I don't mind about the order itself, but when combined with the countdown format, it's very misleading. Just number them 1-15 for counting purposes. The countdown gives the impression there is some kind of order to them.
@@hypatian9093 my local is over 990 years old and i regularly work on grade 1 listed churches. We did Sutton near Hull and it has sir Sutton in his original sarcophagus or whatever it was on full armour and that was from 1260 odd
(8:55) The pictures of the smaller building with the five story pagoda are in Horyu-ji, but the big boxy building and most of the interior shots are of the Todai-ji temple's Daibutsu-den (Great Buddha hall) in Nara City. Even though it's a replica only 2/3 the size of the original, it was built in 1709 and was the biggest wooden building in the world until the late 90s. Like most ancient Japanese buildings it was built like a giant 3D puzzle of interlocking parts and no nails. The Daibutsu (Great Buddha) is one of the world's largest indoor statues. Todai-ji is almost as old as Horyu-ji and there are a few structures in the complex that are over 1000 years old. Many of the temples in Nara were founded when Nara was the capitol of Japan in the 8th century, and their power and influence, especially Todai-ji, were one of the reasons they moved the capitol from Nara to Kyoto. I lived about two blocks from Todai-ji's sister temple, Saidai-ji, for 12 years and could see the roof of Todai-ji's Daibutsu-den and the first imperial palace site (Heijo-kyo) from the roof of my building. Some of my contracts were teaching ESL to the volunteer guides from some of the local temples, including one in Ikaruga-cho teaching the guides from Horyu-ji. I used to joke that I should be paying them instead of the other way around because I was learning way more than I was teaching. If you've heard the name Yamato, that's the old name for Nara and it's considered the historical and cultural heart of Japan. And Nara City is only about a 30 min train ride from the city centers of Osaka and Kyoto, so the whole Kansai region is awash in history. The whole area is also peppered with massive stone tombs called kofun, some going back as far as the 4th century. No-one is allowed on them and most of them are covered with 1600+ years of soil accumulation and foliage so they look like keyhole shaped islands with moats around them. Many historians believe that Yamato is derived from the Yamatai kingdom and that Queen Himiko is buried outside of Sakurai City in the Hashihaka kofun. There are also a lot of castles and ruins.
The reason a grocery store was needed in Diocletian’s palace is that there are hundreds of people living there. It’s a huge complex and there are dozens if not hundreds of apartments that have been created within.
Just a clarification. St Catherine cathedral in Sinai Egypt is not Catholic. It is a Greek Orthodox Christian monastery. It is called Mount Sinai Monastery.
They are all great buildings, still i would expect a few older ones, like the Theatre of Epidaurus in Peloponese Greece, from 4th century bc, which is in use for drama performances and musical events today.
@@kerneywilliams632 No like most of those mentioned in the video (repaired, renovated), after all the title says "15 OLDEST Buildings Still in Use Today" not continuously used.
I gave up after the first three. Two of which are newer than most village churches in Europe. These aren't the 15 OLDEST buildings still in use today. They are 15 building that are old still in use today. Just another channel I've told TH-cam not to recommend in future.
@@hypatian9093 Google won't shag you back. It might me though. I own a chunk of it. I think you'll find I'm part of the our and you're part of a misguided minority :p
Hold my beer: The Roman theatre in Merida, Spain, opened 16 BCE, still host plays, 2040 years after its inauguration. It’s home of the International Festival of Classical Theatre of Mérida.
AI is overall a poor choice of narrative voice for the exotic verbage of this script. Honestly, HOW MUCH does a human narrator with a feel for pronunciation really cost?!
@@casteretpollux American is okay as long as it's deferential. I have a horror of wilful mispronunciation,, which is why I don' like ai (actually, I have a list, but I would like to do other things with my life than hate on anything.) Pace was about right - as someone whose speech is more John Wayne than Ben Shapiro, trust me on this x
@@AndrewGruffudd What I hate about "American" is this attitude of "Oh, a foreign word - why should I research how it is pronounced, I just butcher it and pronounce it my way".
Fascinating to see how these ancient structures have stood the test of time! Is there any information about what preservation efforts have been undertaken to keep them standing for so long?
I'd mostly say 'very massive stone walls' those things hold up pretty well. And - knowing from the cathedral in Regensburg - a dedicated group of stone masoners, workers, engineers and architects repairing and replacing as needed.
