Did Romans Meet the Dinosaurs? - Ancient Fossil Discoveries DOCUMENTARY

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • Lets discover if the Romans ever met the dinosaurs through ancient fossil discoveries. Signup for your FREE trial to Wondrium: ow.ly/fWm130skwQk
    This animated history documentary is a part of our How They Did It series on daily life in the past. In this episode we focus on the topic of ancient fossil discoveries. In theory such events seem plausible given the fact that today, common people will stumble upon such fossils. It stands to reason then that people in the past would also have bumped into dinosaur fossils as nature brought them to the surface or individuals dug down to encounter them.
    The episode begins with a discussion of what we even mean by the term fossil. This is actually a quite generic term which can mean almost any preserved trace of past life. We then discuss the various means by which this might occur. The primary one being permineralization which results in the stereotypical stone dinosaur fossils.
    Next we explore the numerous pieces of evidence which would support the claims that people from the past did indeed encounter fossils. This comes in both direct and indirect forms. Some amazing examples include fossil finds within Egyptian tombs, the reported discovery of massive giants beneath the earth, and anecdotes about fossil galleries such as the one created by Emperor Augustus. We finally finish with a recap of what can be concluded from this evidence. In the next episode we will explore how dinosaur and other pre-historic fossils may have influenced ancient mythology of things like dragons, giants, and cyclops.
    As a big fan of dinosaur documentaries growing up, and of course Jurassic Park, I am amazed that I had never heard of this topic and am so happy to bring it to you today. Hopefully it serves as a more grounded discussion of dinosaurs and humans than the latest Hollywood movie Jurassic World Dominion (which I will totally still go after watching the off-the-rails madness that is the Jurassic World Dominion trailer). Let us know if you think the Romans ever found real dinosaur bones and what sorts of episodes you would like to see next!
    Credits
    Research = Chris Das Neves
    Writing = Chris Das Neves
    Narration = Invicta
    Artwork = Penta Limited
    Editing = Penta Limited
    Sources and Suggested Reading
    "The First Fossil Hunters" by Adrienne Mayor
    "Natural History" by Pliny the Elder
    "The Histories" by Herodotus
    "Description of Greece" by Pausanius
    "Book of Marvels" by Phlegon os Tralles
    "Greek Questions" by Plutarch
    "Life of Apollonius of Tyana" by Philostratus
    #history
    #documentary
    #jurassicworlddominion

Komentáře • 991

  • @InvictaHistory
    @InvictaHistory  Před 2 lety +260

    This has been an episode I've wanted to make for a long time but even I was surprised by the sheer amount of evidence we have about ancient fossil finds. The art team as equally inspired and made this awesome Caesar riding a T-Rex shirt: printerpanther.com/products/caesars-t-rex-invicta%C2%AE-official-design

    • @Callmecel
      @Callmecel Před 2 lety +3

      @The Philosoraptor never underestimate how fun we can make stuff :D

    • @Joso997
      @Joso997 Před 2 lety +6

      giant bones near human remains are a fact. doesn't mean it is from dinosaurs but it may as well be. Romans are not the first ones to play with bones.

    • @nerdelf3704
      @nerdelf3704 Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you! Can’t wait to rock the T shirt!

    • @brokenbridge6316
      @brokenbridge6316 Před rokem +3

      I have no doubt that ancient people found plenty of fossils and probably helped influence some of their mythologies.

    • @fecalmatter4195
      @fecalmatter4195 Před rokem +5

      By the way the gold mining ants story is true. They were Marmots a tunneling rodent in the native tongue that means something like "Mountain Ants" the area they occupied is full of gold dust on the border of India somewhere I forget but it's a dangerous contested area today.

  • @Duchess_Van_Hoof
    @Duchess_Van_Hoof Před 2 lety +1641

    Got to love the Roman who unearthed a fossil, made a sacrifice and then reburied it. He's not going to mess with something way above his paygrade.

    • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
      @aldrinmilespartosa1578 Před rokem +256

      "Thank you Mars for killing this Dragon, would have make my life miserable it you keep it alive".

    • @RexGalilae
      @RexGalilae Před rokem +94

      that roman was none other than Sartorius, probably the most based Roman of the Late Republic until Caesar

    • @simritnam612
      @simritnam612 Před rokem +45

      No matter the price, I would not mess with the God of the Dead.

    • @thebasileus4793
      @thebasileus4793 Před rokem +20

      Honestly he is a fucking vibe.

    • @cliffcampbell8827
      @cliffcampbell8827 Před rokem +48

      "They look like bones except they're much bigger and...made of stone?! What the hell is going on here?"

  • @FlymanMS
    @FlymanMS Před 2 lety +688

    I like the idea that stories and myths of monsters and giants didn't just come out of thin air but are based off the remains of prehistoric animals ancient people came upon.

    • @Ramtin-Blue_rose
      @Ramtin-Blue_rose Před 2 lety +58

      Dragon mythologies in particular

    • @AB-bg7os
      @AB-bg7os Před 2 lety +9

      Yes but many are based on ancient reality

    • @PyrusFlameborn
      @PyrusFlameborn Před 2 lety +56

      I read that the Greek myth of the Cyclops is based on a mammoth skull. The giant hole in the skull where the trunk connected could be misinterpreted as a very large damaged eyesocket.

    • @probablynotdad6553
      @probablynotdad6553 Před rokem +22

      @@PyrusFlameborn yes, but they still killed plenty of elephant, and likely heard stories of Russian mammoths that still lived at the time. They were likely already familiar with them.

