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- André Rieu & Amira - O Mio Babbino Caro https://youtu.be/s9PQ7qPkluM?list=RDY6rbE4Z7P_s :smiling-face-with-halo:
0 Reacties 0 Shares1Please log in to like, share and comment! - Nebukadnezar II
Nebukadnezar II of Nebukadnessar, ook wel Nebukadrezar of Nabuc(h)odonosor,[1] (Akkadisch: 𒀭𒀝𒆪𒁺𒌨𒊑𒋀, mdNabû-kudurrī-ú-ṣu-ur of mdNabû-kudurrī-úṣur,[2] betekent zoveel als "Nabu [god van wijsheid en schrift], bescherm de oudste zoon!" of "Nabu, bescherm de grenzen!") was de machtigste koning van het Nieuw-Babylonische Rijk. Het is (vanuit de chronologie berekend) waarschijnlijk dat de in Herodotos' Historiën (1.74) genoemde Labynetos dezelfde persoon is als Nebukadnezar.
https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebukadnezar_IINebukadnezar II Nebukadnezar II of Nebukadnessar, ook wel Nebukadrezar of Nabuc(h)odonosor,[1] (Akkadisch: 𒀭𒀝𒆪𒁺𒌨𒊑𒋀, mdNabû-kudurrī-ú-ṣu-ur of mdNabû-kudurrī-úṣur,[2] betekent zoveel als "Nabu [god van wijsheid en schrift], bescherm de oudste zoon!" of "Nabu, bescherm de grenzen!") was de machtigste koning van het Nieuw-Babylonische Rijk. Het is (vanuit de chronologie berekend) waarschijnlijk dat de in Herodotos' Historiën (1.74) genoemde Labynetos dezelfde persoon is als Nebukadnezar. https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebukadnezar_IINL.WIKIPEDIA.ORGNebukadnezar IINebukadnezar II of Nebukadnessar, ook wel Nebukadrezar of Nabuc(h)odonosor, (Akkadisch: 𒀭𒀝𒆪𒁺𒌨𒊑𒋀, mdNabû-kudurrī-ú-ṣu-ur of mdNabû-kudurrī-úṣur, betekent zoveel als "Nabu [god van wijsheid en schrift], bescherm de oudste zoon!" of "Nabu, bescherm de grenzen!") was de machtigste koning van het Nieuw-Babylonische Rijk. Het is (vanuit de chronologie berekend) waarschijnlijk dat de in Herodotos' Historiën (1.74) genoemde Labynetos dezelfde persoon is als Nebukadnezar. Regeerperiode Nebukadnezar was de zoon en opvolger van Nabopolassar en regeerde van 605 tot 562 v.Chr. Als koning van het Nieuw-Babylonische rijk bewees Nebukadnezar een verlicht vorst te zijn. Zo'n 95% van alle ruïnes die gevonden zijn in zijn koninkrijk, zijn gemaakt van bakstenen waar zijn naam op staat. Het lijkt erop dat hij bijna elke stad en elke tempel in het hele land heeft laten bouwen of restaureren. Onder hem werd de hoofdstad Babylon in zijn vroegere luister hersteld. Tot de projecten die hij liet uitvoeren behoorde de herbouw van de tempel van Marduk en de bouw van een paleisburcht…0 Reacties 0 Shares -
- It’s the guy im the white at the tribune he pulls smthing out the second before he is shot and it’s pointed at Charlie yoo,,,, #Charlie #Kirk #RIPIt’s the guy im the white at the tribune he pulls smthing out the second before he is shot and it’s pointed at Charlie yoo,,,, #Charlie #Kirk #RIP30 0 Reacties 0 Shares
- #moon #moonlanding never happened
#NASA is a scamm
We never walked on the moon, and we never will, because the moon is not a physical rock you can land on.
"The moon is made of plasma. No man will ever land on it."
- Professor R. Foster (1965)#moon #moonlanding never happened #NASA is a scamm We never walked on the moon, and we never will, because the moon is not a physical rock you can land on. "The moon is made of plasma. No man will ever land on it." - Professor R. Foster (1965)1 0 Reacties 0 Shares1 - The Babylonian Map of the World with Irving Finkel | Curator’s Corner S9 Ep5
The Babylonian map of the world is the oldest map of the world, in the world. Written and inscribed on clay in Mesopotamia around 2,900-years-ago, it is, like so many cuneiform tablets, incomplete. However, Irving Finkel and a particularly gifted student of his - Edith Horsley - managed to locate a missing piece of the map, slot it back into the cuneiform tablet, and from there set us all on journey through the somewhat mythical landscape of Mesopotamia to find the final resting place of the ark. And yes we mean that ark, as in Noah's ark. Although in the earlier Mesopotamian version of the flood story, the ark is built by Ziusudra.
00:00 Intro
00:52 Ancient Mesopotamian Cuneiform Tablets
01:48 The oldest map of the world, in the world
02:07 What is the Babylonian Map of the World?