All these “ancient” structures are a hoax. They were built recently with very little maintenance to speed up the aging of structures. It's good for tourism though who are suckers and will pay for anything as long as it's “ancient”.
I went to Mass at the Pantheon in Rome and was asked to do one of the readings - I was thrilled. I wonder when women were first allowed to read scripture in Mass - does anyone know?
I hate videos that don't represent the actual title of the video....There's no way any building in north America is in the top 15 buildings still in use
For that Faroese building, it actually wouldn't surprise me if a ship hauling lumber either lost it's load or wrecked in a storm, and that lumber was salvaged from the beach and used to build the house.
Why you are sarcastic about Hagia Sophia Christian Basilica? It’s sacrilegious by Turks to have that GREEK Christian Cathedral in Constantinople, “ Istanbul “, use it as mosque. Turkey has only 101 years in existence since 1923, nothing ancient or old in Asia Minor “Anatolia” is Turkic. 🇬🇷🏛️🇬🇷🏛️🇬🇷⚡️🦅
@@antoniosdimoulas3566 I wasn’t being sarcastic at all. I was referring to the ridiculous way the AI reader butchered the name. It’s an astonishing monument to the technical and creative abilities of ancient people, as are the countless other mosques/temples/cathedrals/shrines I’ve visited around the world. These stunning edifices are always at the top of my list when I visit a new city.
18:20 HAGIA SOPHIA: Due to a construction mistake and a local earthquake the original roof of the Hagia Sophia had colapsed short after the construction had been finished. So the building is also an early case of a Construction Scandal in History
Modern usage in ancient buildings like in Split, with the grocery store inside Diocletians palace, is correct. These buildings should be up kept and used. Not left as echoing empty shells.
بہت زبردست جناب، سبحان اللّہ! مزا آگیا۔ ❤👍🏅 نوٹ:- بھائ آپ خود ہی تو کہرہے تھے: یہ کھانا عام سالن بوٹی کی طرح مت کھائیے گا۔ تو آپ بھی ۸۰/۲۰ کچا پکا بیف تکہ بوٹی سمجھ کر کھالو! 😂😂۔ سچ پوچھو تو ہمنے جب بھی پکنک پہ قربانی وغیرہ کا گوشت پکایا ہے کچا پکا ہی کھایا ہے😅!
Well, I was hoping this video would cover some from Iran (ancient Persia) but no. None. There are tons of ancient places that are still in use. Houses, villages and places that are thousands of years old. I hope you cover more in your next videos. And kudos to you for respecting the pronunciation of each name. I loved that part
WHERE'S THE MAHABODHI TEMPLE AT BODH GAYA, INDIA ?? THE TOP PILGRIMAGE SITE IN THE WORLD FOR BUDDHISTS - THE TEMPLE DATES BACK TO THE 2ND CENTURY BC AND HAS BEEN CONTINUOUSLY IN USE SINCE THEN. IT IS THE OLDEST RELIGIOUS STRUCTURE IN THE WORLD THAT'S STILL IN USE.
I really like the temple in Croatia now also being a modern grocery store. I think it is very cool combining history with modernity, and I don't believe in perservation for perservation's sake. The world is supposed to be experienced, now only a museum
"Taos Pueblo... also known as Pueblo de Taos" lol one is the American(ized) version, the other is what it's called in Spanish. BTW "pueblo" means village, small town.
Madison Ave the birthplace of advertising anything to trick people into buying ideas, actions and behavior since Hitler got his ideas against different people call eugenics that men needed an excuse to be superior to another for their ego of which there is very little evidence that women believe as too busy with actually performing the real work for survival after men decided city and agriculture in one place for accommodating resources for men then to covet what another king had that caused no improvement in behavior of men for 10,000 years as women care for the offspring that men always say "not mine" and leave for something or someone younger for a while that causes strife between counties and don't get me started about different religious ideas.
10:03 smoking? I thought tobacco came to europe from American indian tribes .. well maybe not? Surprised to see the the ancient Japanese smoking a filter cigarette and also reference to a smoking room in an old Faeroe Island house ... by the way Faeroe Islands are not part of Iceland. 😮😊
You have mixed up two Japanese temples! This video shows TODAI-JI TEMPLE as well as Horyuji, which IS the oldest temple in Japan. Todai-ji is the largest wooden building in the world and holds the largest bronze statue in the world, that of Buddha.
