagree. I think people have changed, on the extremes. Some got better, but the worse got much worse, with a stage to talk from.

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Před 2 lety +23

      Well that, and medieval people didn't have Facebook and Twitter. The village idiots didn't have a commons.

  • @chimneyphish
    @chimneyphish Před 2 lety +53

    Chronological snobbery is a plague on history. Respect, Metatron.

  • @SomasAcademy
    @SomasAcademy Před 2 lety +97

    I was taught that Christopher Columbus discovered that the world was round in one of the first few grades, then learned that this was wrong on the internet... and then I was told that Christopher Columbus discovered the Earth was round once again in 7th or 8th grade. That wasn't so long ago (I'm in university now), so I wouldn't be surprised if many kids are still being taught the myth today.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Před 2 lety +1

      If i remember correctly my school book had the wrong version, my teacher probobly known about that and just skipped that part. Something something this text is not quite accurate. While i´m old.. we still talk about books written in the early 90-tys (possibly late 80-tys)

    • @andypanda4927
      @andypanda4927 Před 2 lety +3

      Always thought (as an adult) that Christofer Columbus must have had a gifted publicist
      I mean, look, Vikings discovered Eskimos and, possibly, coast dwelling originalamercans after settling Greenland and camping out on the NE seacoast.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Před 2 lety +7

      @@andypanda4927 columbus is not know because he was the first to discover america, but because he was g
      The last. Aftet that the world changed.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Před 2 lety +1

      Let me guess you must be in a country were Columbus is celebrated.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy Před 2 lety +7

      @@TorianTammas Indeed, I'm from a country that has made Columbus part of our national mythology, to the point where teaching the actual facts about him and his voyage are a bit taboo.

  • @nikoslav
    @nikoslav Před 2 lety +240

    He's speaking english but still gesticulates constantly like the Italian that he is. Love it.

    • @nikoslav
      @nikoslav Před 2 lety

      @@learn-italian-with-martino ну, адаптировались, что сказать. Надо почаще летать домой.

    • @lolloblue9646
      @lolloblue9646 Před 2 lety +12

      We speak with our hands as much as our mouths, that is a pretty known fact.

    • @Mortablunt
      @Mortablunt Před rokem

      @@lolloblue9646 How to you silence an Itallian? Bind his hands.
      @Nikoslav Чем замолчать Итальянец? Захвати его руки.

    • @rheinhartsilvento2576
      @rheinhartsilvento2576 Před rokem

      English people gesticulate a lot more nowadays though. So he doesn't really stand out that much I'd say😁

  • @hdnfbp
    @hdnfbp Před 2 lety +164

    Person 1: People on the medieval period were stupid and thought earth was flat
    Person 2: No they weren't and knew the earth was a sphere
    Medieval people: IDK MATE GET OUT AND LET ME TEND MY CROPS FOR THE WINTER

    • @kakhakheviashvili6365
      @kakhakheviashvili6365 Před 2 lety +66

      Virgin flat earther: Earth is flatarinooooo
      Soyjack globe earther: nooooo, scietists say it's globe, nooooo
      Chad Medieval peasant: WIFE! It's harvest time already, bring me my scythe!

    • @saanon9334
      @saanon9334 Před 2 lety +26

      Away with you, vile begger. IT'S ALMOST HARVESTING SEASON.

    • @albertafarmer8638
      @albertafarmer8638 Před 2 lety

      Please show us a well illustrated model of the globe with real bent water, rocks, sand, upside down buildings, cars et cetera. Greetings from Canada

  • @camt9967
    @camt9967 Před 2 lety +49

    Part of the problem is that we are taught to see knowledge -and society - as a progression, with us as the current pinnacle. Thanks for your great vids, Metatron

    • @SeriouslyAwesome
      @SeriouslyAwesome Před rokem +10

      Pretty sure we have been regressing since the first "Enlightenment"

    • @viktordoe1636
      @viktordoe1636 Před rokem +5

      Well the accumulated knowledge and technological advences are growing, that's in a sense prograssion. But there there is no guarantee that this is a continous trend or that it's true for every little niche of knowledge. The modern man probably "knows" different things than a medieval man, but not neccerarily smarter.

    • @wedgeantilles8575
      @wedgeantilles8575 Před rokem +2

      @@SeriouslyAwesome Definitly.
      Imagine how we will be looked upon.
      A society that thinks gender is part of a social constract instead of biology.
      (However, being fat obviously is genetics...)
      Or what I have heard more and more in the last year: A normal woman can beat up a normal man in a fight.
      We have some amazing knowledge in some areas. And in others we are way dumber than we were just 50 years ago.

    • @SeriouslyAwesome
      @SeriouslyAwesome Před rokem +4

      @@wedgeantilles8575 when everything is relative then there is no truth. The result is nihilism.

  • @jjkthebest
    @jjkthebest Před 2 lety +28

    "Imagine a..."
    Me: "Circle!"
    Metatron: "pizza!"
    Of course.

  • @adrianwebster6923
    @adrianwebster6923 Před 2 lety +847

    The fact that the medieval mind was so focused on logic and an orderly worldview holds a very important and uncomfortable lesson for today. Many of the ideas of this period that we have since discarded, like the four humors, were based on logically sound reasoning. It was flawed due to a lack of knowledge of some things and certain assumptions/biases but there was a sound reasoning behind their worldview. We need to keep this in mind and try to avoid being complacent in our own knowledge and logic. Much of it will eventually be proven wrong or at least incomplete.

    • @twuandixon8675
      @twuandixon8675 Před 2 lety +53

      Feelings feelings everywhere but not a drop of sense.

    • @Blunderbussy
      @Blunderbussy Před 2 lety +41

      @@twuandixon8675 bullshit. There is sense everywhere. You are just scared because the world hurts your feelings on a daily basis.

    • @greatomeister675
      @greatomeister675 Před 2 lety +25

      In other words Humans don’t change.

    • @eliahelfenbein4731
      @eliahelfenbein4731 Před 2 lety +5

      That is exactly what I thought. I mean physiks is so interesting. However when they apply Math to it it mostly doesnt Work. They have to round a lot. Which indicates that physiks is flawed. My physicsteacher in Highshool Said 7 is round about 12.

    • @twuandixon8675
      @twuandixon8675 Před 2 lety +21

      @@Blunderbussy no, you're just being a classic internet idiot. I stand by my statement, feelings get us nowhere, everyone has different ones right? Hence why you jumped straight in yours with zero thought 😂 dime a dozen.

  • @tacothunderking4558
    @tacothunderking4558 Před 2 lety +156

    I love how CZcams has deemed it necessary to provide "context" to a Metatron video by linking a Wikipedia article, just because the term "Flat Earth" appears in the video.

    • @astronichols1900
      @astronichols1900 Před 2 lety +29

      Yeah and even asserts the general claim that it's an ancient worldview. Stupid thought police lol. Heck it would be more useful to associate heliocentrism and geocentrism with a time period. Speaking of which, I'd love to see a Metatron video on that.

    • @nunya_bizniz
      @nunya_bizniz Před 2 lety +5

      It's basically to debunk the doofus flerfs who will show up and deny facts.

    • @valentinmitterbauer4196
      @valentinmitterbauer4196 Před 2 lety +1

      @@astronichols1900 How is the worldview called where people thought that the earth was the center of the solar system, however they aknowledged that all other bodies rotated around the sun (which itself would rotate around the stationary earth)?

    • @lsq7833
      @lsq7833 Před 2 lety +1

      @@astronichols1900 Lmao. Flat earth nowadays is a very recent thing.

    • @minutemansam1214
      @minutemansam1214 Před 2 lety +1

      @@astronichols1900 I mean, the ancient Egyptians (like Bronze Age Egyptians) did have a flat Earth cosmology. It was an actual thing people believed in. To say that no group of ancient people believed the Earth was flat is false.

  • @MarkM2023
    @MarkM2023 Před 2 lety +42

    Awesome video! Just an addition: Christian iconography from the Medieval period portrayed the Earth as a globe. There is the globus cruciger and the salvator mundi types of art. These artworks are displayed and seen and they show the Earth as an orb/sphere/globe.

