What Archaeological Sites Used To Actually Look Like

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What Archaeological Sites Used To Actually Look Like


Let’s see what archaeological sites used to actually look like!
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34 Comments

  1. The Romans defeated the tribes in Caledonia and Pictland several times and never lost. They just didn't see it beneficial to stay there in a land that didn't offer much and it was too expensive, so they came back after about 80 years and decided the land in the north had no real benefit. The misinformation that the Scots were so fierce that the Romans couldn't conquer them, is ludicrous at best, and the false sense of national pride is just annoying. The Battle of Mons Graupius saw the Romans go to battle against the Caledonian and Pictish tribes of what is now modern-day Scotland… Around 15,000 troops on each side. The Romans lost around 360 troops and the Picts/Caledonians lost around 10,000 troops… A decisive victory that left the tribes no choice but to unite to try and fight the Romans together. When the Romans pulled away from the land, it was their own choice. They built roads, settlements and places they owned in modern-day Scotland. Their withdrawal was their own choice and was simply for economic purposes, and they built Hadrian's wall to stop the tribes from coming south into Britannia. The tribes that revolted in what is now lower Scotland were slaughtered in a campaign lead by Emperor Septimius Severus, and a mass genocide took place in the lowlands of that area. This then lead to the Romans and tribes north of Hadrian's Wall to stop fighting after 211 AD, and these tribes decided to trade with the Romans and let the Romans come and go as they please up until the Romans left the isle of Great Britain completely. The Romans did try to push the terrirtory of Britannia further north, and built another wall called the Antonine Wall, but it wasn't made of stone, and it was abandoned due to expense and a feeling that the extra land wasn't worth it. When the Romans left Britain, the land north of Hadrian's Wall was conquered by Celts from Ireland. Modern-day Scotland has most of it's genetics come from Ireland. Kilts are even Irish. The Celts didn't conquer Britannia.

  2. Modern-day English people have a lot of their DNA come from south Scandanavia and Northern Germanic places, hence why the English language is Germanic and the name England literally comes from "Angle-land." Angles, Saxons, and Jutes were the main groups of people that came to the isle of Great Britain. Irish people call the land Saxony, because most of the people who came were in fact Saxons, not Angles. British culture evolved from Roman influence over 100s of years and intigrated with the Anglo-Saxon culture. The Anglo-Saxons defeated the Romans and the Romans never came to Britain again after leaving in the 400s. England and Wales were never conquered by the Romans, because there was no such thing as either, and the land was mainly split into tribal land. The most famous being the tribe from modern-day Norfolk, that Boudica lead. The Iceni tribe. They were beaten convincingly by the Romans in a battle where they outnumbered the Romans 20/1. Tribal warfare lost against military structure and military tactics and the Romans conquered most of the known world because of this.

  3. Another thing people get wrong, is the idea that England and Wales were conquered by the Romans… Neither place existed, and modern-day English people didn't arrive until much later from overseas. The old Britonic tribes fled to the west to Wales, Cornwall, Isle of Man, Ireland and western France. These people were the people that the Romans defeated and their ancestors live in these regions today.

  4. People don't know their history… The Romans didn't conquer the land of the Picts. Scotland didn't exist. Pictish ancestry is found in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, mainly in the North West of Britain, western Scotland and Northumbria. The Scots like to say they didn't get conquered… They didn't exist.

  5. How Americans explain history……do you know Game of Thrones? They had this wall right? Yeah so that wall actually excisted in real life!

    WTF are you guys on about?

  6. It's funny to me when people say, "that would have been impossible for that time." We automatically assume we are smarter than the people who lived before us…they were capable of greater things than we can imagine.