Old World Birmingham UK

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 165

  • @cfrnetwork777
    @cfrnetwork777 Před měsícem +13

    BIRMINGHAM BORN AND RAISED, WAS AWARE OF MOST OF THE BUILDINGS, BUT THERE WERE A FEW COULDN'T FIGURE OUT WHERE THEY WERE. SO MUCH HISTORY IN BIRMINGHAM 🇬🇧🇬🇸🇰🇳

  • @kellydenver9597
    @kellydenver9597 Před 28 dny +12

    Fantastic observations. I can tell you that a lot of Birmingham was demolished through corruption. Bent councillors taking money from developers…

    • @wolveshat854
      @wolveshat854 Před 9 dny +3

      Yeh like the destruction of an ancient forest to build chelmsley wood estate

    • @jackvaughan3030
      @jackvaughan3030 Před 9 dny +1

      Also they used the wars to blew up the old world

    • @apocalypticdaze2139
      @apocalypticdaze2139 Před 2 dny

      The original intension was there, you're just referring to the after affects or the minions of the unconscious evils.

  • @CEE-DOT-DEE
    @CEE-DOT-DEE Před 11 měsíci +13

    I live in Birmingham UK and I work in construction I worked on the grand Hotel very old and interesting building there was iron supports the size of my leg with bolts the size of my fist in one of the walls I never knew about the tartan hidden history it makes more sense now ❤

  • @highlightoftheday7058
    @highlightoftheday7058 Před měsícem +4

    Hello fellow Brummies and time travellers. Grew up in the Small Heath part of the city, but have visited much of parts featured in this excellent video. Now living in Northampton. Thank you for the trip down memory lane and beyond.

  • @richardrobey9658
    @richardrobey9658 Před 11 měsíci +8

    Mind blowing 🤯
    The library that looks like a church
    The law court building is a most incredible building maybe ever
    The city hall have the most elaborate pipe organ, doesn’t make sense
    Great video

  • @acimbobby
    @acimbobby Před 11 měsíci +9

    I'm in the UK, but a long way away from Birmingham. I am amazed at what you show in the old photos every time. Thanks for the video.

  • @myboythom
    @myboythom Před 18 dny +1

    A beautiful video, thank you! We live in Brum, i could pass comment ...on LOTS! but just one thing that drives me bonkers is the absolute insane destruction of that amazing library. The brutal eyesore that replaced it was not only horrific but surely an utter waste of time and money. Whats even more astounding is they went and knocked that one down at the turn of this century and built another monstrosity at yet another humongous cost...eyewateringly bad- and why? To what purpose? Birmingham city council has now gone bankrupt btw...and can hardly continue to maintain the basics- like emptying bins, housing the destitute....the place is being destroyed; our ancestors must be spinning in their graves. BCC shame on you and all those who's pockets you have lined.
    Thank you again for such an important and beautiful video.

  • @MrBlueSky1978
    @MrBlueSky1978 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Yay the first video on this channel showcasing a city in the UK. My favourite band hail from there (ELO) and my partner's as well (Duran Duran). Having holidayed in Lytham St. Annes in August this year and feasted my eyes on lots of Old World Tartarian buildings there visiting this city 100 miles south of where I live could well be on the agenda in the near future 😉 Btw the Council House shown around 15 minutes in is an absolute stunner visually 😍🤩

    • @leeherring470
      @leeherring470 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Judas Priest hails from the mighty Birmingham. British Steel!

    • @DIRTBOYS
      @DIRTBOYS Před 9 měsíci +2

      black sabbath/ ozzy aswell

  • @zachariasbennett5105
    @zachariasbennett5105 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Thank you for making this video for I was born in Birmingham in the 1960s and I lived there for four months untill my parents moved to a town just outside Birmingham where I still live but I love Birmingham and have been going there for years for I think of "Brum" (as people from Birmingham and the black country call it) as home but I was very happy to see the old photos that you was able to find and put into your video for I have looked for old photos of old Birmingham and found some but I have never seen the photos that you had discovered and I was delighted when I saw them for I just love the old Birmingham from back then for the architecture was unbelievable for the people who built them was masters of their work and the buildings where so much better than what they build now for they are just glass,concrete and steel structures with no decorative details like the victorian buildings it is just a shame that a lot of the old buildings are gone but I just wish it was possible to be able to travel back in time to see and experience Birmingham as it was in the victorian era and to see all these old buildings. There are a few buildings in Birmingham and around the Midlands where the windows are at pavement level for the buildings had cellars and the windows at pavement level was to let a bit of light in but you will find the windows at that hight with a lot of the victorian buildings. I really loved watching your video that you did of old Birmingham and I can't thank you enough for making it and showing it on your channel.

