Horrible Histories S11 E03
Category
😹
FunTranscript
00:00Terrible Tudors, Gorgeous Georgians, Slimey's Tudors, Vile Victorians, Woeful Wars, Ferocious Fights, Stingy Castles, Staring Knights, Horrors That Did By Description, Cutthroat Councils, Bull Ejection, Vicious Vikings, Cruel Crimes, Punisher From Ancient Times, Roman Rotten, Rank and Ruthless, Cavemen, Savage, Fierce and Tubeless, Groovy Greeks, Rainy Sages, Mean and Misery, Middle Ages.
00:18Gory Stories we do that, and your host a talking rat, the past is no longer a mystery, welcome to Horrible Histories.
00:32Horrible Histories presents Ludicrous Landmarks.
00:39Behold the Pyramids of Giza, arguably the most famous landmarks in the world. They have been built by a single family of pharaohs as ginormous pointy royal tombs.
00:53The third and final one, built by pharaoh Menkaure, has taken thousands of people working in teams decades to build. Now that's really been quite a task.
01:06Previously on The Ancient Apprentice, the two teams chose their names.
01:10We are the friends of Menkaure.
01:13Right.
01:14We are the drunkards of Menkaure.
01:18No, that's not our name, we have a different name.
01:20I'm already drawing the hieroglyphics.
01:25Before pharaoh Menkaure set them a pointed task.
01:29Teams, your task is to build me a pyramid, right here in the same location as my father and my grandfather's pyramids.
01:37For this task, you have about 30 years.
01:40What?
01:41It's literally the challenge of a lifetime.
01:43Off you go.
01:44Let's do this. I'm going to be project manager.
01:46Did he say 30 years?
01:47Yes.
01:48Thousands of workers began building.
01:50Yeah, me and pharaoh Menchago are getting on brilliantly. I mean, he sees a lot of me in him, I think.
01:56Is he pharaoh Menchago?
01:57That's a cheese, isn't it?
01:59I call him pharaoh Menchago.
02:01And tensions flared as the years passed.
02:04What do you want done with this rock?
02:05If the friends of Menkaure think they can beat us, they're in denial.
02:08Just give that to me.
02:09Like the river?
02:10I'm building pyramids, okay? I can't think of a better joke than that.
02:13Come on, please, we are on a deadline. We have got 28 years left.
02:17Friends of Menkaure might be our team name, but we are not here to make friends.
02:21The other team might as well not bother trying, because like a pyramid without a roof, it's absolutely pointless.
02:27Recently, the drunkard suffered a workplace incident.
02:33I'll show you who fell in the pit.
02:34That was not on purpose.
02:36Now, decades later, it's back to the boardroom to see who will make the final of the Ancient Apprentice.
02:43You're fired.
02:46Good morning.
02:47Good morning, pharaoh Menchago.
02:49Right, Nadia, it says here you ordered 100,000 blocks of limestone for your section.
02:56Why did you do that when you've only got space for 10,000 blocks?
03:00Okay, can I just say, pharaoh Menkaure, I correctly estimated that we would need to order 10,000 blocks,
03:06and 10,000 in hieroglyphs is a finger, but Amari here got bored and drew a tadpole, which is 100,000.
03:16So, being totally honest, Amari let us down.
03:21Right, I've come to my decision. Amari, you're fired.
03:27Thank you very much for this opportunity, pharaoh Menchago.
03:30With two apprentices left and years of building still to go, pharaoh Menkaure is about to add a big surprise twist.
03:38By dying long before the pyramid can be finished.
03:41Is this part of the task?
03:42Right, instead, can we pretend that I wasn't fired, please?
03:44No, absolutely not.
03:46Next time, in the final, the remaining apprentices are tasked with removing the pharaoh's organs and mummifying him.
03:53So we stick this up his nose and pull his brains out.
03:58No, no, I'm better than this. I quit.
04:01No, no, I'm better than this. I quit.
04:04And so Badru has won the ancient apprentice.
04:07This does not feel like a win.
04:10Ew, so gross.
04:13Welcome to one of Britain's best known landmarks, Stonehenge in Wiltshire.
04:19Landmarks are famous buildings or places which people can use to help tell where they are.
04:25I made my own mark on the land earlier.
04:29Although, I'm not sure that counts.
04:35Stonehenge is a bit of a mystery.
