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Vladimir Voronin Captain
William Parry
Explorer
Posidonius of Apamea
John Ross Arctic
Explorer
Strabo
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Vladimir Voronin Captain
William Parry
Explorer
Posidonius of Apamea
John Ross Arctic
Explorer
Strabo
0:11
Most people picture ancient Greek warriors in heavy bronze muscle armor, but a huge number of hoplites and Macedonian soldiers actually fought wearing something that looked almost… like hardened fabric. The linothorax—literally “linen cuirass”—was a layered armor made from many sheets of linen glued or stitched together into a stiff, protective shell. When compressed and bonded, these linen layers could absorb and disperse the force of arrows and spear thrusts far better than you’d expect from “
200.4K views
5 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:13
By the 7th century BCE, Greek warfare had shifted toward the hoplite: a citizen-soldier in heavy armor carrying a spear and a large round shield. These men fought in the phalanx, a tight formation where success depended less on individual skill and more on collective discipline. Every shield overlapped, every spear projected forward, and the front became a moving barrier of bronze, wood, and spearpoints. Sparta didn’t invent the phalanx—but it obsessed over what made it terrifying: cohesion. Spa
663.8K views
3 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:13
Long before Roman triremes patrolled the Mediterranean, Greek observers were already describing the Etruscans as masters of the sea. The Greeks even gave them a distinct label—Tyrrhenians—a name that survives today in the Tyrrhenian Sea, like a fossil of fear and respect. But the Etruscans did not “control the whole Mediterranean” the way later empires would. Their power was subtler—and, to coastal neighbors, often more threatening. From roughly the 7th century BCE, Etruscan influence spread thr
83.4K views
3 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:11
Eumenes of Cardia (a Greek from the Thracian Chersonese) rose under Philip II and then Alexander the Great, not as a battlefield noble but as an educated administrator. As Alexander’s chief secretary, he handled correspondence, records, and logistics—the unglamorous machinery that keeps an army alive. When Alexander died in 323 BCE, that proximity to power turned dangerous: the empire splintered, and the generals (the Diadochi) began carving it up. Most commanders sneered at Eumenes as an outsid
159.7K views
4 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:11
Around 600 BC, Greek observers saw towering hounds fighting with Celtic warbands — ancestors of the Irish wolfhound, called “cú” in early Irish, found in names like Cú Chulainn. To the ancient Irish these dogs were status symbols, diplomatic gifts, and weapons. Law tracts fined harming a noble’s hound more than a farmer’s cow. Poets called them “gentle when stroked, fierce when provoked,” fitting for animals that might sleep by the hearth one night and face enemies the next. By the late Roman Em
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4 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
1:31
The oldest languages in the world | Ancient Explorers
24.8K views
Sep 30, 2023
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Ancient Explorers
0:17
Kaunos, known as Καῦνος in Ancient Greek and as Caunus in Latin, served as an ancient city situated in Caria, Anatolia. It occupied a location a few kilometers west of the present-day town of Dalyan in the Muğla Province of Turkey. Established in the 10th century BC, Kaunos thrived as a city. It endured until the 15th century AD before being abandoned. | Ancient Explorers
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Sep 11, 2023
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Ancient Explorers
0:11
In the Anabasis—true tale of the Ten Thousand’s retreat—Xenophon leads free Greek citizens who elect leaders and argue. To move them he must earn respect by courage. When they must seize a ridge before Persian cavalry, he urges them from his horse: “Think of Greece, your wives, your sons—strain now and you won’t fight all day.” Soteridas of Sicyon retorts that such words are cheap from a man on horseback. Xenophon acts: he dismounts, drags Soteridas out, takes his hoplite shield, and—still in hi
418.7K views
6 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:06
The Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, was a magnificent Greek temple dedicated to the goddess Artemis, patroness of the hunt and fertility. Built around 550 BCE in present-day Turkey, it was renowned for its immense size, over 120 Ionic columns, and richly decorated sculptures. The temple served as a religious sanctuary, marketplace, and cultural hub. It was destroyed and rebuilt multiple times, most famously burned by Herostratus, who sought infamy. De
324.3K views
10 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:10
Vitellius ruled Rome for just eight months in 69 AD, but history remembers him less as an emperor than as a glutton. Ancient writers claim he ate banquets that lasted days, with dishes from every corner of the empire. Fat, indulgent, and despised, his reign ended in chaos — and his bloated body was dragged through Rome before being dumped in the Tiber. | Ancient History Explorers
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7 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:18