  • @susanwesterfield6953
    @susanwesterfield6953 Před 11 měsíci +8

    My mother's home in Liverpool was bombed during WWII. The city was hit hard. I've visited twice, but after delving here...I will see in a different way when we travel back in a couple of yrs.
    Great to see so much history survived in Birmigham.

    • @annehat4833
      @annehat4833 Před 3 měsíci +1

      The more i look into his story...the more i see as in ww2....implosions not explosions.....roads were never harmed....just buildings !

    • @alecmiddleton1842
      @alecmiddleton1842 Před 3 měsíci

      @@annehat4833When hit by a falling bomb, it's hard for roads to fall down.

    • @annehat4833
      @annehat4833 Před měsícem

      @@alecmiddleton1842 should make big holes though ???

    • @Xegethra
      @Xegethra Před 8 dny

      ​@@annehat4833 They got paved over. In any case, they would have bombed the buildings to maximise casualties and ruin infrastructure unfortunately.

  • @richardmatthews244
    @richardmatthews244 Před 11 měsíci +5

    I live an hour away from Birmingham in a smaller city called Leicester and we also have lots of Domed buildings and a very interesting town hall with underground windows, yet no construction photos.

  • @EddyTeetree
    @EddyTeetree Před 11 měsíci +6

    You can in England see many examples of buildings supposedly much older than these Elizabethan Queen Anne etc. that are so very different that its hard to draw any line of progression between them and these you show here as though they are from a different universe you can however see the progression to what we call modern architecture especially in the dimensions and austerity of the facades. Thanks for a thought provoking show!

    • @apocalypticdaze2139
      @apocalypticdaze2139 Před 2 dny

      Soon you'll look at the 'mountains', 'cliffs', 'quarries', 'golf courses', 'reservoirs' etc etc
      All just repurposed after narratives.

  • @eqyogi
    @eqyogi Před 19 dny

    Thank you for your work and guiding us on this tour with your true thoughts despite ruffling some feathers. A refreshing look at Birmingham and it's glorious architecture. A great insight to Birmingham his..tory :-)

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Před 11 měsíci +7

    Curved buildings are just unbelievable !

  • @Starlight41717
    @Starlight41717 Před 14 dny

    Brummie here and i know alot of those buildings , some were gone b4 my time 70s child . Spent many a day at moseley swimming baths , still original inside , noticed the domes and style from a young child on many of those shown .I think the connecting building walkway is the museum .

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Před 11 měsíci +5

    Time Stamp 21:59 - Street electrical car is identical ones I rode on in Hong Kong 1971.

  • @someadvids5655
    @someadvids5655 Před 22 dny +1

    Hi, a great vid man im a brummie and was born in good hope hospital, im 51 now and ALLWAYS lived in Birmingham, i would love to go back in time and see how much everything had changed and just have a good walk round the city! i dident know there was a hotel next to the odeon cinema im not sure if its even there now!
    The photo of the building that is half round at 2.46 the john Lewis building it seemed that the left hand side edge had been cropped badly?
    shame there wasent anything on a school called Burlington school in Aston by the swimming bathes between not sure and 1986 ish?
    Anyone remember the wooden climbing frames and community center that was between park lane road and Aston tower junior and infant school in Aston Birmingham between not sure and about 1986 ish?
    Anyone remember the bonfires they had in Philips street park in Aston between 78-86 ish on b on fire nights?
    Anyone remember going down the walk way to go to the markets underneath the rotunda?
    Anyone remember the big fountain in the “old Palisades shopping center” where people would meet up and throw a penny in for a wish? And one way to get to the fountain was walking up the “ramp” where McDonald was/is from about 1970 ish to when they knocked it down for the “new Palisades” in Birmingham city center UK?
    Oh and PS, that tower about 19 mins in, it looked like to me there was a Russian top on that tower? anyone notice that it looked russion!
    Take care mate and have a great day!

  • @carmenjacinto4426
    @carmenjacinto4426 Před 5 měsíci +2

    So so so ...Magnificent !!!❤

  • @user-xj8kw7se2p
    @user-xj8kw7se2p Před 11 měsíci +3

    With all the historic photos of old world cities, you'll never see a building under construction among all the other completed structures, even though they are supposedly going up in the same time frame. Like you say, they all look firmly entrenched, as though they've been standing all along. Only in a designated construction photo you'll see a building during its alleged construction.