04:37We don't really know what it was built for, but it's actually older than the pyramids of Giza.
04:42And was originally made up of a circle of smaller stones called blue stones.
04:47Until at some point in history, someone decided to give the place an upgrade.
04:52Ah, you must be the architect.
04:54So, what do you think of our magnificent blue stones?
04:57Well, I mean, personally, I'd recommend upgrading to a much more impressive circle of these huge stones called sarsen stones.
05:04I've got a model here.
05:06Okay, um, I know you're the hench guy and everything, but that is a lot smaller than the one we've already got.
05:13Right, this is just a model.
05:15Ah, oh.
05:17Look, I'll show you. I've got a sample of the sort of sarsen stone we usually use.
05:21Right, bring it in, lads.
05:22Would you look at the size of that?
05:24It is impressively long.
05:26It's still not as high as the one we've got already.
05:30Oh, yeah. It's on each side.
05:32Just sort of imagine how tall it would look standing up.
05:35Oh, right. I'll just tilt my head to the side then to get a better idea.
05:40It's tricky because now the ground's moved too.
05:42Right. You're the leader, aren't you?
05:44Yeah.
05:45Point is, a circle of these giant sarsen stones would tower over the blue stone circle you currently have.
05:51It'll look fantastic.
05:53Well, it looks pricey.
05:55I can see you don't like it. Take it back, boys.
05:57Bec, we dug this up, carved it and carried it 20 miles.
06:01Yeah, I know. Sorry. Customers are always right.
06:04Even this one.
06:05Unbelievable. Right, come on.
06:08Steady, slow.
06:09It's a shame, really. I mean, it could have been a marvel that stood for thousands of years.
06:13Wait, you know, I think you might be right.
06:15We want to leave our mark on this land.
06:18We will build this new and improved stonehenge.
06:21Bring it back!
06:22I'll make up your mind.
06:24Do you definitely want it?
06:25Oh, yeah.
06:26Because we're going to be ordering in like another 80 of these enormous stones.
06:2980?
06:30Oh, give or take, yeah.
06:31I don't know.
06:32Has it come in any other colours?
06:34Right, you need to make up your mind because this is not going anywhere.
06:39Oh, it's on me foot.
06:41Right, who's for lunch?
06:42Oh, mind if I join you?
06:43Hang on, wait.
06:44Look at that.
06:45Look at that.
06:46Can you bring me back a bath?
06:50Is that a bear?
06:58Good evening.
06:59This is your compulsory courtesy call from the army of Emperor Qin.
07:02Uh-oh.
07:03Last time you lot came here, you took my husband away to work on that great big wall of yours.
07:07Actually, it's several different great big walls we're joining together to protect our northern borders.
07:12But fear not, your husband will no longer be involved.
07:15Oh, well that's wonderful news.
07:16Because he's dead.
07:17What?
07:18Please accept this comforting pat on the head completely free of charge.
07:22Pet, pet, delivered.
07:23I can't believe he's gone.
07:25Yes, his death was a big blow.
07:27Do we get compensation?
07:28I can't say we don't need the money.
07:29Do you have any idea how many people died building that thing?
07:32We haven't got the time, money or indeed desire to hand out cash.
07:35What are you doing here then?
07:37Well, your husband passed away before the end of his shift.
07:40His work was half finished and what good is half a wall, madam?
07:43Well, he can't finish his work, can he?
07:45He's dead.
07:46He can't.
07:47But policy does state that we do need the work completed, if not by the deceased, then by a member of his household.
07:53But we've got no children or...
07:57You don't mean me.
07:58Widows are acceptable.
07:59But I'm grieving.
08:00Fresh air and exercise are very good for that.
08:02And at least your husband made it to the wall.
08:05It's a long, hard journey and a lot of people die on the way.
08:08Are you saying I might not even survive the journey?
08:10Not with that attitude, you won't.
08:12But good news, as soon as you arrive, you'll receive a big bowl of sticky rice.
08:15Oh, at least we'll be well fed.
08:17Oh, it's not to eat.
08:18It's one of the things we use to stick the bricks together.
08:20Hang on!
08:21This great wall of China won't build itself!
08:29What will you do when you retire?
08:31Well, if you were to ask our next guest, 63-year-old Annie Edson-Taylor,
08:36you might be surprised by the answer.
