The concept of zero was independently developed by many such as the mayans, Mesopotamia, Egyptians. But brahma Gupta was the first to use it as a number and value
Ancient Persia still rose up even after Alexander. Plus, the Achaemenid Empire was way larger than the image you showed. It stretched from China to Ukraine.
You cheated Egypt of some good 2500 years of their being, since civilization precedes a unified state (given, Ancient Greece was never one). Great video, nonetheless.
Well, even some archaeologists are unsure about how old Egypt is. But the most consistent number that I find was somewhere between 3300-3100. In case of Greece, although they were not a unified state but the amount of contributions they have on science, it would be unfair not to mention them.
@@simpatico099 Completely understand your point and I am by no means trying to correct something that isn't wrong in a video I appreciated! I just found the criteria for the dating a bit inconsistent given that most of the uncertainty regarding Egypt's formation concerns a unified *political* status of what could be considered a nation-state, but you definitely have archeological evidence of continued civilization along the Nile sooner than that. And Egypt's own contributions to science and culture shouldn't be overlooked; one needs only to see how some of Greece's own brightest started by going to Egypt themselves to learn and study. Again, I know it's a summary video and the information is intentionally concise and direct - I'm not trying to correct, just add some context 🙂 sorry
@@DomPedro3o Totally cool man! I appreciate your comment. You have a valid point actually. Civilisations such as Egypt is way older but its archaeological evidence is also limited.
Nice job. I'm sure they'll just get better over time. Keep up the studies and keep making these videos. I hope you get big! 🎉
Thanks, man ❤️
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Zero (0) was invented by the Indus civilization.
The concept of zero was independently developed by many such as the mayans, Mesopotamia, Egyptians. But brahma Gupta was the first to use it as a number and value
@@morby1296 and Bakshali Manuscript, found in Indian subcontinent, was the first to write it down. What do you mean?
@@saarza9991 read my comment again kid
@@saarza9991 many civilizations independently developed zero in history. The mayans used a shell as the symbol of zero. Search it up
Finally a video talking about the inventions of mesoamerican civilizations and not sacrifice. Every civilization has done that.
It’s interesting - but the grammar made it so I couldn’t get past the halfway point.
How is this not popular
It is a pack of lies for brain dead "Disneylanders".
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there is much more then these, about hundreds more
Ancient Persia still rose up even after Alexander. Plus, the Achaemenid Empire was way larger than the image you showed. It stretched from China to Ukraine.
No?
@@MW_Asurawdym?
Nice summary
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Thank you❤❤❤
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You cheated Egypt of some good 2500 years of their being, since civilization precedes a unified state (given, Ancient Greece was never one). Great video, nonetheless.
Well, even some archaeologists are unsure about how old Egypt is. But the most consistent number that I find was somewhere between 3300-3100. In case of Greece, although they were not a unified state but the amount of contributions they have on science, it would be unfair not to mention them.
@@simpatico099 Completely understand your point and I am by no means trying to correct something that isn't wrong in a video I appreciated! I just found the criteria for the dating a bit inconsistent given that most of the uncertainty regarding Egypt's formation concerns a unified *political* status of what could be considered a nation-state, but you definitely have archeological evidence of continued civilization along the Nile sooner than that. And Egypt's own contributions to science and culture shouldn't be overlooked; one needs only to see how some of Greece's own brightest started by going to Egypt themselves to learn and study.
Again, I know it's a summary video and the information is intentionally concise and direct - I'm not trying to correct, just add some context 🙂 sorry
@@DomPedro3o Totally cool man! I appreciate your comment. You have a valid point actually. Civilisations such as Egypt is way older but its archaeological evidence is also limited.
Is it bc or bce
B.C (before christ) or BCE (before common era) both refers to the same time period.
no australia?
man, keep going
Thanks man, it means alot
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You forgot Australian Aboriginals
It is a good suggestion for part 2
Oldest culture but they never had a civilization
This is incomplete and skips most information as well as half of it is incorrect
This is a summary video, genius
please state the incorrect parts