02:34 The Babylonian Map of the World explained
04:13 What are the triangles on the Babylonian Map of the
World?
06:17 Missing triangle on the Babylonian Map of the World
06:52 Edith Horsley - Cuneiform LEGEND
07:20 Channel 4 News report on Babylonian Map of the World September 1995
08:32 BABY IRVING!
09:48 What the missing piece revealed
11:39 The ark and parsiktu-vessel
13:22 Mount Ararat and Mount Urartu
14:18 What does it all mean?
15:07 Author of Babylonian Map of the World
17:07 Next episode of Curator's Corner • Archaeologists keep re-excavating this 400...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUxFzh8r384The Babylonian Map of the World with Irving Finkel | Curator’s Corner S9 Ep5 The Babylonian map of the world is the oldest map of the world, in the world. Written and inscribed on clay in Mesopotamia around 2,900-years-ago, it is, like so many cuneiform tablets, incomplete. However, Irving Finkel and a particularly gifted student of his - Edith Horsley - managed to locate a missing piece of the map, slot it back into the cuneiform tablet, and from there set us all on journey through the somewhat mythical landscape of Mesopotamia to find the final resting place of the ark. And yes we mean that ark, as in Noah's ark. Although in the earlier Mesopotamian version of the flood story, the ark is built by Ziusudra. 00:00 Intro 00:52 Ancient Mesopotamian Cuneiform Tablets 01:48 The oldest map of the world, in the world 02:07 What is the Babylonian Map of the World? 02:34 The Babylonian Map of the World explained 04:13 What are the triangles on the Babylonian Map of the World? 06:17 Missing triangle on the Babylonian Map of the World 06:52 Edith Horsley - Cuneiform LEGEND 07:20 Channel 4 News report on Babylonian Map of the World September 1995 08:32 BABY IRVING! 09:48 What the missing piece revealed 11:39 The ark and parsiktu-vessel 13:22 Mount Ararat and Mount Urartu 14:18 What does it all mean? 15:07 Author of Babylonian Map of the World 17:07 Next episode of Curator's Corner • Archaeologists keep re-excavating this 400... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUxFzh8r384
0 Reacties 0 Shares1 - Irving Finkel Writes In Ancient Cuneiform
The Ancients Podcast
In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Irving Finkel to uncover how cuneiform actually worked and how you would write it yourself.
More than five thousand years ago, a revolutionary script emerged in the fertile lands of Mesopotamia that would transform how people counted, governed, worshipped and told stories. This was cuneiform, the world’s earliest known writing system.
From humble beginnings as simple pictograms tracking beer and grain, to the wedge-shaped signs that recorded myths, laws and epic tales long before the Bible, this episode explores how cuneiform spread across Sumer, Babylon, Assyria and Persia — and why these clay tablets remain one of archaeology’s richest windows into the ancient world.
0:00 Introduction to Cuneiform
1:40 The Oldest Script Known to Archaeology
3:10 Sumerian: The Language Without Relatives
5:05 Akkadian and the Spread of Cuneiform
8:45 The Behistun Inscription: Unlocking the Code
13:15 Why Clay? The Ultimate Data Storage
16:15 From Pictograms to Protocuneiform
23:55 The Shift to Straight Edges and Wedges
28:50 Accounting for Beer: Early Tablet Bookkeeping
37:30 How to Write: The Three Basic Strokes
38:02 Dr. Finkel Writes Cuneiform
1:08:00 The Decline and Legacy of the Script
Presented by Tristan Hughes. Producers are Joseph Knight & McKenna Fernandez, senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff. Editor is Matthew Wilson. Channel manager is Vilde Øksnes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kELoypEdMs0Irving Finkel Writes In Ancient Cuneiform The Ancients Podcast In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Irving Finkel to uncover how cuneiform actually worked and how you would write it yourself. More than five thousand years ago, a revolutionary script emerged in the fertile lands of Mesopotamia that would transform how people counted, governed, worshipped and told stories. This was cuneiform, the world’s earliest known writing system. From humble beginnings as simple pictograms tracking beer and grain, to the wedge-shaped signs that recorded myths, laws and epic tales long before the Bible, this episode explores how cuneiform spread across Sumer, Babylon, Assyria and Persia — and why these clay tablets remain one of archaeology’s richest windows into the ancient world. 0:00 Introduction to Cuneiform 1:40 The Oldest Script Known to Archaeology 3:10 Sumerian: The Language Without Relatives 5:05 Akkadian and the Spread of Cuneiform 8:45 The Behistun Inscription: Unlocking the Code 13:15 Why Clay? The Ultimate Data Storage 16:15 From Pictograms to Protocuneiform 23:55 The Shift to Straight Edges and Wedges 28:50 Accounting for Beer: Early Tablet Bookkeeping 37:30 How to Write: The Three Basic Strokes 38:02 Dr. Finkel Writes Cuneiform 1:08:00 The Decline and Legacy of the Script Presented by Tristan Hughes. Producers are Joseph Knight & McKenna Fernandez, senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff. Editor is Matthew Wilson. Channel manager is Vilde Øksnes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kELoypEdMs0
0 Reacties 0 Shares1 - A Tour of Babylon in 570 BC — Documentary History
#Babylon #AncientBabylon #570BC
In 570 BC, the largest and most powerful city on Earth sits on the banks of the Euphrates River in modern-day Iraq.
