Culture Explorer Profile picture
Jun 6 19 tweets 7 min read Read on X
You think you know ancient history?
Egypt. Persia. Greece. Rome.

But that’s just the surface.

There were other empires: older, stranger, forgotten.
They shaped our world... then vanished.

Here are 15 ancient civilizations you’ve never heard of but should have. 🧵👇 Delphi: The Center of the World Credit: theelegantaesthetic
The Kingdom of Aksum (Ethiopia)

They built obelisks that rivaled Rome.
Minted coins. Ruled trade routes. Converted to Christianity before Europe did.

And now? Archaeologists just found their Moon temple. Aksum's obelisks and royal tombs reveal the grandeur of the ancient Kingdom of Aksum, a major trading power. Credit: @AvatarDomy
The Nabataeans (Jordan)

Yes, Petra. But they weren’t just architects of beauty.

They engineered secret cisterns in the desert, turning sand into city.
2,000 years later, some still work.

They didn’t find water. They built it. Hegra, also known as Mada’in Salih, is Saudi Arabia’s first UNESCO World Heritage Site, carved into rock by the Nabataeans before the 1st century AD. Once a bustling trade hub, its 111 rock-cut tombs and unique blend of Greek, Roman, and Egyptian influences now captivate travelers seeking its mysteries. Credit: @histories_arch
The Lycians (Turkey)

They carved tombs into cliffs to send the dead skyward.

No empire ever honored its ancestors like this. Lycian Rock Tombs located in the ancient city of Myra. Antalya Credit: @ancientorigins
Indus Valley Civilization (Pakistan/India)

Public baths. Drainage systems. Gridded cities.

But no kings. No temples. No armies.

Who ruled them? No one knows.

Mohenjo-Daro was a mystery wrapped in symmetry. Mohenjo-Daro, Pakistan built around 2500 BC View of the site's Great Bath, showing the surrounding urban layout Credit: By Saqib Qayyum - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0 - Wikipedia
The Moche (Peru)

They didn’t hide their truth.

Pottery shows warriors, blood, gods—and sex.

Their art isn’t polite. It’s raw. It’s human. Huaca del Sol, an ancient Moche pyramid in Peru, is one of the largest adobe brick structures in the Americas. Once a ceremonial and political center, it’s still revealing secrets about the Moche civilization through its intricate murals and buried treasures. Credit: @archeo-histories
The Scythians (Eurasian Steppe)

Horse-riding warriors buried in permafrost.

Golden armor. Braided hair. Tattoos that told stories.

Their tombs were poems. Image
Tarim Basin Mummies (China)

2,000 BC. A desert in China.
Red-haired mummies wearing plaid.

Trade? Migration? Or something deeper?

Their silence is louder than our theories. Credit: @archaeo-Histories
Oldest men's pants found in China, embroidered with a Slavic motif.  Credit: AndTartary and antiquity @andtartary2
The Hittites (Turkey)

They fought Egypt to a standstill—and made peace.

Their archives held contracts, myths, and the oldest treaty ever found.

A paper trail of power. Ruins of Sphinx Gate (17th-13th Century BC), Hattusa, former capital of the Hittite Empire, in present-day Türkiye. Credit: @archeohistories
Egypto-Hittite Peace Treaty (c. 1258 BC) between Hattusili III and Ramesses II, the earliest known surviving peace treaty, sometimes called the Treaty of Kadesh after the Battle of Kadesh (Istanbul Archaeology Museum). Photo taken by Iocanus. Wikimedia CC BY 3.0.
The Chachapoya (Peru)

The “Cloud People” built Kuelap in the sky.
And buried their dead in cliffside tombs—gazing over valleys forever.

Their ghosts still watch. SARCOFAGOS DE KARAJIA | Carlos Lopez
Like stories like this?

I uncover lost empires, ancient art, and hidden culture.

Join the newsletter: newsletter.thecultureexplorer.com/subscribeImage
The Etruscans (Italy)
Before Rome ruled, it borrowed.

Etruscans gave them togas, architecture, even divination.

In their tombs? Mirrors, perfumes, and music.

They lived richly—and died beautifully.
The Kingdom of Elam (Iran)

Before Persia—there was Elam.

At Chogha Zanbil, they stacked mudbrick into sacred ziggurats.

And in the ruins? Laws, recipes, and love letters written in cuneiform. The Ziggurat of Chogha Zanbil is an ancient temple complex located in the Khuzestan province of southwestern Iran. Photo Credit: @johnlopez2nd John the Alchemist
Elamite Ibex Statue from 2nd Millennium BC, Persia (ancient Iran). Photo credit: @Dr_TheHistories
Elamite archer fighting against the Neo-Assyrian troops of Ashurbanipal, and protecting wounded king Teumman (kneeling), at the Battle of Ulai, 653 BC.
The Jomon (Japan)

Before pyramids. Before farming.

The Jomon made pottery with swirling, hypnotic patterns—14,000 years ago.

Oldest known ceramic culture in the world. A 13,000 year old Dogu statue made by the ancient Jomon culture of Japan Credit: @johnlopez2nd
During the Jomon Period, Japan's neolithic age (c. 12,000-300 BCE), women are believed to be the creators of the intricate pottery of the era. Credit: @womensart1
The Olmecs (Mexico)

They carved heads bigger than men.
And left symbols we still can’t read.

They may have invented writing in the Americas.

But their faces stare at us, daring us to understand. La Venta stele 19 with an early depiction of a feathered serpent. By Audrey and George Delange - Audrey and George Delange, Attribution,
The Nok (Nigeria)

Terracotta figures with haunting, hollow eyes.

Were they spirits? Gods? Ancestors?

We still don’t know. But they used iron tools before much of Europe. Image
The Mycenaeans (Greece)

Before Socrates. Before Sparta.