  • @Kiss_My_Art
    @Kiss_My_Art Před 4 měsíci +4

    Brummie here (as those of us born (1960) & raised in Birmingham are known as), I used to go to that library every Saturday, you could hear a pin drop in there it was so silent, I was a nurse at the Children's Hospital in the 80's, I swam at the swimming baths that you showed & the law courts are just fabulous, the town hall has amazing acoustics & I'm very proud to of had Victorian Grandparents....in fact I'm extremely proud of my city 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿❤️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @Abbale
      @Abbale Před 9 dny

      Proud of Birmingham 😂

  • @JustRideTheVibe
    @JustRideTheVibe Před 11 měsíci +6

    A couple of thoughts that keep coming to me as I watch your videos: you've talked about many of these buildings practically going up "over night" or simply with no explanation to be found at all. Two examples of stunning structures that supposedly employed "spirits" or "demons" in construction are Solomon's Temple (by architect Hiram Abiff of Masonic lore) and Kailash Temple in India, which still survives today. Solomon's Temple is obviously long gone (well, I think there was a real edifice, but it is also symbolic as well, if that makes sense), but Kailash Temple still remains, and when you look at it, conventional methods of construction just make zero sense, especially given the historic accounts of it being constructed in literally weeks!
    Speaking of Masons, I just find it fascinating that they have largely been the "architects" of our modern society, and the first Mason (perhaps apocryphal) was literally an architect using literal magic for construction. By the way, as an aside, my own great grandfather was a master sculptor in Richmond, VA who had immigrated to the States around the turn of the last century. His work can still be found in many of the old world buildings in the city today, including the Byrd Theater which is truly stunning, and even in the Architecture School building at UVA. He also did a couple large statues in the city which were recently destroyed during the 2020 riots, unfortunately.
    Anyway, I only bring him up because after my grandmother died, I went through a bunch of old documents she had been keeping, and I discovered an old file of his Masonic documents. Apparently, he was at least a 32nd degree Scottish Rite Mason, which I just found really interesting, given his intimate connection to many "old world" buildings of Richmond. Nobody knew he was a high degree like that, and my own grandfather (his son) flatly refused to be a mason himself, but never revealed why other than his strong Christian beliefs. He himself was actually an architect, interestingly, but his work, while not bad at all, was much less inspired than his old world father (my great grandfather). An article was written in the Richmond Times-Dispatch (city newspaper) about my great grandfather's career, and it's actually still available online.
    I have so much more to say and share, but I'll leave it there for now - this comment is already way too long!

    • @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794
      @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Indeed !!
      Magick yes most definitely .
      But did he build or was he "reclaiming " ?
      And how would you know ?
      Jon Levi does an interesting video on the construction of the 4 presidents into the face of Rock out in the desert : suggests casting of cement was used on a massive scale.
      So tools etc we do not know about & I'm sure some supernatural help !
      I hope that you steer well-clear of freemasonry

    • @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794
      @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794 Před 5 měsíci

      Ps another thought :
      Free = meaning at no cost, to receive or give something.
      So the Masons were not building but "receiving" free buildings by reclaiming them or demonic magic materialising them.

    • @nosaj2001
      @nosaj2001 Před 27 dny

      ​@zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794 interestingly just around the corner of these old buildings in Birmingham by the symphony Hall is an odd looking building that looks out of place. With cryptic symbols, and it's actually a masonic hall.

    • @ChrisRamsbottom
      @ChrisRamsbottom Před 23 dny

      People often forget that in Victorian times, there was a surfeit of labourers and many public buildings were built out of necessity, to provide these men something to do.

    • @lilyrose4191
      @lilyrose4191 Před 4 dny

      I enjoyed your comment, thank you!

  • @fireballfireball6962
    @fireballfireball6962 Před 12 dny

    What an awesome City Birmingham was in its heyday!

  • @Roy-in-U.K.
    @Roy-in-U.K. Před 8 měsíci +1

    A great video and lots of information. Pictures I have never seen and I was born in the centre of the city. You asked about the Hippodrome particularly the one with the tower. That is the main Birmingham Hippodrome Theatre in Hurst Street. The tower is no longer there as it was knocked down in 1963 when the theatre was completely refurbished and also in the early 2000s where it is now the home of the Royal Ballet.
    I was born in 1956 about 50yards from the stage door of the theatre so the area has some fantastic memories. If you need any more information I am here to oblige. Regards Roy.

  • @pauliedibbs9028
    @pauliedibbs9028 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I have been researching "historical English churches" as of late and have a real bombshell for you my friend.. Look up a guy by the name of William Butterfield and all of his "works" ......
    St Paul's Cathedral in Melbourne Australia, while not the most compelling of his "designs", did give me literal head-ache when finding out when and how long it took to build.. Started in 1890...
    ..and ***completed one year later****

  • @lechatleblanc
    @lechatleblanc Před 11 měsíci +2

    ❤❤❤❤❤ thanks so much for doing the uk... i adore the uk!!!!moving there asap

  • @Xegethra
    @Xegethra Před 8 dny

    There's a couple of arcades still bunched up together near Colmore Row. But yeah, we had a lot of nice buildings I still wish we had. That brutalist library isn't there anymore itself....it also has been replaced.

  • @ellemontgomery5262
    @ellemontgomery5262 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video, thank you.
    I was born and raised in Birmingham UK, although now live in New Zealand, but the love of the city is still with me.

