The 11th wonder of the world sould be Simon's prolific contributions to TH-cam. It's rare to find a content creator with such a vast number of channels and regularly posted videos. It truely leaves you with a sense of wonder.
The crew are very under rated. All that cocaine he's putting in Danny's nutriloaf is definitely paying for itself though. I wonder what he's been pumping Sam full of to keep the editing going 🤔
I’ve been to Angkor and the Taj, but Bagan, Myanmar almost rivals both of them in sheer size, number, age and wow factor! Almost nobody mentions Bangan which is a real shame!
I went to see the Terracotta Army exhibit at Te Papa in Wellington and it's awesome, the statues of the soldiers have so much detail, and they're all different, the most incredible part about the army is the emotion on their faces, they almost look alive, it's so mesmerizing and eerie at the same time you don't want to look away from them
I've been to X'ian and have visited the site of the terra cotta warriors. It was for me, literally, a jaw-dropping experience... the most fascinating thing I've ever seen.
I'm only 44yrs old but after watching the things you put out I can truly say that you are really a great teacher in this realm. Thank you for being so wonderful and letting me know the cool stuff about all of it. You rock! ❤
I would add Naqsh-I Jahan square in Isfahan, Iran. Not only is it the second largest square in the world, but it is a wonderland of Persian architecture.
One of my teachers back in the day tried to tell me that the terracotta army were actually real men covered in hot plaster and left to die where they were found. I said NO they're not real people. She continued to argue with me until I gave up. That was my middle school history teacher. Great job.
School the teacher on biology and how organic material decays even with little oxygen present. The bloating during rigor mortis would have been enough to destroy they're casts lol
I feel like that was sort of a common misconception for awhile, I remember hearing that multiple times when I was younger (though I don't think from any teachers).
@@Chris_da_fro ... plus, having to deal with the rotting stench, the health problems associated with corpses, elaborate/expensive intricacies of preservation, the logistics of transporting decaying organic matter... etc. It would have been impractical to use the real thing.
I lived in China for three years, and a somewhat common rumor that was floated many times from many different sources, was that the Terra Cotta Army was actually recently built by the Chinese Government.
I got to go to the terracotta Warriors site couple of months ago it's just amazing your description doesn't even scratch the surface of the overwhelming nature of it it was fabulous
I've been in China while my husband finishes a project. We're getting ready to come home so because of China's strict covid policies we are able to travel in country. Once we leave or anyone trying to visit it's a no go. I haven't seen my family since 2019 we're so excited to get back to Orlando
I am maybe biased, but Ireland could problem have a list of 7 of it's own even though we are a little rock on the edge of Europe. Giant's Causeway, Newgrange, Beehive houses in Killarney and there is 3 without me really trying. Furthermore, Newgrange makes the Pyramid's of Giza seem like a new build !!
The Terracota Army is insane. Insane in the scale, the mindbending size of the army of people sculpting them, the ovens, and all the rest. And the insane ego of the man that wanted that as part of its tomb. Avery world wonder had some crazy, very crazy people behind.
While The Kremlin in Moscow, is the best known of the Kremlins in Russia, there are other beautiful examples still in existence today, but the Moscow one is very impressive. St Basil's always makes me think of winter, maybe as it makes it look more magical with snow around.
Went their on a school trip in 2016 to give a small village fresh water. Was an amazing experience and on the last day we went to Angkor Wat. It was absolutely incredible
I have been to see the Terracotta Warriors in Xian. The site is huge, but most of the warriors are still underground. The problem being that once they are exposed to the air their color fades. A few are behind glass where you can see the original splendor. Every warrior has a different face, as they would have had in life. I met one of the farmers who found the first ones. He is living in comfort now, greeting tourists and having his photo taken with them (for a fee) In fact the whole city of Xian has been revitalized with tourism (well not at the moment of course)
Speaking of the 'wow factor': have you thought of 'finding out': What is 'awe'? For example: I am not religious, but I remember once walking through the doorway of Exeter Cathedral, looking up at the amazing vaulted ceilings, and being moved to tears with the wonder of it. It was easy to imagine how this must contribute to the feeling of 'holiness', but it was 'awe' to me, and quite similar to the thrill of vertigo, but in an overwhelmingly good way. This may be what made Stalin stay his hand over St Basil's: some things, both man made and natural (Grand Canyon) just seem to be 'holy' (i.e. awe inspiring) in their own right.