    • @badape9227
      @badape9227 Před rokem

      Anicent mesoamerican definitely has contact with some hold overs of the ice age, alot more closer in time than our European ancestors

  • @levitschetter5288
    @levitschetter5288 Před 2 lety +350

    Romans would have never found a T Rex, as the species is only found in North America, but there were plenty of other large therapods the Romans could have found

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  Před 2 lety +94

      I thought they had a wider range than that but upon further study it looks like you are right. In looking things up I also saw articles from this week about the similar creature to the t-rex being found in Egypt recently so indeed they may have made some impressive finds

    • @motsje
      @motsje Před 2 lety +43

      @@InvictaHistory i believe the egyptiN find was a spinosaurus. A creature bigger than T-rex. But it mostly ate fish, mostly

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan Před 2 lety +9

      @@motsje Spinosaurus was just a giant crocodile.

    • @Argacyan
      @Argacyan Před 2 lety +24

      @@InvictaHistory Ceratosaurs and Charcharodontosaurs can be found in Egypt, more uniquely Spinosaurids which can also be found in Morocco.

    • @MarkVrem
      @MarkVrem Před 2 lety +22

      @@Argacyan They also had the big sails, which could be mistaken for dragon wings.

  • @brunopereira6789
    @brunopereira6789 Před 2 lety +485

    I love this kind of thing. Thinking how ancient peoples interpreted geological, biological and astronomical events is fascinating.

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  Před 2 lety +50

      Its definitely one of the subjects that fascinates me as well. I'm excited for part 2 where we can talk more about what people though about these fossils

    • @brunopereira6789
      @brunopereira6789 Před 2 lety +2

      @@InvictaHistory I'm excited as well! Any plans on making a series on how ancient peoples interpreted meteors, volcanoes, etc?

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 Před 2 lety +2

      Romans weren't as big on astronomy but mesopotamians had it for food

    • @Duchess_Van_Hoof
      @Duchess_Van_Hoof Před 2 lety +2

      This is one of the primary enjoyments of reading historical primary and secondary sources.

    • @shady83
      @shady83 Před 2 lety +1

      @@InvictaHistory is this where dragon mythology came from?

  • @markmuller7962
    @markmuller7962 Před 2 lety +94

    Imagine ancient history, Egyptian, Indian, Roman all mixed with freaking dinosaurs.
    A journey around the world seasoned with dragons, treasures, legends and mysterious discoveries...
    This documentary felt like 1 second long for how much enjoyment it brought to my life

    • @atshinkansen7439
      @atshinkansen7439 Před rokem +3

      If you’re not familiar with the Dinotopia books, I highly recommend looking into them.

    • @markmuller7962
      @markmuller7962 Před rokem +1

      @@atshinkansen7439 Thx I'll look for it 100% :D

    • @markmuller7962
      @markmuller7962 Před rokem +2

      @Normal Goy "Bro" go back watching vines

  • @gamincaimin9954
    @gamincaimin9954 Před rokem +57

    Its so interesting how cautious they were around fossils, undigging the dead was likely seen in many cultures as lines of being cursed, so the peoples of antiquity treated the fossils with respect probably out of fear of the monster's curse or some undead deity.

    • @stevenle9960
      @stevenle9960 Před rokem +17

      yea if a normal dead dude can haunt you imagine what a giant spirit could do

    • @shuaguin5446
      @shuaguin5446 Před rokem +4

      Which would explain why many of those bones ended in temple. It was both exotic and worthy offering to priest and gods, but also a way of to give the mysterious entity back to the gods, ending any curse or bad luck the dead mysterious entity might bring.

  • @Dryghtendanitsu
    @Dryghtendanitsu Před rokem +25

    On your mention of the big bones being found in coffins: I remember reading somewhere that some bronze age peoples would find fossils and put them in coffins, thinking they were heroes of a previous age, rearranging a mammoth or elephant skeleton to be a human, etc. IDK if its true or not, but hearing you mention the coffins towards the end sparked my memory

    • @warpnin3
      @warpnin3 Před rokem +2

      People were really stupid then..Couldn't even tell animal bones from human!

  • @TheSaneHatter
    @TheSaneHatter Před 2 lety +32

    I can clearly remember the college history/literature class where we read the Mesopotamian creation myth, and how the class speculated on whether the primordial monsters suggested in the tale were inspired by findings of fossils in ancient times.

  • @atticusrussel3485
    @atticusrussel3485 Před 2 lety +168

    You dismissal of herodotus's claim of good digging large ants ignores that ot was just a mistranslation. There actually mammals in the region which frequently unearth gold, but since the greek word for ant sounded so similar to the indian word for marmots and thus the greeks believed them to be talking of ants.

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  Před 2 lety +56

      Hmm I had never heard of that explanation. Got any sources on this?

    • @Quasimodo-mq8tw
      @Quasimodo-mq8tw Před rokem +24

      @@InvictaHistory Don´t know any source but some of my history lecturers in Constance repeated that explanation.

    • @xTheacefrehleyx
      @xTheacefrehleyx Před rokem +12

      @@InvictaHistory In this video, they talk about it, with the sources. v=i93LwbsXncM&pp=ugMICgJwdBABGAE%3D

    • @raminagrobis6112
      @raminagrobis6112 Před rokem +7

      You're probably referring to the fact that the Greek name for any is "myrmex (genitive, myrmicon)". Even then, I fail to see the connection with "marmots".

    • @kylepena8908
      @kylepena8908 Před rokem

      I have also read this

  • @helmutthat8331
    @helmutthat8331 Před 2 lety +184

    The theologian St. Augustine of Hippo was an amateur paleontologist, spending some of his time digging up bones in North Africa when he wasn't performing his duties as Bishop.
    He also recognized that there does not have to be a conflict between the creation account in the book of Genesis and the fossil record as he wrote in City of God.

