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Seven Wonders of the Ancient World - YouTube
Channel: I Am Your Target Demographic
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Welcome to I Am Your Target Demographic and
today we鈥檙e beginning a three-part series
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looking at the wonders of the world.
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We often hear the phrase that there are seven
wonders of the world, but these lists have
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changed throughout time.
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We鈥檙e going to begin with the seven wonders
of the ancient world, followed next week by
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the seven wonders of the middle ages, then
leading to the seven wonders of the modern
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era, which is a much more engineering and
innovation-focused list.
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But let鈥檚 start at the beginning.
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This list was believed to be created around
the 1st century, as the first tourists began
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to really explore Greece and Egypt and the
rest of the Mediterranean, so this list is
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geographically confined to that area.
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They also existed in a pretty wide range of time,
with only 60 years that all seven of them
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supposedly existed at the same time, if they all existed
at all.
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We鈥檒l get to that later.
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Let鈥檚 begin with the only one of these wonders
to still exist today, the Great Pyramid of Giza.
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While there are a few pyramids in Egypt, the
largest pyramid belongs to the Pharoah Khufu
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and this pyramid was singled-out as a sight
to see.
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It was supposedly built in about 2560 BC,
surviving today for a momentous 4,000 year
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plus lifespan.
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For almost 3,800 of those years, it was the
tallest man-made structure on Earth, until
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modern engineering allowed skyscrapers to
exist.
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We鈥檙e still unsure how this pyramid was
built and it鈥檚 debated if slave labor was
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used or if skilled craftsmen were recruited,
either way totaling an average workforce of
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14,000 people at a time over the course of
ten years.
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It鈥檚 also debated if this pyramid was meant
to be a tomb or not, as Khufu鈥檚 remains
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were never found.
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Some believe an elaborate undiscovered room
in the pyramid may still hold his body, but
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only time and slow meticulous investigations
will tell.
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Our second wonder is also in Egypt, the Lighthouse
of Alexandria.
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The lighthouse was created under the reign
of Ptolemy the first and the second, taking
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about 12 years to build.
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This lighthouse had a giant furnace at the
top, becoming the first of its kind
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and the model for all future lighthouses,
used to guide ships into a harbor at night.
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It was destroyed over time by several earthquakes,
which slowly caused the lighthouse to crumble into the sea.
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A fort was built over the lighthouse鈥檚 ruins
so it wasn鈥檛 able to be studied or examined
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until only recently, with most of the ruins
still underwater.
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Our next wonder takes us away from Egypt and
now to Greece where we have the Colossus of Rhodes.
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The city of Rhodes is a harbor city and the
giant Colossus was built in honor of the Greek god Helios.
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They built the statue to celebrate victory
of defending their city against an attacking force.
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The statue was said to be about as tall as
the Statue of Liberty and the pose of the
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statue is hotly debated, with the current
belief that it couldn鈥檛 have actually straddled
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the opening of the harbor as it鈥檚 shown
in pictures, but it likely stood to one side.
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Building the statue in the center of the harbor
would have closed the actual harbor to traffic
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and that seems unlikely, or so experts believe.
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It only stood for about 50 or 60 years before
a massive earthquakes caused it to snap at
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the knees and fall onto the city.
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For a long time, people still traveled to
see its ruins but eventually most of the bronze
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used to make it was melted down and sold,
so there鈥檚 no evidence left in Rhodes of the statue.
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We now move onto the Statue of Zeus, which
was located in the city of Olympia in Greece.
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This giant statue was made out of wood but
then covered in gold and precious metals.
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Zeus was the highest of the gods, so
it was only fitting to build this statue
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in their largest temple to him.
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Eventually the Roman emperors that took over
control of the temple forbid worship of
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"pagan gods", so the temple was abandoned
and the statue crumbled.
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Earthquakes and fires helped to expedite the
process.
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Some theories point to the statue being torn
apart and taken to sell, since little to no
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evidence of the statue remains.
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Our last Greek site is the Temple of Artemis,
located in an area called Ephesus, which now
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falls into the geography of modern-day Turkey.
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This temple was built to worship the goddess
of the hunt Artemis and there is a theory
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that the Greek Amazons had a major role in
building the temple to their patron Goddess.
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This temple was destroyed and rebuilt many
times, by floods, fires, and earthquakes.
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It was rediscovered and excavated in the mid
1800s.
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The site is commemorated now by a single column
that鈥檚 been built by discovered pieces from the wreckage.
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The next wonder is also in Turkey, the Mausoleum
at Halicarnassus.
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This wonder stems from the ruler named Mausolus
who wanted to build a city beautiful and intricate,
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so he transformed the city of Halicarnassus
into a sight to behold.
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He died relatively young, though he had planned for this
with an elaborate tomb and surrounding architecture.
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This tomb looked down over the city and included
a stairway flanked by statues.
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At the time, it looked much more like a temple
than a tomb.
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Tombs like this today, usually large rooms
that hold the coffin, are called mausoleums
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after him.
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It was destroyed when Catholic knights took
over the city and built Bodrum castle, using
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the mausoleum鈥檚 bricks to fortify it.
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Following this, the rest of the treasures
and even the body of Mausolus and his wife went missing.
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You can visit this castle now and likely spot
bricks and pieces that are from the old Mausoleum.
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You can also see the spot where the mausoleum used to sit.
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Our last Wonder is the only Wonder that there
is no physical evidence of, it may not have
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even existed at all.
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The Hanging Gardens of Babylon.
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The ancient city of Babylon existed in what
is now called Iraq and it鈥檚 said to have
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featured a garden, with tiers upon tiers of
hanging flowers that poured down into it.
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What we鈥檙e seeing on the screen is either
what they believed this garden looked like
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or gardens that have been inspired by it.
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The leading theory of who created these gardens
fall to Nebuchadnezzar the second, who likely built them for his wife.
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There is an opposing theory that these gardens
never existed in Babylon but instead were built
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by an Assyrian king in the city of Nineveh.
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There are many references in ancient texts that discuss this Assyrian garden that line up with what we imagine.
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Thank you for watching our first video on the seven wonders of the world!
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Next week we've got part two, if it's already been a week, you can check out part two right here.
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If it hasn't been a week, just be patient. Subscribe. Stay tuned here and thanks for everything, hopefully you enjoy next week's installment!
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