For anyone interested in Angkor, know that while Angkor Wat is the largest, there are literally hundreds of temples and other buildings in quite a small area (15 miles square?). When I say small it's by comparison. Bayon is probably my favorite and looking at it reasonably thoroughly would take a couple of hours.
I always wondered why Angkor Wat wasn't on the list of 7 wonders. The temple and other nearby structures, such as The Bayon and Ta Prohm, are truly magnificent.
I saw the Terracotta Warriors exhibit in Xi An 4 years ago. Very nice, but I went in Summer. Bad idea. Don't go in Summer. They are housed within a huge warehouse like construction made of steel, so it gets swelteringly hot in Summer. Go in the Winter time for a more pleasant experience.
My Mother took me to the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne in 1982 to see the Terracotta Warriors. It was their first trip outside of China. "Impressive" seems a poor and inadequate description. ❤
I knew of all of these sites and locations. However I did not know of all the structures, details, and history. I could have spent my entire life being ignorant of the scale of angkor wat and its religious history/continuing use, Lenin's mausoleum and embalmed body in the red square , and the fragile nature of the terracotta army. Thanks for filling out the gaps in my knowledge!
As amazing as St. Basil's is from the outside, it is too bad you did not include pictures of the inside with an ornate set of decorations and paintings comparable with the Sistine Chapel's level of beauty. Each dome is just as uniquely painted inside as outside, and walking from one to another is awe inspiring.
I have seen the Terra Cotta army when it came through DC. One of my favorite exhibits at Nat Geo museum to ever come through. The detail and the fact they had molds and chose a head, body, hands, etc, made the army more realistic. Not everyone had the same expression, same face, same hand positions. It was wild. Glad he did that and not what a lot of Chinese nobles did and buried that many servants. It wouldn’t have been so impressive so long after so much as horrifying.
angkor wat Is on basically every 7 wonders list I can find online. Basically the only 1 it's not on is the obviously stupid "official" list which was a public vote list so popularity not the actual structure is the main point of that list.
Kailasa temple, Ellora trumps all these three. Built from cutting whole side of mountain from top towards bottom. It is one of the best engineering feet of its Era.
Moving seawater through it constantly sounds like a maintenance nightmare. I don’t see how the energy generated could possibly overcome to energy spent making the materials as they wear out. I love the idea of wave energy. This one has a lot of red flags.
The demolished Buddha statues of the Bamiyan valley also need to be added to this list, not only because they’re nearly 2,000 years old & carved onto the face a mountain but also to show the grotesqueries of iconoclastic fundamentalists.
Ankor Watt is a greater undertaking than the Pyramids, and the terracotta army if you look close enough you'll see that it was a factory that made the statues, and the roof collapsed in on it. Thats it.
Of the 3, have only been to Xi'an for the Terracotta Army. Great Wall and toboggan down. Quite overwhelming!! But, the Army truly takes your breath away.
I was today years old when I found out that the terracotta army wasn't actually an army of dudes that stood between their emperor and an erupting volcano...
I never wanted to visit the world so much!!! Damn you Covid, damn you ill-health, damn you financial “independence”... Thank goodness for the Internet to consume knowledge and images on!
The 11th wonder of the world sould be Simon's prolific contributions to TH-cam. It's rare to find a content creator with such a vast number of channels and regularly posted videos. It truely leaves you with a sense of wonder.
uhh maybe he works hard for his money 🎶 lmao
1:20 - Chapter 1 - Angkor wat
4:15 - Chapter 2 - Red square moscow
8:05 - Chapter 3 - Terracotta army
Simon Whistler(and his researchers and writers), one of the Seven Wonders of TH-cam.