    • @RikudoMadaraUchiha
      @RikudoMadaraUchiha Před 2 lety +29

      I mean dinosaurs could be the beasts that God created in Day 6 right? The Days of creation could be millions of years apart. So I can see that mindset

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 Před 2 lety +4

      @@RikudoMadaraUchiha Do you really believe that jwaish shit? 6 days then god rested on the 7 and evertime god create something he says it's good as if he don't know what is good and what is not

    • @RikudoMadaraUchiha
      @RikudoMadaraUchiha Před 2 lety +34

      @@starcapture3040 Anything’s possible 🤷🏻‍♂️
      I always keep an open mind. Science either hasn’t yet or simply can’t explain everything.
      Who knows maybe science is man’s way of explaining how God made things happen idk

    • @akaroth7542
      @akaroth7542 Před 2 lety +6

      If you have to go that far outside the book, then are you still following it?

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 Před 2 lety

      @@RikudoMadaraUchiha The genesis story in the Torah is copied from Egyptian and mesopotamian sources. it's already known fact. Torah wasn't written by moses but by Rabbi claiming it was. I'm not an atheist but I believe the torah and John Bible are edited and mere copies of re fashioned stories in different narrative.

  • @duneydan7993
    @duneydan7993 Před 2 lety +82

    I think a whale fossilized skeleton in the desert could passed for a giant flying snake in the eyes of ancient people. It's really long, has no back limbs and sometimes the flipper bones could be missing and the spread out ribs at the front could remind someone of the shape of a cobra's hood or even some sort of wings!

    • @joebobjenkins7837
      @joebobjenkins7837 Před rokem +5

      They killed whales for all sorts of purposes. They likely knew what whale bones looked like.

    • @viciousyeen6644
      @viciousyeen6644 Před rokem +8

      Yes they did, but not necessarily in the desert bro

    • @duneydan7993
      @duneydan7993 Před rokem +11

      @@joebobjenkins7837 a freshly killed Baleen whale skeleton on a beach must be a far cry from a flattened rocky broken Basilosaurus skeleton found in the middle of the desert.
      It's not called Basilosaurus (King Lizard) for no reasons either! Even early paleontologist mistaked it for an ancient reptiles!

    • @k9thundra
      @k9thundra Před rokem +1

      24 qubits is like 40 feet long. So yeah I think they mostly found where extinct whales.

    • @SarahlabyrinthLHC
      @SarahlabyrinthLHC Před rokem +2

      @@duneydan7993 An interesting point: The armrests on King Tut's throne are decorated with winged serpents.

  • @lordsiomai
    @lordsiomai Před rokem +12

    To think the Romans were able to make reconstructions of what fossils may have looked like when they were alive just based on measurements and estimations is beyond amazing. They really were ahead of their time

    • @haruyanto8085
      @haruyanto8085 Před rokem +4

      That's common, you underestimate ancient people

    • @rogueascendant6611
      @rogueascendant6611 Před rokem +6

      @@haruyanto8085 Modern people always ALWAYS underestimate the ancient people.

    • @jackstraw4222
      @jackstraw4222 Před 7 měsíci

      not really,anyone past or present can estimate things...its quite simple to guess ..

  • @nigelhirth2181
    @nigelhirth2181 Před rokem +27

    I remember reading a book when I was a child, that claimed the mythology of griffins could be traced back to a specific protoceratops fossil embedded in the wall of an ancient temple in what is today Turkey. The frill had fractured and moved over the back giving the impression of wing bones to ancient observers.
    Wish I could remember the name of the book.

    • @calessel3139
      @calessel3139 Před rokem +5

      I actually remember that being reported in a National Geographic magazine many years ago.

    • @RogueT-Rex8468
      @RogueT-Rex8468 Před rokem

      They’ve made mention of that again in recent books. A comic called Paleontology recently depicted that exact story.

    • @randalosgood
      @randalosgood Před rokem

      The Gryphon's Skull by Harry Turtledove. Great book, and a great series:-)

    • @alicemcquin6160
      @alicemcquin6160 Před rokem

      There is another great book on the same subject called 'The First Fossil Hunters' by Adrienne Mayor. The book you read might actually be based on her research.

  • @mfaizsyahmi
    @mfaizsyahmi Před 2 lety +32

    Fossil bones show up all the time, yet we only ever looked at them through scientific lens within the last couple centuries. Imagine how much clearer our understanding of the deep past could have been have we been able to retroactively apply scientific rigour on all the specimens stretching over thousands of years, easy pickings for sure since those came readily out of the ground, that instead feed mythologies of the peoples.
    Maybe, if the bones were long gone but the myths remain, we could just as well have our science lens trained on what we preserved with words.
    Anyway, can't wait for pt. 2!

    • @CAMSLAYER13
      @CAMSLAYER13 Před rokem

      The problem with that is anything they wrote is filtered through their lense of what they thought it was. They might describe something as a mythical beast but there's no real way of knowing what condition the bones where in and what assumptions they made.

  • @florianpierredumont4775
    @florianpierredumont4775 Před 2 lety +22

    When I was almost 16, after graduating from junior school, I volunteered for archeological work in a small town, near my native city. It was in a remote forest, and there was a huge rock, that historians suspected to be an ancient camping area for hunter-gatherers. We were a band of teens, and our task was to clean the rock and get rid of all the earth and rotten leaves and wood. At some point, two of us (me and an older boy) found big stones, strange in shape. The archeologist came and was very happy : it was two prehistoric blades made of stone. I was shocked by the "simplicity" to find them : they were barely a few inches beneath the ground. So the archeologist told us about strategraphy and stuff. ^^
    4 years later, as a student, I had a teacher whom told us about ancients civilizations discovering, as I did, ancient fossiles and strange objects. One of my pal even made his thesis on this subject.
    Now, I am curious to know if such discoveries influenced ancient mythology, and led to the creation of creatures and monsters we know today.

  • @MarkM2023
    @MarkM2023 Před rokem +4

    A few years ago I came across some stories that suggested Herodotus' gold-digging ants were in fact marmots from Mongolia. These marmots were trained to dig around areas where there's gold and when they came up their fur was covered with gold dust, which were then collected by their trainers.

