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It's comical you people believe the Egyptians were inbred. Lies told to you by white historians who haven't a clue about ancient Egypt whom practice inbreeding among their own family's.. an you buy the crap the sell
I’m surprised the British “royal” family doesn’t look like Tut terrible inbreeding with those people as well you should do a program on how inbred they are
In reality, only the royals were permitted to marry close relatives, a 'privilege' that was accorded to them by tradition and to maintain power. As far as I'm aware, common people couldn't practice this - and thank goodness for that.
Fascinating how such an advanced, complex civilization did not understand the dangers of in-breeding. Even the most isolated tribes, who knew no science, understood this. Smaller tribes without access to other tribes for marrying, divided their groups into 2 moieties, and maintained that separation for generations, only allowing members of one moiety, to marry into the other. Somehow they understood inbreeding weakened them.
Somehow they perceived value in the bloodline in spite of what they must have known about inbreeding. Maybe family members had amazing superior intellect.
I had a professor once who was going over examples of royal inbreeding throughout history. When one of my classmates asked how in the world so many of these families didn't realize what a terrible idea it was, my professor gave a response I've never forgotten: "Royalty and nobility throughout history have been viewed as akin to gods. If you grew up believing you were a god, would you think the rules of humanity applied to you? Power and wealth do not necessarily come with intelligence. If anything, they often get severely in the way of common sense thinking."
So true. And if I’m superior then only another superior being is the only one I’m meant to be with. There are many things that people think are ok to do. It’s only when someone tells you what you are doing is not ok and even then. Look at cult behaviors.
And he didn't die from any sicknes.. I saw a documentary which showed that he inflicted with a couple of wounds and fell off his chariot while in battle and part of his abdomen/pelvic area was run over by the chariot. And that caused his demise.
@@CarlyzClozet lol what. King tut died from malaria I believe. Where’d you heard that? He couldn’t even walk properly and now you’re saying he died in battle?
@@markoliver314hope ur well n having a good day,i have 2 club feet n was told id never walk, 35foot reconstructions later n i walk fine..... what doesnt kill you makes you stronger..... Its totally possible he could of been in battle with a club foot....not all club feet are as severe as mine, i hope his wasnt,it definetly would of made life more difficult but not impossible.....
One of the saddest things about this story is that we know about King Tut's two daughters because they were buried with him. Even though they were stillborn, they were still mummified, and when he died they were placed with him so they could be with him in the afterlife. It's also interesting the genetic testing done on mummies, because we were able to find out that the Younger Lady was Tut's mother even though they've never been able to identify who exactly she was.
If your into this kind of stuff, they found trace amounts of cocaine in mummies. They odd thing was it was only found in South America at that time and according to historical records they had no contact at that point in time.
In India, there were people who kept records of family trees of the whole villages. And before marriage both bride and groom were checked and it was made sure that they were not related at all.
He had two daughters who were either stillborn or died as babies, before he himself died at the age of 18 or 19. And they were in the tomb with their father when they were found by Howard Carter. He said it was probably the saddest thing he ever saw. I remember being shocked to learn about those kids, as they talked frequently in school about “The boy king of Egypt” but never about the tragedy of his personal life. This is part of what makes history interesting, in my opinion. It’s not just the accomplishments of a nation, or the wars, or the dates and places. (Although that’s important too). Primarily it’s the people’s story, and what they endured throughout their life, their joys, their sorrows, their motivations. If you cannot understand history from a personal perspective, find someone or something you can relate to, you will have an incomplete picture.
@Levi Marshall, it’s not necessarily being nosey. “Nosey” is being engaged in the lives of living persons for the sheer pleasure of it, with no particular aim. History as I see it, on the other hand, is a form of psychology. It is the study of the lives of men and women who have long ceased to exist, and to bring back some of what has been lost, by the accounts of what these people were like, what tragedies befell them in life, and how many of them overcame these great afflictions and brought about some good in the world and how we can learn from them. Although, there are plenty of others who failed the test of life and became the cause of much harm to the human race before they were done.
@@brianbommarito3376 they ain't digging up king Phillips great great great grandfather. Is he not important to the world and society,. I find it a bit offending. I'm glad they digging up Vikings now. I really am
This is fascinating. Despite the genetic horrors of his family background, it's amazing that his physical appearance & weaknesses were accepted & he went on to become Pharaoh. In many cultures such a child of an esteemed family would've been discarded or hidden away. Even within the last century. The ancient Egyptians are a most interesting culture to study. Even with all we know & accurately recreate, it's still difficult to picture them as everyday people. There's something magical about them.
egyptian was Europeans who went into Egypt during the ice age Europeans built the pyramids since they found pyramids in Europe older than Egypt's , ice age made all go south for warmer weather
It's cool too how they pushed to "live for eternity" by being buried with everything lavish and they all basically were in competition with each other to out due the other. The one who hit the jackpot was King Tut. He's not even our "King" yet we still call him King Tut. The guy had it made and still does.
@@christins.1481 He certainly was famous for being a king who never was a king. But I don't think he had it made. He only lived to be 19 and he lived in pain during his latter years.
@@onlythewise1 you Europeans wanna claim everything lol. Last time I checked history, Europeans were not in the early civilization. The earliest civilizations was Mesopotamians and Egyptians. You guys came later on. So it’s impossible for you so called “civil” Europeans to have built the pyramids. Y’all not done colonizing, so y’all wanna start colonizing history nah!
@@jennyrose9454 there are also theories that it was a murder, which is not surprising at all. Well at least it stopped him to have more inbred progeny who would have been even less lucky with their genetics.
@@LifeInPink999 I do believe they proved that thery incorrect. Scientist did a scan of his body. He had a broken leg that never healed properly and 2 or 3 strains of malaria.
@@spikefivefivefive are you dumb? It's against our religion to wed/sleep with your own kids/siblings and close cousins. 6th cousins and onward is fine.
Scientists recently have been doing some new studies with the mummy of Egypt's famous boy king. With the aid of highly advanced mri scans they were able to ascertain he suffered from a major gastro intestinal disorder. Apparently he was lactose intolerant. Ya turns out me and the Egyptian kid got a toot in common
I read that the royals didn’t want to taint royal bloodlines with too much non royal blood so they mainly kept it in the family. Too hard to swallow a father marrying his daughter and having kids with her! Very interesting though. Great info and explanation. Thank you
This often gets left out when talking about the ancient Egyptian royalty. They all get described in the best ways but people tiptoe around the problems they suffered from because of generations of inbreeding
That's because every one wants to rewrite history. Even the Egyptians tried to hide thier flaws and failures. Every one wants to be remembered as "great". This is why it's important to seek truth, and never forget real history. People always try to alter it
just like they gloss over the Greeks and Romans practice of child sex, more specifically young boys. It's official name is pederasty and Plato himself speaks about it as well as historians. The Roman and Catholic Church took that practice with them when Greek fell from dominance and power and culture shifted towards Rome. You see, it was considered ok, like for the royals or civilized people but deep down they ALL know it was wrong...
I mean it's the same shit in a lot of countries with monarchies, this ruling system just does something to people's brain it's crazy. They're so scared of losing power they become immune to the repulsive aspect of incest. Look at Spain's royal family history, they had a few disabled members who were victims of their ancestors' incestuous relationships too
For all the people who can't understand how these families didn't know incest was wrong, they very much did. They just percieved the pros to be much greater than the cons. A huge reason for royal inbreeding that isn't as commonly brought up is the consolidation of royal power. When it comes to inheritance and entangling many family trees, what can often happen is that claims to royal blood and the seat of rule itself get dissipated through the families that the royal family intermarries with. If each pharoah marries a member of a different dynasty within the country, within a few generations all of these dynasties have a connection to the royal family and can begin making all sorts of trouble. Alongside this is also the parallelism between divine marriage and royal marriage. In Egyptian and Zoroastrian religions, incest is holy because the gods did incest, so by marrying a sister you are mirroring the gods. Whether it was inheritance or religious legitimacy, royal incest was all about stability and keeping power in the family. As many have pointed out, inbreeding is widely understood to be unnatural, whether its pre industrial societies or our modern one now, an aversion to incest is hard coded into our nature. However, for the royal families of say the Hapsburgs and the many incestuous egyptian lines, genetic defects were a small price to pay for royalty. Plus, it (can) take a remarkably long time for these congenital defects to cement themselves in the family. As such the people who began the practice were far removed from the harm they caused and by the time those defects took hold, inbreeding had become a defacto part of royal culture.
Well, considering the gods didn't exist, it just became an excuse to intermarry and not have anyone who could object. That begs the question, who created the family tree for the gods?
Considering the interactions between sickle cell anemia and a lower death rate when afflicted with malaria, it makes sense that he survived it multiple times.
@@thesecondTH-cam Those of African origin. Even if one is fair skinned, if they have recent African ancestry it can still manifest. It's in reaction to the disease of malaria from that continent. Not sure if it afflicts those of the Indian subcontinent. Carribeans, African Americans, Latin Americans, but in greater #s continent Africans inherit it.
@@rosalynbeatty8310 in indian context sicle cell is most common in tribal population in India with different tribes varying from 1-40%. Later settlers like indo aryans have lower chance of having sickle cells. Sometimes indo aryans are called indo European but they did not come from Europe but had a common ancestors who went to India & Europe. Also in later ages Alexander invaded india and conquered West india & pakistan and we even had a greek empire in India. That's why lot of northern indians & Pakistani have Caucasian features like coloured eyes blonde hair which is absent in tribal population & people in south of India. Tldr- different population accross india have different gene pool with tribal population who probably have more African dna show lot higher rate of sickle cell than north west indians who are more closer to Europe....
