DOCUMENTARIES MAGICAL EGYPT TV series Derek

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Television Ad
168
2

Description

Passage from Magical Egypt second TV series

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Middle Aged (35-54)

Accents

British (England - South East - Oxford, Sussex) British (General) British (Received Pronunciation - RP, BBC)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
ancient Egypt holds a special place in the minds of so many because of its mystery. As time goes by and as more and more of nature's mysteries have yielded to scientific inquiry, this place, if anything, only becomes more mysterious. The more advanced we become, the more we can recognise in ancient Egypt a science and a level of intelligence that seems to defy rational explanation. In many ways, it seems more like something from the future and from the distant past. The promise of ancient Egypt for many lies in the ever present possibility off, recovering the knowledge of the past that empowered ancient man to express such wonders of his steady cultural and scientific genius, Egypt seems to speak in endless riddles, and for most of modern history, the secrets there have remained just out of reach, but only because we have not had the right keys that riddles are meant to be solved. The ancients were careful to leave clues behind that would help the earnest investigator or would be student of the ancient mysteries to unlock the riddle for themselves. The reason these ancient clues have alluded public attention all these years is because they were located in a place that few would think to look for them. They were hidden in plain sight. They were hidden in the art. In the original series of magical Egypt, we explored evidence that pointed to the existence of a missing chapter of human history and a missing chapter in human, scientific and intellectual life. In the new show, we will present a Siri's of watershed discoveries that hold the promise of reconnecting us to a mysterious body of knowledge that was thought to be lost to time.