08:38Annie was hoping to raise some money for charity.
08:40So she came up with a smashing, or should I say splashing, idea.
08:46Jenny is in 1901, beside one of the world's most famous landmarks, the Niagara Falls.
08:52So let's see what she's up to. Jenny!
08:54Jenny!
08:55Annie, how's it going?
08:57Well, my cat survived going over Niagara Falls in a barrel,
09:00so I think we're ready to go.
09:02I'm sorry, it sounded like you sent your cat
09:05over the falls in a barrel.
09:07Yes!
09:08That's horrible!
09:09How would you like to be sent over the falls in a barrel?
09:11Oh, yes, no, so that is the plan, Jenny!
09:14I'm doing it for charity.
09:16I had the barrel especially made.
09:18It's got a cushion to sit on and everything.
09:19It says, Queen of the Mist.
09:21The mist is what people call the spray at the bottom of the falls.
09:24Wish me luck!
09:25This elderly lady is about to fall 158 metres down a waterfall in a barrel.
09:37We even have in-barrel footage and I'm sure everything will be fine.
09:42Here we go!
09:44Oh, it's dreadful!
09:46Still, I was expecting it to be much worse than...
09:49Ah!
09:54Oh!
09:55And we're just hearing that Annie has survived the drop.
09:59She's out of the barrel and she's back on dry land.
10:02Are you OK, Annie?
10:03Sorry, am I the right way up?
10:04You certainly are, you little daredevil,
10:06and I dare say you've raised loads of money for charity.
10:09What charity was it again?
10:11Well, the charity was me!
10:13My inheritance has run low and I don't want to be poor, Jenny!
10:16Going over Niagara Falls in a barrel seemed like the obvious way to make a bit of money.
10:21So the people watching had to pay?
10:23Well, I was hoping they'd pay after I finished,
10:25but most of them seemed to have left by the time I got out of the barrel.
10:29So you didn't make any money at all?
10:32Not enough to retire on, no.
10:34But hey-ho!
10:36I can always take my barrel on a tour.
10:38People will pay to see that.
10:40Oh, no. No.
10:42No, no, my manager's stealing my barrel!
10:45No, no!
10:49There are many huge natural landmarks like Niagara Falls and Mount Everest,
10:55but behind every human-made landmark is the architect who designed it,
11:00and they could have some odd ideas about the things to include.
11:03Head teacher Ruth Thomas needs a new art and design teacher
11:07after Mr Braithwaite chose to fart and resign.
11:11Welcome to Historical Educating.
11:15Mr Braithwaite's stand-in is one of the most prolific architects in British history.
11:21He'll be a breath of fresh air, which is something we could do with around here.
11:26Class 7F's new teacher is Sir Christopher Wren.
11:30Morning, class.
11:31Good morning, Mr Sir Christopher Wren.
11:35Now, today I would like you all to design a new building.
11:40It can't be any sort of building.
11:42No, it must be exultant, it must be geometrically sublime,
11:47and it must have pineapples.
11:50There's no building that can't be improved with a pineapple,
11:54which is why, when I was asked to renovate the old St Paul's Cathedral,
11:59bam! 68ft pineapple on top!
12:02Unfortunately, the old building burned down in the Great Fire of London
12:05before I could actually stick a pineapple on it,
12:08but I was asked to design the new St Paul's Cathedral,
12:11so, bam! Two pineapples! Woo-hoo!
12:15Ah, you love it. I can see you love it.
12:18Apparently, pineapples were really round expensive in Mr Wren's day.
12:23Not bad. Something very conspicuously missing there.
12:26Someone hasn't understood the assignment.
12:28Right. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
12:31OK, where's the pineapple?
12:33Come on, people! I once designed a building with 48 pineapples on it,
12:37and you, you can't even draw a house with one!
12:41Pineapples!
12:43Mr Wren's bananas are about pineapples.
12:46Exciting news, class.
12:48I've decided to design you a new pineapple school.
12:52Now, who wants to help me knock down the old one?
12:56CHEERING
12:58What on earth's going on?
13:00Thank you, Mr Wren. Your services are no longer required.
13:03What about just two pineapples on top of the science block?
13:06Or one massive one on top of the gym? No? No.
13:09They loved it. No pineapple, no party.
