이집트는 피라미드 세울 때 한반도는 고인돌을 쌓았다
In 2560 BC, Egypt was building a pyramid 146 meters high. At the same time, people on the Korean Peninsula lived in pithouses dug one meter deep. People without kings, without writing, and without metal. Yet, a thousand years later, these quiet people erected half of the world's dolmens. The pyramid was the command of a single king, whereas the dolmens were the spontaneous efforts of tens of thousands of villages. It wasn't that they lagged behind; it was simply that their timetables for explosion were different. 📌 References Mark Lehner, 1997, The Complete Pyramids, Thames & Hudson Zahi Hawass, 2006, Mountains of the Pharaohs: The Untold Story of the Pyramid Builders, American University in Cairo Press National Museum of Korea, 2015, Prehistoric Culture of Korea (Permanent Exhibition Catalog) Heinrich et al., 2004, Radiocarbon dates and the Neolithic in Korea, Cambridge Core Radiocarbon Shin Dong-hoon et al., 2011, Analysis of Human Bones Excavated from the Auraji Site in Jeongseon, The Archaeological Journal of Korea Kim, J. et al., 2015, Community Formation during the Neolithic in the Korean Peninsula, Springer UNESCO World Heritage Centre, 2000, Gochang, Hwasun and Ganghwa Dolmen Sites (Decision on Inscription) KBS History Special Production Team, 2004, The Secrets of Dolmens — How Megaliths Were Moved #Dolmen #Pyramids #KoreanPeninsula #Egypt #Prehistory #AncientCivilization #CombPatternPottery #BronzeAge #UNESCO #WorldCulturalHeritage #2500BC #PitDwelling #MegalithicCulture #InstinctLaboratory ※ This video is a reconstruction based on various academic materials and archaeological research. The images used in this video were generated by AI and may differ from the actual appearance of the artifacts or sites. For those requiring accurate academic citations, please check the references in the video description.