  • @dannyeccles1894
    @dannyeccles1894 Před 2 lety +23

    Started watching this thinking, "has Shad made an error in a video! Surely not!"
    A couple of minutes in, "phew, Metatron is just adding MORE information".
    I do enjoy these channels....
    Could have done with a response to Shad's attempt at those accents though. 😂

    • @Yorick257
      @Yorick257 Před 2 lety

      well... Shad was partially wrong, most people didn't even think about the shape of the Earth in the early medieval period. So, no, some didn't know that the Earth is a sphere but they didn't know the Earth a disk either

  • @kungfuman82
    @kungfuman82 Před 2 lety +266

    LMAO, CZcams thinks wikipedia is going to give "context" to this. That gave me a good laugh.

    • @brandonkohler6677
      @brandonkohler6677 Před 2 lety +10

      Yes, I love that

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion Před 2 lety +27

      It just automatically does that for any video it detects flat earth being mentioned in even if the video is debunking it. It's easier than trying to manually give a basic rebuttal to every video supporting the idea.

    • @abraxas4261
      @abraxas4261 Před 2 lety +88

      @@BonaparteBardithion Yeah, no, it's just stupid. All attempts by Big Tech to police ideas and language is just immoral and moronic.

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion Před 2 lety +19

      @@abraxas4261
      I didn't say it was effective or even if I agree with the attempt. That just happens to be why you get those Wikipedia excerpts on certain topics.

    • @robertjenkins6132
      @robertjenkins6132 Před 2 lety +14

      OrwellTube

  • @Sigeberht
    @Sigeberht Před 2 lety +219

    While many folks in the middle ages could not read, they relied on symbols. The one representing authority of Christ over the Earth is the globus cruciger, the orb and cross. It is present in a lot of iconography, in the regalia of every ruler, on paintings and coins.
    The ancient gold smiths would have had a much easier time sticking a cross on a disk, rather than crafting an orb each time.

    • @mulmeyun
      @mulmeyun Před 2 lety +21

      brilliant observation

    • @samomarincek478
      @samomarincek478 Před 2 lety +12

      great explanation. I never thought of that before...

    • @thomasecker9405
      @thomasecker9405 Před 2 lety +1

      Agreed. Excellent observation.

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Před 2 lety

      Excellent point. I was not aware of the _globus cruciger_ but, yes, you would be quite right: if the most common representation of the Earth was of a globe, then that's the idea they would have had.

    • @johnhoelzeman6683
      @johnhoelzeman6683 Před rokem +4

      That's what I was thinking, that's a pretty clear example that most every Christian going to Mass would've seen

  • @moto.roxtar
    @moto.roxtar Před 2 lety +7

    The idea that the "medieval" people were ignorant, didn't bathe and that the life expectency was about 30, is mainly due to "enlightened" historians. They called it the " Dark Ages", to contrast with the "Renaissance" and "the Enlightement".

    • @Siegbert85
      @Siegbert85 Před 2 lety

      Funnily enough it did became en vogue to not bathe, but that was during the Baroque age.

    • @minutemansam1214
      @minutemansam1214 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Siegbert85 And this was mostly the noble. Common peasants still bathed because they worked with the dirt, and people don't like being caked in dirt all the time.

    • @Siegbert85
      @Siegbert85 Před 2 lety

      @Leilani Bexley I believe this is mostly a misunderstanding of statistics... statistically people didn't get old because the child mortality was so high.

  • @TheHistoryofIndiaShow
    @TheHistoryofIndiaShow Před 2 lety +4

    Only stumbled upon your channel last month and I wish I had found it years ago. More power to you sir, keep up the fantastic work!

  • @openfly4u
    @openfly4u Před 2 lety +798

    I like that there is such a back and forth between historical youtubers, brings up questions, clarifies and also peer reviews each other. Love it! Both of you keep up the good and passionate work!

    • @Spot_Faceless-Soldier
      @Spot_Faceless-Soldier Před 2 lety +33

      Honestly, i love this community, and how different youtubers just casually reply to eachother when they want clarify, correct, or add to the topic.

    • @anthonyoer4778
      @anthonyoer4778 Před 2 lety +16

      One word....
      Machinations!

    • @kylewilliams8114
      @kylewilliams8114 Před 2 lety +22

      Seriously, many history CZcamsrs treat it as a dialogue. Which I believe all good history is! When we reason things out as a community, we get much closer to the truth(generally). Watch Vsauce's video on the future of reason. Fascinating stuff.

    • @jinxhead4182
      @jinxhead4182 Před 2 lety +12

      It's almost as if the scientific method is applied by people and working quite well, enabling fact based, civil dialogue. Shocking. :)
      And yes, the historical community, on or off youtube, is pretty awesome.

    • @chadgessele7452
      @chadgessele7452 Před 2 lety +4

      Respectful dialog and rebuttal is both useful and a thrill as it is so often in short supply.
      If nothing else, this whole exchange and the material in it is a useful check on our egos. That may be worth almost as much as the particular facts.

  • @anttibra
    @anttibra Před 2 lety +463

    A slight correction to Columbus part: his calculations were wrong partially because there was no standardized units. In our time we have easy when kilometers, miles, seconds, amperes etc. are all same everywhere. However in the past this wasn't the case. Mile in Orleans was different lengths than in Alexandria. If I remember correctly, Columbus got his numbers from book, but he didn't knew the unit was different compared to what people in his time and area used.

    • @federicogiana7430
      @federicogiana7430 Před 2 lety +133

      Columbus took a measurement from an Islamic Persian scholar, al-Farghani, that measured a degree of latitude in 57,65 miles (correcting the previous measure of 60,0).
      Then he decided that the miles weren't Arabic miles (a geodetic unit of measure refined several times during history, but always more than -1900m- EDIT for typo: 1800m ): no, the Persian Alfraganius was surely Roman miles, likely the shortest measure of the mile ever codified (1450m).
      Columbus made so many of these "optimistic misrepresentations of the sources" (let's not forget he conveniently placed an imaginary island, Antilla, just halfway through his route so he could refill his stocks) that it simply cannot be a coincidence. Mistakes tend to cancel out: Columbus was being straight out delusional.
      Still an awesome navigator: his knowledge of trade winds saved his own skin and changed history.

    • @kurokami5964
      @kurokami5964 Před 2 lety +43

      @@federicogiana7430 these "optimistic misrepresentations" happen so often to everyone so to attack him for that is somewhat petty
      he just wanted to be right because it would be his lifetime accomplishment and those that doesnt try cannot really accomplish anything
      most famous peoples in history are those that risked themselves
      tho obviously the schoolars obviously have to discourage him from doing so

    • @helium-379
      @helium-379 Před 2 lety +11

      @@kurokami5964 His contractual job was also to find and bring back wealth.

    • @kooroshrostami27
      @kooroshrostami27 Před 2 lety +20

      Didn't Columbus believe to his death that he actually discovered India from the other side, and that's the reason why we call native Americans "Indians" to this day?

    • @nobilismaximus
      @nobilismaximus Před 2 lety +11

      Hell, a USA foot and a UK foot aren’t the same length.

  • @rayz6307
    @rayz6307 Před 2 lety +4

    Love this community because of these kinds of videos and how you all respectfully either disagree or build upon each other! We need more of this in this day and age. You guys are awesome keep it up!

  • @whyjnot420
    @whyjnot420 Před 2 lety +7

    One thing I really hate is the misunderstanding about what a dark age really is. A dark age is dark because we have relatively little insight into the period in question (relative to the classical age) due to things like stone buildings not being built as much, with the use of wood leading to less remains. In other words, it is dark to the eyes of history.

    • @bigmonkey1254
      @bigmonkey1254 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I mean, "The Dark Age of Technology" in Warhammer 40000 is also called "The Golden Age of Technology" for that reason. It was a time of great prosperity but the Age of Strife that followed was so cataclysmic that vast amounts of knowledge and development from that time were lost. To the point where no one in the setting actually knows exactly what it was like.