  • @sufler5670
    @sufler5670 Před 2 lety +14

    Units of History: T rex cataphracts

  • @LudosErgoSum
    @LudosErgoSum Před 2 lety +57

    I want to point out that ceratopsidae which Triceratops belong to, is strictly confined to Laramidia, the western continent of todays United States that was split in half by the Western Interior Seaway during the Cretaceous. To use Triceratops as an art asset in the video along with the suggestion that it was a potential inspiration for dragons, is thus an anachronism in multiple ways. Neither did it or it's chasmosaurie or centrosaurine relatives inhabit the geographical area during their existence, their fossils was most likely never exhibited in Rome in ancient times as this would furthermore imply exploration and possible trade between the old world and the new world over massive distances.
    The only advanced ceratopsian found outside Laramidia, is Sinoceratops. As the name imply, it was found in China. Even if fossils were found and traded, fossil transport is notoriously difficult even today with modern technology at our disposal which make it highly improbable that any ceratopsidae material ever made it to Rome or it's neighbour provinces.

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  Před 2 lety +36

      Thanks for pointing all this out. In part 2 I'll see if we can work this in as a point of clarification

    • @AB-bg7os
      @AB-bg7os Před 2 lety +10

      Neeeeeeerd

    • @shady83
      @shady83 Před 2 lety +9

      @@InvictaHistory your art is visual aids for the audience not forensic specimens for peer review.
      If it helps the lay audience understand and does not explicitly state Romans found the triceratops, I see nothing wrong with it.

    • @Citsatpans
      @Citsatpans Před rokem +2

      I am glad to know that I wasn't the only one considering the species' locations. X-D

    • @The_Ossifrage
      @The_Ossifrage Před rokem +5

      Basal ceratopsids originated in the lands that are now China, and eastern Asia, so they weren't confined to modern-day USA. It's more likely that these 'dragons' found in India belong to theropod dinosaurs, with the horns perhaps referring to bony ridges or crests above the eye orbit.

  • @CliffCardi
    @CliffCardi Před 2 lety +19

    I may missed this, but
    Those curly nautilus shell fossils? Those are actually fossils of an extinct relative of the Nautilus called Ammonites. Often found in limestone quarries where the Romans mined for concrete, they were given their name after Amon, an Egyptians deity depicted as a ram with large, curled horns.

  • @adrianwebster6923
    @adrianwebster6923 Před 2 lety +20

    It is certainly plausible that some legends/myths came out of fossil finds. After all the head of the lindwurm (dragon) from medieval Klagenfurt can still be seen today. Turns out it was a wooly rhino skull. A good story can survive even if only based on a single specimen and we all know how stories can grow and spread.

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 Před rokem

      I believe the word "dinosaur" itself is Latin for "Dragon". So when the Romans found the fossils, they thought they found dragon bones.

    • @Lucius1958
      @Lucius1958 Před rokem +4

      @@theawesomeman9821 'Dinosaur' is Greek, meaning 'terrible lizard': the word itself was not coined until the 19th century.

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 Před rokem +3

      @@Lucius1958 I'm pretty sure "dragon" and "lizard" are synoumnous in Latin. And Latin is more broad with its words meanings then English.

    • @user-wo7ql7or3g
      @user-wo7ql7or3g Před rokem +1

      @@theawesomeman9821 actually, dragon comes from the latin word draco which means snake. Also dinosaurs are not lizard if thats what you are trying to imply

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 Před rokem

      @@user-wo7ql7or3g Lizards, dinosaurs, and dragons are all reptiles.

  • @Ungulates
    @Ungulates Před rokem +4

    You mention a part 2 of this video, but I can't find it on your channel. Is it still being made? Was it taken down? Your coverage of this subject is so fascinating that I must know!

  • @NoBudjetFilms
    @NoBudjetFilms Před 2 lety +2

    Very cool! I researched this back in High School for a paper I wrote. It was amazing to learn what ancients thought when they discovered bones of giant monsters.

  • @ichhinterfrage559
    @ichhinterfrage559 Před rokem

    That was amazing! I can't wait for the second part. Thank you!

  • @danandlewistube
    @danandlewistube Před 2 lety +3

    This is truly fascinating 👏 more please 🙏

  • @simarrosaurio
    @simarrosaurio Před rokem +7

    As a paleontologist, I really enjoyed this video, very well done!

  • @rohitsoni2109
    @rohitsoni2109 Před 2 lety

    Was thinking about this. Thanks for the upload

  • @juanmagm
    @juanmagm Před rokem

    I find your expositions really cool and entertaining, thx a lot!

  • @ancientsitesgirl
    @ancientsitesgirl Před 2 lety +23

    What a surprise! Interesting topic, I wonder if there are any sources about similar discoveries in ancient Egypt????🤔

    • @lordInquisitor
      @lordInquisitor Před 2 lety +7

      Without a doubt there is

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 Před 2 lety +4

      there must be!

    • @saradavis6581
      @saradavis6581 Před 2 lety +3

      Did you watch the video? SKip to 4:53 for your answer smfh

    • @jjones6606
      @jjones6606 Před 2 lety +1

      @@saradavis6581 I bet you’re really popular at parties. 🙄

    • @froggystyle642
      @froggystyle642 Před rokem

      @@saradavis6581 I took this to mean ancient Egyptian sources, which are NOT present in the video.

  • @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014

    This channel is really getting interesting. Keep up the good work

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- Před rokem

    I've been waiting for something like this to be made for a long time. I've only heard small mentions of such discoveries about fossils in the past.

  • @homefirepizza6062
    @homefirepizza6062 Před rokem +1

    Great work can't wait for part 2!

  • @bencejuhasz6459
    @bencejuhasz6459 Před rokem +3

    Greetings from Hungary!
    It doesn't have to do anything to this subject, but there was a British company named "Invicta Plastics" once, which produced plastic dinosaurs from the 1970's to the early 1990's.