What saved Tut's line is the rare introduction of non family members. It's baffling how the majority of the family tree wasn't rendered sterile, but, at the same time, it's interesting to see how the people came together for their king, knowing he had so many hardships physically. His mind was strong. Inbred or not, Tut had spirit that, if he were to live longer, might have made great changes for the egyptians of his day.
@@Gutch220 like a wreath like the habsburgs. A lot of time Egyptians didn't actually marry their sisters usually they marry their cousins. It was actually very rare to marry their sisters. And it was only until a certain Pharaoh that they actually started marrying their brothers and sisters off. So they weren't entirely like super incesty but they were still very much incest. That's why they weren't sterile after so long. Also on top of that a lot of pharaohs actually had a ton of wives. So that's also a big reason why they weren't as inbred as you might think. And why they weren't super sterile like the habsburgs. Is because a lot of times they were very distant cousins marry each other or they were like half-siblings marrying each other. It was never like pure brother and sister.
@@bobsmith6544 what are you talkin about? Nobody in his family is inbred. What's the Point of lying except to look like a fool. Like birth records and death records and marriage records are public knowledge. It's been proven multiple times that he is not inbred. Like Obama is a US citizen is born in the US. You may not like it but those are facts. You shouldn't believe every idiot that you listen to.
This poor kid! I used to want to be an archeologist when I was really young and had a big poster of king Tut and a book on his tomb… This channel brings this history to life. Thank you!
In-breeding simply makes recessive traits visible, thus making natural selection better at work. This means by killing off those with recessive traits, the family line actually has less mutated recessive genes in their genomes. You shouldn't look at the dysfunctional ones, as that's just natural selection at play. The king should've had hundreds of babies and select the healthiest ones (killing off the dysfunctional), and continue the process until there's no recessive detrimental genes in the family line.
Incest isbest keeps the families wealth in tact that's why it was practiced amongst the wealthy until someone noticed how defects became more common as the practice continued.
@Ray J it is often a royal trait to keep the power, wealth and property within the family and double your child's claim to the throne if challenged. The Hanovers (Windsors) did it along with the Hapsburgs and Carlosian line. Incest itself doesn't necessarily produce new genetic problems...that's a commoners myth form farming. However if a bad trait deforming is recessive, it requires both parents to have it but maybe not evident as it is recessive...then each has a 50 50 chance of passing it along so 1/4th chance of a deformed kid. A 3/4 chance of a kid with the trait. Only a 1/4 chance of a kid with no bad gene. Their kids or 1st cousins then marry (sister wife or cousin wife) and the likelihood is at least one has the full blown trait (two genes) and the other has one good and one bad gene. Their kid now has a 50 50 chance of showing the trait (ie Club foot) by getting both genes....or at least a 100% chance of carrying one. So by 3rd generation it is becoming inevitable in a family way. This can also work for good recessive traits. Enhancing that trait as well. For instance longevity. Both Queen Regents of Britain in the last 200 years lived about a century, as did Elizabeth's mother. Elizabeth is still pretty strong, as she brushed off c19 like a head cold.
I always felt so bad for King Tut. I imagine his childhood, given his poor health and deformities, wasn’t very enjoyable or lighthearted not to mention it was very short. And on top of that, his father was very controversial. I’m sure Tut and his sisters were aware to an extent the turmoil around them and how scary that must’ve been for a young child. And then of course basically his whole family falls apart after the death of his father and he’s encouraged to leave it all behind. He grows up no doubt with rather big expectations and the poor kid can’t even get around properly only to lose his own kids and his own life so young. People of ancient times always seem so different, almost unrealistic, but in reality they were just like us and Tut had it rough. I’m sure that poor boy cried himself to sleep a few times, be from the physical pain or all that was happening around him. I hope in death he found some peace (and was able to kiss those canes goodbye).
@@ghristophermyers666 i'm sure that was a great comfort for all of the people he was divinely ordained to rule over. Oh, yes, our god-king presides over a state built on the suffering of slaves and peasants, but he's mentally incapable of understanding the horrors committed in his name :) so it's cool!!! you know, if he was mentally handicapped at all. This is actually how I feel about everyone who has ever benefitted from an inherited power structure.
Im actually amazed at king tut despite his disability, he actually ordered back the old gods to be restored and to be worshipped again and denied his father's sun god (aten) from people worshipping it... He was also reportedly had an interest in chariot ridings... If he was alive today he'd definitely love skateboarding and BMX. He also loved weapons such as swords and bows... No wonder the egyptians crafted him a dagger before he passed away.
They also practiced skull-binding which is the elongation of the skull by binding the babies’ still soft skulls. Naturally they considered themselves gods and their bloodline sacred and preserving its purity paramount. They based their power on it, so naturally they could not recognize what was obvious: that they were producing offsprings laden with all kinds of defects and not a lot of them either. Btw somebody pointed it out that in European royal families cousins routinely married each other with various negative results, like for example the hemophilia of the last little czarevich which led to the downfall of czarism etc. etc.
It was prevalent in the British royal houses too, cousins, the entire European aristocracy was interbred , why they no longer marry close relatives,but marry outside the line to introduce fresh blood. Think recently ?
For reals the whole point about king is that he died young and with health problems lol he did nothing for Egypt just be born and mummified for us to find
@@difidon The reason King Tut's famous is because his tomb was largely found intact. That's the only reason. As I'm sure you know, most, if not all, of the other kings' tombs were robbed over the centuries. Nothing set him apart, just the fact that his grave was found largely undisturbed was a very big deal for archeology.
Really interesting! Judging by the three "phases" of the family tree (inbreeding, non inbreeding, inbreeding) and assuming that they all had relatively short life spans, I wonder if they drew a connection between no surviving heirs and their inbreeding, which ultimately resulted in them marrying "outsiders". Once several generations passed they started inbreeding again. But this is not my profession and I am just assuming stuff 🙈
In Pauline Gedge’s book, “The Twelfth Transforming,” she makes a clear distinction between the royals inbreeding and sibling marriages, and the rest of society, who found it both distasteful and problematic for the health and survival of the children of those unions. Not that Gedge is the end all and be all of Egyptian history, but it does seem realistic to me that even the Egyptian royals understood that new blood had to be inserted into the family line every so often to revitalize it and keep it going. Just my opinion of course :-)
You're right. Looking at the family tree, we can clearly see that those of the pharaohs who married their sisters, half-sisters, daughters or direct nieces had almost no surviving heirs and the ones that did live on were the ones who were born from other noblemen's daughters and not related to them. Yet they did it anyways without looking at the consequences. I've studied ancient Egyptian history and from what I can tell is the reason they inbred wasn't just because they were attracted to their family members (gross) but also moreso because they wanted to keep the family riches and nobility strictly in the family. We know that the Egyptian pharaohs also had God complexes and believed that some of them descended from the Egyptian Gods like Anubis or Ra, which is why they also believed that marrying someone else out of the family would "pollute" their lineage and that they had to preserve their bloodline, and the only way they thought that to be possible is if they married their own kin.
It's so wild the snobbery that exists amongst elites of being 'pureblood' despite how history and their own family trees have proven time and time again it causes endless deformities until they can't breed anymore. They're actually forced to bring in someone outside of their circle to continue their family or end their line.
Poor young man, he must have spent most of his life in pain. Just think a world with no pain relief, or anything to help with his ailments, we have it extremely good.
They had pain meds back then they knew about opioids and plants that helped with pain too and plants that helped the body it wasn't In pill form or in shot's like we have today but alot of time if was made to be a drink and put it on your skin for wounds and certain pain indains did the same thing for years and years
You would think that the family might’ve started to figure out “hey, we’re all afflicted with physical and/or mental disorders maybe we should STOP marrying close family members” I mean they could see that the everyday citizens of their kingdom weren’t intermarrying and had healthier children, so it wouldn’t have been hard to figure out the common denominator. I understand they had to keep the power and wealth within the family, but there’s other ways to do this, and WTH is going on that they could even think about their own children in a sexual way.
Scientists at that time had no knowledge of genetic mutations caused by inbreeding. Today's hillbillies, on the other hand have heard about it but, along with evolution, vaccinations, and climate change, they just don't believe it.
@@rickriccardi4741 Bingo! You are quite correct in reference to what the Egyptians did not 'know' in ancient times. In spite of that they had figured out a lot of other valuable scientific problems. The math required to build massive granite structures , including the cutting, transport and manipulation of stone blocks still baffles us. The development of the mummification process provides a wealth of knowledge about human anatomy, skill in dentistry and their ability to suture wounds and set bone fractures. However, I still maintain that the effects of inbreeding they observed among royalty was not considered a negative in the modern sense - they viewed it as a mark of distinction, status and actual 'beauty'.