    • @whyjnot420
      @whyjnot420 Před 10 měsíci

      @@bigmonkey1254 Yep. For all of the utter BS that comes out of Games Workshop, they of all people understood what was actually meant by historians using the term "dark age".
      I point this out constantly when people are talking about that aspect of 40k lore but don't understand why the _dark_ age was the high water mark of humanity. Not many people seem to even care why it matters, while at the same time they mourn the loss of STC tech and I just shake my head in dismay.
      edit: There are at least a handful of beings in the time of 40k that were around during the dark age of technology. At the very least there is the Emperor who was there for it. Also in theory there should be some sporadic activity from Necrons. In 30k there would have been at least a few more still alive. E.g. Malcador.

  • @Spot_Faceless-Soldier
    @Spot_Faceless-Soldier Před 2 lety +106

    Timetraveler: peasant! What do you think is the shape of the planet?
    Peasant: shape of the _what?_

    • @AkatsukiEmpire
      @AkatsukiEmpire Před 2 lety +33

      Which planet? Planet back then would mean the objects in the sky that moved differently from the stars. Generally, It would mean the classical Planets not including Earth: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn but would include the Sun and the Moon. That's where the name came from, meaning wanderers.

    • @forn8473
      @forn8473 Před 2 lety +10

      More like: you wear weird clothes and you speak a language I can't understand. You must be French! We happen to be at war with the French you know, and we love to penetrate the French with all kind of tools!
      *maniacal laughter while drawing a sword*

    • @Spot_Faceless-Soldier
      @Spot_Faceless-Soldier Před 2 lety +1

      @@AkatsukiEmpire well, i felt like a random peasant wouldn't know that the traveller meant earth as in the planet, not the literal ground.

    • @MarzoVarea
      @MarzoVarea Před 2 lety +7

      @@AkatsukiEmpire To be precise planets were wandering stars, as opposed to the fixed stars. Dante's _Divina commedia_ ends: _The love that moves the sun and the other stars_ ( _l'amor che move il sole e l'altre stelle"_ ).

    • @AkatsukiEmpire
      @AkatsukiEmpire Před 2 lety +3

      @@MarzoVarea Yes, you're right!

  • @dr1Voss48
    @dr1Voss48 Před 2 lety +88

    I just have to take a moment and say how much I love this channel. I’m an English and History teacher for 6th-12th grades in the US and I cannot tell you how invaluable you have been to the education of both my students and myself. It’s wonderful to see a lifelong passion that enriches the lives and knowledge of others and you, fair Metatron, have accomplished that and more. Your content is rich, multi-lingual (without being exclusive), totally encompassing from antiquity to the Medieval period and beyond, and based in exceptionally thorough historical research. Never stop with your wonderful work!

    • @metatronyt
      @metatronyt  Před 2 lety +24

      Thank you! I'm honoured by your words

    • @dr1Voss48
      @dr1Voss48 Před 2 lety +1

      @@metatronyt *Loud Fanboy Noises*
      :D

    • @spaceisfake8184
      @spaceisfake8184 Před 2 lety

      @@metatronyt why didnt you quote any flat earth earth sources from tht time period? A bit of a one sided presentation noble sir but I salute you for making the video

    • @CheezeOfAstora
      @CheezeOfAstora Před 2 lety +1

      @Michael Terrell II probably due to the Max lifespan would have been less compare to now,
      For eg.if today it is 70-80 years, the adulthood age is 18 years, compare it to medieval the avg lifespan would be 60 years, so adulthood age would be 15 years.
      Following this pattern in the future it may be very much possible if the age of adulthood goes to 21-22 as our lifespan increase more due to better and healthy lifestyle.

    • @CheezeOfAstora
      @CheezeOfAstora Před 2 lety +2

      @Michael Terrell II age of above 21 in pre modern era was not the adulthood age it was the age of when can a person can get authoritive powers, even today this practice happens,
      I think the marriage age in Roman empire was quite low 13-14 for both boys and girls.
      This only grew as time passed, at post "Dark ages" this number would have been higher.and now it is commonly 18-21 in majority of the countries.
      If you are above 14-15 in pre 17th century then you would be considered an adult not because you have influence on power, but you are a workforce, labor, soldier etc. Now this age has become 18-19 but still some 16-17 years old now thinks as they are adults and sometimes we treat them as this, similarly this can also be applied for pre modern world a 13 year may be considered as a young adult.

  • @rafox66
    @rafox66 Před 2 lety +6

    I can confirm that I was taught the wrong story about Columbus at school just like how they taught us that he was the first to discover the Americas but the funny thing is that I already knew that at the time and when I told the teacher he didn't take me seriously because I was just a kid, I couldn't possibly be right.

  • @wedgeantilles1498
    @wedgeantilles1498 Před 2 lety +3

    Shad and you are like history professors. Taking each others lessons and expanding them back and fourth without rivalry or saltiness. Very nice.

  • @Philipp.of.Swabia
    @Philipp.of.Swabia Před 2 lety +130

    ….frederic Barbarossa reached the age of 70, his grandson nearly 60…“yeah all medieval people totally didn’t reach the age of 30“…

    • @mpalfadel2008
      @mpalfadel2008 Před 2 lety +2

      Most didn’t
      The few tend to prove the rule…

    • @Philipp.of.Swabia
      @Philipp.of.Swabia Před 2 lety +20

      @@mpalfadel2008 I’d say most people in the Middle Ages reached the age of 40 and older, but there were certainly many who passed away very early, especially warriors.

    • @MehrumesDagon
      @MehrumesDagon Před 2 lety +31

      "or all died brfore 30" was because in that video shad was addressing pair of misconceptions: one about shape of earth, and other popular misconception coming from the idea of "average lifespan in the medieval ages was 30" which may or may not be correct, but as shad explained in the video there is alot of factors that will lower the "total average" making the number misleading.

    • @linkofvev
      @linkofvev Před 2 lety +39

      @@MehrumesDagon Biggest one being infant mortality.

    • @manofcultura
      @manofcultura Před 2 lety +27

      @@mpalfadel2008 no, no, no. Most adults lived to about 55-65 even in medieval era. It’s children that skew the average to 27. 33% of kids don’t make it past 10 back then, and before you turn 16 you’re still more vulnerable until you reach majority.

  • @rathernotpick7183
    @rathernotpick7183 Před 2 lety +70

    Fun fact: Life expectancy is affected by childbirth deaths and young child death. Therefore an adult is paradoxically expected to live past life expectancy. This is more pronounced in countries with poor healthcare such as Lesotho.

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 Před 2 lety +3

      The primary cause of death was things like dysentry, essentially the result of poor hygienge during food preparation. There would have been a lot of death from bacterial respiratory disease as well. This would have affected adults as well as children, so life expectancy was still low. Some people obviously got very old, but it was much less common then than now. Improved hygiene standards and the development of antibiotics have drastically changed adult life expectancy in the last 150 years or so.

    • @blacktigerpaw1
      @blacktigerpaw1 Před 2 lety +3

      It's also is due to the age of the mother. Teenage mothers are more likely to suffer childbirth complications whereas young twenty somethings were the most fertile and more likely to survive.

    • @blacktigerpaw1
      @blacktigerpaw1 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Tugela60 You imply those people didn't know how to keep basic hygiene

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 Před 2 lety +2

      @@blacktigerpaw1 Until relatively recently they did not. Not when it came to food and water. They had no idea what bacteria were, and believed that disease was caused by things like bad smells, magic and devine will.

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 Před 2 lety +4

      @@blacktigerpaw1 Actually teenaged brides was more of an upper class thing. Among peasants marriage tended to be later because of the financial implications of leaving a parental home.

  • @NakedOwl501
    @NakedOwl501 Před 2 lety +18

    I can remember being taught the fictional story of Colombus in school, even in later grades. This was in the early 2000's before things got even more crazy and it became as much a social issue as one about historical fact. Tell you what, makes me want to keep my kids out of public school more and more.

    • @bigmonkey1254
      @bigmonkey1254 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Yeah, I remember being told that in elementary school. I was confused because I knew about people prior to that knowing that the earth was round. Also, the notion that seamen didn't know that the earth was round is frankly rediculous.

  • @Lurklen
    @Lurklen Před 2 lety +7

    Very good point about asking a normal joe about the shape of the earth. Lot's of people are either not gonna have an opinion, or go with whatever the local lore tells them. If they or their granddad read a book, they might have an opinion, but otherwise they're busy people, and there's lots more relevant things to think about.