13:20I'm here at the Taj Mahal in 17th century Agra, India.
13:25This monument was built by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan
13:29as a tribute to his late wife.
13:31It took 17 years to construct,
13:34with builders and materials from all across Asia.
13:38Oh, hello.
13:40Not to mention thousands of elephants.
13:43Shah Jahan, it must give you great pleasure to look at.
13:46Yes, it's very nice.
13:48Although I'd enjoy looking at it more
13:51if my son hadn't have locked me up in here in order to take over my kingdom!
13:55Ha! Little tyke. Chip off the old block.
13:59Actually, could you move that elephant? I can't see the Taj.
14:03Er, shoot!
14:07I'm not going anywhere near that.
14:09This is Historic Landmarks with Anne Marx.
14:12Anne? Anne, come back! Anne! Don't go, Anne!
14:15Come on! Anne!
14:19The Sagrada Familia Cathedral
14:21is going to be the wonder of Barcelona, Signor Gaudi.
14:24But it is taking a long time.
14:27A long time, yes, but...
14:30Look at the quality of my lifelike statues.
14:33Yes, how do you do that?
14:36I base them on real people.
14:38Stop! Don't move! I shall use your likeness for my next statue.
14:42Signor Gaudi, we need to speed things up.
14:44This way it will still be built in this place in 100 years.
14:47Oh, that's great.
14:49What is?
14:50Your look of frustration.
14:52It will be perfect for my statue of Joseph being turned away from the inn
14:56while his wife Mary is pregnant with their little baby Jesus.
14:59Please don't use the workers as your models.
15:02Use the locals, like that shepherd yesterday.
15:05OK, no more sketching.
15:09But their pose will be perfect for the figures carrying the crosses.
15:13Don't move!
15:15You said no more sketching!
15:17I'm not going to sketch. I'm going to take a plaster cast of his face.
15:21Breathe in...
15:22Wait, don't...
15:25I did say breathe in.
15:27Oh well, there goes another one.
15:29Where is the donkey anyway?
15:31He's supposed to move the heavy stuff.
15:33Why is the donkey up there covered in plaster?
15:36I tried to do it on the floor, but the donkey wouldn't stay still.
15:41You can have it back when the plaster's set.
15:45Must have left a hole at the back.
15:47You are slowing the work down.
15:49My client is God and he is not in a hurry.
15:53You're going to make a plaster cast of that goose, aren't you?
15:56Come here, goosey!
15:58This will never be finished.
16:02Gaudi never did finish his cathedral in Barcelona.
16:05And, over 100 years later, it's still being built today.
16:10While most landmarks have become very popular,
16:13they weren't always welcomed when they were built.
16:16Like when the sun was setting,
16:18Like when the suffragettes of New York
16:20took issue with a certain Lady of Liberty
16:23at her unveiling by designer Frederick Bartholdi
16:26and American president Grover Cleveland.
16:32Greetings, Monsieur le Président.
16:35Or, should I say, voisin.
16:39On behalf of the French people,
16:41I present to you my artistic work.
16:43The Statue of Liberty.
16:45My artistic work.
16:47The Statue of Liberty.
16:49Wow, what a truly impressive statue, Monsieur Bartholdi.
16:53But now for something even more impressive.
16:55My speech.
16:57A statue of liberty for a land of liberty.
17:03Liberty for who?
17:05Give us the vote, you big hypocrite.
17:07Yeah, so we can vote for someone else.
17:10Liberty? We're not even at liberty to come to your party.
17:14One of the only women you invited
17:16is 300 feet high and made of copper.
17:20Awkward.
17:21You're not being very ladylike.
17:23This is what we think of being ladylike.
17:30No, she didn't.
17:33Making a woman the Statue of Liberty
17:36when women aren't even at liberty to vote
17:38is the biggest art of liberty I've ever heard of.
17:42Monsieur le Président, c'est un wicked burn, n'est-ce pas?
17:46Right, that does it.
17:48Fire the ceremonial cannons!
17:53A perfect compromise.
17:55They are at liberty to make as much noise as they want,
17:58while I, as President,
18:00am at liberty to fire cannons so I don't have to listen to them.
18:04You know what? I think I would prefer to be with them.
18:06Ladies, is there room for one more of this boat?
18:11Where are you going?