  • @davidhughes8357
    @davidhughes8357 Před 2 lety +19

    I wonder what ancient Gauls thought about the bones of elephants they found in the alps many years after hannibal's invasion never having experienced them ?

  • @justsometimber1nthelake873

    very nice video man! I really enjoy your work

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the video keep up the good work 👍🏻

  • @MarkVrem
    @MarkVrem Před 2 lety +11

    Just gonna say Triceratops lived in North America. I mean someone has to point it out.

  • @Caesars_Legate
    @Caesars_Legate Před 2 lety +4

    Another great video, thanks a bunch for this Invicta!

  • @snakycake4790
    @snakycake4790 Před rokem

    Awesome video! Looking forward to pt2

  • @beeman2075
    @beeman2075 Před rokem +1

    This was a fascinating video to watch.
    Years ago I read a passage in one of Michael Crichton's books that stuck in my mind: that if we counted the number of hours going back in time from the present to the ancient Egypt pyramid building period, and then multiplied each of those hours by ten years going back in time from the present, that's approximately how ancient the dinosaur period was. I don't know how accurate that is, but it's a neat little analogy. And on a geological scale, a few millions years is only a blink of the eye.

  • @RikudoMadaraUchiha
    @RikudoMadaraUchiha Před 2 lety +21

    I mean aren’t fossils the inspiration for mythological monsters anyway? Like Cyclopses or Dragons?

    • @m.hughmungus121
      @m.hughmungus121 Před 2 lety +2

      Or, they *were* monsters that existed at one time - and the fossils are evidence all great beasts do bleed

    • @manospondylus4896
      @manospondylus4896 Před 2 lety

      While it has been popularized by pop-science, there is no actual case where one can say with certainty that X fossil inspired Y monster. The ideas put forward, like the griffin being based off Protoceratops and cyclops being inspired by elephant skulls, have many problems with them and are not actually taken seriously by archaeologists and paleontologists. The so-called “dragon bones” sold in Chinese folk medicine on closer inspection also turned out to not be dinosaur fossils at all, but instead largely come from Pleistocene horses or sometimes even clamshells.

    • @Barthaneous34
      @Barthaneous34 Před 2 lety +3

      No. All peoples all cultures had first hand experiences with dragons (dinosaurs) the term dinosaur is only from the 1800s. Literally dragon and dinosaur are the same thing. " Large reptiles."
      Look it up. Roman Empire had " long neck" dragons fight int he collesium and in China we're they recorded everything an Emperor did , states very clearly that smaller dragons pulled the Emperor's chariot.
      This is ridiculous that we have people telling other people that sharks and crocodiles predate the dinosaurs but they survived but not even 1 or a few dinosaurs survived?
      That's illogical and irrational and foolish to think that dragons or aka dinosaurs in some small part of the earth survived just as the other creatures that supposedly came before them.
      .a brontosaurus the size of a building is still a brontosaurus if it's only the size of a truck living int he jungle.

    • @sciencefliestothemoon2305
      @sciencefliestothemoon2305 Před 2 lety +1

      Human embryonic development can cause a cyclops like baby to be born. They usually die soon after birth, but are likely the root of this myth

    • @Duchess_Van_Hoof
      @Duchess_Van_Hoof Před 2 lety

      That and stories that grow way out of scale over the generations.

  • @Lucius1958
    @Lucius1958 Před rokem +3

    There is actually pictorial evidence of ancient fossil discoveries. I recall a Greek vase painting, reproduced in the magazine _Archaeology_ some years ago, depicting Heracles rescuing Hesione from the 'sea monster'. The 'monster' looks exactly like a skull eroding out of a hillside: in fact, modern paleontologists are said to have identified it as an Eocene mammal - possibly a camelid of some sort.

  • @Randomdudefromtheinternet
    @Randomdudefromtheinternet Před 11 měsíci

    I really loved this, can’t wait for the sequel video.

  • @HerculesMays
    @HerculesMays Před rokem +2

    Thank you so much for giving some attention to Philostratus! He's a fascinating author to read and, for those who are interested, Philostratus talks about the giant fossils in his book "Heroicus".
    It offers one of the best examples of fossil discoveries in classical antiquity and how they were viewed by Greco-Roman society. In his Heroicus, Philostratus' character of the vine-tender uses the fossils as evidence for the giants of Greek mythology as well as to prove that the heroes of the Trojan war like Achilles, Ajax Protesilaus, and Hector, really were abnormally huge.
    I'd honestly highly recommend it for anyone interested in how fossils were viewed in antiquity, and especially if you're interested in the hero cults of the time.

  • @rthehusband8572
    @rthehusband8572 Před 2 lety +9

    Sure would explain the stories and folklore. I can definitely see how someone could claim a dinosaur skull and skeletal remains be that of dead dragons.

  • @krankarvolund7771
    @krankarvolund7771 Před 2 lety +15

    "Certainly it's possible that some romans dug up a T. rex skull"
    Nope. T. rex only lived in the western part of North-America, Romans never seen any XD
    And frankly, it's very unlikely that Romans dug up dinosaur remains, those are very hard to find, even today. The most plausible, is that they've dug up some cenozoic mammals bones, so mammoths, rhinoceros, etc.... ^^

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Před 2 lety

      Dinosaur fossils have been found in parts of what was once the Roman Empire, it is very likely they found them as well as prehistoric mammals
      But you are correct in that they did not find a T Rex skull there, as T Rex was native to North America. However, other large therapies have been found in Europe and North Africa, some of which are other species of tyrannosaur

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Před 2 lety

      @@ecurewitz Yeah, of course we've found dinosaur bones. But it's still very hard to found XD
      They probably found one or two, but the majority of the fossils they've found were cenozoic beasts, because today the majority of fossils we found are cenozoic beasts ^^