    • @michaelkenner3289
      @michaelkenner3289 Před 2 lety

      Yes and no. It's true that most people wouldn't care or consider it a relevant question. It's not true that they didn't have access to the information.
      Everyone went to church and priests had to be literate in Latin, so most of the population was only one step removed from the knowledge of the classical world.
      Depends a little on the time period and country of course. However as long as you accepted it through a Catholic lens information was available, just not necessarily useful or relevant enough for people to look for it

    • @Lurklen
      @Lurklen Před 2 lety

      @@michaelkenner3289 Interesting fact, not everyone went to church. There's a channel on here that reads out historical writings, and one was of an executioner from...I want to say the 1500's, it might be earlier or later by a bit. He comments that some of the criminals he executed had never even seen a church in person.
      I also never said they didn't have access, but many wouldn't.
      The priests knew how to read Latin, and some of the elite, but the lower classes often only heard Latin, and the language is far removed from the content of the classical philosophy. Even if the priests were educated in the knowledge of the classical world, which was not a certainty, that doesn't mean they were passing it along, or agreed with it.
      Knowledge relevant to the Church's doctrine was available, but even then it was far from homogeneous, with many locals having a disparity in views on a number of matters (hence the need for inquisitions and the Church's self policing so that the position of the Church was clear). The Church was also much more interested in educating people in specific matters, the nature of the globe was not something an average joe need be concerned with (or from a certain perspective, should be concerned with) nor something a priest to a low class settlement would likely have the education to reflect on. Not all priests were of equal knowledge, or equally educated, and sometimes the gulf was quite large. That's if a place had a priest at all, they might have some other Church functionary, or need to go to the next town over.
      Like I said, if someone or their granddad had an interest, and sought out a book (or spoke with someone on the topic) they could probably find out what they wanted to know, but it's even odds they're gonna get some other explanation, or just consider it an idle fancy and go about their lives.
      There's also the big economic disparity to think about. Many people were dealing with rather extreme limitations on income, and things like books were not a relevant expense. So while the knowledge is accessible, the likelihood of many people in that circumstance getting ahold of it is low, simply because it's not going to dove tail with their needs. Pair that with your other access being dependent on the personal bias and education/interest of your local priest, and you end up with a lot of people who just wouldn't know, and might not even have an opinion, but if they did wouldn't have an informed one.

  • @bubbasbigblast8563
    @bubbasbigblast8563 Před 2 lety +233

    "Corners of the Earth" is a bad translation: it's more like "The Extremities of the Earth," conveying that people would come from the farthest points of the planet.

    • @niupala1739
      @niupala1739 Před 2 lety +76

      "4 corners of the earth" also probably means the general directions North, South, East, and West

    • @lloydgush
      @lloydgush Před 2 lety +48

      It's not a bad translation. No, it doesn't mean literal corners, it's figure of speech.

    • @fnors2
      @fnors2 Před 2 lety +36

      It's also likely it came from thinking about maps.
      A map is generally a drawn on rectangle, and maps were often only about the nearby regions.
      So coming from the four corners of the world might also mean from the "edges of the maps" .

    • @lloydgush
      @lloydgush Před 2 lety +3

      @@fnors2 The reason why I believe is comes from searching in a room is the old expression "I'll search for x in the four corners of y., if I have to."

    • @federicogiana7430
      @federicogiana7430 Před 2 lety +20

      @@lloydgush "No, it doesn't mean literal corners, it's figure of speech"
      Yep: the same Bible speaks of "the four corners of the head", too.

  • @markfergerson2145
    @markfergerson2145 Před 2 lety +36

    I attended elementary school in southern California in the late 1950s/early 1960s. I must have had particularly enlightened teachers because despite the Irving tale being mentioned, they credited Columbus and Isabella both with knowing the Earth was a globe, mentioned that Columbus' calculations were off due to him using the wrong units, and him expecting to find other land masses along the way to "the Indies".

  • @MsJavaWolf
    @MsJavaWolf Před 2 lety +10

    Very interesting video, I must admit it changed some of my faulty preconceptions.
    Maybe on a related note you could make a video about Galileo? From my understanding he was prosecuted because he challenged the geocentric world view, which now sounds odd, knowing that many medieval people hat a decent grasp on astronomy and were scientifically minded.
    I would also like to add that I think discussions like this one are the most important part of history. It is much more important for me to know how people actually felt in the past, what they thought and how they lived, rather than only memorizing dates of supposedly important events.

    • @DamonNomad82
      @DamonNomad82 Před 2 lety +5

      While many astronomers in Galileo's time were highly intelligent and had a great understanding of the apparent motions of stars and planets as observed from earth (at least the ones that didn't require a telescope to see), they were firmly entrenched the the Ptolemaic view of the cosmos. This view, while inaccurate due to being based on the false premise that the earth was the center of the universe, was very logically valid. Claudius Ptolemy, a 2nd century Egyptian scientist, was a skilled mathematician, and had developed a brilliant, well-constructed set of explanations for the motions of stars and planets that seemed inconsistent with how they would be if the sun, moon and five known planets were orbiting the earth. The astronomers through the 14 centuries between Ptolemy's time and Galileo's time would have been fully educated with this view, and would have faced terrible peer pressure if they went against it. A century before Galileo, Polish astronomer Nicolai Copernicus had advocated the heliocentric model we now know to be true, and was ridiculed and ostracized for it. Galileo's great contribution to astronomy and science were due to the fact that he proved Copernicus right, as he was able to use early telescopes to observe processes that were previously unobservable.

    • @robertmurphree7210
      @robertmurphree7210 Před 2 lety +7

      in Galileo's time, Astronomers like Kepler believed in heliocentrism and published it, but they didn't make a big deal about, didn't get jailed. Galileo made fun of his friend, the current pope in a book, represented the pope as a character in the book called "Simplicio". The church had a distinction between rhetorical, philosophical discussions of a topics, and discussion of a proposition as in fact actual truth. The universities conducted such "theoretical discussions" for hundreds of years, many topics. in fact a very clear discussion of the mechanical equivalence of a stationary earth and rotating earth was published 2 centuries earlier. Galileo insisted that the heliocentric view was in fact true. In the 16nth century there was no proof that the earth moved, in the 17nth century an aberration of light was discovered that showed it, in 19nth the parallax showed the distance of the stars, so in 1630, 75 -200 years til actual proof was found.
      So brilliant arguments but no proof by galileo that might cause the uneducaged (galileo appealed to the uneducated public by books in italian) vs waiting til actual proof showed up.

    • @robertmurphree7210
      @robertmurphree7210 Před 2 lety +5

      Copernicus published his book after he died so he was not ostracized. During his lifetime people who read pre-published versions of his thesis encouraged him to publish it, in fact a Cardinal wrote him and offerred to pay for publishing it. Copernicus didn't fear the criticism of the professional astronomer, just comman literate person who could barely read who's said its against common sense. Copernicus dedicated the book to the current pope. not something you would do if it was ridiciuled.

  • @Lillyluri
    @Lillyluri Před 2 lety

    Thank you for bringing this to my attention and elaborating it like this!
    Tempted now to look into this standard book of learning you mentioned.

  • @player0851
    @player0851 Před 2 lety +34

    The reason the story is told that way is because there is a whole historiographic discourse in the bourgeois humanist interpretation of the past, specially between XVIII and XIX century, everything that was previous to the “scientific” societies of that age was regarded as inferior, including the so-called dark ages, based primarily on the supposed rupture brought by the renaissance.

  • @kentuckycrittercamera9407
    @kentuckycrittercamera9407 Před 2 lety +16

    If I remember correctly, my textbooks in the 1980s said that Christopher Columbus and the church both agreed the earth was round, but said Columbus had the earths size far smaller than it actually was.

    • @andyjay729
      @andyjay729 Před rokem +6

      I don't remember if any of my teachers ever taught me "Columbus wanted to prove the world is round", but I do remember my family's 1990 edition of the World Book Encyclopedia said something like "A common modern misconception is that Columbus was trying to prove the world was round. He didn't have to. Most educated people in 15th century Europe already believed in a round Earth." Call that another example of "people from the past weren't as ignorant as we moderns think".