@@jaycorby No, i dont think so. Just imagine what was like more than 5000 years ago. The Pharaoh was nothing less than a living GOD. At least, it was what they and the sacerdots where saying. At some point, they started to believe this. As living Gods, they could not mix whit simple mortals, and this imbreeded marriages where a royal obligation and simbol of their special status, as using the double crow, sit on the trone, and promote the whorshiping of the gods. Must have been a heavy obligation, because I dont believe they liked this inbreed marriages. Consider that aside moral reasons, many of this kings and sister-wifes must have been sick, ugly as fuck, sterile, and very probably having a laundry list of mental problems. That explain bouth the marriages whit no offspring, and the eventual marriages outside the family. I dont believe they where aware this sikness where caused by the imbreeding, I dont think so, because to do this reasoning they first must see thenselves as humans, and they where seeing thenselves as gods. And if they where aware of the cause, they could silently stop this imbreeding in order to preserve the health of their childrens and their dinasty. Instead, I supose the sikness where seen as a punishement of the gods, as any other desease or plague where seen at that time, for some failure to apease the gods commited by the Pharaoh or some ancestral. If so, this may partially explain why many Pharaohs where frenetical builders of temples and monuments. Maybe, besides looking for fame and glory in the afterlife, they expected to be cured or have their childrens spared of this sikness if they build enough temples for the gods.
The Habsberg Jaw is very famous! Marie Antoinette had a slight hint and they said the one prince was so inbred and unhealthy that when he died the dr described his heart as black as coal and tiny
It is amazing that they were able to detect sickle cell disease. This would contribute to his health problems and he probably live in a lot of pain episodes as well. It mentioned that sickle cell disease can cause seizures. I’m wondering if Julius Caesar suffered from that and possibly not epilepsy.
The timeline he listed was discovered in mid 1800's. My grandmother has a issue of National Geographic from the 60's with the exact same royal timeline.
Crazy to think that he was actually much less inbred than some family members in generations before him because there were actually quite a few outsiders freshing up the family gene pool before him.
Yeah, he wasn’t actually that inbred at all. So it’s unlikely his conditions were simply the result of inbreeding. You have to go back to his great, great, great, great grandfather to find someone who married a relative. The genetic contribution any of us have from an ancestor that far back is fairly minimal.
Please do a reconstruction of Lady Rai, the nursemaid to Queen Ahmose-Nefertari. Her mummy is regarded as being one of the finest examples of mummification. Grafton Elliot Smith, who unwrapped her, described Rai as the "least unlovely" of the other mummified women and that she was "slim, gracefully-built...and had child-like hands."
King Tut suffered from numerous medical anomalies his major issue was brittle bone disease. I saw the exhibit back in the 70's the full exhibit that showed x-rays of The Boy King.
Damn! I thought I won the genetic profile from hell but King Tut really did. I got lucky with no inbreeding. Ancient Egypt is very interesting. The thought of marrying a sibling or uncle is just disgusting. Honestly, I’m surprised they lasted as long as they did.
Ancient Egypt wasn't always ruled by the "native Egyptians". There were dynasties established by foreign powers who invaded and conquered Egypt, but adopted the culture and tradition to hold on to their power. The conquerors became conquered.
@@fredrika27 Despite it being written against in law by multiple religions, the Bible records people doing it, including daughters raping their father and then being cursed by the God for it. Yep, very disgusting. I think because of the intense punishments by multiple religions across the world for it I think it saved a lot innocent girls from what the Pharaohs did.
Holy shit. I haven't read about anything like this in a decade or more. I forgot my obsession with all of this. Spent hours with books and films, at one point I had an alphabet that because I was a child became the only language I wrote or talked in. Man the Egyptian royals are astounding.
His visual pictographs show him in a chariot fighting against his enemies. With his numerous physical deformities and illnesses it is unlikely that he had an active military experience. The massive inbreeding insured the physical deformities Tut had. Probably many of the Egyptian royals were physical wrecks due to the inbreeding.
What I want to know is why some Kings chose to marry outsiders. Was it out of love? Also it seems like some Kings chose to marry only one person and some chose to marry literally every female relative they could get their hands on. I wonder why that is?
This was so incredibly interesting!!! I love how you take the time to break down the family tree and go through it so thoroughly!!! Will you do Mary Shelley?? Thanks for a great video!!! Looking forward to the next!
@@t.g.7180 yeah it’s funny too because the people most likely to be inbreeding tend to be certain ethnicities of nonwhite, mostly urban dwellers from the Near East.
Honestly, I'm afraid my face may never return to normal after all the sneering I just did during this video. Ugh that's a nasty looking family branch they've got there. I hate that Tutankhamun lived with so much pain for his short life. Great googly moogly, that geneology was horrific.
It's so strange that in a culture that had a well developed medical knowledge and praxis that they did not recognise inbreeding as a harbinger of physical problems & genetic illness. The Pharoahs seemed to have taken on the belief that their genetics needed to be preserved for a specific reason - descended from the gods or something. Whatever it was, their beliefs wreaked havoc in their children - I'm sure King Tut was not the only individual with such a background in this family to suffer.
Lorna Long I believe they knew the result of royal incest, but viewed the subsequent physical deformities in a totally different light than we do now. Tut's father, the pharaoh Akhenaten, was so physically malformed that there are those today who believe he was a human/alien hybrid! It seems to me that to the Egyptians these 'freakish' maladies were actually considered to be 'beautiful' as marks of royal birth, rather than revolting or ugly. Modern perceptions of ancient attitudes, beliefs and practices often do not match up with those who lived millennia ago.
Tutankhamun is a fascinating subject of study. As sad as it is that he was the product of incest and died young, he's got a legacy that can never be disputed. For the longest time, it was believed he was a warrior Pharaoh. But if he had clubfoot and couldn't stand normally, what makes them think he'd be able to drive a chariot?
It makes me wonder if the term 'warrior' might have been given to his spirited nature, because he really tried to set Egypt straight again after what his father did, and thus across time our perceptions of warriors as frontline fighter only.
There is some dispute over whether or not Tutankhamun had a clubfoot, even among the top scholars/experts. His mummified body got cut into pieces and chiseled out of his sarcophagus by Howard Carter's team, so it can be difficult to tell the difference between modern injuries and ancient ones. One of the things in his tomb that lead people to think he had an issue walking were numerous walking sticks in his tomb, but many pharaohs had similar ones as symbols as power not walking aides. Some experts look at the scans of his mummified body and find traces of disabilities whereas others don't. It's a very complicated subject that not even experts can agree on. Yes, agreed! His life and death are both very fascinating, and it's one of the things that lead me to want to study anthropology in college.
In king tut's tomb... There is a painting in there about a pharaoh crushing the nubians... My guess is that king tut did ride the chariot but he was just a passenger... Clinging to the side of the chariot on his dear life, the reason i believe they saw him as a living god is that because of his face, despite the disability on his body he looked like exactly like his death mask... For such an awful physique how can such a boy have a beautiful face? As if he was a miracle.
My mom is slowly reconstructing our family tree. We come from a family that immigrated to Brazil over 300 years ago. Most of said family stayed in small villages around the same area for centuries. If you look at my family tree, it's pretty much cousins marrying each other over and over again. Even my grandparents were cousins (my grandfather married his cousin's daughter). No wonder we do have lots of genetic ailments lmao (for example, everyone had to have their gallbladder removed because we get gallbladder stones. I had mine removed when I was only 20).
Thank you so much for this channel and your videos, this is precious. I can watch the videos for hours. The reconstruction of the faces and the accurate historic detailing give us these real people back to life.
These very ancient genetic family trees are largely speculative. The Ancient Egyptian Royal line of inheritance was matrilineal- the right to the throne and the Pharaoh's divinity passed down the female line, so the Pharaoh needed to marry the Heiress Princess in order legitimately to ascend the throne. A wise Pharaoh married all possible Heiress Princesses, which is why many married aunts, sisters and even daughters. It does not necessarily mean that they mated with them and had issue from them. Amenhotep the Third's major wife Queen Tiye was not an Heiress Princess, so he married his daughter by her, Sitamon, purely for form's sake thus 'spawning his own legitimacy' .Later Pharaohs occasionally did marry and breed from daughters [most notably the Heretic Pharaoh Amenhotep IV who had children by 3 of his 6 daughters by Nefertiti, to try to get a male heir, but all offspring were girls who were either still born or survived very briefly.] DNA evidence is not available in so many cases. Although there is definite consanguinity, this is the first I have heard of some of the disabilities here attributed to Tutankhamen and as far as I know, a cause of death is still disputed.
An interesting anecdote: Moses was most likely adopted by Hatshepsut when she still was a child. With him growing up and Harshepsut and Thutmose II not having any children Moses almost became pharaoh since he was considered as Hatshepsuts son.
Interesting. At least how Moses looked like should be corrected. This modern interpretation of Moses as a white dude is simply wrong. Moses is brown skinned. Or in the old times, he is called a red skin.
I fell into a late night rabbit hole… here I am with my 2 cents Amazing video, I don’t like history but you kept me pulled in with this timeline! Keep it up!
This has to be the absolute BEST explanation I have ever seen on this subject. The way the information ℹ️ is mapped out is very easy to understand. I am a lifelong “student” of many things and I’m extremely impressed with how well this was presented. I HAD to SHARE this with my social media “friends” as it is full of interesting facts that I have never heard before. I have not seen anything about the many many illnesses and deformities that King Tut suffered from. I also wasn’t aware of the “head binding” practice of the time and I often wondered why so many had elongated heads. So many documentaries and classes on Ancient Egypt focus on the wealth that was found inside his tomb but not once did I hear anything about the severity of his ailments or that several canes were also found inside his tomb. I don’t imagine many “regular people” at that time had the opportunity to see him “walking around” as I can only assume that he was “carried” about by his servants whenever he did make public appearances. I am curious about how the “common people”thought about him and his abnormalities during his reign. I wonder 💭 if they even knew about all of the tragic things that were happening in the “Royal Bloodline.” I am thinking that it would be kept secret as to not taint his image. Just like today’s social media posts, people wanted to be seen in the best light possible. So I’m sure his images were refined to not display his facial and body deformities. In the human world it seems that creating a positive image has always played a huge role in being accepted by others. I feel like I have to say this… do people not think 💭 about the “Creation Story” in the Christian Bible with a critical eye 👁?? I ask this because I never hear people say anything about how Adam and Eve supposedly populated the entire world by literally adopting an incestuous belief system?? Who do people think Adam and Eve’s children had sex with?? Obviously 🙄 it’s their own siblings and/or parents. Just a little food for thought 💭. Peace ☮️ of mind for All Humankind🕉☮️💟☯️👁🧐💭!!! PS… I have also recently learned that approximately %30 of people in the modern world 🌎 are married to a relative. Marriage to a 2nd or 3rd cousin is still practiced by many cultures in the West. So I’m not at all surprised by the level of inbreeding within a “Royal Bloodline.” It’s the only true way to “keep power in the family.”