    • @Abbale
      @Abbale Před 9 dny

      You escaped

    • @ellemontgomery5262
      @ellemontgomery5262 Před 9 dny

      @@AbbaleI did. And I’m glad I did but I do love the nostalgia of Brum 🥰

  • @robertplumb632
    @robertplumb632 Před 5 měsíci +1

    A very good video off my city, I remember a lot of the way it was thank you.

  • @vintagebuddha
    @vintagebuddha Před 11 měsíci +4

    Excellent

  • @Scottish-tart
    @Scottish-tart Před 11 měsíci +5

    I think the sidewalk kiosks were newspaper stands.

    • @kondition-kode-nine
      @kondition-kode-nine Před 3 měsíci

      Or possibly public urinals? They used to be very prominent features of town streets.

    • @ChrisRamsbottom
      @ChrisRamsbottom Před 23 dny

      @@kondition-kode-nine Some of Birmingham's still exist, they are cast iron but very ornate and painted green.

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Před 11 měsíci +2

    Structures seem to have an "Authoritarian be respective of what we made for your future lives and wonderment " !

  • @jasonlamberth414
    @jasonlamberth414 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Excellent vid and love the new intro!

  • @sawnoff77
    @sawnoff77 Před 11 dny +1

    21:31 the black box you query in the image at this time stamp might possibly have been a police box these were usually used by patrolling police to shelter from inclement conditions and to use a landline telephone to stay in contact the station. This was before frequency radios were available. This being in a city might have to be bigger for the officers to use together rather than the type of police box that was used as the Time Machine. Being blue and like a call box in size. Unlike the one in the picture which looks like is actually black.
    Falling out of favour around the late sixties early seventies again with cb radios improving and the use of patrol vehicles
    If not that, I’d say it’s a newspaper and local information stand.
    Could be wrong.
    Oh and that date on the church of the messiah image is 1895. Plus the derelict factory was probably an old workhouse for debtors or wash house for the poor and orphaned children.
    Thanks for doing this episode on Birmingham uk. As a current residence of Aston it’s always interesting to note what’s changed and what’s still as it was all those years ago. It’s a crap hole now with drugged up zombies on the pavements and rats in all the filth that has been fly tipped by the roadside. It’s not a nice place and dangerous too. Looking to move pretty soon so I avoid this wave of madness that’s descending on the city and I’m right now.
    God bless you.

    • @Bcfcuklhpwalker
      @Bcfcuklhpwalker Před 5 dny

      Council going bankrupt plus welcoming half the world will break this great city sad times

  • @wallacewarren
    @wallacewarren Před 11 měsíci +8

    There is also a Birmingham in Al-Abama.... the lies of History are unraveling.

    • @peterwilliamallen1063
      @peterwilliamallen1063 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Which was named after Birmingham UK

    • @stud105
      @stud105 Před 19 dny

      I'd say 75% of American place names are named from UK. Then you've got New YORK, New JERSEY, New ENGLAND etc...

  • @user-qc6kq9vh3p
    @user-qc6kq9vh3p Před 11 měsíci +2

    great vid. would be interested to know some picture sources as i live in stroud, gloucestershire,uk and would like to explore my home town. thanks for all your vids..awesome work🌼

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Před 11 měsíci +2

      I just did a quick search and came across the school of science and art. Wow! Thanks for watching..

    • @user-qc6kq9vh3p
      @user-qc6kq9vh3p Před 11 měsíci +2

      yes that building is definitely an old-worlder..also the hospital, i think.@@oldworldex

  • @kinghighpriestarchon4792
    @kinghighpriestarchon4792 Před měsícem +1

    I live in Birmingham UK, the old buildings that you’re referring to were made from Geo polymers and you can see them the way they’re peeling off the buildings they don’t like traditional rock.

  • @deeperconversationswithchad

    Here on the ground brother . Love to chat ❤️
    Love and light x

  • @davidgerber6385
    @davidgerber6385 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Please do Glasgow in Scotland

  • @howardharrisonphotosforever
    @howardharrisonphotosforever Před 11 měsíci +3

    Hi! howie here. Have you checked out its sister city? Birmingham, Alabama?full of old world buildings!

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Před 11 měsíci +4

      I have a file. Maybe I'll throw one together...

  • @crustyzimmerman3324
    @crustyzimmerman3324 Před 16 dny

    On our 3rd central library now…
    The second one was under construction nearly 20 years.

  • @sawnoff77
    @sawnoff77 Před 11 dny

    Victorians weren’t known as that because of their victory in the time and what was achieved. It was because the queen was Victoria. Like Georgian windows. Came into popular fashion for windows when king George was ruling Britain. It went so with the introduction window tax bill, the wealthy business owners would partition one large window into many panes and pay the tax for the apparent single window panes to show how well off they were. It’s why you’ll see other places with all the windows bricked up throughout the uk.

