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3. The Mayan Collapse - Ruins Among the Trees
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295,178 Views ā€¢ Feb 7, 2019 ā€¢ Click to toggle off description
WATCH WITH VIDEO: Ā Ā Ā ā€¢Ā 3.Ā TheĀ MayansĀ -Ā RuinsĀ AmongĀ theĀ TreesĀ Ā 

In the tropical forests of Central America, vast stone pyramids slowly crumble beneath the trees.

In this episode, we look at that great romantic mystery: the fall of the Classic Maya Civilization. Find out how this great civilization grew up among environmental conditions that no other civilization has ever contended with, learn about the fatal flaws that lay beneath its surface, and what happened after its final, cataclysmic collapse.

Support Fall of Civilizations on Patreon: www.patreon.com/fallofcivilizations_podcast

Credits:

Sound engineering by Thomas Ntinas

Voice Actors:

Bryan Thsiobi
Jacob Rollinson
Jake Barrett-Mills
Helena Bacon

Music by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Artist: incompetech.com/

Title theme: Home At Last by John Bartmann. johnbartmann.com/
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Views : 295,178
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Feb 7, 2019 ^^


Rating : 4.82 (184/3,904 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T09:32:13.62003Z
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YouTube Comments - 200 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@l.c.cooper9714

3 years ago

Your stories are so vividly rich in detail that I can envision standing among the ruins. Never before has history captivated me for hours. I thoroughly enjoy your podcasts. Kudos to you, Mr. Cooper.

76 |

@stonesourjim

2 years ago

This podcast series is some of the best stuff I've listened to in a very long time.

14 |

@vudu8ball

7 months ago

I feel we are living in the declining moments of modern civilization and these videos fill me with sorrow.

3 |

@DataJuggler

4 years ago

5:00 Your last point about 'I want to see what life was like for a person watching their world collapse', was the biggest part that is lacking from history taught in public schools (at least in the US is all I know). Names and dates we were forced to memorize are so boring, but the gory details "they" decided to shield school kids from is what makes history interesting.

49 |

@grassfeeding6073

4 years ago

Very good synopsis. Pre-Columbian civilizations have fascinated me for a number of years, due in no small part to how much is still unknown. I have visited a number of maya sites ranging from small trade outposts to large cities in Mexico and Belize over the past couple decades and I am always fascinated with what I learn. The Maya were highly influential in the region, with trade networks that may have ranged as far as the SE United States. They were a truly fascinating civilization that deserves much more study and preservation.

42 |

@SSHitMan

1 year ago

I had an archaeology class in college in the 1980s, and my professor was one of the archaeologists digging in Copan. This account squares pretty well from what I remember of his classes - overpopulation > crop failure > endless civil war. He attributed much of the crop failure to intensive farming on hillsides, which caused the topsoil to wash away. Pollen samples in soil from the era confirmed pollen from trees and shrubs greatly decreased as pollen from crops like corn increased, indicating the hillsides were all stripped bare for farming in a desperate attempt to feed the population.

21 |

@knutthompson7879

4 years ago

Just the horrible cultural tragedy involving destruction of the Mayan texts (and Rongo-Rongo texts of the Rapanui) makes my heart ache. Writing was such a rare and (on this planet) uniquely human invention these relics are (were) among the most indescribably precious of our species, and they were destroyed for no imaginable reason beyond arrogance.

53 |

@timelanguid4813

4 months ago

This is a great production so thanks to all involved. I remember Oscar Spengler wrote a book about the rise and fall of the civilizations. I will have to dig it out to see the connection here.

1 |

@jordaneggerman4734

3 years ago

You, sir, make some of the highest quality content on YouTube. I have wept for burnt cities and ransacked capitals, and I have been immensely moved by poetry and laments, the world over. It almost makes me wish there was more human history for you to cover, if it weren't for stories, like those of the Rapa Nui, who had little hand in their own downfall.

17 |

@alynneloup7707

2 weeks ago

These podcasts are amazing. A note of hope -- Life is cyclic -- Especially in these declining times of this "modern" civilization please remember -- The Maya are still here, quietly passing on their culture, the Native Americans, are still here, reconstructing their language and their belief system, the cuniforms and glyphs all over the world are being studied and translated. We will survive, maybe wiser and kind. Very refreshing scholarship, Thank you

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@LIE4ME

4 years ago

Five thousand subscribers in 21 hours. Here we go. You earned it Paul. Enjoy this ride.

7 |

@panchora99

3 years ago

As a Honduran it pleased me ro hear Copan beinf mentioned. Do try to visit Copan in Honduras and Antigua in Guatemala when you have a chance.

14 |

@wx-01

5 years ago

Thank you. Brilliant as always. Waiting for the next one mate!

18 |

@jamesmejia2195

2 months ago

I love this series of podcasts. It is captured so perfectly. Thank you for this awesome series

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@diggingwithdugan3084

4 years ago

Got chills hearing of the book burning, proper story telling. Real shame that tho.

69 |

@Ceci_et_Cela

5 months ago

I really enjoy your content. I listen to one of your videos every night before bed. Please donā€™t ever delete your videos from youtube or make them private. I would be so crushed. It is so disappointing when channels do that. Seriously, you are in my top 3 favorite you tubers.Thank you for sharing all your hard work with us.

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@rogersledz6793

3 years ago

You have created a marvelous series. It is so informative!

4 |

@veronikalynn5084

1 year ago

Betty Meggersā€™ theory on society regarding energy, starting at 49:53, seemsā€¦very relevant now šŸ˜… As relevant as it always is I suppose. I guess it reminds me of how, when our sinuses are acting up and itā€™s hard to breath through the nose on one side, itā€™s so frustrating and miserable. Then how lovely it is when that clears up and suddenly we can take deep, full breaths. How grateful we are. One time I even told myself ā€œfrom now on Iā€™ll remember to be thankful for this simple gift of a clear left nostrilā€ šŸ¤£ I know itā€™s only natural but I canā€™t help but find it sad and kind of scary how we tend to take such amazing and vital systems for granted when theyā€™re working smooth

4 |

@voxvire2350

5 years ago

My weekend has been saved! Thank you so much.

7 |

@alehaim

2 years ago

That war of chess and then paying off after century was beautiful. Should be a story/movie honestly

3 |

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