He has 10 channels, so he's got all 10 wonders of TH-cam!
agreed. he owns the 10 wonders of the youtubes.
The crew are very under rated. All that cocaine he's putting in Danny's nutriloaf is definitely paying for itself though. I wonder what he's been pumping Sam full of to keep the editing going 🤔
yeah you can just say Danny
⁰
I’ve been to Angkor and the Taj, but Bagan, Myanmar almost rivals both of them in sheer size, number, age and wow factor! Almost nobody mentions Bangan which is a real shame!
You should see kailasha temple then.
I have seen both Angkor Wat and Bagan. Both the sites are ... wonders. It's very bad there seems to be no chance to visit Myanmar any soon. :(
I went to see the Terracotta Army exhibit at Te Papa in Wellington and it's awesome, the statues of the soldiers have so much detail, and they're all different, the most incredible part about the army is the emotion on their faces, they almost look alive, it's so mesmerizing and eerie at the same time you don't want to look away from them
I've been to X'ian and have visited the site of the terra cotta warriors. It was for me, literally, a jaw-dropping experience... the most fascinating thing I've ever seen.
Nice to see these wonders mentioned somewhere other than a Civilization game.
@Nicholas Feiock good job on not sounding like a douche lol 10/10
@Nicholas Feiock Irony achievement bonus earned. If you must start the statement with "I don't mean to be" then you failed before you started.
Literally just forced myself from a game of "just one more turn" to go to work
Watch Ancient Aliens, they love these places
@Nicholas Feiock Wow, before I just thought you were a pretentious douche. I had not realized you could actually go down in my estimation.
We need an extended list.
Pls
I'm only 44yrs old but after watching the things you put out I can truly say that you are really a great teacher in this realm. Thank you for being so wonderful and letting me know the cool stuff about all of it. You rock! ❤
I would add Naqsh-I Jahan square in Isfahan, Iran. Not only is it the second largest square in the world, but it is a wonderland of Persian architecture.
Read my mind lol a lot more beautiful than others on this list!
1:20 Angkor Wat
4:14 Red Square Moscow
8:04 Terracotta Army
You're a legend! Thank you.
Where's my ad for Dollar Shave Club, goddammit!
One of my teachers back in the day tried to tell me that the terracotta army were actually real men covered in hot plaster and left to die where they were found. I said NO they're not real people. She continued to argue with me until I gave up. That was my middle school history teacher. Great job.
School the teacher on biology and how organic material decays even with little oxygen present. The bloating during rigor mortis would have been enough to destroy they're casts lol
I feel like that was sort of a common misconception for awhile, I remember hearing that multiple times when I was younger (though I don't think from any teachers).
@@Chris_da_fro ... plus, having to deal with the rotting stench, the health problems associated with corpses, elaborate/expensive intricacies of preservation, the logistics of transporting decaying organic matter... etc. It would have been impractical to use the real thing.
I lived in China for three years, and a somewhat common rumor that was floated many times from many different sources, was that the Terra Cotta Army was actually recently built by the Chinese Government.
@@mombaassa Not to mention if they were alive when plastered the statures would not look that nice. It would looks like something out of Pompejj.
