Hoysaleswara Temple, India - Built with Ancient Machining Technology?

Hoysaleswara Temple, India - Built with Ancient Machining Technology?

PraveenMohan

7 лет назад

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@ramakrishnansubbiyan1764
@ramakrishnansubbiyan1764 - 11.12.2023 05:30

130 croes one of the best Indian..Award..winner...year 2024..First vote my👍vote🙏❤️breaking Science..

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@SreenivaS_Universe_Is_God
@SreenivaS_Universe_Is_God - 05.12.2023 09:39

No answers for now

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@DileepKumar-7-3
@DileepKumar-7-3 - 02.12.2023 10:09

ಕನ್ನಡಿಗರ ಕೊಡುಗೆ❤

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@piotrwojciechowski7246
@piotrwojciechowski7246 - 29.11.2023 18:54

Wow 👽 coll 👍

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@bharathkrishna9087
@bharathkrishna9087 - 27.11.2023 23:57

Then y in the earth taj mahal is consider the 7th wonder of the world .

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@saitarott777
@saitarott777 - 26.11.2023 21:10

Plz make this video in Hindi ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

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@patriot8489
@patriot8489 - 26.11.2023 11:52

They were built by race of Giants aka nephelim

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@michaelmolefe8792
@michaelmolefe8792 - 15.11.2023 15:08

They even have had electric.

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@oliverklozhoff7937
@oliverklozhoff7937 - 13.11.2023 10:10

Just my 2cents, but after your suggestion that the pine cone in the statues was a tool, i kinda thought it looked alot like a cylinder hone. Anybody else see the similarity?

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@airhawaii23
@airhawaii23 - 11.11.2023 06:34

Compelling!

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@rkstudies8891
@rkstudies8891 - 03.11.2023 19:45

Included UNESCO World Heritage site...42

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@vickyv8519
@vickyv8519 - 02.11.2023 19:33

I think Masaan Bhairav means God of Shamshan.

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@gopalkashyap6927
@gopalkashyap6927 - 20.10.2023 20:44

Hindi me Bol lodu

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@aryanshsoni4537
@aryanshsoni4537 - 20.10.2023 19:06

Thank you sir, to let everyone know about our ancient magicians... I call them magicians because it is just like magic... We have to be aware everyone to save our temples... It is our heritage plz contribute in saving them ... I wish that our every temple should included in UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITES. You are doing a great job.. Hats off to your intelligence... Where people just declare this technology as simple hammer and chisel one you are striving and working hard to prove how advanced our ancestors were. You are great Sir!

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@user-cs7dy6tj8z
@user-cs7dy6tj8z - 13.10.2023 14:08

Next time take a nice big flash light wish I could be there to to take a deeper closer look into all these temples

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@user-cs7dy6tj8z
@user-cs7dy6tj8z - 13.10.2023 14:04

It seems to me like every part of that temple was polished just looks like it has old dirt sand sediments probably a pressure wash

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@manuelch.4381
@manuelch.4381 - 13.10.2023 01:54

Like and enjoy 👍🍀👍
Greetings from Germany Everytime 👍🍀👍

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@user-yg4iy2vn2u
@user-yg4iy2vn2u - 12.10.2023 21:47

SEE WAT FARAONS HAWE ON THE TOP OF THE HEAD THE HOLY SNAKE,

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@user-yg4iy2vn2u
@user-yg4iy2vn2u - 12.10.2023 21:44

THE PILAR,S ARE BED,S FOR NAGGA HALF SNAKE BOT THEY WERE HUNTET BUY TROFEE HUNTER,S

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@user-cz8gy9tj9u
@user-cz8gy9tj9u - 08.10.2023 12:22

Wow! I watched this video more than once, I always feel wonder how did this happen. After watching your videos, my view on going to o historic temples has been changed. I dont go to only pray, but am observing the creation. Explaining my people around to see the art and skill of our ancient people. Thanks Praveen for this pride content. You have opened new dimensions in our thinking.