Thank heavens there were various religions that taught against such a practice around the world in those days. It probably saved a lot more innocent girls than we will ever know.
Sena The ancient Egyptian royal view concerning this practice was 100% at odds with what is a matter of law in present day civilized societies. It is illegal to commit incest within specific degrees of blood relationships.
I “Nooo-Ed” out loud when you got Amenhotep III. These are probably the most intense levels of inbreeding I have ever seen. Who needs 1st cousins, when you have DAUGHTERS?!?!?!
There was a forensic study done on his injuries a few years ago, and the…forensic archeologist determined the leg fracture was from (most likely because obviously we don’t KNOW) being run over by a chariot. They believe during a chariot race. the King was smashed into by a chariot then knocked from his own chariot and possibly and run over. But the family tree was interesting.
I have always been very interested in archaeology. Read alot about king tut growing up. This was VERY well done. The family tree you made took alot of work and you are to be commended. Bravo!!!!
Thank you for your presentation. I was taken by my father to Chicago in the late 1970s to visit the Tutankhamun exhibit . I would like to watch your presentation about Cleopatra.
I really like your videos! I like how informative, interesting & historical they are without interjecting opinions into them. I also enjoy your animation’s of their possible likeness. This adds into the interesting commentary. Great job! I look forward to watching more!
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It's comical you people believe the Egyptians were inbred. Lies told to you by white historians who haven't a clue about ancient Egypt whom practice inbreeding among their own family's.. an you buy the crap the sell
Dude that's my uncle... 😑
Looks like Adam Greenblat
He was a she..
I’m surprised the British “royal” family doesn’t look like Tut terrible inbreeding with those people as well you should do a program on how inbred they are
In reality, only the royals were permitted to marry close relatives, a 'privilege' that was accorded to them by tradition and to maintain power. As far as I'm aware, common people couldn't practice this - and thank goodness for that.
@@kjhnsn7296 ayo💀💀
You r wrong , at least if we r only talking about Egypt here, everyone was allowed to marry relatives and it was and still is the norm there
@@kjhnsn7296 most cases of incest are in Africa and the Middle east
@@trevorclinton5692 yup
@@trevorclinton5692 such a lie Europe and AmeriKKKa
Fascinating how such an advanced, complex civilization did not understand the dangers of in-breeding. Even the most isolated tribes, who knew no science, understood this. Smaller tribes without access to other tribes for marrying, divided their groups into 2 moieties, and maintained that separation for generations, only allowing members of one moiety, to marry into the other. Somehow they understood inbreeding weakened them.
Somehow they perceived value in the bloodline in spite of what they must have known about inbreeding.
Maybe family members had amazing superior intellect.
A lot of royals married to keep the money in the family
The five generations before he was born included new blood.
Perhaps the Ancient Egyptians knew the dangers, but felt that keeping the power and wealth within the family was more important to them.
Lucky this was only practice an Royalty.
It’s crazy how you can tell so much about someone’s health by just looking at the bones.
His excellent mummification was the biggest reason we know so much about him.
@@Error_4x5 yes, because the bones still in good condition. In other way would be more difficult.
@@rowanjoy419 mummification preserves more than bones
@@rowanjoy419 u don't even know what you're talking about 🙄
Isnt flat footedness caused by tendons? How do we know about that part?
(Im genuinely curious)
I had a professor once who was going over examples of royal inbreeding throughout history. When one of my classmates asked how in the world so many of these families didn't realize what a terrible idea it was, my professor gave a response I've never forgotten: "Royalty and nobility throughout history have been viewed as akin to gods. If you grew up believing you were a god, would you think the rules of humanity applied to you? Power and wealth do not necessarily come with intelligence. If anything, they often get severely in the way of common sense thinking."
So true. And if I’m superior then only another superior being is the only one I’m meant to be with. There are many things that people think are ok to do. It’s only when someone tells you what you are doing is not ok and even then. Look at cult behaviors.
Now that’s an answer! Very fascinating!
Fast forward to 2020 America and over a billion dollars was spent to install Joe Biden.
Not to mention inbreeding in the Bible!
And the peons could see the damages of inbreed on their cattle... No, thanks! While the wealthier remained unaware
It's amazing that he managed to live to be 18-19 years old.
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And he didn't die from any sicknes.. I saw a documentary which showed that he inflicted with a couple of wounds and fell off his chariot while in battle and part of his abdomen/pelvic area was run over by the chariot. And that caused his demise.
@@CarlyzClozet lol what. King tut died from malaria I believe. Where’d you heard that? He couldn’t even walk properly and now you’re saying he died in battle?
@@markoliver314 Its crazy cause I remember being taught in the 4th grade that he died of sickness and his wounds in battle made things worse
@@markoliver314hope ur well n having a good day,i have 2 club feet n was told id never walk, 35foot reconstructions later n i walk fine.....
what doesnt kill you makes you stronger.....
Its totally possible he could of been in battle with a club foot....not all club feet are as severe as mine, i hope his wasnt,it definetly would of made life more difficult but not impossible.....
Not a family tree, a family wreath 😱
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Best comment
it's a tree. A bamboo tree
I've never seen a family tree that just curves to one side like this lol.
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One of the saddest things about this story is that we know about King Tut's two daughters because they were buried with him. Even though they were stillborn, they were still mummified, and when he died they were placed with him so they could be with him in the afterlife. It's also interesting the genetic testing done on mummies, because we were able to find out that the Younger Lady was Tut's mother even though they've never been able to identify who exactly she was.
Thank you for this information. Fascinating family.
maybe?
Didn’t they say the younger lady was king tut’s fathers’s sister aka his aunt
If your into this kind of stuff, they found trace amounts of cocaine in mummies. They odd thing was it was only found in South America at that time and according to historical records they had no contact at that point in time.
@@thebobloblawshow8832 why Incan mummies?
In India, there were people who kept records of family trees of the whole villages. And before marriage both bride and groom were checked and it was made sure that they were not related at all.
Hi,so in my Village there is a man who keeps record of all the our ancestors.
@@ishasharma2554 Exactly
@@heavenlypot how cramped is it in india
@@ChorizoFungis Less than Japan and Korea.
Not all parts though, cousin-marriages are still common in some parts.
He had two daughters who were either stillborn or died as babies, before he himself died at the age of 18 or 19. And they were in the tomb with their father when they were found by Howard Carter. He said it was probably the saddest thing he ever saw. I remember being shocked to learn about those kids, as they talked frequently in school about “The boy king of Egypt” but never about the tragedy of his personal life. This is part of what makes history interesting, in my opinion. It’s not just the accomplishments of a nation, or the wars, or the dates and places. (Although that’s important too). Primarily it’s the people’s story, and what they endured throughout their life, their joys, their sorrows, their motivations. If you cannot understand history from a personal perspective, find someone or something you can relate to, you will have an incomplete picture.
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@Levi Marshall, it’s not necessarily being nosey. “Nosey” is being engaged in the lives of living persons for the sheer pleasure of it, with no particular aim. History as I see it, on the other hand, is a form of psychology. It is the study of the lives of men and women who have long ceased to exist, and to bring back some of what has been lost, by the accounts of what these people were like, what tragedies befell them in life, and how many of them overcame these great afflictions and brought about some good in the world and how we can learn from them. Although, there are plenty of others who failed the test of life and became the cause of much harm to the human race before they were done.
And his 2 young babies looked like aliens.. I got to see them after they where run threw an MRI ..
@Levi Marshall 💨
@@brianbommarito3376 they ain't digging up king Phillips great great great grandfather. Is he not important to the world and society,. I find it a bit offending. I'm glad they digging up Vikings now. I really am
This is fascinating. Despite the genetic horrors of his family background, it's amazing that his physical appearance & weaknesses were accepted & he went on to become Pharaoh. In many cultures such a child of an esteemed family would've been discarded or hidden away. Even within the last century. The ancient Egyptians are a most interesting culture to study. Even with all we know & accurately recreate, it's still difficult to picture them as everyday people. There's something magical about them.
egyptian was Europeans who went into Egypt during the ice age Europeans built the pyramids since they found pyramids in Europe older than Egypt's , ice age made all go south for warmer weather
It's cool too how they pushed to "live for eternity" by being buried with everything lavish and they all basically were in competition with each other to out due the other. The one who hit the jackpot was King Tut. He's not even our "King" yet we still call him King Tut.
The guy had it made and still does.
@@christins.1481 He certainly was famous for being a king who never was a king. But I don't think he had it made. He only lived to be 19 and he lived in pain during his latter years.