Stave churches, still in use are 1000 to 1200 years old, then hearing here of a "mere" 700 yr odl bulding and habve that on a list of the 10 oldests is silly
Not true regarding the Jews. The sites of Mt Sinai and the Burning Bush are not really known in Jewish tradition. The mountain known as Mt. Sinai and Santa Katherine Monastery are NOT Jewish sacred places.
The Pueblo is preserved because the US Government sends millions to the tribal Government every year making those living units some of the most expensive on the planet. I am their auditor. I have first hand knowledge.
sorry, but this video is misleading from beginning to end. from the AI-generated thumbnail to the absolute lack of research and fact checking. this thing was rushed out and it feels like no one even bothered to watch it before pressing publish.
The US Capitol Building holds the oldest people in one location
🎉😂
The younger ones retire in Florida...
The younger ones retire in Florida...
@@abcdef-qk6jf Pelosi is young?
🤣
I absolutely hate that this video is not in chronological order.
I don't mind about the order itself, but when combined with the countdown format, it's very misleading. Just number them 1-15 for counting purposes. The countdown gives the impression there is some kind of order to them.
Fix it daddy
I'd like to put You in chronological order!
Oldest buildings still in use- the first one is newer than my local church by 300-400 years
Damn, that church probably has a existential crisis
Similar here - in the neighbouring town's church Charlemagne once stayed for christmas.
@@hypatian9093 my local is over 990 years old and i regularly work on grade 1 listed churches. We did Sutton near Hull and it has sir Sutton in his original sarcophagus or whatever it was on full armour and that was from 1260 odd
Several churches in my Spanish northern region of Asturias are from the 9th century, about 1300 years old…
@@Natalia-pc7fm what If those places weren't churches to begin with. The Original use was probably something else
(8:55) The pictures of the smaller building with the five story pagoda are in Horyu-ji, but the big boxy building and most of the interior shots are of the Todai-ji temple's Daibutsu-den (Great Buddha hall) in Nara City. Even though it's a replica only 2/3 the size of the original, it was built in 1709 and was the biggest wooden building in the world until the late 90s. Like most ancient Japanese buildings it was built like a giant 3D puzzle of interlocking parts and no nails. The Daibutsu (Great Buddha) is one of the world's largest indoor statues. Todai-ji is almost as old as Horyu-ji and there are a few structures in the complex that are over 1000 years old. Many of the temples in Nara were founded when Nara was the capitol of Japan in the 8th century, and their power and influence, especially Todai-ji, were one of the reasons they moved the capitol from Nara to Kyoto. I lived about two blocks from Todai-ji's sister temple, Saidai-ji, for 12 years and could see the roof of Todai-ji's Daibutsu-den and the first imperial palace site (Heijo-kyo) from the roof of my building. Some of my contracts were teaching ESL to the volunteer guides from some of the local temples, including one in Ikaruga-cho teaching the guides from Horyu-ji. I used to joke that I should be paying them instead of the other way around because I was learning way more than I was teaching.
If you've heard the name Yamato, that's the old name for Nara and it's considered the historical and cultural heart of Japan. And Nara City is only about a 30 min train ride from the city centers of Osaka and Kyoto, so the whole Kansai region is awash in history. The whole area is also peppered with massive stone tombs called kofun, some going back as far as the 4th century. No-one is allowed on them and most of them are covered with 1600+ years of soil accumulation and foliage so they look like keyhole shaped islands with moats around them. Many historians believe that Yamato is derived from the Yamatai kingdom and that Queen Himiko is buried outside of Sakurai City in the Hashihaka kofun. There are also a lot of castles and ruins.
Nicely said! Nara is wonderful.
The best thing about Nara is the deer! After thousands of years they are genetically more friendly!
This is not a list of the 15 oldest buildings still in use. Very misleading
The reason a grocery store was needed in Diocletian’s palace is that there are hundreds of people living there. It’s a huge complex and there are dozens if not hundreds of apartments that have been created within.
Just a clarification. St Catherine cathedral in Sinai Egypt is not Catholic. It is a Greek Orthodox Christian monastery. It is called Mount Sinai Monastery.
No it isn't Greek Orthodox; It's Coptic !
@@bastiennietveld7128 It is under the jurisdiction of the Greek Orthodoc Church. It is not Coptic.
I think its called the Monastery of St. Catherine. It is affiliated with the Orthodox Church.