    • @Lissbirds
      @Lissbirds Před rokem

      I learned that Columbus was told no by the Italians, so he went to Spain, and Queen Isabella said yes, and that he didn't realize how big the earth was.

  • @TheKlaun9
    @TheKlaun9 Před rokem

    You really had me for a second there when doing the stories and giving the context and me expecting lies straight away. For a moment I thought all I knew was wrong.

  • @laamonftiboren4236
    @laamonftiboren4236 Před 2 lety

    Answered perfectly the questions I still had after watching Shad's video. Thanks for sharing your research!

  • @alinalexandru2466
    @alinalexandru2466 Před 2 lety +144

    Last time I was this early, Rome was still a Republic.

    • @fransbuijs808
      @fransbuijs808 Před 2 lety +9

      Last time I was this early, Rome was still a little village on the Tiber.

    • @mercianthane2503
      @mercianthane2503 Před 2 lety +2

      Last time I was early, Rome was sacked by the Chad Alaric.

    • @Duke_of_Lorraine
      @Duke_of_Lorraine Před 2 lety +1

      So it was under Napoleon ?
      (One of his puppet states in Italy, replacing the Papal States, was named the Roman Republic)

    • @AveCruxSpesUnica
      @AveCruxSpesUnica Před 2 lety

      si Romania era Dacia

    • @alinalexandru2466
      @alinalexandru2466 Před 2 lety

      @@AveCruxSpesUnica Corect :)

  • @magister343
    @magister343 Před 2 lety +49

    I've read that there were only 2 or 3 known Flat-Earthers in the Patristic era, which we know because the other early Church Fathers often made fun of them or at best argued that being so wrong about that shouldn't be considered heretical since it is not relevant to matters of faith or doctrine.
    The most famous Christian Flat-Earther was Lactantius, an Arian heretic who was a close adviser of Emperor Constantine.

    • @rorschach1985ify
      @rorschach1985ify Před 2 lety +9

      "early Church Fathers often made fun of them or at best argued that being so wrong about that shouldn't be considered heretical"
      I really would like a source for this because it sounds exactly like what I have been searching for, and it sounds hilarious.

    • @silverhawkscape2677
      @silverhawkscape2677 Před rokem

      True. Even Early Church fathers knew of a round or at least not flat Earth.

  • @kathybarnes3809
    @kathybarnes3809 Před 2 lety

    I just found your channel, and I really enjoy it. The one about what Jesus looks like, cleared up a lot of questions I had. Great job. Thank you.

  • @uncleporkinz3905
    @uncleporkinz3905 Před 2 lety +1

    THANK YOU for laying it all out. I am SO tired of explaining to people that anybody educated at all knew the world was spherical for a VERY LONG TIME, far before Christ for goodness sake! The myth that people thought the world was flat before Columbus JUST WILL NOT DIE!

  • @InSanic13
    @InSanic13 Před 2 lety +174

    The first story was definitely what I was taught in elementary school, but I learned the second later on.

    • @st0rmrider
      @st0rmrider Před 2 lety +8

      Same here

    • @pietersleijpen3662
      @pietersleijpen3662 Před 2 lety +5

      This, taught wrong at elementary school. I am quiet sure it was at high school that they taught differently, but I might have read/seen it on a documentary instead. 30 years ago, so my memory is a bit hazy.

    • @KanchidoShinokyoufu
      @KanchidoShinokyoufu Před 2 lety +3

      In my Grade School we're taught somewhat of the Washington Irving's tale of Columbus, but it wasn't that the scholars were ignorant but rather that Columbus fudged his calculations so it'd seems that the trip would be shorter also that he believes that there was some mass in between India & Europe sailing west. Plus we had the painting of Columbus trying to convince Queen Isabella with a huge globe next to her in the throne room in our text books. As well with his misadventures in The New World. Mostly in the Caribbean.

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 Před 2 lety +4

      In the History of the World according to Flip Wilson Chris set sail to discover were the Ray Charles records came from.

    • @ailediablo79
      @ailediablo79 Před 2 lety

      Why nobody mentions the signature signficant influence of the Arab world and muslim world. Those info are primarily originally come from Muslim world in Baghdad or Granada or Damascus or Cairo or Isfahan. The monks and Catholic church until 1650s it just copy Muslim world science and discoveries for most of the time. Even the Americans is discovered first by the Muslims in Spain and later by Ottoman Empire before Columbus did ,but they didn't act abone it. Columbus used the Muslims maps and guides to reach America. A topic like this is a must to mention the superpowers of the time around Europe of the Muslim world, due to their massive science and the true Golden age that Europe is based it is science on and Industrial revolution and modern day. It can't be overstated how important to mention the link and influence as well as the context properly. The bible verses are not wrong if you are talking about the universe in all, the monks just deal it with something they can't understand yet. Earth here means the 7th heaven or lowest heaven or from human perspective first heaven bottom. Heaven i would say in sometime it means a universe or in other aspects it can means near God area where the angels or the heaven where the guardians and the price for the believers in God of mankind. Heven too can refer to the sky as well. It depends on the context. The Church didn't fight knowledge but they did fight many sciences from Muslim world and they did hide science from non church officials and high Nobility to control the masses. The idea that the church didn't fight science is also a misconception. You need to be in the middle. They fought science infront of the common folk whom most are not educated in academic.

  • @yibraman1361
    @yibraman1361 Před 2 lety +136

    I was taught the incorrect story back in a US elementary school in the late 2000s, but afterwards in middle and high school they dropped most of the nonsense. Although now that I think about it, when we spoke of Columbus this topic was rarely brought up and the emphasis was on the Colombian exchange and its impact on the America’s, Europe, and European colonialism.

    • @spearfisherman308
      @spearfisherman308 Před 2 lety +3

      They just pointed out that columbus was just trying to find a better trade route to India

    • @yibraman1361
      @yibraman1361 Před 2 lety +15

      @Will Aden I think we may have went to different schools lol

    • @AndrewTheFrank
      @AndrewTheFrank Před 2 lety +3

      I think early on Columbus was used to push flat earth. Especially if you think about how prominent different christian groups were in American during the 80s and 90s. Create the mental association of Christian = Flat Earth. Once those died down the focus switched to denounce American for being a white imperialist country.

    • @kylewilliams8114
      @kylewilliams8114 Před 2 lety +5

      @Will Aden drop the con-servative propaganda. I was in elementary between 96 and 03. They taught how great Columbus was and didn't mention any of the facts surrounding his treatment of indigenous people.

    • @moonboogien8908
      @moonboogien8908 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kylewilliams8114 and what are the facts surrounding his treatment of indigenous people?

  • @clarencepsaila4743
    @clarencepsaila4743 Před 2 lety +1

    I loved this video! If you can please, expand upon this theme by comparing education levels between classical times (Greece, Rome, Asia) to Medieval times! It would be so interesting. Also the education itself must have changed!

  • @frankhainke7442
    @frankhainke7442 Před rokem

    Thank you.I knew this. But I am glad that this has been explained once more. That is needed until everybody nows it.

  • @QalOrt
    @QalOrt Před 2 lety +24

    I remember one of my professors telling how when Columbus went to the Portuguese king and said he wanted to sail around the world and give him the calculations, the Portuguese king balked as he was afraid that due to Columbus's calculations the ships would run out of food and he forbid this as he didn't want to send men to his death.

    • @jonugalde1275
      @jonugalde1275 Před 2 lety +2

      It looks like a LOT of teacher confuse the history and myths of Magellan and Columbus voyages, sad but true.
      Let me tell you about the first myth which is at least at the same level of Columbus one, Magellan's intention was to sail around the globe. No it wasn't, at any part of the voyage. What made Juan Sebastian Elkano take the decision to end the trip sailing around the orb was in fact the dead of Fernando de Magallanes.

  • @gemmeliusgrammaticus2509
    @gemmeliusgrammaticus2509 Před 2 lety +64

    I’m surprised you didn’t mention Pierre D’Aily whose “Imago Mundi” was a major source of Columbus’ underestimate of the size of the Western Ocean. If I’m not mistaken, I think Columbus’ copy of the Imago Mundi still exists with his own notes in the margin.