@@onlythewise1 WTF? Lol 🙄🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@onlythewise1 you Europeans wanna claim everything lol. Last time I checked history, Europeans were not in the early civilization. The earliest civilizations was Mesopotamians and Egyptians. You guys came later on. So it’s impossible for you so called “civil” Europeans to have built the pyramids. Y’all not done colonizing, so y’all wanna start colonizing history nah!
This poor kid wasn't just unlucky, he was beaten by the bad genetics stick, until he just suffered all of his life.
Probably a kindness that he didn't live long.
@@jennyrose9454 there are also theories that it was a murder, which is not surprising at all. Well at least it stopped him to have more inbred progeny who would have been even less lucky with their genetics.
@@jennyrose9454 Indeed
@@LifeInPink999 I do believe they proved that thery incorrect. Scientist did a scan of his body. He had a broken leg that never healed properly and 2 or 3 strains of malaria.
@@LifeInPink999 yeah his wife was his sister his family tree was so messed up
Imagine holding your new born baby thinking... I'm going to have kids with him/her when they're older 🤢
It happens every single day in the Muslim world.
@@spikefivefivefive really? can u you please explain
@@spikefivefivefive are you dumb? It's against our religion to wed/sleep with your own kids/siblings and close cousins. 6th cousins and onward is fine.
@@spikefivefivefive fuck no?!? What you talking about there ain’t nothing more haram than that.
@@spikefivefivefive the most delusional shit I have ever seen on the internet
Scientists recently have been doing some new studies with the mummy of Egypt's famous boy king. With the aid of highly advanced mri scans they were able to ascertain he suffered from a major gastro intestinal disorder. Apparently he was lactose intolerant. Ya turns out me and the Egyptian kid got a toot in common
Poor dude couldn't even enjoy cheese before he died from the pure motor oil running through his veins
HAD A TOOT IN COMMON I CAN'T BWEATHE
@@jemcarstairstoe Sometimes my inner vaudevillian comes up with some good ones
This is too good, it needs more likes 😂😂
Boooo lol
I read that the royals didn’t want to taint royal bloodlines with too much non royal blood so they mainly kept it in the family. Too hard to swallow a father marrying his daughter and having kids with her! Very interesting though. Great info and explanation. Thank you
Yes true they wanted all royal blood
True til this day!
Sadly, some fathers still rape their own daughters. Nowadays they keep it secret, though.
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It wasn't just Egyptians royals that inbred. There's alot of inbreeding in European royals too.
This often gets left out when talking about the ancient Egyptian royalty. They all get described in the best ways but people tiptoe around the problems they suffered from because of generations of inbreeding
That's because every one wants to rewrite history. Even the Egyptians tried to hide thier flaws and failures. Every one wants to be remembered as "great". This is why it's important to seek truth, and never forget real history. People always try to alter it
just like they gloss over the Greeks and Romans practice of child sex, more specifically young boys. It's official name is pederasty and Plato himself speaks about it as well as historians. The Roman and Catholic Church took that practice with them when Greek fell from dominance and power and culture shifted towards Rome. You see, it was considered ok, like for the royals or civilized people but deep down they ALL know it was wrong...
I mean it's the same shit in a lot of countries with monarchies, this ruling system just does something to people's brain it's crazy. They're so scared of losing power they become immune to the repulsive aspect of incest. Look at Spain's royal family history, they had a few disabled members who were victims of their ancestors' incestuous relationships too
@@jenjosh i don't really see people hiding this.
The British did it too
Look at them
For all the people who can't understand how these families didn't know incest was wrong, they very much did. They just percieved the pros to be much greater than the cons.
A huge reason for royal inbreeding that isn't as commonly brought up is the consolidation of royal power. When it comes to inheritance and entangling many family trees, what can often happen is that claims to royal blood and the seat of rule itself get dissipated through the families that the royal family intermarries with. If each pharoah marries a member of a different dynasty within the country, within a few generations all of these dynasties have a connection to the royal family and can begin making all sorts of trouble. Alongside this is also the parallelism between divine marriage and royal marriage. In Egyptian and Zoroastrian religions, incest is holy because the gods did incest, so by marrying a sister you are mirroring the gods. Whether it was inheritance or religious legitimacy, royal incest was all about stability and keeping power in the family.
As many have pointed out, inbreeding is widely understood to be unnatural, whether its pre industrial societies or our modern one now, an aversion to incest is hard coded into our nature. However, for the royal families of say the Hapsburgs and the many incestuous egyptian lines, genetic defects were a small price to pay for royalty. Plus, it (can) take a remarkably long time for these congenital defects to cement themselves in the family. As such the people who began the practice were far removed from the harm they caused and by the time those defects took hold, inbreeding had become a defacto part of royal culture.
A great example of how culture can override our own survival instincts. Once a biological anthropologist said the same thing about sun tanning
Well, considering the gods didn't exist, it just became an excuse to intermarry and not have anyone who could object. That begs the question, who created the family tree for the gods?
Considering the interactions between sickle cell anemia and a lower death rate when afflicted with malaria, it makes sense that he survived it multiple times.
Yeah, I wonder what ethnic group suffers from those illnesses today and what they look like? 🤔
@@thesecondTH-cam Those of African origin. Even if one is fair skinned, if they have recent African ancestry it can still manifest.
It's in reaction to the disease of malaria from that continent.
Not sure if it afflicts those of the Indian subcontinent.
Carribeans, African Americans, Latin Americans, but in greater #s continent Africans inherit it.
@@thesecondTH-cam I see what you did there. LOL
@@rosalynbeatty8310 in indian context sicle cell is most common in tribal population in India with different tribes varying from 1-40%.
Later settlers like indo aryans have lower chance of having sickle cells. Sometimes indo aryans are called indo European but they did not come from Europe but had a common ancestors who went to India & Europe. Also in later ages Alexander invaded india and conquered West india & pakistan and we even had a greek empire in India. That's why lot of northern indians & Pakistani have Caucasian features like coloured eyes blonde hair which is absent in tribal population & people in south of India.
Tldr- different population accross india have different gene pool with tribal population who probably have more African dna show lot higher rate of sickle cell than north west indians who are more closer to Europe....
I think these are most common in mainly west Africa the rest is in the rest of Africa the Middle East I think and India
What saved Tut's line is the rare introduction of non family members. It's baffling how the majority of the family tree wasn't rendered sterile, but, at the same time, it's interesting to see how the people came together for their king, knowing he had so many hardships physically. His mind was strong. Inbred or not, Tut had spirit that, if he were to live longer, might have made great changes for the egyptians of his day.
more like a family ladder
It's kinda like the Bidens.
@@Gutch220 like a wreath like the habsburgs. A lot of time Egyptians didn't actually marry their sisters usually they marry their cousins. It was actually very rare to marry their sisters. And it was only until a certain Pharaoh that they actually started marrying their brothers and sisters off. So they weren't entirely like super incesty but they were still very much incest. That's why they weren't sterile after so long. Also on top of that a lot of pharaohs actually had a ton of wives. So that's also a big reason why they weren't as inbred as you might think. And why they weren't super sterile like the habsburgs. Is because a lot of times they were very distant cousins marry each other or they were like half-siblings marrying each other. It was never like pure brother and sister.
@@bobsmith6544 what are you talkin about? Nobody in his family is inbred. What's the Point of lying except to look like a fool. Like birth records and death records and marriage records are public knowledge. It's been proven multiple times that he is not inbred. Like Obama is a US citizen is born in the US. You may not like it but those are facts. You shouldn't believe every idiot that you listen to.
King Ramses 2 did
This poor kid! I used to want to be an archeologist when I was really young and had a big poster of king Tut and a book on his tomb… This channel brings this history to life. Thank you!
In-breeding simply makes recessive traits visible, thus making natural selection better at work. This means by killing off those with recessive traits, the family line actually has less mutated recessive genes in their genomes. You shouldn't look at the dysfunctional ones, as that's just natural selection at play. The king should've had hundreds of babies and select the healthiest ones (killing off the dysfunctional), and continue the process until there's no recessive detrimental genes in the family line.
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I saw him at an Exhibit in Houston. I felt bad seeing his remains in a glass case. I wish I could've left him flowers.
King Tut sang “because I’m an island boyyy” #islandboy
@@dubuyajay9964 was this back in the early 2000s to mid 2000s? I remember seeing a ton of promo for the king tut exhibit back around then as a kid.
"Keeping it in the family" gives this situation a whole other meaning ... maintaining the lineage of diseases.
In Chinese society, marrying someone with the same surname (i.e. within the same clan) is prohibited. It is highly taboo.
Chinese sure like exotic foods
@@bilobath6093 well, huge population plus not enough food, one has to become creative
Marriage with same surname was banned in Korea until 25-30 years ago
@@johnpark7972 don't they have like only three surnames in korea
Not in China, in Taiwan I suppose.
How very interesting! No wonder they were so sick and died young, so much incest over and over! I loved your explanation, thank you!
No
Incest isbest keeps the families wealth in tact that's why it was practiced amongst the wealthy until someone noticed how defects became more common as the practice continued.
@Ray J it is often a royal trait to keep the power, wealth and property within the family and double your child's claim to the throne if challenged.
The Hanovers (Windsors) did it along with the Hapsburgs and Carlosian line.
Incest itself doesn't necessarily produce new genetic problems...that's a commoners myth form farming. However if a bad trait deforming is recessive, it requires both parents to have it but maybe not evident as it is recessive...then each has a 50 50 chance of passing it along so 1/4th chance of a deformed kid. A 3/4 chance of a kid with the trait. Only a 1/4 chance of a kid with no bad gene.