Video by @arkeolojievreni | The Library of Celsus, located in Ephesus, western Turkey, was the third-largest library in the Greco-Roman world, behind only those of Alexandria and Pergamum, believed to have held around 12,000 scrolls, with only its impressive facade remaining today, commissioned by Tiberius Julius Aquila Polemaeanus, a consul of the Roman Republic, as a funerary monument for his father Tiberius Julius Celsus Polemaeanus, who is buried in a crypt beneath the library in a decorated
7.9K views
Mar 8, 2024
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Ancient Explorers
0:08
Alexander the Great, the legendary Macedonian conqueror, shared an extraordinary bond with his faithful companion, Peritas, a massive Molossian hound. This ancient breed, known for its imposing size, strength, and unwavering loyalty, perfectly complemented Alexander's bold and ambitious nature. Peritas was more than just a pet; he was a constant presence throughout Alexander's epic conquests, from Greece to India. The huge dog's courage on the battlefield matched that of his master, fighting fie
362K views
10 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:13
From the moment Achilles steps into the Iliad, Homer treats him as something more than human—faster, stronger, and more dangerous than any other Greek. He isn’t simply brave. He is overwhelming. The Greek army doesn’t just rely on him; it depends on him as the decisive force that can break Troy’s best defenses. But the most famous “Achilles detail” isn’t actually in Homer. The story of the River Styx—Thetis dipping her infant son into the underworld river so his body becomes invulnerable—comes f
290.1K views
3 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:05
Beneath the quiet grasslands of Kazakhstan, a city once long forgotten has risen again. More than 4,000 years old, Semiyarka—known as the City of Seven Ravines—was not a fleeting camp or a nomad’s stop. It was a carefully planned Bronze Age metropolis, built around 1600 BC, with massive earth walls stretching over a kilometer, organized household compounds, and a monumental central structure aligned with the rising and setting sun. This was a place designed to endure. Generations lived here. Wor
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4 months ago
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Ancient Explorers
0:11
In 72 BCE the revolt that began at Capua stopped looking like a prison break and started looking like a civil war. Spartacus had turned a band of escaped gladiators into an army, drawing in farm workers, shepherds, deserters, and fugitives from across Italy. But as the force swelled, so did the arguments about what “justice” should mean. Ancient writers suggest two instincts pulling in opposite directions. Spartacus seems to have favored movement and escape—pushing north toward the Alps, where m
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4 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:11
For nearly 300 years, Sparta’s reputation rested on a single belief: their phalanx was unbeatable. Perfect discipline. Perfect symmetry. Hoplites drilled from childhood to fight the same way, every time. Against this machine, Greek cities usually broke before the first clash. Then came Epaminondas of Thebes. At the Battle of Leuctra, Epaminondas did something no one dared. He refused symmetry. Instead of matching Sparta’s elite right wing with his own, he stacked his left wing—fifty ranks deep—a
386.8K views
3 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:10
History remembers the 300 Spartans, but their final stand at Thermopylae was not fought alone. At their side stood 700 soldiers from the city of Thespiae, and their story is one of the most profound in ancient history. Unlike the Spartans, who were a professional military caste bred for war, the Thespians were citizen-hoplites—farmers, potters, and merchants who had answered the call to defend their homeland. When King Leonidas saw the battle was lost and dismissed the other Greek allies to save
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9 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:13
The Romans didn’t just build roads—they built a culture that demanded measurement. You can’t run an empire on guesses. Armies need marching distances, tax officials need boundaries, couriers need schedules, and engineers need reliable numbers. That’s why ancient writers describe a clever device that feels surprisingly modern: an early odometer. The idea is mechanical common sense. If you know a wheel’s circumference, you can calculate distance by counting how many times it turns. But the Roman-s
94.8K views
3 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
0:13
The Scythians were nomadic, horse-centered peoples who dominated large parts of the Eurasian steppe for centuries. To settled neighbors—Greeks along the Black Sea and Persians to the south—they represented a terrifying kind of warfare: fast, mobile, and difficult to trap. They could appear out of nowhere, strike hard, and vanish across distances that infantry-based armies couldn’t easily match. But their power wasn’t only tactical. It was psychological. Greek authors, especially Herodotus, descr
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3 months ago
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Ancient History Explorers
Ancient Greece - Government, Facts & Timeline | HISTORY
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