History

History is not just a record of events but a reflection of who we are. Distorted histories omit the voices of the oppressed, shaping our understanding in ways that perpetuate injustice. By embracing an honest history, we can learn from the past, challenge oppression, and build a more just society.
Lost Civilization
A highly advanced civilization existed long before known ancient cultures in the Americas and was wiped out by a global catastrophe.
Ancient Evidence
Evidence of this lost civilization is scattered across the Americas, from ruins and megalithic structures to artifacts that challenge mainstream archaeology.
Cataclysmic Event
A global disaster, such as a comet impact, may have caused widespread destruction and led to the fall of this ancient civilization.
Mainstream Rejection
The mainstream academic community largely rejects these ideas, dismissing them as pseudoscience or fringe theories, but Hancock advocates for reevaluating conventional history.

Ancient Apocalypse: the Americas

Graham Hancock explores the Americas in search of a prehistoric society whose ancient knowledge has been passed down and spread across the continents.

Old World Order

Our history has been distorted. The official narrative claims that in the 1800s-1900s, men on horse-drawn carriages or prisoners built massive stone and marble structures, but this timeline doesn’t align with reality. The history we’re taught—shaped by figures like Rockefeller—is full of fabrications, like the “Great Chicago Fire,” while ignoring the fact that many cities were destroyed. The advanced civilization before us and its technology have been deliberately erased. It’s all part of a massive cover-up.

The Vanishing Realm of Grand Tartary
Old maps and texts once depicted Tartaria as a colossal, multifaceted territory spanning northern Asia from the Arctic to Persia, China, and Hindustan, with provinces that suggest a far more interconnected and significant Eurasian sphere than modern history acknowledges — prompting us to ask why such a vast designation quietly disappeared from atlases and textbooks in the 19th century.
Cathay, the Great Wall, and Shifting Boundaries
Exploring "Cathay" as an older name tied to northern realms and dissecting the Great Wall's origins and orientation, the video raises doubts about whether it served solely as a Ming defense or possibly marked deeper divisions between powers, inviting skepticism toward simplified narratives of its construction and purpose in light of contradictory early accounts.
Independent Tartary and Forgotten Conquerors
Accounts of heartland regions like Bukharia, Turkistan, and Samarkand, alongside empires led by Tamerlane, Genghis Khan, and enigmatic figures tied to Prester John legends, challenge us to consider whether these mobile yet sophisticated societies represented a richer, more organized cultural continuum that later histories may have fragmented to fit emerging national stories.
Siberian Tartary and the Hidden Northern Frontiers
Descriptions of vast Siberian wildernesses, underground dwellings, nomadic groups, and resource-rich yet sparsely documented lands under Russian and later Soviet influence spark questions about what cultural depth or alternative knowledge might have been obscured when these "frozen frontiers" were absorbed into standardized imperial narratives.

Questioning the Vanishing Empire

 The Forgotten Realm of Grand Tartaria