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@sonuent8574
@sonuent8574 - 08.10.2023 09:18

Since we don’t get any evidence of advanced machinery existed at that time , it is possible that these architecture were made by the help of gods themselves

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@robertleechford4250
@robertleechford4250 - 04.10.2023 01:46

Fascinating India Technology used 900 years ago. In Ancient times there was a worldwide high technology civilization.

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@daringpleiadean
@daringpleiadean - 02.10.2023 09:05

Advanced is advanced...and they still are!!😊!❤

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@shalimar1792
@shalimar1792 - 27.09.2023 18:55

Today i read that these temples have been declared to b unesco heritage...

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@pravinpatel3472
@pravinpatel3472 - 22.09.2023 19:38

Technically it's very difficult to turn stone .
Which tools we can use on metals .it will not usable for stone .

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@Rdev845
@Rdev845 - 19.09.2023 22:03

Now world heritage site...

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@mge12
@mge12 - 19.09.2023 05:45

This video will go even more viral as this temple is now UNESCO heritage! Kuddos to your efforts Praveen, you explain them to us so well

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@Veenasri_jillella
@Veenasri_jillella - 18.09.2023 20:51

Who is here are after UNESCO inscribed hoysalas temple in the world heritage list?

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@harshavardhanab.r1230
@harshavardhanab.r1230 - 18.09.2023 20:06

Good imagination, not perfect explianation

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@debojeetsen6461
@debojeetsen6461 - 18.09.2023 10:41

❤❤❤❤❤

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@devin8524
@devin8524 - 04.09.2023 15:43

Unlike Ancient Alien theorists Praveen is actually visiting sites and showing you the evidence and drawing his conclusions from there. This is the difference between real analysis and hard work compared to lofty theories made for a TV audience

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@Saltiumine
@Saltiumine - 17.08.2023 19:38

It may not be alien technology. I think that metal rods were casted and built into a rig where these pieces could fit onto with a hole in the center, and then spinned with another metal object or rocks used to lathe the pieces. The stones are heavy but 4-5 men could lift one around enough to work on it. Or they were sat onto a spinning rod and used an object on the side to shape the rock while having water poured on it. I think we may need to look into how exactly were they spinning the lathe to determine if it was great technology or just manual labor.

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@bob_btw6751
@bob_btw6751 - 13.08.2023 04:03

Wow! And tney had these machine tools 900 yrs ago? Amazing! But what devices held these bits? How were they powered and are any of them waiting in places yet to be found. Thank you for shining light into things unknown by most modern people.

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@jessehumphrey4273
@jessehumphrey4273 - 04.08.2023 01:14

As a machinist, this is amazing to see! I do all manual machining and am a toolmaker, so here's a few comments. The turned pillars look like a lot of fun to make, I've done the same thing to countless pieces of steel, just a lot smaller, but it's the same thing. Those marks you point out in the beginning are what happens when you create a contour on a lathe by hand. You can only move the tool on a lathe in the X and Y axis (right/left and in/out), so in order to create this feature you have to precisely move the tool in and over at the same time, both of which are done with a separate hand wheel on a modern lathe. It's not a perfect operation which is why the surface finish (grooves) are worse in those contoured areas. The evenly divided features around their perimeter, and the cuts along their length is much harder to make than the fact that it was turned. Unless they're hand carved, with precision layouts. That's something seldomly considered. If I had no machines, I could still use my knowledge and do a precision layout on the work, and then use hand tools to remove the material slowly. And you can do very precise layouts in surprisingly simple ways, ways that even the modern machinists of today have already forgotten. Unfortunately, it's always that way and even a lot of what I know hasn't been done in a very long time, and is now forgotten. Gears can easily be made by hand, and they were done that way for a long time before they were cut on machines. Just like one who truly seeks God will certainly find enlightenment, one that seeks how to make two things move together will eventually connect them with a belt. And when considering how to make one move 1/2 as fast as the other, while they're connected by a belt... If given a little stone or sand drawing of the problem, and a few evenings of contemplation and ancient wine, they will surely discover that making one 1/2 as big would accomplish the goal. Within ourselves is most of these answers, and I believe we are much more capable as humans than we imagine, which is why most of these things seem so impossible. But knowing what these tool marks are and being able to imagine how it may have been done, I think only makes it seem MORE amazing. I wish I could quit my job and go be Praveen's sidekick... bringing along a bag of calipers, micrometers, indicators, reference tools, and other metrology equipment. There is so much to be measured, and I'm sure there are mysteries that wait to be discovered within the micro detail. For instance if we knew they could maintain a precise diameter over the entire column, in other words it's the same size at the top as the bottom, to say within .005" or .010" , then we'd know the accuracy of their machines, and that would be incredible accuracy for such a large pillar. But say it measured to within .0005 or better, then that would be a whole different thing, and there might be aliens...just sayin.