  • @malahamavet
    @malahamavet Před 2 lety

    i love how in our community response videos add more content to the responded video

  • @Morticia147
    @Morticia147 Před rokem +1

    I do love your Channel, I discovered you very shortly and now I am bingewatching your Videos. Just great fun content and so informative.

  • @kaltengeist
    @kaltengeist Před 2 lety +64

    I'm sad to say that, in the History graduation that I'm undergoing, this same story is told as factual by several different professors. The only sources they show to support this tale, however, are some bibliographic works from american writters from the last and current centuries. But, if I am to defy these teachers, it's off to the pyre with me.
    Note that I'm speaking this as a Brazilian, with the university I study being one of the most respected in the region, besides being the most technologically advanced one. If only their machines could equal a functioning human brain....

    • @probablythedm1669
      @probablythedm1669 Před 2 lety +8

      They would still produce erroneous results if they were given the same erroneous data. So I regret to inform you that machine brains would not help this issue. Though a machine might accept new data easier, depending on how that data selection is done.
      I am fun at parties! 🤣

    • @zakazany1945
      @zakazany1945 Před 2 lety +6

      Infelizmente no Brasil maioria esmagadora ou tem essa visão manjada da idade média ou o extremo oposto que beira o bizarro que chegam ao ponto de falar que a idade média foi o pináculo da civilização humana e deveríamos unir a igreja ao estado de novo.
      O tal filósofo tava mais do que certo quanto a muita "gente" ser como animais, seguindo mais pela intuição e sentimentos do que a razão.

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 Před 2 lety +2

      Manda o professor tomar no cu. Onde ele aprendeu isso? No desenho do Pernalonga

    • @HolyPineCone
      @HolyPineCone Před 2 lety +1

      What? This is just sad. How? Why?

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 Před 2 lety +1

      What is the University you are studying at?

  • @SpartanWolf222
    @SpartanWolf222 Před 2 lety +21

    I do so *enjoy* when CZcams flags videos like this with fact-check notifications below the video, and then they just cite Wikipedia of all things. Even middle-school students know not to cite Wikipedia for a source, yet here we are in 2021.

    • @InSanic13
      @InSanic13 Před 2 lety +9

      It's not ideal, but Wikipedia is what most people know, it's not terrible these days (in fact, I have had professors point out specific articles on Wikipedia as being really good), and it can link to good sources.

    • @SpartanWolf222
      @SpartanWolf222 Před 2 lety +6

      @@InSanic13 I’m aware Wikipedia isn’t all bad, and admittedly you can find some sources there to get started researching a topic thanks to the citations. However, I have a big problem with CZcams algorithms putting these labels/links to Wikis and treating them like warning labels of misinformation.

    • @MrHarumakiSensei
      @MrHarumakiSensei Před 2 lety +4

      @@InSanic13 It peaked maybe a decade ago. It's getting worse these days. It'll change depending on the political climate rather than verifiable facts.

    • @ssholum
      @ssholum Před 2 lety +6

      @@InSanic13 In many cases, it's fine, but it has a particular political bias, and CZcams just loves to plop Wikipedia references on hot-button political points (mostly involving a certain problem the world has been facing for the past year and a half). This is probably the least political "context" blurb I've seen. Apparently, CZcams thinks Flat Earthers are an influential force in society. Shows how out of touch they are.

    • @zakazany1945
      @zakazany1945 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ssholum Flatearthers usually are together with lots of anti-science conspirations, some of them with catastrophic consequences like anti-vaxxers. So I can see why CZcams do this, even if the solution is ineffective.

  • @ristomanasiev4077
    @ristomanasiev4077 Před 2 lety

    You and Shad should do a collaboration, both of you have extreme knowledge and it would be fantastic to see you to work together on a subject. Awesome channel by the way, many greetings from Macedonia! Saluti!

  • @davidenriqueamorochodaza9362

    they thought me history number 1 in the school, it allways seemed a bit off for me, but both history and geography teachers kept teaching us this! Thank you so much Metatron! love your work

  • @Psiberzerker
    @Psiberzerker Před 2 lety +72

    Yes, the Irving narrative is still told as history in schoolbooks, and classes in America, today. Keep in mind, this is the same guy that wrote Rip Van Winkle, and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. So, it's basically like believing that spycraft works that way, because Ian Flemming wrote Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

    • @vonfaustien3957
      @vonfaustien3957 Před 2 lety +2

      Ian Fleming would have know far more about espionage and spying than Irving knew about geography and navigation given his background as a high ranking and influential member of British intligence during WW2

    • @Psiberzerker
      @Psiberzerker Před 2 lety

      @@vonfaustien3957 Yes, but he wouldn't tell the TRUTH about his work in the Secret Service. You're right, he palled around with Fairbairn, Sykes, Applegate, and WerBell, but he didn't write about that. James Bond was a farce, comedy. Everyone that knows how it actually worked were laughing the whole time.

    • @vonfaustien3957
      @vonfaustien3957 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Psiberzerker the best parodies come from a understanding and subversion of the source material

    • @Psiberzerker
      @Psiberzerker Před 2 lety +1

      @@vonfaustien3957 Oh yeah, non-spooks don't get half the jokes in the Bond books. Just the name Bond, the drink orders are an inside joke privy only to people that knew Flemming personally. (And uber nerds.) Same with Shakespeare. The vast majority of people miss the vast majority of jokes even in Tragedies like Julius Cesear. That whole dialog between the Centurion, and the Cobbler is a medley of puns for the Peanut Gallery.

    • @Psiberzerker
      @Psiberzerker Před 2 lety

      I'm not a retired spook, but if I was, I'd lie about it.

  • @marcello7781
    @marcello7781 Před 2 lety +31

    Debunking old myths, my favorite content! I think you should do a collab with Alessandro Barbero someday.

  • @uovaeasparagi
    @uovaeasparagi Před 2 lety +2

    Great video, but I think it would have been fairer to mention Alessandro Barbero (as you did in previous videos) as your main source, since his lesson on this topic was clearly your inspiration. Good job anyway

  • @RicardoMoralesMassin
    @RicardoMoralesMassin Před 2 lety

    This was lovely. I really enjoyed the in-depth explanations and your sources.

  • @luispereztasso
    @luispereztasso Před 2 lety +18

    I'm just a young Peruvian archaeologist but damn this is such a good content, love your channel so much!

  • @bleflar9183
    @bleflar9183 Před 2 lety +13

    Time Traveler: Hello Medieval peasant. Earth is accually round, and bathing won't kill you, no need to thank me!
    Medieval Peasant: *(dies from modern diseases that the time traveler brought with him)*

    • @austincummins7712
      @austincummins7712 Před 2 lety

      Which he got from the screen of the iPhone that you gave him, where he was watching CZcams Flat Earth videos and laughing. Alright, that was a bit too try hard...

    • @josephradley3160
      @josephradley3160 Před 2 lety

      That's evil. I like it.

    • @peterang6912
      @peterang6912 Před rokem

      And then the rats get the blame ...

  • @HoustonRLamb
    @HoustonRLamb Před 2 lety +4

    As an American student who just graduated high school last may, I can say that my school was pretty good when telling this story. In elementary, most teachers didn't confirm or deny until 6 grade and then we basically got the second story you told. also, my 10th grade/sophomore history teacher actually backtracked on this whole thing and this story alone was the reason I Believe 3 arguments I had with him, honestly, I had so many arguments over what and how he taught that they started to blur together.

    • @materliliorum
      @materliliorum Před 11 měsíci

      I am amazed to see how few thumbs up you became and how many accounts commented on having been taught the wrong story. I heard the story of Columbus being the only one in his time to believe the Earth was round in this video for the first time ever. However, I have heard sometimes that Galileo Galilei was the only one in his time (17th century) who believed that the Earth was round, so if the narrative was at all consistent, it should have meant that Columbus didn't know it at all… But I believe the narrative isn't even meant to be consistent.

  • @82dorrin
    @82dorrin Před 2 lety +1

    You kind of touched on another Shadiversity video about literacy at the time. A lot of medieval people COULD read and write, just not in Latin.

  • @Pijawek
    @Pijawek Před 2 lety +84

    Knowing that the earth is round is essentialnto maritime navigation - so people knew it as soon as they started sailing.