Sorry, but the word “Catholic” was never used. “Christian” is. Unless I’ve missed my guess, Orthodox is Christian. Is someone trying to take offense?
You were 50 seconds into the Tower of Hercules before you gave a hint as to where it is. I finally looked it up and discovered it's in Coruna, Spain.
They are all great buildings, still i would expect a few older ones, like the Theatre of Epidaurus in Peloponese Greece, from 4th century bc, which is in use for drama performances and musical events today.
Was it in use over the whole time?
@@kerneywilliams632 No like most of those mentioned in the video (repaired, renovated), after all the title says "15 OLDEST Buildings Still in Use Today" not continuously used.
@@kalliaspapaioannou7045 Good answer!
I gave up after the first three. Two of which are newer than most village churches in Europe. These aren't the 15 OLDEST buildings still in use today. They are 15 building that are old still in use today. Just another channel I've told TH-cam not to recommend in future.
That's the best we can do - try and keep "our" TH-cam free of such a drivel.
@@hypatian9093 Google won't shag you back. It might me though. I own a chunk of it. I think you'll find I'm part of the our and you're part of a misguided minority :p
While the title is not correct, the video itself is quite good.
21:34 Did anyone even watch the video before publishing?
He says, 'The Basilica of Santa Sabina', yet it reads on screen "The Tower of Jericho" :-/
Uhhh. The Faroe Islands and Iceland have different languages I think
Exactly. Not the same country at all
And the are 809 km apart 😂
Hold my beer: The Roman theatre in Merida, Spain, opened 16 BCE, still host plays, 2040 years after its inauguration. It’s home of the International Festival of Classical Theatre of Mérida.
Saint Mary’s cathedral in Limerick, Ireland was built in 1148ad and is still in daily use by Limerick people .
Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin was founded in 1028.
Churches all over the British Isles are that old and in use. 12th century one where I grew up. So about the same age as yours give or take a decade.
No electricity in Pueblo. Yet, at 3:43 you can see an electrical conduit on the left side of the building, lol.
A 1400 year old prince smoking a modern day cigarette?!!
Time traveller....?
That wasnt ancient Japan when dudes clearly smoking a Newport 100
The great Buddha statue is in Todaiji Temple(東大寺). Not Horyuji Temple.(法隆寺)
Those are totally different temples and different location in Nara.
Some of them are from the XIII century. I bet there are OLDER ones around. I think the title is quite misleading 😅
Exactly. Watching as European I was smiling at that... Oh so young.
Windsor Castle, UK
There are just loads of older churches. My local parish church is from 1060 A.D - I grew tired of the "CE" timeline and opted out.
Very cool 😎 places.😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤
Absolutely fascinating. I love this. I live that there are many others who enjoy history so much.
The important thing is this: to be able at any moment to sacrifice what we are for what we could become.
oh look! another clickbait video!
Actually, darling, a clickbait list video usually has an addendum in the title indicsting which entry is particularly special x
WONDERFUL!
The library. Oh, how beautiful. It smells fabulous.
"They survive without electricity" While showing a picture with the power cable going through the wall at 3:42
All very Beautiful ❤️ places
Very informative. Thanks for vid!!!
Our greatest glory is not in never failing but rising everytime we fall.
AI is overall a poor choice of narrative voice for the exotic verbage of this script. Honestly, HOW MUCH does a human narrator with a feel for pronunciation really cost?!
Agreed on ai generated narration. Somewhat disconcerting and uncomfortable to sit through.
If it is AI, darling, it's the best I've heard. Usually, you can tell - especially over a long narration, but at 17 minutes in, I'm none the wiser.
American, but clear diction and correct pronunciation. A bit brisk.
@@casteretpollux American is okay as long as it's deferential. I have a horror of wilful mispronunciation,, which is why I don' like ai (actually, I have a list, but I would like to do other things with my life than hate on anything.) Pace was about right - as someone whose speech is more John Wayne than Ben Shapiro, trust me on this x
@@AndrewGruffudd What I hate about "American" is this attitude of "Oh, a foreign word - why should I research how it is pronounced, I just butcher it and pronounce it my way".
The Pantheon is the only place I must visit. Thanks for this.
Fascinating to see how these ancient structures have stood the test of time! Is there any information about what preservation efforts have been undertaken to keep them standing for so long?
I'd mostly say 'very massive stone walls' those things hold up pretty well.