Its walls are wide enough for two chariots to race side by side along the top. Its gate is covered in bright blue glazed bricks and golden dragons that no other civilization on Earth can replicate. Its tower rises ninety meters into the sky the structure that will inspire the legend of the Tower of Babel. And every single brick in this city carries the stamped name of the king who built it.
This is Babylon. Not the myth. Not the metaphor. The real, functioning city at the absolute peak of its power.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiZVWFIk-MUA Tour of Babylon in 570 BC — Documentary History #Babylon #AncientBabylon #570BC In 570 BC, the largest and most powerful city on Earth sits on the banks of the Euphrates River in modern-day Iraq. Its walls are wide enough for two chariots to race side by side along the top. Its gate is covered in bright blue glazed bricks and golden dragons that no other civilization on Earth can replicate. Its tower rises ninety meters into the sky the structure that will inspire the legend of the Tower of Babel. And every single brick in this city carries the stamped name of the king who built it. This is Babylon. Not the myth. Not the metaphor. The real, functioning city at the absolute peak of its power. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiZVWFIk-MU
0 Reacties 0 Shares1 - The Rise and Fall of Babylon: History's Greatest City (2300 - 480 BC)
Ancient Babylon history — from a tiny town on the Euphrates River to the greatest city of the ancient world. In this history documentary, we trace the rise and fall of the Babylonian empire across nearly two thousand years of Mesopotamia's most dramatic chapter.
Using historically grounded visuals and cinematic storytelling, this film explores:
How a nomadic Amorite tribe seized an unremarkable town and turned it into the capital of an empire
How Hammurabi forgave all debts on his first day as king — and then wrote laws that protected women, children, and slaves millennia before Europe
Why Babylonian women could divorce their husbands, win in court, and remarry — in the nineteenth century BCE
How Hammurabi played rival kingdoms against each other for thirty years before launching his conquest of all Mesopotamia
Why the Assyrian king Sennacherib burned Babylon to the ground, flooded its ruins, and carried away its gods — and how his own sons murdered him for it
How a Chaldean rebel named Nabopolassar rose from the ashes, crushed the Assyrian empire, and founded a new dynasty
What Nebuchadnezzar built on top of the destruction — walls wider than the Great Wall of China, the cobalt-blue Ishtar Gate, the ziggurat Etemenanki that inspired the Tower of Babel, and the Hanging Gardens that may never have existed
How Babylon became the first city in history to reach two hundred thousand people — when Rome was still a village
Why the Persian conquest and the theft of one statue marked the beginning of the end
And how the Babylon we know from ruins is not the Babylon that became a legend — but a city built on top of its ghost
This is not a summary. It is a reconstruction of a civilization.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-uVKIstl7MThe Rise and Fall of Babylon: History's Greatest City (2300 - 480 BC) Ancient Babylon history — from a tiny town on the Euphrates River to the greatest city of the ancient world. In this history documentary, we trace the rise and fall of the Babylonian empire across nearly two thousand years of Mesopotamia's most dramatic chapter. Using historically grounded visuals and cinematic storytelling, this film explores: How a nomadic Amorite tribe seized an unremarkable town and turned it into the capital of an empire How Hammurabi forgave all debts on his first day as king — and then wrote laws that protected women, children, and slaves millennia before Europe Why Babylonian women could divorce their husbands, win in court, and remarry — in the nineteenth century BCE How Hammurabi played rival kingdoms against each other for thirty years before launching his conquest of all Mesopotamia Why the Assyrian king Sennacherib burned Babylon to the ground, flooded its ruins, and carried away its gods — and how his own sons murdered him for it How a Chaldean rebel named Nabopolassar rose from the ashes, crushed the Assyrian empire, and founded a new dynasty What Nebuchadnezzar built on top of the destruction — walls wider than the Great Wall of China, the cobalt-blue Ishtar Gate, the ziggurat Etemenanki that inspired the Tower of Babel, and the Hanging Gardens that may never have existed How Babylon became the first city in history to reach two hundred thousand people — when Rome was still a village Why the Persian conquest and the theft of one statue marked the beginning of the end And how the Babylon we know from ruins is not the Babylon that became a legend — but a city built on top of its ghost This is not a summary. It is a reconstruction of a civilization. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-uVKIstl7M
0 Reacties 0 Shares - Love does not care about age/ stop the left wing /democrat discrimination of elder people and elder dogs and cats etc.
#ALLIVESMATTERLove does not care about age/ stop the left wing /democrat discrimination of elder people and elder dogs and cats etc. #ALLIVESMATTER0 Reacties 0 Shares1
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