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History of Technology 5: Domestic Changes and Cultural Changes 14 Views


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Description:

Today, we're learning about domestic and cultural changes. Tomorrow, we'll be figuring out who let the dogs out. We teach the important things here at Shmoop.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:02

Small domestic changes are always connected to bigger cultural changes. [Map of the world]

00:07

It's like that old saying…"if you fart in Calcutta, there's going to be a tornado in Kansas."

00:12

…Isn't that a saying? Well it should be. [Tornado going round Kansas on the map]

00:14

Anyway, in the ancient world, new building materials, combined with a huge amount of

00:18

new wealth, meant that people had new thoughts about what a home could be. [Stacks of 100 dollar bills]

00:23

Basically, the idea of a dream home got a lot dreamier. [Man lying on his back dreaming]

00:27

Maybe a home could be more than a place for families to keep warm at night. [Woman asleep in bed]

00:31

Maybe it could be a communal structure where people lived, ate, and slept. [Pictures of people in their homes]

00:35

And guess what?

00:36

Sometimes dreams do come true.

00:38

Homes got more rooms, and each room had its own purpose. [Floor plan of a house]

00:42

No more eating where we slept. [Man falls over]

00:44

And not a moment too soon…those puddles of yak milk weren’t making for good sleeping companions.

00:50

People started hoarding possessions and material goods like hamsters hoard carrots. [People holding bags of stuff]

00:55

What?

00:56

Hamsters are invested in ocular health.

00:58

And different parts of the house started to be designated for different people… [Man and woman sticking post-it notes on the floor plan claiming parts of the house]

01:02

Like servants or masters, men or women, children or adults….you get the picture.

01:07

C'mon, it's not like men and women could hang out together.

01:10

Gross.

01:11

Cooties.

01:12

Now, not everybody in the ancient world lived in multi-room splendor. [Ancient ruins]

01:16

Both Romans and Greeks, for example, owned huge amounts of slaves. [Roman with 3 slaves]

01:20

And there’s no way that slaves lived in villas with their own bathhouses. [Dirty looking slave by a bath]

01:24

But hey, that's another cultural change, isn't it?

01:27

Housing started to be a strong dividing line between the poor and the wealthy, with rich

01:31

guys getting the ancient equivalent of the penthouse. [Rich people living above the poor]

01:34

Now, onto the Medieval age, which unsurprisingly was a sluggish pit of non-invention. [Slug crawls across the front gate of some houses]

01:41

Everybody was too busy dying of the plague. [People drop dead]

01:44

Boring.

01:45

But in the industrial age, an explosion of new materials hit the scene. [An explosion on a factory]

01:48

Let's go over the biggies.

01:50

First, brickmaking became standardized and industrial. [Man stood next to pile of bricks]

01:53

That meant there were machines to mold the clay into exactly the same sizes and shapes, [Bricks land on top of a man waiting for them to come out the mold]

01:58

and ginormous kilns that could bake thousands of bricks at once. [Bricks continue to cover the man on the floor]

02:02

Then we've got glass.

02:04

Unless you live in an underground bunker, your house probably has windows. [Man with foil on his head climbs into an underground bunker]

02:09

But for most of human history, glass was mega hard to make.

02:13

This made it mega expensive.

02:15

Like "selling body parts to afford it" expensive. [Man missing an arm looking out a window]

02:19

Glassmaking involved finding chunks of quartz, melting them over a super hot fire, and slowly

02:26

forming it into the desired shape. [Glassmaker working over a kiln]

02:29

And, P.S., glass is fragile.

02:31

So yeah, definitely not an easy task. [The glass that is being worked on smashes]

02:33

But in the 1840s, some dudes figured out how to melt a lot of glass at once and toss it

02:38

onto a big iron slab.

02:40

Then they used a giant iron roller to smoosh it out and make it perfectly even. [Worker pushes iron roller over molten glass]

02:46

And tahdah!

02:47

An easy, quicker way to make glass.

02:49

And yes, "smoosh" is a technical term.

02:52

They had big, clear pieces of glass, called plate glass. [Skyscrapers with all glass structures]

02:56

It was perfect for windows, or giant show-off-y buildings made entirely of glass.

03:02

But neither bricks nor glass alone are going to build a skyscraper.

03:05

For the massively tall and heavy buildings that we think of as modern, we needed an entirely [Picture of a modern city]

03:11

new kind of building material: steel. [Steel rods]

03:14

Steel, remember, is very pure, very strong iron, and until the 20th century, it was very, [Man reading a book on how to make steel]

03:20

very difficult to make.

03:22

Back in the day, nobody was saying to themselves…

03:25

"Hey, let's build a huge building out of this stuff. [Two men in front of house covered in diamonds]

03:28

And then, what the hey, we'll make one out of diamonds!"

03:31

Because past humans weren't crazy.

03:34

In the 1850s, the Bessemer process was invented. [Bessemer furnace]

03:38

Basically, the Bessemer process involved firing a whole bunch of air into the molten iron,

03:44

which encouraged oxidation and got rid of carbon.

03:48

With a little more equipment, people could manufacture high-quality steel almost as easily as iron. [Steel rods]

03:54

Steel could support massive amounts of weight after it was shaped into the appropriate shape, [Man hammering molten steel]

03:59

that turned out to be I-beams.

04:02

Those are basically beams shaped like I’s.

04:04

…the letter I.

04:05

Why on earth would it be shaped like an eye-ball… [Man is confused as molten steel looks like an eye ball]

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