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@tubeles5920
@tubeles5920 - 28.07.2023 17:34

Stup!d modern academe chisels and hammers your !d!otic ass.
That is a product of a lathe machine.

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@BhaaskarDesai
@BhaaskarDesai - 05.07.2023 19:44

I've always believed today's civilization is primitive as compared to ancient people in terms of understanding the universe and it's hidden secrets of energy, vibration and frequency.

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@jamesarakaki2454
@jamesarakaki2454 - 04.07.2023 20:13

I visited these temples in Karnataka back around 1990 and at the time I saw that the columns had been lathe turned. It's pretty evident that some ingenious apparatus would have been needed. Likewise the fine stone filigree work is fascinating. However, to posit that this is mysterious since the humans in that area and time were 'primitive' reminds me a lot of the huge, olympian leaps of logic promoted by folks like Von Daniken. I think human ingenuity has existed far longer than our recent sense of history. Just because we see the past through modern filters (and a questionable sense that we have 'evolved' or 'progressed') and cannot personally understand how something was done doesn't mean that it was impossible for 'primitives'.

The filigree carving and hollowing of stone (and relatively soft stone, from what I was told it's a variety of soapstone) is not without practice within the last few hundred years. I saw curios at the National Palace Museum in Taipei that showed similar levels of craftsmanship- jadeite and nephrite carved into nesting, movable spheres, or into lace like structures finer than that seen in the temples. Of course the scale was completely different- jewelry vs architechtural detailing. I asked a curator and was told it was done using wood, copper, and bronze tools with an abrasive slurry and water. I think the wood was used with fine polishing powders to give the piece a gloss polish.

I have carved stone using a scrap of copper wire, a simple drill (the old chinese craftsmen used small bow drills) and aluminum oxide powder. Soft stone can be carved this way using hard quartz sand. Likewise, John Dobson made huge telescope mirrors to high precision using materials found in a gardner's shed- hard sand as abrasive, mixed with water and timed to settle out larger from smaller grain sizes so he could use coarse to very fine grinding sessions. The material was salvaged thick disks of glass from ship portholes, which he turned into large amateur telescopes-the Dobsonian.

My point is there is always a way, even if at first glance it might seem impossible.

I have a thought experiment that is of course not backed with proof, but consider it a possible explaination other than Aliens with tractor beams and defrappolating pistols:
1) A deep pit is dug, with provision for filling and draining water. The ground, if too porous to contain water, could be sealed with bentonite clay as is done for farm ponds. Perhaps something like a well.
2) A large timber cylinder, with a socket carved into its bottom center, is lowered and settled into the pit and onto a stone block fitted with a pin that mates to the socket of the timber cylinder.
3) A block of stone is moved into position and affixed to the upper end of the timber cylinder. Metal stakes driven into the end of the timber could be used to fit into sockets carved into the stone block. This block is roughly carved into a cylinder before being mounted to the timber.
4) The pit is flooded with enough water to pick up the weight of the stone.
5) The timber post float with the stone block is rotated, using a rope capstan type drive. Think the scale of Roman siege engines.
6) Bronze bars of various shapes are pushed against the rotating stone, while being fed a slurry of crushed quartz. As the surface progresses this is replaced with sand. The support structure for these bars must be fixed to the surrounding ground as it must be relatively stationary while the stone block is turning.
7) The upper part of the timber is kept steady with logs crossing the mouth of the pit and bearing lightly against the turning timber float, like a steady rest on a lathe. This keeps the work from moving off center. Lubrication is by beeswax at the points of contact of the steady logs and the timber float.