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Před 2 lety

      @@krankarvolund7771 but they still found dinosaurs
      In parts of Southern Europe, Cenozoic deposits are exposed at the surface, which is why many Cenozoic animals were found. But the Roman Empire was vast, and in m any areas, it is Mesozoic and Paleozoic ricks exposed at the surface. It is those Mesozoic outcrops where dinosaurs were found, most notably in much of North Africa as well as Britain and several other parts of the empire

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Před 2 lety

      @@ecurewitz Yeah, we found dinosaurs because we look for it, most of the time, there's some lucky findings, often when digging deeper than Romans would, but that's not the majority ^^
      We don't find more Cenooic fossils just because we have more Cenozoic rocs, it's also because Cenozoic is very recent, and so there had been less time to destroy the fossils ^^

    • @mondaysinsanity8193
      @mondaysinsanity8193 Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@krankarvolund7771 they simply did find fossils though lmao

  • @fifa4lifeunknow795
    @fifa4lifeunknow795 Před 2 lety +1

    YAAAAAAS BEEN REQUESTING THIS VIDEO FOR FOR LIKE 6-12 MONTHS BACK FINALLY

  • @Mike-dn7ul
    @Mike-dn7ul Před rokem +1

    interesting vid. thanks and subscribed!

  • @raymondrogers3929
    @raymondrogers3929 Před 2 lety +6

    Mathmatically speaking, its very unlikely that the Romans and people within the empire did not come across these ancient treasures.

  • @4rnnr_as
    @4rnnr_as Před rokem +4

    Thanks for this! A bit unexpected, but wholly original and interesting . I always knew the Chinese and Medieval dragons were were inspired by fossils, but never realized ancient Europeans or Egyptians documented them.
    On the other hand, one must wonder what was lost because they didn't know how to protect or preserve what they found.

  • @malavolpe2814
    @malavolpe2814 Před 2 lety

    I adore this. Such a great episode.

  • @sethbartley2212
    @sethbartley2212 Před 2 lety

    Fantastic video!

  • @TheKEGdragon
    @TheKEGdragon Před 2 lety +6

    Go Go Dino Romans!

  • @alfrancisbuada2591
    @alfrancisbuada2591 Před 2 lety +3

    This was something new. I always wondered if the Romans also found fossils.

  • @garicrewsen1128
    @garicrewsen1128 Před rokem

    This was awesome!

  • @John-so5xw
    @John-so5xw Před rokem

    I LOVE YOUR CHANNEL DUDE!

  • @duneydan7993
    @duneydan7993 Před 2 lety +5

    We found fossil records from the Romans!
    The romans, by simply recording: the event, what the fossil looked like, the place and the dates, created some sort of primitive fossils database!
    That just blew my mind!
    I was just thinking they would have just been :"oh look a weird rock! Looks like a big bone! Let's put it in a temple or something!" While they were keeping quite complete written tracks of discoveries all over the world!
    🤯

    • @tsutenkakurobo9642
      @tsutenkakurobo9642 Před 2 lety

      I wouldn't go that far, lol. Got any specific examples?

    • @duneydan7993
      @duneydan7993 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tsutenkakurobo9642 except the ones in the video I don't have other examples as it's something I learned about thx to this video.
      Indeed, now that I read it again I might have gone too far😅.
      I was just really surprised some romans were that interested about fossils it was worth sending reports of findings from far away.
      A bit too emotional of me

    • @tsutenkakurobo9642
      @tsutenkakurobo9642 Před rokem +1

      @@duneydan7993 I'm always keen to hear about examples of things like this. Reminds me of meteoric iron weapons. Interests colliding!

    • @duneydan7993
      @duneydan7993 Před rokem +2

      @@tsutenkakurobo9642 I've watch a nice video about comparative anatomy. The guy used famous "dragon bones" found in old churches all around Europe as example and it was fun to discover what species were those bones from.
      Unfortunatly It's in french.

    • @duneydan7993
      @duneydan7993 Před rokem

      @@tsutenkakurobo9642 czcams.com/video/HWUIqvkNSoM/video.html here's the link

  • @Vanic00
    @Vanic00 Před 2 lety +5

    Imagine a legionary finding a T-Rex skull and just flipping out!!!

    • @JMObyx
      @JMObyx Před 2 lety +4

      Sadly, T-Rex was native to America, however, there are some other candidates.
      But for real, that is a cool idea!

    • @Vanic00
      @Vanic00 Před 2 lety +1

      @@JMObyx ya I know, just saying.

    • @MarkVrem
      @MarkVrem Před 2 lety +4

      Spinosaur is something they could have encountered. Maybe the big fin on the back would even look like a wing to them. LIke dragon wings.

  • @dakkefernet8585
    @dakkefernet8585 Před 2 lety

    lovely video, thanks❤

  • @djryken
    @djryken Před rokem +1

    Love this! Explains dragons, thank you. Is part 2 available yet?

  • @davidenativo
    @davidenativo Před 2 lety +4

    My question is, how many fossils have been destroyed due to mishandle by these ancient civilizations. We’ll never know..

    • @tapewerm6716
      @tapewerm6716 Před rokem +1

      There were perhaps billions of dinosaurs that lived and left their bones somewhere on the Earth. You can't keep every fossil you find.

    • @georgesmith2500
      @georgesmith2500 Před rokem

      @@tapewerm6716 Most likely trillions, but unfortunately, fossilisation is quite rare.

  • @manospondylus4896
    @manospondylus4896 Před 2 lety +42

    Implying that the Indian “dragons” might have been based off the skulls of ceratopsian dinosaurs is misleading, as these are not actually known from India. While they were native to Asia, when they lived, India was an isolated island continent similar to modern Australia, and so they never reached that landmass.

    • @RJStockton
      @RJStockton Před 2 lety +7

      Look up Shringasaurus indicus. It's not a ceratopsian, but it's a dragon right enough.