Some from Indian Subcontinent: Brihadeeswara Temple at Thanjavur, Brihadeeswara Temple at Gangaikonda Cholapuram, Konark Sun Temple, Jagganath Puri Temple, Dwarkhadish Temple, Somnath Temple, Rani Ki Vav, Chennakeshava Temple, Gol Gumbaz, Bulund Darwaza at Fatehpur Sikri, Amer Fort, Mahabodhi Temple, Khajuraho Temples, Adalaj Stepwell, Chand Baori Stepwell, Virupaksha Temple, Vijaya Vitthala Temple, Sri Ranganthaswamy Temple, Meenakshi Amman Temple, Lingaraj Temple, Ranakpur Temple, Ajanta and Karla Caves, Nalanda Mahavihara, Sri Harmindar Sahib Temple, Padmanbhaswamy Temple, Modhera Sun Temple, Martand Sun Temple, Agra Fort, Sikandra Tomb, Kanishka Stupa, Somapura Mahavihara, Dilwara Temples, Palitana Temples, Champaner Ruins, Vijayanagara Ruins, Lakhnauti Ruins, Airavateshwara Temple, Bhojeshwara Temple, Chhitorgarh Ruins among many others
This is an awesome format! I would LOVE to see even more sort-of-unknown wonders of the world with background information like this. Thank you!
I've had the privilege to see St Basil's onions in person.... Long time ago....
Another very well done 👍 podcast.... Thanks again 🌹🕊️...
Yes! Angkor Wat is amazing!
Hagia Sophia is pretty cool too.
Hi Simon, can you show how the ‘onion domes’ were constructed on St Basils cathedral please?
Good call. The engineering an empire on it was very cool. Fact Boi would do it justice, I'm sure. 🤙
He doesn't like doing domes because of his dome
They’re referred to as onions but are actually modeled after candle flames
@@SRDuly2010 That's interesting...I didn't know that!! I like to learn one new thing a day!! 😃
I like this new format for TopTenz videos
I got to go to the terracotta Warriors site couple of months ago it's just amazing your description doesn't even scratch the surface of the overwhelming nature of it it was fabulous
You traveled to China a couple of months ago??
I've been in China while my husband finishes a project. We're getting ready to come home so because of China's strict covid policies we are able to travel in country. Once we leave or anyone trying to visit it's a no go. I haven't seen my family since 2019 we're so excited to get back to Orlando
I am maybe biased, but Ireland could problem have a list of 7 of it's own even though we are a little rock on the edge of Europe. Giant's Causeway, Newgrange, Beehive houses in Killarney and there is 3 without me really trying. Furthermore, Newgrange makes the Pyramid's of Giza seem like a new build !!
Saw the Terracotta Warriors when it came to the field museum in Chicago. Absolutely fantastic...
Awesome video! Would you be willing to take a look at Solomon’s Temple? I’d love to get your perspectives.
Grand Canal, ancient canal longer than most rivers in the world. Has ancient canal locks that is older than some countries.
The Terracota Army is insane. Insane in the scale, the mindbending size of the army of people sculpting them, the ovens, and all the rest. And the insane ego of the man that wanted that as part of its tomb. Avery world wonder had some crazy, very crazy people behind.
Don't forget the Ellora Caves of India, which are crazy huge temples carved out of a mountainside.
I'll second that.
Thanks for sharing Simon, you and your people Never disappoint !
Hi for the third time today, Simon! Thanks to all of you, You guys and Katrina are keeping us sane. ❤
Qin's tomb is something I hope will be explored in my lifetime. Have to settle for the warriors, i am afraid.
While The Kremlin in Moscow, is the best known of the Kremlins in Russia, there are other beautiful examples still in existence today, but the Moscow one is very impressive. St Basil's always makes me think of winter, maybe as it makes it look more magical with snow around.
Angkor Wat is so iconic in Cambodia that it is even featured on the flag!
Went their on a school trip in 2016 to give a small village fresh water. Was an amazing experience and on the last day we went to Angkor Wat. It was absolutely incredible
Excellent video. Evocative intro, too. Had me all ready to go Beyond Seven!
I have been to see the Terracotta Warriors in Xian. The site is huge, but most of the warriors are still underground. The problem being that once they are exposed to the air their color fades. A few are behind glass where you can see the original splendor. Every warrior has a different face, as they would have had in life. I met one of the farmers who found the first ones. He is living in comfort now, greeting tourists and having his photo taken with them (for a fee) In fact the whole city of Xian has been revitalized with tourism (well not at the moment of course)
Great choices! I really enjoyed this video. Thanks, Simon.