Their kids or 1st cousins then marry (sister wife or cousin wife) and the likelihood is at least one has the full blown trait (two genes) and the other has one good and one bad gene. Their kid now has a 50 50 chance of showing the trait (ie Club foot) by getting both genes....or at least a 100% chance of carrying one.
So by 3rd generation it is becoming inevitable in a family way.
This can also work for good recessive traits. Enhancing that trait as well. For instance longevity. Both Queen Regents of Britain in the last 200 years lived about a century, as did Elizabeth's mother. Elizabeth is still pretty strong, as she brushed off c19 like a head cold.
ADAM, AND EVE 😳
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I always felt so bad for King Tut. I imagine his childhood, given his poor health and deformities, wasn’t very enjoyable or lighthearted not to mention it was very short. And on top of that, his father was very controversial. I’m sure Tut and his sisters were aware to an extent the turmoil around them and how scary that must’ve been for a young child. And then of course basically his whole family falls apart after the death of his father and he’s encouraged to leave it all behind. He grows up no doubt with rather big expectations and the poor kid can’t even get around properly only to lose his own kids and his own life so young. People of ancient times always seem so different, almost unrealistic, but in reality they were just like us and Tut had it rough. I’m sure that poor boy cried himself to sleep a few times, be from the physical pain or all that was happening around him. I hope in death he found some peace (and was able to kiss those canes goodbye).
I’m sure it was worse for all of the slaves he owned :)
@@partricklambaste1235 I’m sure you’re right, Patrick. Thank you for your input. Very insightful.
@@partricklambaste1235 ok but tbf he was mentally handicapped most likely
@@ghristophermyers666 i'm sure that was a great comfort for all of the people he was divinely ordained to rule over.
Oh, yes, our god-king presides over a state built on the suffering of slaves and peasants, but he's mentally incapable of understanding the horrors committed in his name :) so it's cool!!!
you know, if he was mentally handicapped at all.
This is actually how I feel about everyone who has ever benefitted from an inherited power structure.
Im actually amazed at king tut despite his disability, he actually ordered back the old gods to be restored and to be worshipped again and denied his father's sun god (aten) from people worshipping it...
He was also reportedly had an interest in chariot ridings... If he was alive today he'd definitely love skateboarding and BMX.
He also loved weapons such as swords and bows... No wonder the egyptians crafted him a dagger before he passed away.
Poor Tut. He was in pain a lot of his life :( Kid didn't have much of a happy life. Sounds confusing and pretty scary as well.
Takes the words "KEEPING IT IN THE FAMILY" to new levels..
Damn you beat me to this joke. Well played
I heard someone say “why go to the mall when you can go across the hall?”
They also practiced skull-binding which is the elongation of the skull by binding the babies’ still soft skulls. Naturally they considered themselves gods and their bloodline sacred and preserving its purity paramount. They based their power on it, so naturally they could not recognize what was obvious: that they were producing offsprings laden with all kinds of defects and not a lot of them either.
Btw somebody pointed it out that in European royal families cousins routinely married each other with various negative results, like for example the hemophilia of the last little czarevich which led to the downfall of czarism etc. etc.
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It was prevalent in the British royal houses too, cousins, the entire European aristocracy was interbred , why they no longer marry close relatives,but marry outside the line to introduce fresh blood. Think recently ?
From what you've said here, it confirms that everything isn't meant for everyone to experience in the same manner/receive the same outcome.
Some parts of Pakistan to this day practice inbreeding by marrying cousins off to each other.
@@hym3323 the countries with the highest inbreeding rate are Pakistan, Irak, Turkey, Afghanistan, Oman and Saudi Arabia
This is so interesting as much as I studied Egyptians during my teens I never came across king tuts health. Wow thank you for this knowledge
he is literally one of if not the most popular theme about egypt,your studying was wank if you never found that out tbf
For reals the whole point about king is that he died young and with health problems lol he did nothing for Egypt just be born and mummified for us to find
Why is king Tut so famous? I never understood what set him apart.
@@difidon being a young pharaoh
@@difidon The reason King Tut's famous is because his tomb was largely found intact. That's the only reason. As I'm sure you know, most, if not all, of the other kings' tombs were robbed over the centuries. Nothing set him apart, just the fact that his grave was found largely undisturbed was a very big deal for archeology.
You do an extraordinary job of breaking down such complicated family trees in such a short time!!! Fascinating info!!
Really interesting! Judging by the three "phases" of the family tree (inbreeding, non inbreeding, inbreeding) and assuming that they all had relatively short life spans, I wonder if they drew a connection between no surviving heirs and their inbreeding, which ultimately resulted in them marrying "outsiders". Once several generations passed they started inbreeding again.
But this is not my profession and I am just assuming stuff 🙈
maybe the "no-inbreeding era" was just a time when they needed political alliances/marriages to stay on the throne?
In Pauline Gedge’s book, “The Twelfth Transforming,” she makes a clear distinction between the royals inbreeding and sibling marriages, and the rest of society, who found it both distasteful and problematic for the health and survival of the children of those unions. Not that Gedge is the end all and be all of Egyptian history, but it does seem realistic to me that even the Egyptian royals understood that new blood had to be inserted into the family line every so often to revitalize it and keep it going. Just my opinion of course :-)
You're right. Looking at the family tree, we can clearly see that those of the pharaohs who married their sisters, half-sisters, daughters or direct nieces had almost no surviving heirs and the ones that did live on were the ones who were born from other noblemen's daughters and not related to them. Yet they did it anyways without looking at the consequences.
I've studied ancient Egyptian history and from what I can tell is the reason they inbred wasn't just because they were attracted to their family members (gross) but also moreso because they wanted to keep the family riches and nobility strictly in the family. We know that the Egyptian pharaohs also had God complexes and believed that some of them descended from the Egyptian Gods like Anubis or Ra, which is why they also believed that marrying someone else out of the family would "pollute" their lineage and that they had to preserve their bloodline, and the only way they thought that to be possible is if they married their own kin.
Did you mean heirs, or am I missing something?
All in all greed, royalty, and wealth played a part… marrying into own family to keep everything! And they got punished for that with inbred family!
It's so wild the snobbery that exists amongst elites of being 'pureblood' despite how history and their own family trees have proven time and time again it causes endless deformities until they can't breed anymore. They're actually forced to bring in someone outside of their circle to continue their family or end their line.
It’s not really anything to do with that, that’s just cope to deal with the fact they’re inbred.
It was always about keeping power in their family.
Poor young man, he must have spent most of his life in pain. Just think a world with no pain relief, or anything to help with his ailments, we have it extremely good.
I know, right? Never knew I could feel such pity for a king, but he truly had what we would consider today to be a short and miserable life.
I would say they had stronger stuff then we had
right? especially with having sickle cell and necrosis!
They had pain meds back then they knew about opioids and plants that helped with pain too and plants that helped the body it wasn't In pill form or in shot's like we have today but alot of time if was made to be a drink and put it on your skin for wounds and certain pain indains did the same thing for years and years
They had ways of pain relief back then- one of the history channels did an interesting vid on it
Imagine what could still be laying undisturbed under Egypt...I find this fascinating, great work
You would think that the family might’ve started to figure out “hey, we’re all afflicted with physical and/or mental disorders maybe we should STOP marrying close family members” I mean they could see that the everyday citizens of their kingdom weren’t intermarrying and had healthier children, so it wouldn’t have been hard to figure out the common denominator. I understand they had to keep the power and wealth within the family, but there’s other ways to do this, and WTH is going on that they could even think about their own children in a sexual way.
Saoirse Rose ( see my reply above to Lorna Long )
Scientists at that time had no knowledge of genetic mutations caused by inbreeding. Today's hillbillies, on the other hand have heard about it but, along with evolution, vaccinations, and climate change, they just don't believe it.
@@rickriccardi4741 Bingo! You are quite correct in reference to what the Egyptians did not 'know' in ancient times. In spite of that they had figured out a lot of other valuable scientific problems. The math required to build massive granite structures , including the cutting, transport and manipulation of stone blocks still baffles us. The development of the mummification process provides a wealth of knowledge about human anatomy, skill in dentistry and their ability to suture wounds and set bone fractures. However, I still maintain that the effects of inbreeding they observed among royalty was not considered a negative in the modern sense - they viewed it as a mark of distinction, status and actual 'beauty'.
I couldn't agree more! Its ABSOLUTELY disgusting and vile.
@@jaycorby No, i dont think so. Just imagine what was like more than 5000 years ago. The Pharaoh was nothing less than a living GOD. At least, it was what they and the sacerdots where saying. At some point, they started to believe this. As living Gods, they could not mix whit simple mortals, and this imbreeded marriages where a royal obligation and simbol of their special status, as using the double crow, sit on the trone, and promote the whorshiping of the gods.
Must have been a heavy obligation, because I dont believe they liked this inbreed marriages. Consider that aside moral reasons, many of this kings and sister-wifes must have been sick, ugly as fuck, sterile, and very probably having a laundry list of mental problems. That explain bouth the marriages whit no offspring, and the eventual marriages outside the family.
I dont believe they where aware this sikness where caused by the imbreeding, I dont think so, because to do this reasoning they first must see thenselves as humans, and they where seeing thenselves as gods. And if they where aware of the cause, they could silently stop this imbreeding in order to preserve the health of their childrens and their dinasty. Instead, I supose the sikness where seen as a punishement of the gods, as any other desease or plague where seen at that time, for some failure to apease the gods commited by the Pharaoh or some ancestral.