    • @wamken619
      @wamken619 Před 2 lety +25

      for a second, I thought essentialnto was a real word

    • @LORDCTHULHU738
      @LORDCTHULHU738 Před 2 lety +12

      The world is a disc under a dome. The globalists have lied to you.

    • @klobknocker6512
      @klobknocker6512 Před 2 lety +16

      @@LORDCTHULHU738 Bait.

    • @MarTin-fz3ns
      @MarTin-fz3ns Před 2 lety +25

      @@LORDCTHULHU738 It's actually a giant doughnut. The Bible lied to you.

    • @_aullik
      @_aullik Před 2 lety +19

      @@LORDCTHULHU738 actually its more like a potato.

  • @MrAchile13
    @MrAchile13 Před 2 lety +27

    Matching armor with Shad? I see you're of man of culture as well.

    • @maddie9602
      @maddie9602 Před 2 lety

      When I can afford it, I'm tempted to get a brigantine as well. I recently acquired my first piece of armor, a gambeson, which I'm sure will be great to LARP in when I break it in. But I really want a nice brig like Shad and Metatron have.

    • @AnotherDuck
      @AnotherDuck Před 2 lety

      I like that subtle way he has of saying, "I agree with this man of culture."

  • @m.rivers9201
    @m.rivers9201 Před 2 lety

    Meta I was watching some of your videos on the Punic Wars and I had a question, what were the spoken languages. Of course the Romans spoke Latin but what of the other side? Thanks and keep up your good work! I love your way!

  • @Veo87
    @Veo87 Před 2 lety

    I was in school in the U.S. throughout the 90's and we were taught the wrong story of Columbus, that he knew the Earth was round and no one believed him, so he had to prove them wrong. I've already learned that was false years ago, but it's still crazy to me that that's what I learned in my early times in school.
    Excellent video. One suggestion is to tell us what years these historical writers you quote lived. Augustine, for example, lived in the 300's - 400's A.D., but I don't think you mentioned that in the video.

  • @Raleyg
    @Raleyg Před 2 lety +56

    A medieval monk gave probably the most obvious proof that the Earth is round: It explains why we can see further from higher elevation

    • @raimohoft1236
      @raimohoft1236 Před 2 lety +7

      Also you can always see the spherical form if you live on the ocean or any large body of water, especially if there is a big peninsula stretching out into the distance and "diving" under the horizon like the big ships do if you watch them sailing away.

    • @Raleyg
      @Raleyg Před 2 lety +6

      ​@@raimohoft1236 This is just a theory but most people in the US who seem to believe in the flat earth are people from rural communities right? Maybe in addition to not having the best education they also rarely get to actually see the ocean

    • @NemisCassander
      @NemisCassander Před 2 lety

      @@Raleyg This is either a language issue or a gross overgeneralization. At least in American English, 'rural' has no connotation with 'inland' as opposed to 'coastal'. E.g., most of Florida, including where I grew up, is quite rural (i.e., not urbanized), and all of it is quite coastal. I'll grant that most large cities in many countries are either on seacoast or have access to the sea, but that is not quite the same.
      I'd also want to get some data on the correlation between living in a rural area and being a Flat-Earther before I admit that proposition.

    • @santikiller22
      @santikiller22 Před 2 lety

      @@NemisCassander rural areas TEND to have lower education rates, so probably that.
      Atleast in my country and how It was taught to me.

  • @zeppelinled3967
    @zeppelinled3967 Před 2 lety +29

    well, the very first proof that they knew is the fact that Kings held a staff in one hand and an orb in another. Staff for authority, Orb for the world.

  • @stevensalad8125
    @stevensalad8125 Před 2 lety +1

    What is it with youtubers and informative open discussions on CZcams lately?
    I like it

  • @Mkninja002
    @Mkninja002 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember telling my grandma (born in a countryside) that there are people who believe that the Earth is flat. She was like "What do you mean, flat? What about mountains?"

  • @fransbuijs808
    @fransbuijs808 Před 2 lety +23

    Science was always there in the Middle Ages. You should do a video about Frederick II of Hohenstaufen, a medieval scholar if ever there was one.

    • @kristianferencik8685
      @kristianferencik8685 Před 2 lety +1

      True but it was not called science. Back then physics was philosophy, biology was natural philosophy and chemistry was alchemy.
      Everything was building off of the works of the ancient greeks and this was not challenged till the age of enlightenment

    • @crozraven
      @crozraven Před 2 lety +1

      But how much a popular thing is "science" in medieval time or dark ages compare to religious dogmas, myths, & superstition?

    • @kristianferencik8685
      @kristianferencik8685 Před 2 lety +5

      @@crozraven well it depended on the people, time period and location. Though even prior to the fall of the empire it was commonly agreed that religion and superstition was not a substitute for reason and logic. Its just what they thought to be science was sometimes incorrect. But that's no different to the present time where new discoveries sometimes replace commonly outdated beliefs in the field of science.

    • @valentinmitterbauer4196
      @valentinmitterbauer4196 Před 2 lety +2

      Interestingly abrahamitic religions both helped sience and slowed it down. The one idea is "If god made the world, then everything in the world is touched by god, we can come closer to god when we observe and understand the world." This thought was common in the medieval arab world and in renaissance europe. The other position is that typical stereotype of the dogmatic theist rejecting new thoughts. This was fashioned in medieval europe and in the arab world after their golden age in medieval times.

  • @ozone2031
    @ozone2031 Před 2 lety +58

    Tell me why rafaël is italian:
    "Imagine a pizza"

    • @michaelmoorrees3585
      @michaelmoorrees3585 Před 2 lety +11

      I imagine it quite often. Usually when I'm hungry.

    • @solinvictus1234
      @solinvictus1234 Před 2 lety +6

      It's Raffaello.

    • @AnotherDuck
      @AnotherDuck Před 2 lety

      If you like a stereotype people have about you, why not reinforce it?

    • @AnotherDuck
      @AnotherDuck Před 2 lety +1

      @Questa Semplice Animazione stereotypes are like slurs. If you own them, people can't use them against you.

  • @pixelprincess9
    @pixelprincess9 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey Metatron! Love the video! Do you have the citation for your quote of St. Augustine? I'd love to cite the text myself in the future.

  • @JamesAnderson-dp1dt
    @JamesAnderson-dp1dt Před 2 lety +1

    Yes, the first story you told was indeed the version I heard when I was a child. However, I learned the actual facts at some point around the early 1980’s. I genuinely thought that the myth had died years ago. I didn’t know it was still in wide circulation!

  • @badgamemaster
    @badgamemaster Před 2 lety +22

    back in the 90s and the 2000s the fake Columbus was still taught in schools here in Denmark, but it was because they were still using old book from the 70s.

  • @mark_williamh1340
    @mark_williamh1340 Před 2 lety +5

    Reply videos that seek to expand upon and enhance the original video? Hell yes. Nice work

  • @jjkthebest
    @jjkthebest Před 2 lety +2

    What I knew about Columbus was somewhere in the middle. I knew that Columbus' calculations were wrong. I didn't think the academics thought the earth was flat. I knew the Spanish crown rejected his proposal. I didn't think about it enough to realise the rejection came from his incorrect calculations.

  • @fodassenaosei
    @fodassenaosei Před 2 lety +2

    I'm a simple Portuguese
    I see Portugal mencioned in a Metatron video I give a thumbs up!

  • @historypunkwargames4760
    @historypunkwargames4760 Před 2 lety +5

    thank you for all the video metatron you really are a great addition to my day and your videos have given me motivation to study Russian and improve my self Спасибо!

  • @RyuuKageDesu
    @RyuuKageDesu Před 2 lety +16

    I remember "learning" the first Christopher Columbus story in school, along with how nice he treated the indigenous people, in school. I learned the other story, during the same time, from my Native American grandmother. My history teacher that year "loved" when I raised my hand.