General rule of thumb: if a Civilization game lists it as a Wonder, it’s worthy of its spot on this list.
How about the Seven Wonders of Simon Whistler TH-cam channels?
He's stretched so thin you can see through him. But haven't we always?
Love how you pronounce Kaganovich completely differently just 3 seconds apart.
Great work guys, best crew to follow
Speaking of the 'wow factor': have you thought of 'finding out': What is 'awe'?
For example: I am not religious, but I remember once walking through the doorway of Exeter Cathedral, looking up at the amazing vaulted ceilings, and being moved to tears with the wonder of it. It was easy to imagine how this must contribute to the feeling of 'holiness', but it was 'awe' to me, and quite similar to the thrill of vertigo, but in an overwhelmingly good way. This may be what made Stalin stay his hand over St Basil's: some things, both man made and natural (Grand Canyon) just seem to be 'holy' (i.e. awe inspiring) in their own right.
Angkor Wat really is a beautiful structure, would love to visit someday.
Simon knows what we like.
If there was (were?) a "7 Wonders Of TH-cam" I would wager Simon Whistler would comprise the entirety of the list.
Yeah.. the River Caves in Blackpool really don’t do the Temple of Angkor Wat justice 😂
Every single carving on Ankor Watt's walls are unique in design and hand crafted. I spent many many hours there and couldn't even cover 1/10th of it.
Ive been to Saint Basil's and Red Square, wasn't aware of it's full significance.
One of your best! Thanks.
I'm opening Civ VI as I type this. Seems appropriate.
Alternate title: Seven Wonders Cut From Seven Wonders Lists
Next list should include the Todaiji temple in Nara, Japan. It was once the largest wooden building in the world.
For anyone interested in Angkor, know that while Angkor Wat is the largest, there are literally hundreds of temples and other buildings in quite a small area (15 miles square?). When I say small it's by comparison. Bayon is probably my favorite and looking at it reasonably thoroughly would take a couple of hours.
I always wondered why Angkor Wat wasn't on the list of 7 wonders. The temple and other nearby structures, such as The Bayon and Ta Prohm, are truly magnificent.
I saw the Terracotta Warriors exhibit in Xi An 4 years ago. Very nice, but I went in Summer. Bad idea. Don't go in Summer. They are housed within a huge warehouse like construction made of steel, so it gets swelteringly hot in Summer. Go in the Winter time for a more pleasant experience.
Have you done a video on the 7 natural wonders of the world? Grand Canyon, Geat barrier reef etc.
Excellent!
Number ten is the most impres... no wait! Number eight is... nevermind!
You forgot about magnificent Meenakshi temple tamilnadu INDIA.
I saw Simon without glasses in an ollllld video finally!!
Without a beard too!
Have been looking forward to visit Cambodia forever.... Finally made it to Asia but it was Jan 2020 so needless to say I didn't visit anything.
I’ve watched 3 of your videos now and before this I’d heard the word ‘mausoleum’ perhaps a dozen times, now I have the word etched into my brain.
My Mother took me to the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne in 1982 to see the Terracotta Warriors. It was their first trip outside of China.
"Impressive" seems a poor and inadequate description. ❤
So, the commercials lining up perfectly with the videos different wonders, does TH-cam determine that or does the poster inform TH-cam of that?
Quite enjoyed this list, thanks Simon.
[Never drink cappuccino as you're getting ready to make a brand new video...]
"Acid induced Disney film"
So most things made by Studio Ghibli?
I knew of all of these sites and locations. However I did not know of all the structures, details, and history. I could have spent my entire life being ignorant of the scale of angkor wat and its religious history/continuing use, Lenin's mausoleum and embalmed body in the red square , and the fragile nature of the terracotta army. Thanks for filling out the gaps in my knowledge!