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  Před 2 lety +28

      Implying that any vague story correlates to a specific species is definitely problematic and its a big red flag I mention in the script. The artistic depictions in this video are certainly creative liberties more than proven hypothesis.

    • @manospondylus4896
      @manospondylus4896 Před 2 lety +1

      @@RJStockton And also way too rare as a fossil to have made any cultural impact

    • @markmuller7962
      @markmuller7962 Před 2 lety +3

      I didn't felt that hard-imply scenario personally. Ofc there's a lot of metaphor-like art in this type of documentaries

    • @Gillemear
      @Gillemear Před 2 lety +3

      For the ancient European Classical writers, "India" was a rather nebulous area to the east and not necessarily equated to the modern state of India or the Indian subcontinent as we identify it today.

  • @Crytica.
    @Crytica. Před rokem +1

    I actually once had a midnight thought about mammoth skulls being seen as evidence for cyclops in ancient times.
    Crazy to see such a thought being discussed seriously in this video!

    • @alicemcquin6160
      @alicemcquin6160 Před rokem

      I would read 'The First Fossil Hunters' by Adrienne Mayor. It addresses this subject in depth.

  • @ecurewitz
    @ecurewitz Před 2 lety +2

    At the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, in the Ancient Greek section, there is a case on display which shows people attacking a “monster” The monster is in fact the fossilized skull of an unknown species of monitor lizard
    Nest part: museum staff misidentified the skull as belonging to either a prehistoric whale or prehistoric giraffe

  • @2710cruiser
    @2710cruiser Před rokem +3

    Frankly speaking... After looking and reading up about recent feathered dinosaur discoveries from recent years... I am not surprised that the giants and beasts of legends were actually based off fossils that were found

  • @OmarSlloum
    @OmarSlloum Před 2 lety +6

    How did they mistake giant lizard skulls for human skeletons?

    • @dmorgan0628
      @dmorgan0628 Před 2 lety

      Trust in Jesus(PBUH) for the truth.

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Před 2 lety +5

      First, they probably didn't found giant lizards skulls. Second, you'd be surprised how ignorant men can misinterpret fossils, elephant skulls were mistaken for cyclops, crocodiles were thought to be dragons, etc... ^^
      The first registered dinosaur fossil had been identified as an elephant skeleton XD

    • @Duchess_Van_Hoof
      @Duchess_Van_Hoof Před 2 lety

      Ever seen a hippo skull? Shit's freaky.

  • @SmokingMonkeyMedia
    @SmokingMonkeyMedia Před rokem +1

    Good Video 👍

  • @natannaell
    @natannaell Před rokem +2

    The term "Dinosaur" is quite a new term. In ancient times people used to call them "giant monsters and dragons".

  • @oevr37
    @oevr37 Před rokem +3

    Did the romans meet the dinosaurs? Sure they did, they drank a cup of coffee together, then ankylosaurus knocked over the tower of Pisa. That made the romans really angry and they killed all the dinosaurs. It took the goths 55 million years to avenge them. If that wouldn't have happened, the roman inginuity would have progressed so that we would've had hovercars by the time of the first world war and my great grandfather would've been a trillionair for not investing in the tyre-industry. But in the end it is not money that matters in life, it is the structural integrity of buildings in a dinosaur infested world. So take what you can learn from this and spread the wisdom.

  • @awesomehpt8938
    @awesomehpt8938 Před 2 lety +3

    Of course they did! Most dinosaurs are given Latin names after all lol

  • @overallchampion539
    @overallchampion539 Před rokem

    Very interesting idea for video

  • @PenguinofD00mxxx
    @PenguinofD00mxxx Před 2 lety +1

    Really fun topic

  • @christopherflux6254
    @christopherflux6254 Před 2 lety +9

    In the written works of Josephus he mentions a skeleton of a giant being on display in Jerusalem. It was widely believed to be the bones of Goliath that Israel kept as a trophy. Maybe they were dinosaur bones constructed to look like a giant man.

    • @warpnin3
      @warpnin3 Před rokem

      Maybe.. It is utterly impossible that Goliath ever really existed.

  • @dane1382
    @dane1382 Před 2 lety +8

    Considering that the world is 3000 years old, I'm sure the Romans did encounter dinosaurs. Maybe they even domesticated them, like in the historical documentary cartoon "The Flintstones."

  • @255ad
    @255ad Před rokem +2

    you got some young earth creationists very excited with that title.

  • @lisaolson5933
    @lisaolson5933 Před rokem

    That was really interesting I enjoy that.

  • @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014

    Crazy how fossils can influenced the culture and mythology of ancient civilizations. I wondered a lot before how x culture came up with that idea of monster, for example the Kraken

    • @deusvult6920
      @deusvult6920 Před 2 lety

      Kraken was just a giant squid. There's a lot of the ocean we still haven't explored

  • @m.hughmungus121
    @m.hughmungus121 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm pretty sure there were leviathans and behemoths in biblical times

  • @Timodj13
    @Timodj13 Před rokem +2

    May we have another video on this topic, or at least a list of the sources?!? This is utterly fascinating

    • @alicemcquin6160
      @alicemcquin6160 Před rokem

      I would read 'The First Fossil Hunters' by Adrienne Mayor. This is basically one of her subjects of speciality.

  • @Zebred2001
    @Zebred2001 Před rokem +1

    I heard once that the Blackfoot Indians of Alberta referred to dinosaur bones as "the grandfathers of the buffalo" and that Eurasian tribes believed that mammoth bones and carcasses were the remains of a large subterranean creature.

  • @Duchess_Van_Hoof
    @Duchess_Van_Hoof Před 2 lety +2

    Then we have the Cretan mammoth, check out its skull. It is vaguely humanoid in shape with a large hole in its forehead for the trunk that looks a lot like an eye-socket.

