Primii oameni care au traversat oceanele | Setting Sail (Sailing Documentary) | Cronologie

Primii oameni care au traversat oceanele |  Setting Sail (Sailing Documentary) |  Cronologie



Aceasta este povestea primilor marinari cu apă albastră din lume: austronezienii și polinezienii care au cucerit cel mai mare ocean de pe planetă. Povestea lor începe în Asia de Sud-Est cu mai bine de 5.000 de ani în urmă, când austronesienii au început o tracțiune spre est în Pacific. Din Indonezia s-au îndreptat spre Est, ajungând în Papua Noua Guinee, Insulele Solomon, Vanuatu și în final Fiji. Dispersate în cea mai mare și mai singuratică întindere de apă a pământului, faptele lor au rămas necunoscute restului lumii până de curând. Au fost primii marinari de apă albastră. Este ca Netflix pentru istorie… Înscrieți-vă la History Hit, cel mai bun serviciu de documentare de istorie din lume, la o reducere uriașă folosind codul „TIMELINE” –ᐳ http://bit.ly/3a7ambu Puteți găsi mai multe de la noi pe: https://www.facebook.com/timelineWH https://www.instagram.com/timelineWH Acest canal face parte din History Hit Network. Pentru orice întrebări, vă rugăm să contactați owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com

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42 thoughts on “Primii oameni care au traversat oceanele | Setting Sail (Sailing Documentary) | Cronologie

  1. Isn't this actually an older documentary, repackaged as "Time Line?" I would like to know what the geneticists have to say. Wouldn't that shed light on the timing and origins of these ancient mariners?

  2. I like how they communicate about these historical Lupita people as if these natives couldn’t possibly be related to them! Lol it’s ridiculous the lengths white supremacy goes to discount colored peoples contribution to the history of the world. Utterly ridiculous.

  3. Why is the thinking that there was a linear outward expansion? The ocean being vast like a desert the people may have been semi nomad. Stay in a place for a few 100 years, get bored and go on a trip and stay somewhere else for a while, constant rotation. Any site may have been occupied on and off many times.

  4. war is what cause this people to migrate, theres plenty bad blood in the old days between the fijians, samoans and tongans, the people that went east and settle the eastern pacific were probly war refugees from this wars.

  5. Am I the only one saddened to witness their dependence on imported items, such as Clorox bleach? I don't have an island home to protect, but I consolidate to minimize how many plastic containers I buy. Shampoo works as body wash, hand soap and lingerie cleaner.
    That's ONE bottle, rather than 4. Soon, I'm switching to a soap brand that doesn't come in plastic for all the former hygiene concerns.

  6. Of all the civilizations that have existed on earth, the Polynesians to me are the most fascinating.
    Absolutely incredible that these people were able to travel the vast Pacific to reach some of the most remote islands anywhere.

  7. If anything these people are more smart than we are!
    The less technology the smarter u hv to be to make use of the resources!
    ANCIENT MAN WAS SMART AND WE ARE OGGA BOOGA CAVEMEN

  8. Great documentary, I'd always wondered how these people traversed such large swathes of open water, the "against the wind" theory makes a lot of sense. Brave dudes, these must have been, I have mad respect for them.

  9. The outrigger canoe was actually already invented in Maluku and Papua as far back as 15.000 years ago in the Arafura Sea region (West Melanesia) – like the Kora Kora warship and expedition Prau's – the direct inspiration for the catamaran later used to colonize Madagascar and Polynesia. This was all on the West and NorthWest side of Papua and South Moluccas, compared to the pottery evidence from Eastern Papua where all the Western focus lies. Since ancient times islands had extensive trade networks, for example the Alifuru tribes and the Papuan tribes exchanged raw iron and spices/herbs, which was then traded back for medicine and tattoo ink as well as weaponry. But also ornaments and jewelry (shell money or tabu) were traded en masse to keep diplomatic relationships afloat. There is much that Western science has yet to learn.

  10. This documentaries funny because there were people crossing the Atlantic to the Americas long before The Polynesians cell all over Oceana

  11. In ancestry dna I show up eastern polynesian in 23andme I come up melanesian and Filipino south east asian.. bla bla bla.. it's weird to me.. I know im hawaiian..I know my 2nd and 3rd great grandmother's were from kauai.. my great grandpa was born in Honolulu.. I know my 3rd great grandpa was from guam.. sooo..?? anywho.. my point is according to different dna tests I come up different things.. but I bet it's just a database issue and the more people who get their dna tested the better the big picture will be…

  12. Robert Adrian Langdon introduces the theory that the European features of the Polinesians not only physically but culturally are the direct influence of the descendants of the seafaring people of the San Lesmes Caravel, stranded at one of the many atolls in 1526. No other European vessel has been registered to have entered the Pacific since then. 250 years before Cook's arrival, approximately 20 generations, had been passed down genes and dexterities, from catamaran building and sailing, to agriculture, animal farming, astronomy, gastronomy, theatricals and attire. The book is called "The Lost Caravel" however in order to align with the British being the first to have arrived in Pacific, this theory has been silenced and swept under the carpet, coming up with ever ridiculous ideas such as descending from Taiwan or the Incas.

  13. men learning they only can go by what they see
    nothing wrong with that method it's fine when it happens currently at that moment but you can't do that with the past history of someone because you don't have all the pieces
    like for instance in a court case to prove your innocent YOU BETTER HAVE ALL ACCOUNTS
    IN ORDER IF NOT JAIL YOU'LL GO…

  14. As of 2013-15, members of Polynesian Voyaging Society(PVS) embarked on circumnavigation of Mother Earth, sailing first to American Samoa/Tahiti then continuing W to Marianas, Korean peninsula, SE Asia, Indonesia, India, E Africa, RSA, etc., etc. Then up/down Canadian/U.S. Eastern seaboard. More detailed/extensive video logs can be found on Timeline, PVS & other various news outlets

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