As amazing as St. Basil's is from the outside, it is too bad you did not include pictures of the inside with an ornate set of decorations and paintings comparable with the Sistine Chapel's level of beauty. Each dome is just as uniquely painted inside as outside, and walking from one to another is awe inspiring.
I have seen the Terra Cotta army when it came through DC. One of my favorite exhibits at Nat Geo museum to ever come through. The detail and the fact they had molds and chose a head, body, hands, etc, made the army more realistic. Not everyone had the same expression, same face, same hand positions. It was wild. Glad he did that and not what a lot of Chinese nobles did and buried that many servants. It wouldn’t have been so impressive so long after so much as horrifying.
Red Square Moscow - nice to see Danny's suggestion included :-)
I think you could add Chaco Canyon to the list.
Tony Hawk made me very aware of Red Square
Acid-infused Disney film. I love it.
angkor wat Is on basically every 7 wonders list I can find online. Basically the only 1 it's not on is the obviously stupid "official" list which was a public vote list so popularity not the actual structure is the main point of that list.
The world - We always stop at seven.
Simon - Which is precisely why we will not.
Why do you have two watches?
Kailasa temple, Ellora trumps all these three. Built from cutting whole side of mountain from top towards bottom. It is one of the best engineering feet of its Era.
Am I the only one who got the "Beyond 7" reference? 🤣😂🤣😂 gold Simon, pure gold!!
I have no idea what you're talking about.
Moving seawater through it constantly sounds like a maintenance nightmare. I don’t see how the energy generated could possibly overcome to energy spent making the materials as they wear out. I love the idea of wave energy. This one has a lot of red flags.
Thoroughly enjoyed this one
I'd love to see SideProjects videos on the P-51 Mustang and p-38 Lightning from WWII
Gosh Simon I'm darned-well inspired and you haven't even finished your intro! Have a 👍 for your efforts, as usual! 😂 Sideprojects foreveeeeer!🤣
Would love to see a part 2 :)
What’s that song that’s playing when Red Square is covered?
I went to the Soviet Union back in the late 80's on a school trip. Red Square was awesome! Got to see Lenin also.
Excellent video, must visit after lockdown
A truly wonderful video
Maybe a video on Chevrolets turbine car? I think it was made starting around 1953
The red square always seems to look like a fondant fancy or some other type of cake with icing on it
Where I live we call them " French fancies " and we call french fries " chips"
another great video, fact boi
The demolished Buddha statues of the Bamiyan valley also need to be added to this list, not only because they’re nearly 2,000 years old & carved onto the face a mountain but also to show the grotesqueries of iconoclastic fundamentalists.
I think...or- I feel, that the Terracotta warriors are similarity to every soldier from that time. I think, that we are looking at particular people.
The moment you realize you've skated on the Lenin Mausoleum in Tony Hawk's Underground.
Ankor Watt is a greater undertaking than the Pyramids, and the terracotta army if you look close enough you'll see that it was a factory that made the statues, and the roof collapsed in on it. Thats it.
Nope and more nope lol
It would be nice if you said where Angkor Wat was located. I had to Google it.
Of the 3, have only been to Xi'an for the Terracotta Army.
Great Wall and toboggan down.
Quite overwhelming!!
But, the Army truly takes your breath away.
The 11th wonder of the world: Simons collection of youtube channels.
I want to visit the terracotta army just for the chance to yell PIERTOTUM LOCOMOTOR!
Nicely done sir 👍🏼
I was today years old when I found out that the terracotta army wasn't actually an army of dudes that stood between their emperor and an erupting volcano...
Johnny Sins should dress like Simon in a video. Video-ception
I never wanted to visit the world so much!!!
Damn you Covid, damn you ill-health, damn you financial “independence”...
Thank goodness for the Internet to consume knowledge and images on!
So 10 then 👍 nicely done Simon keep up the good work
Loving your work!! :)