There were the Mycenaeans—builders of fortresses, writers of Linear B, and possibly…

The origin of the Trojan War. Image
We call them forgotten.
But they shaped everything.

Cities. Stories. Scripts. Secrets.

Which one shocked you most? Image
And if you want more untold stories from the ancient world:

follow @CultureExploreX and click on the notification icon 🔔so you receive the latest threads in real time. The Capitoline Wolf, long considered an Etruscan bronze, feeding the twins Romulus and Remus.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Culture Explorer

Culture Explorer Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @CultureExploreX

Jun 5
We’re taught to see empire as evil.
Oppression. Exploitation. Nothing more.

But history doesn’t live in slogans.

Some empires-built libraries, roads, and laws that still shape our world.

So, here’s the uncomfortable question:
Were they ever a force for good? 🧵👇 Painting from the Empire Series by Thomas Cole.
Start with the British Empire.

It built railways. Linked continents. Turned cities like Bombay, Cairo, and Singapore into global hubs.

It claimed to spread order and progress.

But that wasn’t the full story. Peak: Late 19th/early 20th century.
Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus formerly Victoria Terminus in Mumbai, India.
A Colossus computer, developed by British codebreakers in 1943–1945
Image
It also brought famines, massacres, and apartheid-like systems.

Racial hierarchies were law. Wealth was extracted. Dissent was crushed.

It connected the world while dividing it.

Was it civilization… or control?

That depends on where you stood. Image
Read 16 tweets
Jun 4
When a civilization forgets what made it great, can it still survive?

Europe has traded faith for guilt, beauty for convenience, pride for apology.

Where is it heading now? 🧵👇 Duomo del Milano, Milan, Italy
This isn’t nostalgia.
It’s a warning.

Europe once led the world in art, architecture, music, and literature.

Now, it questions whether those things even matter.
Cathedrals once pointed toward the divine.
Now many are silent or repurposed into cafés and nightclubs.

The faith that moved mountains now struggles to light a single candle. Image
Image
Read 15 tweets
Jun 3
Many still associate Bucharest with gray communism and concrete blocks.

But that image hides the truth.

This city was once called “Little Paris” and its beauty never fully disappeared.

Today, it's one of Europe’s most underrated gems. Let me show you why... 🧵 Romanian Athenaeum Credit: designedtotravel.ro on IG
1. Romanian Athenaeum

A cultural temple where music and memory echo. Survived wars. Romanian Athenaeum is an elegant neoclassical concert hall that celebrates Romania's rich cultural heritage with its exquisite dome and lavish interiors.
2. CEC Palace

A glass dome and ornate façade, it’s a symbol of Bucharest’s Belle Époque movement. Photo by Capricon Traveller on Pinterest  pin/658370039307057221/
Read 20 tweets
Jun 1
For centuries, humans have killed for them.
Kings and Queens have flaunted them.
Thieves have risked everything to steal them.

But what makes a gemstone truly priceless?

Let’s explore 12 of the world’s most legendary gems and why they’re worth more than money...🧵 The Sovereign's Sceptre with Cross that is set with the largest of the Cullinan diamonds known as the Star of Africa or Cullinan I that weighs 530.2 carats. The Sceptre is part of the Crown Jewels. Image via: The Jewellery Editor
1. The Cullinan Diamond – $400M

The largest rough diamond ever found—3,106 carats.

It was so massive it was cut into 9 major stones. One now sits in the British royal scepter.

They called it “The Star of Africa.” Rightfully so. The Cullinan diamond, discovered in South Africa in 1905, weighed an unmatched 3,106 carats. It was cut into nine major gems and 96 smaller ones. The largest two—Cullinan I (530.20 ct) and Cullinan II (317.40 ct)—are part of the British Crown Jewels. The remaining major stones (Cullinan III–IX) were privately owned by Queen Elizabeth II and often worn as brooches. In 2023, Queen Consort Camilla honored the late queen by resetting Queen Mary’s Crown with the Cullinan III, IV, and V diamonds. A one-carat diamond is often shown for scale next to replicas of the Cullinan stones. Image: GIA
2. The Hope Diamond – $250M

It’s stunning, it’s cursed, and it’s seen centuries of power plays.

The 45.52-carat blue diamond once belonged to French royalty and was rumored to bring death to its owners.

Today, it rests in the Smithsonian, watched by 7M people a year. Image
Read 15 tweets
May 31
The Minnesota State Capitol has something no other in America can match:

The second-largest unsupported marble dome in the world.

Only the Pantheon in Rome is bigger. 🧵👇 Minnesota State Capitol, Saint Paul, MN Credit: The Beauty of St. Paul, MN on flickr
But it’s not just the dome.

Inside, every mural, ceiling, and staircase tells you:
This place matters.

It was designed to make you feel something—awe, duty, pride. Interior Minnesota State Capitol
That’s not a coincidence.

Architect Cass Gilbert studied in Europe and came back with a bold mission:

Build a temple of democracy that could rival the ancients. Interior Minnesota State Capitol
Read 20 tweets
May 31
He heard a voice.
He left his home.
He nearly killed his son.

Not for fame. Not for power.

But because he believed in a God no one else could see.
That man was Abraham.
And half the world still walks in his shadow. 🧵 Abraham and Isaac by Harold Copping
Abraham was born in ancient Ur, modern-day Iraq. A city glittering with idols, temples, and kings.

But he smashed the statues of his father’s gods.
He walked into the unknown, armed with nothing but a command:

"Go." Ancient Mesopotamia
He wandered through Mesopotamia and Canaan.
No map. No army. No heir.

Just a promise:
That his children would outnumber the stars—
And through them, the world would be blessed. Image
Read 15 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(