  • @eacalvert
    @eacalvert Před 2 lety

    Dude perfect timing with the shirt just solved what to get my dad for his birthday

  • @simritnam612
    @simritnam612 Před rokem

    In Situ Fossils do NOT get scattered as a cadaver remains would be scattered by animals or weather.
    Greatly interesting topic and always love a Herodotus reference.

  • @DISTurbedwaffle918
    @DISTurbedwaffle918 Před rokem

    Augustus: "I have no idea what these bones belonged to, but they're really cool and I'm keeping them."

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Před rokem

    I can’t thank You enough I’ve d
    Been dying to know what people thought of prehistoric fossils especially from the dinosaurs.

  • @ronaldolio76
    @ronaldolio76 Před rokem +1

    That was cool, never thought about Dinosaurs and Romans together before, they do have a connection the Latin names and dominating the known world in there era.With all the building works and quarrying the Romans did they must have found a stack.

  • @sunpowerguru3993
    @sunpowerguru3993 Před rokem

    Years ago, i heard a tale about some ancient Greeks (?) that uncovered a mastodon or mammoth, mistook the trunk hole for an eye socket, and decided it was a huge cyclops warrior. They were also said to have reburied it. They laid out the bones as if they were human, so anyone digging it up years later would think it was a giant.

  • @dawnsparrow4477
    @dawnsparrow4477 Před 2 lety

    Uniquely & interesting video about Romanian peoples saws 👀 fossils of primitive animals like dinosaurs 🦕 ...thanks( Invicta )channel for sharing this video

  • @user-fl1ub9ov3e
    @user-fl1ub9ov3e Před rokem

    Great ☺️💓

  • @Eclipsed_Archon
    @Eclipsed_Archon Před 2 lety +1

    "Did Romans Meet the Dinosaurs?" is a great title!

  • @Colt1775
    @Colt1775 Před rokem

    I don't know if your artists see this or not so please tell them that I think they're incredibly talented and they do an excellent job at driving the story.

  • @alejandrosakai1744
    @alejandrosakai1744 Před 2 lety +2

    You should do a video to answer if the Romans, Greeks, Carthagians, Phoenicians, or Egyptians discovered America or Japan! Greetings from Mexico!

  • @MedjayofFaiyum
    @MedjayofFaiyum Před 2 lety +2

    This would be a cool fantasy alternate history concept if the Romans had found dinosaurs for real and used them!!

    • @Barthaneous34
      @Barthaneous34 Před 2 lety

      They did. Look it up. They had long neck "dragons" fight in the collesium . The first emperor of China had his chariot pulled by dragons.
      All cultures and languages and peoples in every corner of this earth have stories of their people dealing with large reptiles of some kind.
      Like the Roman Empire we put thousands of species of creatures to extinction.
      To say also the sharks and crocodiles predate dinosaurs (dragons) , yet they are still alive but dinosaurs are not is pure foolishness. It's not even logically or rationally sound.

    • @Duchess_Van_Hoof
      @Duchess_Van_Hoof Před 2 lety +1

      @@Barthaneous34 You do know that birds are theropod dinosaurs right? Right?

  • @ZecaPinto1
    @ZecaPinto1 Před 2 lety +2

    Well. Saint George met a crocodile for the first time and called it a dragon because he had never seen a crocodile once

    • @Duchess_Van_Hoof
      @Duchess_Van_Hoof Před 2 lety

      I was under the impression that it was a monitor lizard, judging by some of the old art?

  • @banksuvladimir
    @banksuvladimir Před rokem

    Little did they know just how old those bones were. It would’ve likely terrified them to even contemplate it. We tend to regard it as trivia now, but it was the stuff of horror stories for Lovecraft back when we were really starting to figure out just how deep time goes back

  • @TheAnimale
    @TheAnimale Před rokem +1

    I think that people in medieval times and earlier definitely got the idea of beasts and dragons from dinosaur bones.

  • @tommyt4259
    @tommyt4259 Před 2 lety +2

    I believe that's how mythical creatures started. They find old skeletal remains and guess what it could of come from.

  • @Argacyan
    @Argacyan Před 2 lety +2

    While it can be interesting, older unearthings of fossils can also be seen as a form of anthropogenic erosion due to improper care & exposure to the elements. In some cases deliberate as well, as fossils found during especially construction (especially once we go closer to modern times) were sometimes also destroyed as correctly reporting on them would cost more money.

  • @therandomizer7187
    @therandomizer7187 Před rokem

    When I was little, my dad forbid me to go to the basement because I had a hobby of digging up buried things in the sand or soil. At the time we moved to the house the basement was still not cement. A couple years later when dad passed away, I went down to the basement to see if there are stuff I could still use for the house renovation, there I found a chest. It was small in size compared to the ones we see in television but it still looked very old and very unusual for my dad to keep such a thing because he was never the type of guy who would keep antiquities. Curious, I pried open the old rusty lock and opened the little chest but all that was inside were love letters and finally i got into the last letter at the bottom, opened it and saw a tiny treasure map and I was dumbfounded like what the actual fuckery so dad also had a childhood huh. A few years later, I still couldn't get over the treasure map so I decided to just get on with it once and for all and finally I got into the spot where it says on the map. I took my shovel from my trunk and started digging, finally got 3 feet deep and suddenly I hit a wooden surface. I started scraping all the soil from the surface of the wooden surface, then it revealed a chest the size of a human coffin. When I finally got rid of most of the dirt I decided to pry it open, it took me an hour because I was already exhausted. Then with the deepest breath I took, I opened the chest, there I saw a huge collection of bone like stuff and I wasn't sure at first because they are curved into sort of like coconut tree when the wind blows. They weren't sharp but more like blunted objects so out of curiosity, I took a few with me back into my car and took my water jug to clean them all off. My long day of hard work finally paid off when it revealed its true form right before my eyes. I could still remember what I said that day....Oh dildos...

  • @midori4352
    @midori4352 Před rokem +1

    Actual content starts around 4:40 if you already understand what a fossil is, timelines, etc.