    • @lloydgush
      @lloydgush Před 2 lety

      She was caribian? (or is)

    • @septimus7524
      @septimus7524 Před 2 lety +11

      Well here's the thing... The first one is *mostly* right about Columbus's OWN treatment of natives. Columbus HIMSELF tended to treat them with kindness, noting in his own writings how he wished to SUBJEGATE them, NOT enslave them. He wanted to turn them into subjects of the crown, not whip the fuck out of them and force them to work. Columbus himself was never in the new world for very long periods of time (makes sense after all, he'd have to constantly return to Europe to report back to Spain since phone lines weren't a thing..) It was his Spanish subordinates who ended up doing all that horrible stuff. Since he wasn't even in the Caribbean very often nor for very long at a time, nor did he have the power to stand up to a bunch of Spanish generals and their loyal soldiers. Good luck asking the King of Spain to do anything about it either, Columbus wasn't Spanish, and the King of Spain certainly isn't going to slap his military leaders on the wrists for any reason.

    • @iainlovejoy2135
      @iainlovejoy2135 Před 2 lety +9

      This is simply untrue. Columbus was removed as governor of Hispaniola by the Spanish crown and returned to prison in Spain for brutality towards the local inhabitants. Reported crimes included rape, murder, torture and mutilation as well as enslaving the population to mine gold in such brutal conditions a third of those enslaved and set to work died within 6 months.

    • @RyuuKageDesu
      @RyuuKageDesu Před 2 lety +6

      @@septimus7524 Ultimately, you are correct, in that the people he brought with him were undoubtedly worse. But, as we even see today the most public figure, gets the most generalized blame. Native Nations across the entire content cary the anguish brought by "his" ships, not just the Caribbeans, @lloydgush . She was equal parts Blackfoot and Sioux, actually.

    • @RyuuKageDesu
      @RyuuKageDesu Před 2 lety

      Thank you, @@iainlovejoy2135.

  • @stephenrice2063
    @stephenrice2063 Před 2 lety

    I knew about this in general, but I was surprised some years ago when I read Dante's _Comedy_ and found not only that he knew the earth was spherical but that he kept bringing up reasoning and experimentation to solve what we would call scientific problems. He sometimes interrupts a theological discussion with a question about physics or astronomy and then proposes a thought or practical experiment to resolve it. If he had had access to slightly better tools, he would probably be recognized as a pioneer of early science.

  • @shaynethechangingman322
    @shaynethechangingman322 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember in school we were taught the correct story, but a lot of after school "educational" shows told the false version.

  • @StergiosMekras
    @StergiosMekras Před 2 lety +4

    Was taught the second story in school, thanks to the teacher (Greece, late 80's - early 90's) but already had seen both versions in books.

  • @jehl1963
    @jehl1963 Před 2 lety +3

    To the list that you mention I'd also include Adam of Bremen (

  • @mdug7224
    @mdug7224 Před 2 lety

    Solid information. Thanks for clearing up the Columbus caper too.

  • @Sombre_gd
    @Sombre_gd Před 2 lety +5

    To be honest, I never heard about scholars of Salamanca helping or thwarting Columbus' efforts to travel to India. At school we were tough he just convinced Isabella of Spain. I learned about existence of such group as scholars of Salamanca in my adult life, but only that they were proponents of free market, some kind of Renaissance economical libertarians.

  • @uberfeel
    @uberfeel Před 2 lety +29

    Lol even ancient greeks didn't believe the earth was flat.

    • @Segalmed
      @Segalmed Před 2 lety +6

      They believed in a lot of possible shapes (those pre-Socratic philosophers had a lot of strange ideas) but most got abandoned by the classical era.

    • @DubyaDeeEight
      @DubyaDeeEight Před 2 lety +3

      @@Segalmed the Earth is shaped like a Tetrahedron dont @ me

    • @Madara-rz8hv
      @Madara-rz8hv Před 2 lety +3

      Thts not true the average greek never believed in a globe it was a very obscure and long forgotten theory until rediscovered by the Jesuits and the Freemasons. Christianity didnt purge a knowledge of the globe from the masses it was simply unknown and so when you say "even the greeks knew" thts simply a lie or a statement made from total ignorance

    • @minutemansam1214
      @minutemansam1214 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Madara-rz8hv I mean, this is false. It was common knowledge that the Earth was round long before Christianity was a thought in someone's head. The Romans already knew this. And where do you think they got this knowledge from?

    • @Madara-rz8hv
      @Madara-rz8hv Před 2 lety

      @@minutemansam1214 wrong

  • @balazsszucs7055
    @balazsszucs7055 Před 2 lety +11

    Not gonna lie, I did hear the first story. Can't even remember when I've first heard the second one, but was certain that was true one, ever since.

  • @verv5737
    @verv5737 Před 2 lety +1

    Whenever I have seen people debunk the myth that people in the medieval period though the Earth was round, I have always found the arguments incomplete because they only seem to talk about the fact that the educated people of the time knew that it is round and I'd be left wondering if that information made its way to common people. Thank you for addressing this!

  • @eraigames
    @eraigames Před 2 lety

    I found this video to be really fantastic and just the right length for me!

  • @christopher-johnbompas9729

    This is so interesting. Thanks for this discussion. I am such a fan of both Shadiversity and Metatron.

    • @inregionecaecorum
      @inregionecaecorum Před 2 lety

      Yep I was taught the false Columbus story in junior school back in the 1960s

  • @louisdisalvia8310
    @louisdisalvia8310 Před 2 lety +26

    I’ve never actually heard the “false” story before. I had only ever heard the “true” one albeit with a few minor differences. Maybe I just had good teachers as a kid lol

  • @CAepicreviews
    @CAepicreviews Před 2 lety +2

    I have not heard the story regarding Columbus sailing around the globe - I have heard about a so called "Alternative Route" though. I cannot recall anything about the doctors denying him though.

  • @Deus0tiosus
    @Deus0tiosus Před 2 lety +2

    A comparison I like to use when this topic arises goes like this: "Common medieval people did not think about what shape the Earth was, just like common people today do not think about what shape the universe is."

  • @hubertk7363
    @hubertk7363 Před 2 lety +8

    I was surprised to learn that my history teacher believes this misconception about Columbus. To be clear - she is not a bad teacher, certainly above average!

  • @Donnerwamp
    @Donnerwamp Před 2 lety +17

    So in other words: Flatearthers aren't just agaist science, their understanding lacks behind way more than most of us thought...

    • @QwertyBoredom122
      @QwertyBoredom122 Před 2 lety +6

      Flatearther's can literally be disproven by lying on the floor at sunset then standing up right after the sun has gone below the horizon.

    • @zakazany1945
      @zakazany1945 Před 2 lety +2

      Flatearthers are either people who want to feel special or simply christians with VERY literal interpretation of the Bible. Remember that people to this day believe that the hebrews were enslaved by the egyptians and the pyramids were made with slave labour.

    • @Donnerwamp
      @Donnerwamp Před 2 lety +1

      @@zakazany1945 Oh boy, I totally forgot about those nutcases... But to be fair, thos whackos have a lot more problems than denial of the obvious truth...

  • @ivorkovac303
    @ivorkovac303 Před 2 lety

    A great video. I have also read Sir John Mandeville, which is basically a summary of the medieval world view and myths. I think it's probably also reflective of folk beliefs, since it includes things like the Prester John legend, the Amazons, and the cynacocephali. There are plenty of church depictions of the Earth as being round, and in fact their whole cosmology conceived of the universe as a series of spheres.
    I'm wondering of you could do a video about their views of other parts of the world, maybe shed some light on their debate over whether or not there could be live in the southern hemisphere. I know there was some talk about "antichthones" (spelling?), and whether or not the equator could be crossed by humans because it was allegedly so hot.

  • @ivanchagasp
    @ivanchagasp Před 2 lety

    Loved this video. It was recommended to me and I'm very glad I've watched it.
    So, is it wrong to designate medieval times as the dark ages for the supposed lack of knowledge production?

    • @GarethXL
      @GarethXL Před 2 lety +1

      the dark ages are call so due to the fact that there's next to no records left of the time, not because the lack of knowledge production
      ie: an age where we are all in the dark due to the lack of info

    • @robertmurphree7210
      @robertmurphree7210 Před 2 lety

      "'God's Philosophers How the medieval World land the foundations of Modern Science" by James Hannam 2010. Early Humanist Petrarch wanted to ruin their reputation and he invented the idea in the 14nth century.