upvote
You might be interested in Guédelon Castle - a project to build a 13th century castle in France using our best guess at the resources and knowledge available at the time.
reply
There is an excellent documentary series about it, Secrets of the Castle [1], with historian Ruth Goodman and archeologist Peter Ginn taking part in the building and upkeep. Very old-fashioned but highly rewarding stuff, as are all their series, such as Victorian Farm.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secrets_of_the_Castle

reply
Going even further back in time, Kon-Tiki back in 1947 demonstrated it was indeed possible to travel on a balsa wood raft to get from South America to Polynesia, settling that part of the debate.

Of course, Heyerdahl's diffusion model was completely wrong, but that's a different topic.

reply
Incomplete, perhaps, and vastly oversimplified, but not "completely wrong"; the more genetic evidence we get, the more it appears that ancient people moved around much more than we used to think.

https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(14)...

reply
That's not Heyerdahl's diffusion model. From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thor_Heyerdahl

> The expedition was supposed to demonstrate that the legendary sun-worshiping red-haired, bearded, and white-skinned "Tiki people" from South America drifted and colonized Polynesia first, before actual Polynesian peoples. His hyperdiffusionist ideas on ancient cultures had been widely rejected by the scientific community, even before the expedition ....

> Heyerdahl's hypothesis was part of early Eurocentric hyperdiffusionism and the westerner disbelief that (non-white) "stone-age" peoples with "no math" could colonize islands separated by vast distances of ocean water, even against prevailing winds and currents. He rejected the highly skilled voyaging and navigating traditions of the Austronesian peoples and instead argued that Polynesia was settled from boats following the wind and currents for navigation from South America. ...

The genetic evidence does not support his theory.

Nor is it right to attribute the idea of a possible connection to Heyerdahl. Nordenskiöld wrote about "'Oceanian' Cultural Elements in South America" in 1931, https://archive.org/details/09-comparative-ethnographical-st...

> As is well known, we find in South America quite a number of culture elements of which parallels are found in Oceania.1 These we may call ’’Oceanian’’, although this certainly does not imply any proof that they have been imported into America from Oceania. These “Oceanian’’ culture elements may derive their origin from the crew of some weather-driven vessel, because the possibility of such having landed upon the coasts of America is not entirely to be disregarded, as Friederici has fairly convincingly shown.

> [p24]... Friederici has pointed out that there is much which speaks for the theory of weather-driven Oceanian vessels having reached America but nothing of their returning whence they came, or of Indians sailing westward and reaching any Oceanic island. It is important to note that all islands off the South American coast that cannot be seen from the mainland, such as the Galapagos, Juan Fernandez, etc., at the time of the discovery of America were uninhabited and, judging from everything, always had been so.

(I think the Friederici reference is "Zu den vorkolumbischen Verbindungen der Südsee-Völker mit Amerika" - "Regarding the pre-Columbian connections of the South Seas with America", 1929. Heyerdahl was born in 1914, so about 15 years old.)

As I recall, the prevailing hypothesis was that any contact came likely from the Pacific. Heyerdahl didn't believe that was possible, and it must have been the other way. People argued that South Americans didn't have the sailing ability to reach Polynesia. Heyerdahl demonstrated that opposing argument was incorrect, by doing it. That doesn't mean it must have happened.

So, no, Heyerdahl's hypothesis is completely wrong, and the new evidence we have more strongly support older hypotheses by others, which Heyerdahl disagreed with.

reply
The follow-up attempt in 1999 where the team succeeds in raising a large obelisk by slowly draining sand out of a pit underneath it is a great watch.
reply
Reminds me of the “Stonehenge in my backyard” guy.

https://youtu.be/jD-EMOhbJ9U

My proudest moment (perhaps) was changing a tire without a jack a hundred miles from anywhere. I couldn’t raise the car, but I could lower the ground!

reply