Now, keep in mind that the silliness above assumes the pillars are single pieces of stone. They may actually be segmented and joined with a color matched mortar; the extreme fluted designs would make it hard to tell. If so the mass of the stone block blank would be that much lower.

In fact, unless these pillars have been deconstructed to prove otherwise they could have been made using a much simpler apparatus much like a large potter's wheel on dry land and simply pinned and mortared together. It would not be difficult to formulate a colored mortar that would make the joint hard to see, and it could also be lapped and polished with a rope to further refine the surface of the join. If they are pinned they don't even have to be mortared- the joint could be covered with stone dust and wax.

Really, we need to respect the intelligence and ingenuity of these ancients. Just because Von Daniken couldn't figure out how the pyramids were made doesn't mean human genius in the past couldn't. In any field there are techniques that are astonishing to those outside looking in. Honestly, while I can't do it there were people that could make an intricate chronometer mechanism out of brass hundreds of years ago. People still do it today, and with the simplest of machines. A horological lathe is not complex but brilliant in its creation and use.

Humans are smart. We can figure stuff out.

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@jzzquant
@jzzquant - 02.07.2023 23:29

Went to srirangapatnam temple , same pillars there as well looks like it was quite a wide spread technology across Karnataka back then

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@nirmalhpfuels5854
@nirmalhpfuels5854 - 02.07.2023 06:17

If tools were used then I am wondering what was the power source? Did they use solar, hydro, human or animal power. Great information. Thanks 🙏🙏🙏

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@SGTSpliffer
@SGTSpliffer - 26.06.2023 12:10

Water is the missing element.
Imagine the friction and dust.

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@aek12
@aek12 - 03.06.2023 16:34

Damn it looks like a artworks of Pirates of the Caribbean. How would you even plan this, how would you draw this on paper? Do Indians have paper and good scales and geometrical drawings and understanding of mathematics. They must have some kind of pen or colors to make a 3d art and then emulate it. So many things are hidden? Make a video about paper and writing technology in ancient Bharat.

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@TopazBadger6550
@TopazBadger6550 - 03.06.2023 14:57

900yrs? wouldn't there be better records? 9000 yrs is more like it.

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@soundsofsirius9
@soundsofsirius9 - 09.05.2023 00:03

Some people think these cones shapes in their hands are ears of corn. I vote for stone carving tools i think theirs other carvings that point to some of these being stone carving tools and some clearly have corn husk still on the ones that are ears of corn. But some are much smaller that look like carving tools that did the detail work.

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@flowergirlinWard17
@flowergirlinWard17 - 30.04.2023 01:15

This is such very cool information and has changed my mind about a lot of things and now I need to review sound technology and maybe all of the music and dancing around these temples was to encourage the people doing the physical work of turning the pillars to keep them moving for the stone carvers.
And now I want to do more on sound and sonic technology.

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@solomonlee4503
@solomonlee4503 - 23.04.2023 19:48

7.14 It seems like the statue is wearing a watch.

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@LuigiPanizza-ud6du
@LuigiPanizza-ud6du - 17.04.2023 06:06

You are the best. Thanks for the Italian subtitles. Sharing the video is mandatory!

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@user-fq8wi8qn6z
@user-fq8wi8qn6z - 16.04.2023 01:17

👍👍👍❤

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@austinmcinturff3208
@austinmcinturff3208 - 12.04.2023 12:03

These temples are truly mind blowing. I can’t believe I never heard about these highly advanced beautifully carved temples. The designs often remind me of visuals seen in psychedelic experiences

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