  • @patrickpatel5527
    @patrickpatel5527 Před měsícem

    Love it! I live in Birmingham. Apparently we had more spectacular buildings but sadly was demolished after ww2

  • @crustyzimmerman3324
    @crustyzimmerman3324 Před 16 dny

    @25:05 that’s buildings from 3 different Centuries.
    StMartins Chuch. The Rotunda 1960s and M-Pox Selfridges building c 2000.

  • @mrmeltology
    @mrmeltology Před 11 měsíci +4

    #meltology 👀🛎🕌🕍🌇⚡🧱

  • @anthonyroach6711
    @anthonyroach6711 Před 2 měsíci

    I live in Liverpool which is crammed with old world buildings, underground architecture and megalithic stone work. Feel free to visit anytime 👍🏻

  • @paulevetts9771
    @paulevetts9771 Před 14 dny +1

    i fitted the ugly steel frame entrance to the childrens hospital about 25 yrs ago. just feels like amy other city now. not home.

  • @LuxorCosmic
    @LuxorCosmic Před 16 dny

    My city!!!! As much as I know the city I couldn’t identify some of these places. The city has changed

  • @salparadise1220
    @salparadise1220 Před 14 hodinami

    You cannot be a city without a cathedral, but, having a cathedral doesn't make you a city. City status is, "within the gift of the Crown". (You have to apply for Royal permission and then it's up to the Crown to grant, or refuse, the request. New city status is often given out on jubilees/special anniversaries.
    It is, like pretty much everything else in the UK, class ridden madness.)
    The Roman Colosseum is an amphitheatre. The Town Hall takes its proportions from
    Temple of Castor and Pollux in the Roman Forum. It was, allegedly, designed and built to host a music festival (this sounds so unlikely).
    Gigantism in architecture vs architecture for giants?
    Plants growing out of towers and twiddly bits is evidence that the Council doesn't; bother to maintain buildings anymore. Each and every plant will, in time, start splitting mortar joints and then things will start falling down.
    Birmingham Council was the first in the country to declare bankruptcy, last year, after being saddled with a historic £850 million wage bill for having paid women less than men, for the same job, despite legislation saying otherwise, for a period of some 40 or so years. Central Government rubbed its hands in glee and refused to pay the bill (despite being responsible) and have laid it on the shoulders of the people of Birmingham. (We have some of the most deprived areas in Europe).
    It's all fun and games until the Tories get in to power, and then things start going wrong in short order.

  • @t4404
    @t4404 Před 7 dny +1

    it's a pity what the city looks like now. the people who will inherit these buildings are nothing like the people who built them

  • @zenaakers7469
    @zenaakers7469 Před 13 dny

    those are kiosks that sold newspapers etc

  • @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794

    18.31 in
    Looks like the turret of a mosque from which is sent out the sing-song call to prayer
    21.32
    Police box for duty policeman or tobacconist or type of "pissoir homme "
    --------------------
    Thank you for educating me on my own country !!
    I have only passed through Burmingham, but what you show is such a beautiful city.
    All of our cities are gradually eroded without even our knowledge or consent. It just "happens ".
    I dont recognise the London skyline anymore , which has changed super-rapidly since 2010.

  • @garyjohn1822
    @garyjohn1822 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Great video, i have found the history they have been teaching in main stream is compromised. two books which really touches on the ancient history of Britain which I would say to read is
    David Mc Ritchie Ancient and Modern Britain volume I & 2 and Early man in Britain by E.boyd Dawkins
    They both speak on the ancient egyptians who leave lower Nubia cross the Iberian peninsula into italy become known as the phonecians then cross into britain up to 40,000 years ago they become the ancient celts druid's, pics, cheddar man and build stone hendge and the 11 pyramids in England and 15 pyramids in Scotland...these ancient egyptians become known as the moors who were the first monarchs .who build thriving highly advanced civilization in Britain, based on the book by Diana darke, stealing from the Saracens
    what we are calling gothic/greco-roman victorian is really Saracen Islamic architecture laid down by the Moors.. I believe we are looking at ancient architecture and cities still standing today
    They say truth is stranger than fiction

    • @artstation707
      @artstation707 Před 11 měsíci

      Your offering here bulges to the brim with disinformation. Britain did not exist 40,000 years ago. It's the result of a global flood, 5,000 years yore. Cheddar Man is a fictional creation.
      It's true that Iberians deriving from Egypt and the Levant entered Scotland by way of Ireland, but they weren't the first blacks in the British Isles. The nation gets its name from black Judean Trojan exiles under the leadership of a grandson of Aeneas, named Brutus, who settled on the banks of the River Thames, establishing Trinovantum (New Troy), a city later renamed after a chief, King Lud. Beyond Roman occupancy, the realm became Christian, and continued that way, with legendary British rulers who even subdued Rome, around the time that an influx of Angles, Jutes and Saxons could no longer be contained. Saracen and Islamic influence is possible, but I don't think it ever amounted to a substantial phenomenon in medieval Britain. Influenced by further injections of culture from the near continent, including the black Vikings (Goths?) and French Normans, and with the advent of the Franco-Angevins, French Plantagenets, and then Scottish Judeo-Christian Stewarts, it was Catholic until the Tudor age when it became a protestant haven for French protestant refugees, who themselves ultimately derive from Moorish forebears in southern France.