And - knowing from the cathedral in Regensburg - a dedicated group of stone masoners, workers, engineers and architects repairing and replacing as needed.
All these “ancient” structures are a hoax. They were built recently with very little maintenance to speed up the aging of structures. It's good for tourism though who are suckers and will pay for anything as long as it's “ancient”.
the text graphic for #2 states the Tower of Jericho, which is never once mentioned in this entire video
✌️🐝➕
Hey! My apartment building isn’t on your list.
So beautiful😊
10,00 Prince with modern Cigarette ?
I thought Westminster hall would be on this list due to age and history.
What does CE stand for
I've done a couple of paintings of Taos pueblo over the years.
I went to Mass at the Pantheon in Rome and was asked to do one of the readings - I was thrilled. I wonder when women were first allowed to read scripture in Mass - does anyone know?
Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu, India
Thanks
I hate videos that don't represent the actual title of the video....There's no way any building in north America is in the top 15 buildings still in use
For that Faroese building, it actually wouldn't surprise me if a ship hauling lumber either lost it's load or wrecked in a storm, and that lumber was salvaged from the beach and used to build the house.
The Hoggia Sophia 🤣🤣🤣
Why you are sarcastic about Hagia Sophia Christian Basilica? It’s sacrilegious by Turks to have that GREEK Christian Cathedral in Constantinople, “ Istanbul “, use it as mosque. Turkey has only 101 years in existence since 1923, nothing ancient or old in Asia Minor “Anatolia” is Turkic. 🇬🇷🏛️🇬🇷🏛️🇬🇷⚡️🦅
@@antoniosdimoulas3566 I wasn’t being sarcastic at all. I was referring to the ridiculous way the AI reader butchered the name. It’s an astonishing monument to the technical and creative abilities of ancient people, as are the countless other mosques/temples/cathedrals/shrines I’ve visited around the world. These stunning edifices are always at the top of my list when I visit a new city.
El Panteón parece un hormiguero lol
You really stretched the concept “still in use”… you should have included the Colosseum in Rime… it’s still as much in use as many of these. Weak!
Or the ampitheater in Arles France.
Well, it's used for instagram posts mainly, it's not like games are still held there.
the one surprise was the omission of the Dome of the Rock.
Taos Pueblo, a refletcion from Red Dead Redemption uno. The first Village when you cross el rio grande in Mexico
There are older buildings still in use than many you mentioned
The Peblo appear to have electricity. Hence wire running down the wall. Look at Fram 25.48.
Pretty sure that was installed later and wasn't in the original construction...
@robertnett9793 yea I guess so hua
Houryuji image shown at the beginning with a giant Buddha statue is Todaiji
18:20 HAGIA SOPHIA: Due to a construction mistake and a local earthquake the original roof of the Hagia Sophia had colapsed short after the construction had been finished. So the building is also an early case of a Construction Scandal in History
The Arles coliseum -was it there when Van Gogh was there ?
Modern usage in ancient buildings like in Split, with the grocery store inside Diocletians palace, is correct. These buildings should be up kept and used. Not left as echoing empty shells.
بہت زبردست جناب، سبحان اللّہ! مزا آگیا۔ ❤👍🏅
نوٹ:- بھائ آپ خود ہی تو کہرہے تھے: یہ کھانا عام سالن بوٹی کی طرح مت کھائیے گا۔ تو آپ بھی ۸۰/۲۰ کچا پکا بیف تکہ بوٹی سمجھ کر کھالو! 😂😂۔ سچ پوچھو تو ہمنے جب بھی پکنک پہ قربانی وغیرہ کا گوشت پکایا ہے کچا پکا ہی کھایا ہے😅!
the Faroe islands are not a part of Iceland. :) they are under the Danish flag. The Faroe islands have there own language and flag.
Well, I was hoping this video would cover some from Iran (ancient Persia) but no. None. There are tons of ancient places that are still in use. Houses, villages and places that are thousands of years old. I hope you cover more in your next videos. And kudos to you for respecting the pronunciation of each name. I loved that part
So what about the 11 Rock-hewn Churches of Lalibela in Ethiopia? Africa doesn't count? Ethiopian civilisation is continuous and never colonized.
Yo, your editors trying to fail you by providing your viewers with fake thumbnails, big thumbs down👎
1000 CE? Wow. Ancestry goes above.. and beyond.
14:33 been there my mother is from split.