If so, this may partially explain why many Pharaohs where frenetical builders of temples and monuments. Maybe, besides looking for fame and glory in the afterlife, they expected to be cured or have their childrens spared of this sikness if they build enough temples for the gods.
European monarchy also had plenty of inbreeding. Their offspring suffering from genetic illnesses were hidden away.
Except maybe for King George, who's mental instability led him to start a war with the American Colonies.
You could only hide so much. Just look at the Habsburgs!
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The Habsberg Jaw is very famous! Marie Antoinette had a slight hint and they said the one prince was so inbred and unhealthy that when he died the dr described his heart as black as coal and tiny
It seems nobility in a lot of places seem to have this issue. They wanted to keep the power in the family.
Poor king Tutankhamen suffered all of his short life. What a tragedy!
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Thank his parents and those before for that!
It is amazing that they were able to detect sickle cell disease. This would contribute to his health problems and he probably live in a lot of pain episodes as well.
It mentioned that sickle cell disease can cause seizures. I’m wondering if Julius Caesar suffered from that and possibly not epilepsy.
Very impressive. No archeologist that studies the Pharaohs show a family tree timeline of where King Tut came from like you did .
The timeline he listed was discovered in mid 1800's. My grandmother has a issue of National Geographic from the 60's with the exact same royal timeline.
@@Error_4x5 Thank you for letting me know. Seems like Nat Geo has a lot of info, we just need to do our research.
Crazy to think that he was actually much less inbred than some family members in generations before him because there were actually quite a few outsiders freshing up the family gene pool before him.
Teenage Mutant Incest Paroahs ! 🤢
Yeah, he wasn’t actually that inbred at all.
So it’s unlikely his conditions were simply the result of inbreeding.
You have to go back to his great, great, great, great grandfather to find someone who married a relative.
The genetic contribution any of us have from an ancestor that far back is fairly minimal.
i was wondering if those "outsiders" were pure outsiders at all, or maybe somewjere along the line they had connections with royal blood too tho
Very interesting.
Please do a reconstruction of Lady Rai, the nursemaid to Queen Ahmose-Nefertari. Her mummy is regarded as being one of the finest examples of mummification. Grafton Elliot Smith, who unwrapped her, described Rai as the "least unlovely" of the other mummified women and that she was "slim, gracefully-built...and had child-like hands."
Been binging this since last night! Amazing stuff man!
King Tut suffered from numerous medical anomalies his major issue was brittle bone disease. I saw the exhibit back in the 70's the full exhibit that showed x-rays of The Boy King.
This is so sad. He was probably in pain all the time.
Nope
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Yea from the sickle cell alone his pain must of been unbearable
don't apologize for not pronouncing their names right, literally nobody knows how they're pronounced
Actually we do, due to writings and reconstruction. As far as I know some hieroglyphic systems are based on pronunciation
They think Ra is pronounced “Ray” now.
@@mjrhmekssh Some people know yes, but it is far, far from common knowledge, and it is understandably inoffensive for one to mess it up.
What a pity that Nefertiti mummy wasn't found yet! I wish I could know more about her! A lot of historical registers mention her beauty 💕
Omg... Stop simping for an old lady
Let him enjoy his history
@@ImmaWrongdoer I'm a straight woman 😂😂😂😂
@@fuinha9781 🌈
@@ImmaWrongdoer troll...
Damn! I thought I won the genetic profile from hell but King Tut really did. I got lucky with no inbreeding. Ancient Egypt is very interesting. The thought of marrying a sibling or uncle is just disgusting. Honestly, I’m surprised they lasted as long as they did.
How do you think man started off ? I think you're going over the top as all people do. when you work that one out you will think more clearly..
Royalty does it still to keep the money in the family lol
Ancient Egypt wasn't always ruled by the "native Egyptians". There were dynasties established by foreign powers who invaded and conquered Egypt, but adopted the culture and tradition to hold on to their power. The conquerors became conquered.
@@PungiFungi very true. I haven’t dipped into ancient Egyptian history for quite some time. It is quite interesting regardless of the rulers.
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Ah yes a revisit to the family bean stalk.
Also…daughter wives? I made an audible sound of disgust at that
yep me to revolting.
Yes, any decent person would find that revolting.
Very biblical!
@@fredrika27 Despite it being written against in law by multiple religions, the Bible records people doing it, including daughters raping their father and then being cursed by the God for it. Yep, very disgusting. I think because of the intense punishments by multiple religions across the world for it I think it saved a lot innocent girls from what the Pharaohs did.
@@lovetobe6118 the story of noah though 😂😂😂
It's a testament to the doctors and midwives of the time that he even survived. He wouldn't have been easy to feed for example.
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Egyptian royals: it’s a privilege to marry your daughter/sister and have her bear children.
Science: hold my beer.
Holy shit. I haven't read about anything like this in a decade or more. I forgot my obsession with all of this. Spent hours with books and films, at one point I had an alphabet that because I was a child became the only language I wrote or talked in. Man the Egyptian royals are astounding.
His visual pictographs show him in a chariot fighting against his enemies. With his numerous physical deformities and illnesses it is unlikely that he had an active military experience. The massive inbreeding insured the physical deformities Tut had. Probably many of the Egyptian royals were physical wrecks due to the inbreeding.
We’re there square jawlines back then? Why don’t we see any in ancient art? Did nobody look good until, I don’t know the seventies or nineties?
It's crazy that someone from 3000 years ago has a bigger family tree than any modern person today
And that big family tree only accounts for like 2 generations spread out over hundreds of years.
What I want to know is why some Kings chose to marry outsiders. Was it out of love? Also it seems like some Kings chose to marry only one person and some chose to marry literally every female relative they could get their hands on. I wonder why that is?
@@WhitneyDahlin Desire and political alliances go hand in hand.
That ain't a tree. It's a family circuit
The pharaohs didn’t have family trees, they had family wreaths.
Lol
Stolen comment
Omg lol
Marrying daughters? That one really got me. He saw them grow up. I wonder at what age the daughters got married to their father?
Thank you so much. My head always spins with all these names & keeping track of fathers, mothers, etc. The family tree is incredibly helpful!
Wow this is so cool . I don’t have any interesting insight … but I love history and bringing it to life like this is so amazing to me . Thank you 🙏!
This was so incredibly interesting!!! I love how you take the time to break down the family tree and go through it so thoroughly!!! Will you do Mary Shelley?? Thanks for a great video!!! Looking forward to the next!
Family tree??More like a wreath 😉
@@sekichdawn3913 LOL!!! 😂😂😂
@@sekichdawn3913 lol and ppl nowadays make fun of hillbillies 😆
@@t.g.7180 yeah it’s funny too because the people most likely to be inbreeding tend to be certain ethnicities of nonwhite, mostly urban dwellers from the Near East.
@@doomguy9049 ikr? Funny to see everyone swoon over this guy. Sounds like the family gene pool was 🤮 and that one guy calling them “Magical” wtf? 🤪😂
Honestly, I'm afraid my face may never return to normal after all the sneering I just did during this video. Ugh that's a nasty looking family branch they've got there. I hate that Tutankhamun lived with so much pain for his short life. Great googly moogly, that geneology was horrific.
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It's so strange that in a culture that had a well developed medical knowledge and praxis that they did not recognise inbreeding as a harbinger of physical problems & genetic illness.
The Pharoahs seemed to have taken on the belief that their genetics needed to be preserved for a specific reason - descended from the gods or something.
Whatever it was, their beliefs wreaked havoc in their children - I'm sure King Tut was not the only individual with such a background in this family to suffer.
Its possible the priests knew of this risk but considered a price worth paying for stability. Its amazing how long that culture lasted
beacuse its fake
thats not how king tut looked like ffs.
and plus ancient Egypt is just much more fascinating than they want u to believe.
The Egyptian and Anunnaki gods did marry their half-sisters as they did believe want to preserve the best DNA.
Lorna Long I believe they knew the result of royal incest, but viewed the subsequent physical deformities in a totally different light than we do now. Tut's father, the pharaoh Akhenaten, was so physically malformed that there are those today who believe he was a human/alien hybrid! It seems to me that to the Egyptians these 'freakish' maladies were actually considered to be 'beautiful' as marks of royal birth, rather than revolting or ugly. Modern perceptions of ancient attitudes, beliefs and practices often do not match up with those who lived millennia ago.
@@jaycorby good point. The rulling class have always been wanting to look different.
Tutankhamun is a fascinating subject of study. As sad as it is that he was the product of incest and died young, he's got a legacy that can never be disputed. For the longest time, it was believed he was a warrior Pharaoh. But if he had clubfoot and couldn't stand normally, what makes them think he'd be able to drive a chariot?
It makes me wonder if the term 'warrior' might have been given to his spirited nature, because he really tried to set Egypt straight again after what his father did, and thus across time our perceptions of warriors as frontline fighter only.
There is some dispute over whether or not Tutankhamun had a clubfoot, even among the top scholars/experts. His mummified body got cut into pieces and chiseled out of his sarcophagus by Howard Carter's team, so it can be difficult to tell the difference between modern injuries and ancient ones. One of the things in his tomb that lead people to think he had an issue walking were numerous walking sticks in his tomb, but many pharaohs had similar ones as symbols as power not walking aides. Some experts look at the scans of his mummified body and find traces of disabilities whereas others don't. It's a very complicated subject that not even experts can agree on.