    • @Bcfcuklhpwalker
      @Bcfcuklhpwalker Před 5 dny

      Bs rb222 indigenous to north Africa true Berbers are not cheeder gauge woke bs

  • @OldTerraLizz
    @OldTerraLizz Před 11 měsíci +1

    The law courts WOW! It stuns me when they say these Beautiful Ornate buildings are for criminals, the insane, government facilities, etc. The money and effort that went into these was huge! Now we are soooo much more advanced (HAHA) But it's too expensive, it's too hard, it's apparently ridiculous to make anything that is beautiful. We should just accept that people then worked harder and money, transportation of materials and skilled workers and artists were just readily available worldwide.

  • @anthonyroach6711
    @anthonyroach6711 Před 2 měsíci

    Hi. I have been a researcher of old world antiquitech for around 5 years now. This channel is a dream come true in revealing the lies and false history currently awash in humanity. Love the voice over too. Your accent is fantastic and not one of those accents that make you switch off due to annoyance 😏🤦🏻‍♂️🤣

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Thank you that's very kind...from a scouser no less. I'll put a Liverpool file together..

    • @anthonyroach6711
      @anthonyroach6711 Před 2 měsíci

      @@oldworldex that’s great news. Edge Hill, the city centre, Kensington, Toxteth, Sefton and many more areas have tonnes of “out of place” architecture. The underground tunnel system is fascinating too 👍🏻

  • @timothydillow3160
    @timothydillow3160 Před 11 měsíci +2

    That's what you can do when your "advanced."

  • @seti5142
    @seti5142 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Where the Goths originally came from is unknown???!!

  • @peterstopes-robinson9996
    @peterstopes-robinson9996 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Wow. Just because you can't comprehend something doesn't mean there must be a conspiracy afoot.
    1) The British empire during the Victorian era (Named after Queen Victoria not victory) covered half the globe. With lots of money and resources you can build nice things!
    2) The overlap of traditional crafts and guilds with industrial revolution produces beautiful buildings built quickly. Several years is a very reasonable time frame for these buildings, especially with the finances available.
    3) Just to highlight the clue you haven't got: Roman Coliseum? The Town Hall was based on the Temple of Castor and Pollux. Please read Frank Salmon's "Building on ruins: The rediscovery of Rome and English Architecture"
    4) WE HAVE RECORDS! Although I know you will dismiss this out of hand because "history was written by the victors"... Or is it the Victorians... Who knows, must be a conspiracy.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Před 6 měsíci

      You're welcomed to take it all at face value...with a large portion of your victory gin. Long live the king!

    • @ChrisRamsbottom
      @ChrisRamsbottom Před 23 dny

      Absolutely! We have photos of buildings going back nearly 200 years now - people really need to give their heads a wobble if they think it's all lies! Just because we are in the "old world" doesn't mean we are backwards, you know! We invented most of the stuff you take for granted!

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Před 11 měsíci +1

    Time stamp 21:35 - , little house on blocks may be representing a security day and night 360 degrees observation post to keep order ?

  • @thefernking3582
    @thefernking3582 Před 28 dny +1

    It’s funny because Birmingham loves queen Victoria but she did not like Birmingham and the Black Country 😂

  • @brianmac8260
    @brianmac8260 Před 11 měsíci +1

    1618 , 1838, 1902, 1892, 1863, 1865. Just some of them and I stopped at halfway, but are you getting the picture? That old black magic. 9 11

    • @ladyloucks
      @ladyloucks Před 11 měsíci

      Wow! I started adding up the dates and I see what you are saying. Just wow!😮

    • @bbymeowplants
      @bbymeowplants Před 8 měsíci

      Could you explain more what you mean I’m intrigued

  • @lechatleblanc
    @lechatleblanc Před 11 měsíci +1

    they be lion everywhere !!! those university blue prints mapping are very weird... doesnt make sense for a university...that half dome shape...

  • @susanwesterfield6953
    @susanwesterfield6953 Před 11 měsíci +2

    First glance 1862 for the church of the messiah.