The mispronunciations of a few of these locations is not good since they're what you're featuring. Acoma Pueblo, NM is not an unconscious coma.
Pantheon, Rome: #1 ❤😉👍
You totally pronounced kirkjubøargarður wrong! Lmao, nowhere near what you said, haha. Great video though. That gave me a,great laugh haha😅
In this video I see someone family members how many places are lost to history and time
WHERE'S THE MAHABODHI TEMPLE AT BODH GAYA, INDIA ?? THE TOP PILGRIMAGE SITE IN THE WORLD FOR BUDDHISTS - THE TEMPLE DATES BACK TO THE 2ND CENTURY BC AND HAS BEEN CONTINUOUSLY IN USE SINCE THEN. IT IS THE OLDEST RELIGIOUS STRUCTURE IN THE WORLD THAT'S STILL IN USE.
I really like the temple in Croatia now also being a modern grocery store. I think it is very cool combining history with modernity, and I don't believe in perservation for perservation's sake. The world is supposed to be experienced, now only a museum
Did Charlie Sheen narrate this video??
All over the world look at beautiful architecture, then come to America to see our literal mud huts 😂
There are older buildings if you look 😉
Westminster Abbey?
0:50 1000 years From WHOM? Bigots
It would be nice if they could program computer-generated voices to pronounce names correctly.
"Taos Pueblo... also known as Pueblo de Taos" lol one is the American(ized) version, the other is what it's called in Spanish. BTW "pueblo" means village, small town.
as far as I am concerned, if a supermarket in the palace helps keep it going, and helping with funds that preserve the historic icon, why not?
I watched this because of the thumbnail, and apparently that is fake. 👎👎
Yeah they do that
Lol SAME!!
Madison Ave the birthplace of advertising anything to trick people into buying ideas, actions and behavior since Hitler got his ideas against different people call eugenics that men needed an excuse to be superior to another for their ego of which there is very little evidence that women believe as too busy with actually performing the real work for survival after men decided city and agriculture in one place for accommodating resources for men then to covet what another king had that caused no improvement in behavior of men for 10,000 years as women care for the offspring that men always say "not mine" and leave for something or someone younger for a while that causes strife between counties and don't get me started about different religious ideas.
That's how they hook you.
10:03 smoking? I thought tobacco came to europe from American indian tribes .. well maybe not? Surprised to see the the ancient Japanese smoking a filter cigarette and also reference to a smoking room in an old Faeroe Island house ... by the way Faeroe Islands are not part of Iceland. 😮😊
You have mixed up two Japanese temples! This video shows TODAI-JI TEMPLE as well as Horyuji, which IS the oldest temple in Japan. Todai-ji is the largest wooden building in the world and holds the largest bronze statue in the world, that of Buddha.
e il Panteon?
What a bogus list.
and the image of the miniature is??????? clickbait again, ....
(23:54) "Publius Alias Hadranius" !
Save me Jeebus !
What? Horyoji mixed together with todaiji?
What is with this order?
Really, not old at all. New Grange in Ireland is 3550 BC . We use it as a kind of giant calendar.
Ye Olde Trip To Jerusalem Inn opened 1189 and it is still very much in use.
Split, what's wrong with you?
C.E?
Panteon in Rome is disgusting, broken and bad conservation.
Considering the state of every other ancient building in Rome it’s lucky this temple even still has an interior to walk around in.
Galitian coast
some things are just NOT !!!!!!! worth knowing about thumbs down n unsubscribe
Stave churches, still in use are 1000 to 1200 years old, then hearing here of a "mere" 700 yr odl bulding and habve that on a list of the 10 oldests is silly
Not true regarding the Jews. The sites of Mt Sinai and the Burning Bush are not really known in Jewish tradition. The mountain known as Mt. Sinai and Santa Katherine Monastery are NOT Jewish sacred places.
Judging from the first few comments, it seems as though this vid is so full of errors as to be unwatchable.
The Pueblo is preserved because the US Government sends millions to the tribal Government every year making those living units some of the most expensive on the planet. I am their auditor. I have first hand knowledge.
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉😮
sorry, but this video is misleading from beginning to end. from the AI-generated thumbnail to the absolute lack of research and fact checking. this thing was rushed out and it feels like no one even bothered to watch it before pressing publish.
So wordy!
Fuuny how you fail to mention the jewish temple