Yes, agreed! His life and death are both very fascinating, and it's one of the things that lead me to want to study anthropology in college.
In king tut's tomb... There is a painting in there about a pharaoh crushing the nubians...
My guess is that king tut did ride the chariot but he was just a passenger... Clinging to the side of the chariot on his dear life, the reason i believe they saw him as a living god is that because of his face, despite the disability on his body he looked like exactly like his death mask...
For such an awful physique how can such a boy have a beautiful face? As if he was a miracle.
Wonderful Egyptian family trees, I am astounded at how many brothers & sisters married! Totally amazing narration, thank you. 🌺
Alabama is identical
@@Truth72500 LOL
@@jimb8695 whole new world song from Aladdin is needed for them not sweet home Alabama
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Inbreeding was not only common in Egypt, but it also was common centuries later in European royalty with cousins marrying each other.
King Charles II of the Habsburg for example
Inbreeding is still even common to this day. There are even countries where the majority of marriages are between cousins unfortunately
My mom is slowly reconstructing our family tree. We come from a family that immigrated to Brazil over 300 years ago. Most of said family stayed in small villages around the same area for centuries. If you look at my family tree, it's pretty much cousins marrying each other over and over again. Even my grandparents were cousins (my grandfather married his cousin's daughter). No wonder we do have lots of genetic ailments lmao (for example, everyone had to have their gallbladder removed because we get gallbladder stones. I had mine removed when I was only 20).
They married distant cousins, not in the first or second degree of kinship
In the United States there are still states that let you marry your first cousin.
Thank you so much for this channel and your videos, this is precious. I can watch the videos for hours.
The reconstruction of the faces and the accurate historic detailing give us these real people back to life.
That was very interesting!! Loved your pronunciation of their names - thank you 😊👏
These very ancient genetic family trees are largely speculative. The Ancient Egyptian Royal line of inheritance was matrilineal- the right to the throne and the Pharaoh's divinity passed down the female line, so the Pharaoh needed to marry the Heiress Princess in order legitimately to ascend the throne. A wise Pharaoh married all possible Heiress Princesses, which is why many married aunts, sisters and even daughters. It does not necessarily mean that they mated with them and had issue from them. Amenhotep the Third's major wife Queen Tiye was not an Heiress Princess, so he married his daughter by her, Sitamon, purely for form's sake thus 'spawning his own legitimacy' .Later Pharaohs occasionally did marry and breed from daughters [most notably the Heretic Pharaoh Amenhotep IV who had children by 3 of his 6 daughters by Nefertiti, to try to get a male heir, but all offspring were girls who were either still born or survived very briefly.] DNA evidence is not available in so many cases. Although there is definite consanguinity, this is the first I have heard of some of the disabilities here attributed to Tutankhamen and as far as I know, a cause of death is still disputed.
The title should be ‘what happens when your family tree has more trunk than branch. ‘
Can I acknowledge that I’m experiencing culture shock. That’s so disturbing to hear, factual and informative but a really uncomfortable reality
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An interesting anecdote: Moses was most likely adopted by Hatshepsut when she still was a child. With him growing up and Harshepsut and Thutmose II not having any children Moses almost became pharaoh since he was considered as Hatshepsuts son.
Interesting. At least how Moses looked like should be corrected. This modern interpretation of Moses as a white dude is simply wrong. Moses is brown skinned. Or in the old times, he is called a red skin.
@@wavemaker2077 Моисей был евреем,возможно,его кожа была смугловатой
I fell into a late night rabbit hole… here I am with my 2 cents
Amazing video, I don’t like history but you kept me pulled in with this timeline! Keep it up!
This has to be the absolute BEST explanation I have ever seen on this subject. The way the information ℹ️ is mapped out is very easy to understand. I am a lifelong “student” of many things and I’m extremely impressed with how well this was presented. I HAD to SHARE this with my social media “friends” as it is full of interesting facts that I have never heard before. I have not seen anything about the many many illnesses and deformities that King Tut suffered from. I also wasn’t aware of the “head binding” practice of the time and I often wondered why so many had elongated heads. So many documentaries and classes on Ancient Egypt focus on the wealth that was found inside his tomb but not once did I hear anything about the severity of his ailments or that several canes were also found inside his tomb. I don’t imagine many “regular people” at that time had the opportunity to see him “walking around” as I can only assume that he was “carried” about by his servants whenever he did make public appearances. I am curious about how the “common people”thought about him and his abnormalities during his reign. I wonder 💭 if they even knew about all of the tragic things that were happening in the “Royal Bloodline.” I am thinking that it would be kept secret as to not taint his image. Just like today’s social media posts, people wanted to be seen in the best light possible. So I’m sure his images were refined to not display his facial and body deformities. In the human world it seems that creating a positive image has always played a huge role in being accepted by others. I feel like I have to say this… do people not think 💭 about the “Creation Story” in the Christian Bible with a critical eye 👁?? I ask this because I never hear people say anything about how Adam and Eve supposedly populated the entire world by literally adopting an incestuous belief system?? Who do people think Adam and Eve’s children had sex with?? Obviously 🙄 it’s their own siblings and/or parents. Just a little food for thought 💭. Peace ☮️ of mind for All Humankind🕉☮️💟☯️👁🧐💭!!!
PS… I have also recently learned that approximately %30 of people in the modern world 🌎 are married to a relative. Marriage to a 2nd or 3rd cousin is still practiced by many cultures in the West. So I’m not at all surprised by the level of inbreeding within a “Royal Bloodline.” It’s the only true way to “keep power in the family.”
Thank you for taking the trouble to create really interesting & well planned content.
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I absolutely love ancient Egyptian history. I wish I could travel back in time to see these legendary people.
Ancient Egyptians history is African history, they were damn Africans, he looks nothing like this.
@@eddiecrow9133 who told you that ? Are you even Egyptian ?!!’
@@DiNaMaklad211 their own depiction of themselves says they were black African not white and sick looking….👀
They wouldn’t last as long as they did if not for Thutmose I. Also, who tf marries not one but two of their daughters 🤢
Amenhotep III
Probably any royalty back in those days, if they wanted
Thank heavens there were various religions that taught against such a practice around the world in those days. It probably saved a lot more innocent girls than we will ever know.
Sena The ancient Egyptian royal view concerning this practice was 100% at odds with
what is a matter of law in present day civilized societies. It is illegal to commit incest within specific degrees of blood relationships.
It was a different time. Not to mention, the rulers make the rules.
Very interesting! I thought your pronunciation of their names was impressive,. I loved hearing them out loud!
I “Nooo-Ed” out loud when you got Amenhotep III. These are probably the most intense levels of inbreeding I have ever seen. Who needs 1st cousins, when you have DAUGHTERS?!?!?!
Don't be deceived
You should see my Crusader Kings 3 family tree
Poor king Tut. I hope he enjoyed his life in spite of his poor health.
Love history and you make it even more interesting
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There was a forensic study done on his injuries a few years ago, and the…forensic archeologist determined the leg fracture was from (most likely because obviously we don’t KNOW) being run over by a chariot. They believe during a chariot race. the King was smashed into by a chariot then knocked from his own chariot and possibly and run over.
But the family tree was interesting.
A romantic story. Leg fracture yes, cause unknown.
I have always been very interested in archaeology. Read alot about king tut growing up. This was VERY well done. The family tree you made took alot of work and you are to be commended. Bravo!!!!
Me: Could this possibly get any worse?
Amenhotep III: Wait for it!
This channel is amazing. Very thoughtful commentary, great Photoshop skills, research and hard work!
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First video I heard regarding Tut's health.
The price of keeping it "all in the family".
Just found this channel, love it! So informative and not boring
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Brings new meaning to the song, "We Are Family" or the term, "keeping it in the family".
All of this fascinates me, thank you! Love your way of teaching/narrating
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This is so interesting and I'm glad I found your channel. Subscribed.
Thank you for mapping this out. It was easily followed and very interesting
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Tohle je prostě super nápad!!!
To se skvěle pozná, že nápad není jenom nápad... To je úplná symfonie intelektů :D na to totiž musejí bejt dva :D
Poor guy. I never knew he was so unwell.
Oh that was a wonderful video. Got to learn a lot. Thanks for the video.
King Tut’s tomb was a great motivator for the Art Deco movement in the 1920’s
GREAT VIDEO , THANK YOU FOR ALL THE INFOMATION, VERY,VERY INTERESTING I'VE SUBSCRIBED BECAUSE I LOVE HISTORY
“A man barely alive”, by the sound of it.
Poor thing. Must have made life miserable for him
The family tree was very interesting. Some after him attempted to erase him from history, but haha, he is the most famous today!
You tried harder than a lot of people do with the pronunciations! I applaud your efforts!!
Well Tut would never be called lucky.
Thank you for your presentation. I was taken by my father to Chicago in the late 1970s to visit the Tutankhamun exhibit . I would like to watch your presentation about Cleopatra.
She didn't want a bar of it.....
@@offwiththefairiesforever2373
I am sure your comment is relevant , but , I don't understand it.
@@crawfordsmith3700 about Cleopatra? Well, check out her ' moves ' .....
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Heh, she was also inbred AF.
Since the ptolomys adopted the sibling marriage tradition of the pharohs.
I really like your videos! I like how informative, interesting & historical they are without interjecting opinions into them. I also enjoy your animation’s of their possible likeness. This adds into the interesting commentary. Great job! I look forward to watching more!
Me almost the entire famy tree: "Okay, this can't get worse."
Me at 7:03: "It got worse"