18:14Hello, my name's Joshua Cross,
18:16and on October 16th, 1834,
18:18I played an important part in the redesign
18:21of one of Britain's most famous buildings, Parliament.
18:25And this is what it used to look like.
18:27But tell me, what role did I have
18:29in the redesign of this amazing landmark?
18:32Did I, A, accidentally burn down the old Parliament
18:36so they had to build a new one?
18:38B, come up with the idea for Big Ben?
18:41Or C, design the comfy green seats the MPs all sit on?
18:45And the answer is...
18:47A, I burned the whole place down by accident.
18:50It's a bit awks, actually.
18:52My job was to burn something called tally sticks
18:55in the furnaces inside Parliament.
18:57One day, me and my friend Patrick
18:59decided to go and have a beer while they were burning.
19:01Then we forgot about them, and the whole place burned down.
19:05Luckily, no-one died,
19:07and it led to Parliament being rebuilt like you know it today.
19:10So, in a way, it was a good thing.
19:13Joshua!
19:14Of course, not everyone sees it that way.
19:17Better dash!
19:26I'm here at the Eiffel Tower in 1889
19:29with its brilliant, visionary...
19:31And adorable...
19:34When it was completed, standing at 300 metres tall,
19:37the tower was the highest building in the world.
19:40And it was loved by all of Paris.
19:44A little bit like myself. Bonjour, Eiffel fans!
19:47Actually, a lot of people didn't like it at all.
19:49We're going there, are we?
19:51Many French artists signed a letter saying they hated it,
19:54and some of them wanted to replace the top of the tower
19:57with a giant naked statue.
19:59They have no sense of history, tradition or spectacle!
20:03So, if they're looking for a model,
20:05this would be a pretty good statue, right?
20:08What is happening?
20:10What are you doing?
20:12Go with it.
20:14Be part of it.
20:16Improvise.
20:18So this is Historic Landmarks with Landmarks.
20:21I'm taking off my trousers.
20:23No, he's not.
20:25Isn't the Eiffel Tower amazing?
20:29But some famous landmarks have pretty gruesome pasts,
20:33like the Colosseum in Rome, Italy.
20:36Although it's now a famous tourist hotspot,
20:39it was once a place that, unless you were in the audience,
20:42you really didn't want to go.
20:45Put it this way, a lot of the performers only got to do one show,
20:49and it was short and painful.
20:53Come on down to the Flagon Amphitheatre
20:56for the best live entertainment Rome has to offer.
20:59Don't be shy. We've got plenty of room.
21:02We can seat over 50,000.
21:04Wow, that ain't no lie.
21:06It's not just gladiators and barbaric cruelly to slaves
21:09and religious minorities, you know.
21:11It's barbaric cruelly to everything.
21:14We've got horses, bulls, rhinos, panthers, bears, tigers, elephants.
21:18We've even got rabbits. They're so cute.
21:21Especially when the lion's in them.
21:23You'll see all kinds of animals hunted in the Flagon Amphitheatre.
21:27Heck, sometimes we even fill the whole darn place with water
21:30so the horses and bulls have to swim.
21:33We did that at the first games we held here.
21:35Who don't want to see that?
21:37But if animals ain't your thing, we got people too.
21:40Gladiators, magicians, acrobats,
21:43and criminal types being torn apart by wild bears.
21:47And it's real good value for money.
21:50Some shows last for over 100 days.
21:52So come on down, have the time of your life
21:54while a bunch of animals and slaves lose theirs.
21:57Any risk to spectators is the responsibility of the spectators themselves
21:59and is not accepted by Fable Entertainment Ltd.
22:01Tickets for the second day cannot be guaranteed as the animals may not survive the first.
22:04So what you waiting for?
22:06Get yourself down to the Amphitheatre, my darling.
22:09We got everything you want to see
22:11plus a whole bunch of stuff you really don't.
22:21Welcome to my historical crafting channel Stuff on a Stick.
22:24Stuff on a Stick!
22:26My guest this week is the Head Keeper of London Bridge.
22:30So, yeah, I'm Keeper of Heads.
22:33Not the Head of the Keepers.
22:35So tell us about these amazing crafted heads.
22:38They're so detailed. How do you carve them?
22:41Ooh, don't carve them.
22:43No, no, no, these are real heads.
22:46That's Thomas Cromwell.
22:48We've also had in William Wallace, Thomas More.