    • @rebeccabrown5014
      @rebeccabrown5014 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I was torn between 1862 and 1852. I settled on 1852. 😉

  • @leeherring470
    @leeherring470 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Hey guys atleast the timelines are a little more believable they are giving 4-5 years for construction. Those huge buildings/castles in us cities are measured in a single year & some if you look into the months it is less than a year SO believable. It us crazy how they think we go along with it then there are the huge fires in every city Keep up the great jib

    • @ladyloucks
      @ladyloucks Před 11 měsíci +1

      Their whole story begins to get tired and old. The majority of the Old World wasn't built by the Victorian Era and it is silly for us to even think it was. If this is their story and they are sticking to it, then they need to show us how to build an Old World building in a few months with 3 months or more of winter right in the middle. Plus, explain why the bathrooms and sewage systems weren't installed at the same time. They could build huge fountains, three floors underground and huge glass buildings, greatest architecture ever. Built a Continental railroad but no bathrooms? Really??? I have so many questions. 😅

    • @freya6766
      @freya6766 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@ladyloucks
      💯 On point lady! 🎯 They. Are. Lying. Just like everything else, their narratives are an insult to our intelligence. They're just f-ing trolls printing history books!

  • @thirdeyelazerclinic1143
    @thirdeyelazerclinic1143 Před měsícem

    Why did machines make more jobs?
    Given the Luddites etc saw the Industrial Evolution different to history and population also paradoxically more orphans?

  • @siamrain7277
    @siamrain7277 Před 13 dny

    21:34 That's a Tardis 😮

  • @cathychilders5109
    @cathychilders5109 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Victoria’s real secret lol.

    • @JamieCrain5349
      @JamieCrain5349 Před 11 měsíci +1

      The secret is there old men. I always point out to the people in my life but if we’re watching TV how many females in Hollywood are really males. And they don’t believe me. Everything is upside down and backwards like Sandra has bullocks Jennifer Aniston Shakira, Jennifer Lopez I mean the list goes on they’re all dudes, and then brings them pleasure to have men lusting after them thinking they’re women. Because that would be a sin and a lot of religions. What really surprises me is that a lot of these wow- man come out and see it in interviews like J Lo had its sex change during the filming of in Living Color, but no one wants to see lady guy guy admitted it as well but still everyone is like no way. How can people be so blind and refuse to admit different

    • @artstation707
      @artstation707 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Check out images of Queen Victoria at Balmoral in 1884, with her biological niece Viktoria of Prussia. If you can find untampered with images, you should notice something distinctive about the Prussian princess, whose nickname was Moretta.

    • @artstation707
      @artstation707 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Here's another image that's quite revealing
      Group, including Queen Victoria, Balmoral 1887 in Portraits of Royal Children Vol.36 1887-1888 Sep 1887

    • @annehat4833
      @annehat4833 Před 3 měsíci

      @@artstation707 transisters is all i see !

    • @artstation707
      @artstation707 Před 3 měsíci

      @@annehat4833 Monkey see. Monkey do.

  • @pigeon_the_brit565
    @pigeon_the_brit565 Před 4 měsíci +2

    a narrative like tartary needs a extreme amount of evidence, do you have any?

  • @AntheaMorris-hm8nk
    @AntheaMorris-hm8nk Před 7 měsíci +1

    By the birmingham hippodrome it was bomb damage from ww2

  • @corinthians1961
    @corinthians1961 Před 9 měsíci

    Someone here can help me where is in Birmingham the old picture on Jeff Lynne's Long Wave cover, if it was in Birmingham or pick up from nearest places in Midlands or even in England, please let me know about, Thanxs

  • @recesorrecesor8924
    @recesorrecesor8924 Před 11 měsíci +1

    In 1800 there were 1 billion people in the world acording to the official narrative and just few days ago i was reading in newspaper how there is a super great lack of workers in every possible job. We really need a simple timeline about all of the fantastic buildings in the world from 1800 until 1900 so that we understand how many unique buildings are capable of building 1 billion people 🤣🤣🤣

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Před 11 měsíci +5

      Don't forget the infrastructure: railways, canals, brick paved streets...

    • @recesorrecesor8924
      @recesorrecesor8924 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@oldworldex For example, i would like to know what buildings were built in 1876 all over the world, location, time needed for constructing the explicit building and maybe worth of everything. Also timeline of all the "great" architects from 1800 till 1900 and all of their works 🤣🤣🤣

    • @ladyloucks
      @ladyloucks Před 11 měsíci +2

      ​@@recesorrecesor8924 And why did they not add sewage and bathrooms at the time??? The Old World could create beautiful fountains. What was the reasoning?

    • @recesorrecesor8924
      @recesorrecesor8924 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@ladyloucks Well my theory is that they had teleporters and whenever they had a nature call they simply teleported themself somwhere into nature and there they had their alone time and do their thing and then they returned. Where else do you thing the term nature call came from ?

