SumitPatil

SumitPatil 📽️ꜰɪʟᴍᴍᴀᴋᴇʀ ʙʏ ᴘᴀꜱꜱɪᴏɴ, ʜɪꜱᴛᴏʀʏ ʟᴏᴠᴇʀ ʙʏ ʜᴇᴀʀᴛ♥️
▶️ʏᴏᴜᴛᴜʙᴇ 2.5 ᴍɪʟʟɪᴏɴ +
mail - [email protected]

16/02/2026

In this video I am showing you the entrance of tunnel inside devgiri fort , for more videos follow my page

14/02/2026

this video is of naneghat, which was ancient trade route used centuries ago !

13/02/2026

This reel is about a personal experience at Prasannagad in Pune district. The place looks calm, but something felt off that day. I’m sharing exactly what happened, without adding drama—judge for yourself

12/02/2026

Those are wedge holes. Builders from the Vijayanagara Empire drilled or chiseled these slots, then hammered in wooden or iron wedges. When wooden wedges were soaked with water, they expanded and created pressure inside the rock. That controlled force cracked the granite in a straight line. No blasting. No machines. Just physics and patience

11/02/2026

11/02/2026

Orchha Fort has uneven steps because they were built for kings to mount horses and elephants easily, showing smart planning and practical design in ancient architecture

04/02/2026

In this travel vlog I am walking inside Purana Qila in Delhi and showing one very unusual ancient brick structure which many visitors do not notice. This place is known in history of many ancient civilizations and archaeologists still study this fort area to understand old settlements and early city life. When I saw this brick pattern closely it did not look like normal wall or floor, it looks like some planned design from old time but exact purpose is still not fully clear. Some experts say it can be part of ancient route, storage area, or foundation of forgotten structure from early historical period. During my travel across historical places in India I see many ruins, but this structure inside Purana Qila feels different and raises many questions about archaeology and lost layers of history under our feet

01/02/2026

While walking inside the palace area of Gwalior Fort, I noticed many small square shape cavities made in the walls, and this made me very curious. At first look they seem like simple holes, but when we learn history and old architecture, these details become very interesting. Many experts in archaeology and ancient architecture say such wall cavities were used to keep oil lamps, so light could spread in dark corridors and rooms during old times. Some historians also explain that these spaces helped in reducing the overall weight of thick stone walls, which is an important part of load balancing in ancient construction. At the same time, these shapes also break the plain surface of big walls and give a decorative look without extra carving. Exploring such hidden historical places during travel vlogs makes us understand that old builders were not only artists but also smart engineers. Gwalior Fort is one of those forgotten sites where ruins, stones, and small design details together tell the story of history, ancient civilizations, and how people lived and built strong structures along old routes and landscapes

31/01/2026

During my visit to Purana Qila in Delhi, I kept thinking about one old question many people talk about, was this place once the ancient city of Indraprastha from the Mahabharata. Today we see big stone walls and Mughal period structures, but archaeology studies show that this land was occupied long before medieval times. Excavations here found Painted Grey Ware pottery, which many historians connect with the period often linked to Mahabharata era, though it is still debated and not fully proven. Walking through these ruins feels like moving between layers of history, from ancient civilizations to later empires. As someone who makes travel vlogs about hidden historical places and forgotten sites, I find such locations very meaningful. They remind us that many modern cities stand over ancient routes and old settlements. Purana Qila is not just a fort, it is a landscape of continuous human life. When we explore such places, archaeology helps us ask better questions about our past, instead of only believing legends or rejecting them fully

30/01/2026

While walking through the ruins of Hampi, I came across something very interesting related to temple pillars. Many historians and archaeology experts believe that the smooth and perfectly shaped stone pillars seen in Vijayanagara temples may have been made using a kind of ancient lathe like device. It is hard to imagine today, but ancient civilizations had deep knowledge of stone working and mechanical skills. When you touch these pillars, you can see the round finish and even patterns that look like they were turned while rotating. This makes travel vlogs in such hidden historical places very exciting because history here is not only about kings and wars but also about technology. Hampi is one of those forgotten sites where ruins still speak about skill, planning, and creativity. Walking through these ancient routes and temple complexes, we slowly understand how advanced people were without modern machines. Exploring such places teaches us that archaeology is not only digging objects, but also understanding how people lived, built, and thought many centuries ago

इंग्लैंड के ऑक्सफोर्ड म्यूजियम में भगवान जगन्नाथ, बलभद्र और सुभद्रा की लकड़ी की प्राचीन मूर्तियां रखी हुई हैं, जिन्हें द...
30/01/2026

इंग्लैंड के ऑक्सफोर्ड म्यूजियम में भगवान जगन्नाथ, बलभद्र और सुभद्रा की लकड़ी की प्राचीन मूर्तियां रखी हुई हैं, जिन्हें देखकर ओडिशा की रहने वाली मीता महोपात्रा भावुक हो गईं। वो अब यूके में रहती हैं और जब उन्होंने म्यूजियम के अंदर य मूर्तियां देखीं, तो उन्होंने उस पल का वीडियो बनाकर शेयर किया । इतिहास के हिसाब से ये मूर्तियां 18वीं–19वीं सदी में कई बार यूरोप के म्यूजियमों तक पहुंची थीं, जहां उन्हें कला और धार्मिक विरासत के रूप में सुरक्षित रखा गया।

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