22:51It's mostly traitors. We display them on sticks on London Bridge.
22:54So anyone crossing the bridge can see what happens when you double-cross the keys.
22:58Don't do it!
22:59This is horrific.
23:00It's also very popular.
23:01London Bridge has become a real tourist attraction
23:03thanks to these naughty noggins.
23:05Naughty noggins!
23:06You've got to go back on the bridge soon.
23:08I don't want to go back on the bridge.
23:09Well, you've got to.
23:10Naughty noggin.
23:11Naughty noggin.
23:12Bit of fun.
23:13How do you stop them from rotting and falling apart?
23:15It's a very delicate, artistic and refined process.
23:18Well, I suppose you'd better talk us through it.
23:20Fantastic, yeah.
23:21Step one, boil your old head.
23:23Boiling the head stops it from rotting.
23:25Have a whiff of that.
23:27This is the day I boil them.
23:28I'm going to be sick.
23:29Well, don't be sick of that, please, because that is step two.
23:32Step two, dip them in tar.
23:34It's to stop the birds from making off with the eyes as a tasty snack.
23:38Lovely.
23:39Step three, stick it on a stick.
23:41The finishing touch is just put it on a stick or a spike or a pike.
23:45It doesn't really matter as long as it's sharp and pointy.
23:49Yeah, well, you get the idea.
23:51And voila!
23:52Heads up on how to get these banging bodges looking their best.
23:55Well, thank you for coming on my show.
23:57Sure.
23:58And please feel free to like, share and subscribe.
24:00Yeah, like, share and subscribe, guys.
24:02Please don't do that.
24:03Bye-bye.
24:07I am the French General Napoleon Bonaparte.
24:10It is the end of the 18th century and France is at war with Portugal, Russia, Austria, Britain, bits of Italy and I think Malta, which is weird.
24:19And in 1798, I took 40,000 magnificent French soldiers to capture Egypt.
24:24But my main enemy is boredom.
24:27Boredom.
24:28Boredom!
24:29Oh, oui, oui, yes, boredom.
24:30This must be tamed.
24:33So, how did I keep myself and my soldiers entertained?
24:36Did I, A, order my men to re-dig the 200-kilometre-long canal of the Faroes?
24:41B, get my men to race up and down the pyramids?
24:45Or C, build a giant arena with 105 columns and a huge obelisk in the centre inscribed with the Heroes of France?
24:54It was a trick question.
24:56I did all three of them.
24:58My people also found the Rosetta Stone, which helped unlock the meaning of the Egyptian hieroglyphics.
25:05You see, Napoleon Bonaparte can do anything.
25:09Sir, there is trouble in France and British ships are approaching.
25:12And right now, he's heading back to France.
25:15Gotta go!
25:16Oh!
25:17I'm fine, I'm fine, I'm fine!
25:20The Great Pyramids of Giza are actually the only surviving example of the so-called Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
25:28The other six are no longer around.
25:31But what were they?
25:33Luckily, we have an absolute banger to tell you all about them.
25:45In Alexandria
25:48A lighthouse built by Pharaoh Ptolemy
25:53Towered over all
25:56Until an earthquake made it fall into the sea
26:01And in Olympia
26:03The Greek gods Zeus heard a gigantic statue
26:10Until a massive raging fire destroyed that wonder too
26:17At least the Great Pyramid of Giza still stands
26:22All the Seven Wonders
26:25Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
26:29Colossus of Rhodes
26:32A statue built to celebrate a great victory
26:36Stood on the harbour wall
26:39Until an earthquake brought it crashing to its knees
26:44The Hanging Gardens of Babylon are next on the list
26:52Though this is the only wonder that maybe didn't exist
27:00At least the Great Pyramid of Giza cannot be missed
27:04All the Seven Wonders
27:08Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
27:11Temple of Artemis
27:14The Temple of Diana is its other name
27:18Built for a Greek goddess
27:22Now only fragments and its foundations remain
27:26The mausoleum at Halicarnassus was a giant tomb
27:34Just like the bodies placed inside it this wonder has fed its tomb
27:42At least the Great Pyramid of Giza I'm off to see still
27:47All the Seven Wonders
27:50Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
27:54All the Seven Wonders
27:58Sadly only one remains preserved
28:02The Great Pyramid of Giza, have I mentioned that?