    • @ladyloucks
      @ladyloucks Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@recesorrecesor8924 lol I can see that

  • @AC-id5ow
    @AC-id5ow Před 3 měsíci

    Certainly a refined civilisation, sadly no longer present in modern times.

  • @JeffTyrrell-c2d
    @JeffTyrrell-c2d Před 2 měsíci

    just because we have to feel modern !!!!! absolute disgusting when you think of it, shame and the new yorkers got rid of the first skyscraper building aswell < shame , shame, whats it called ,??? oh yeah THE SINGER BUILDING, shame on us all

  • @powpow8869
    @powpow8869 Před 3 měsíci

    Seeing the in tact greek/roman style buildings really does make you think. Apart from the integrity the ancient and modern buildings are basically the same... Watching this however made me wonder how much of this tartaria theory is part trauma response for having so much culture taken away? I agree that mainstream narratives are... Dodgy, but there is a lot more going on...

    • @ChrisRamsbottom
      @ChrisRamsbottom Před 23 dny

      Back then, people believed that imitation was the sincerest form of flattery, and as the Greeks had buildings that lasted 2000 years, then it behoves us who aspire to match their genius to copy their building styles.

  • @COLLSWORK
    @COLLSWORK Před měsícem

    😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁

  • @artstation707
    @artstation707 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Stop using the term "Tartarian." You're supposed to be exposing deception, not promoting it.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Před 11 měsíci +2

      stop trying to censor me...or don't. You're free to do as you please..

    • @artstation707
      @artstation707 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@oldworldex At least you're taking note of my efforts. That's a good start.

    • @user-lq6fl2ct6d
      @user-lq6fl2ct6d Před 10 měsíci

      Actually I've taken to using 'Old World" as opposed to Tartarian because of this channels name - however - I came into this research via the word "Tartarian" (from Ewon) and I like it's Gravitas and Roman Centurian kind of implication - it really captures the utter magnitude of this civilization - but I agree with artstation that it is not so accurate given that Tartar's are a mix of Euro Uralic and that might be appropriate for the North East of Europe and Russia but not the West of Europe or the North America where all of the statues and such appear to be of Europeans that look no different than Europeans that live around me in the Mid West of the United States - but I like replacing Victorian with Tartarian for this video - half asleep I smiled at the dig

  • @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794

    9.34 in
    Yes, you open my eyes : bombing antiquities and museums to re-write history.
    Look at Iraq - deluberate targeting of antiquities , blamed on "rebels" & not UK/USA - as if anyone believed that crap.
    Museum in Gaza oblitetarated as well as significant buildings. Remive the people, the buildings, the evudence.
    Then write a new story with different people😮😢

  • @annoloki
    @annoloki Před měsícem +2

    **lol** what's with "so we're told"? Who's telling you these things? Very suspicious! No, most of those buildings are still here, no one's trying to erase what we were, there's always new people on our one world, and they just want to do their own things just as much as people in the past did. But yeah, Birmingham was where the industrial revolution got its steam, it was a very free city, far enough from the centers of power that people were kinda left alone to be able to invent and innovate, but still close enough to those centers of power to go trade and make some money... but the powers took those steam engines used to make life better here to dominate other people around the world, which makes a few people very rich, but has a negative effect overall... forcing vulnerable people to do the work under threats of violence rather than decent pay and fulfilment from creating and innovating is more profitable, but the growth and the hope disappears, as does the money in the hands of the masses. People one made amazing machines here, now... I guess you can get yourself a hot latte! But yeah, no grand strategy, people who wanted to do the things in the past stopped being around, and new people don't want to give their own lives simply to serve the past which they have no connection to, they want to do their own things too... that's why you're doing youtube videos rather than those slide things you put into those old binocular type things that you look in to see the pics... um... google "view master" to see what I'm referring to

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Před měsícem

      'the powers' did take those things. But I disagree, it IS a grand strategy...and has been for some time.

    • @derekvanbloemen8415
      @derekvanbloemen8415 Před 18 dny

      So many beautiful buildings were destroyed.

  • @scottpike9009
    @scottpike9009 Před 5 měsíci

    Birmingham looks like any City in the US.
    I was surprised by the dates for construction, very similar to the US.
    I had assumed they were older.
    Made by the same hands, GOD Inc.

    • @Bcfcuklhpwalker
      @Bcfcuklhpwalker Před 5 dny

      Chicago builder came to Birmingham the planners to see a modern city an plan there's

  • @rycka88
    @rycka88 Před měsícem +2

    It will take some time to mark these channels as "do not recommend" one by one. CZcams for some reason wants me to go to stupid conspiracies.

  • @ComradeCorbyn-n4s
    @ComradeCorbyn-n4s Před 17 dny +1

    Bring back old England

  • @mrmeltology
    @mrmeltology Před 11 měsíci +2

    & #theoldworldparadise 🕌🕍🌇⚡🧱🔥