what's usually overlooked is that the Scottish weren't that hard to invade after all, it was their landscape that made the land impossible and virtually useless to conquer. One powerful Roman general actually reached so far into Scotland that he was being offered peace treaties and land treaties and he could have invaded the whole of Scotland if he had continued. However because of his victories, he was becoming extreamly popular in Rome and the emperor feared a popular uprising against him so he recalled the general back to Rome before he could complete the invasion. Most historical sources fail to mention such factors though
"If there's one thing I've learned about Rome's invasion of Britain... A hairy, naked, screaming man wielding a blade can give even the most stalwart of attackers pause."
@@ishmaelforester9825 ummm…no? I’d call it an invasion when colonial powers invade an otherwise self-sufficient, independent, proud nation under the guise of “settlement”. Not enrichment, no.
I'd love to see the Yugoslavia Report: "Slobodan Milošević is offered what's called the Carrington Plan, which will make all the Yugoslav republics independent, but talks break down after he 'Slobodan' the proposal and refused to sign."
Did he just say Septimus Severus.... coz if he did.... I have been brought immense joy. Septimus Weasley is Ron Weasley's grandfather. And obviously Severus Snape
They could have done it but it would have required diverting Legions away from the Rhine & other more value provinces also being threatened, The rugged terrain in the highlands was not suited for their style of warfare & the country did not offer them much.
I remember on Masterpiece Theater Alistair Cooke quoted from a Roman document, which he claimed you don't scream about in Scotland is that the Romans never wanted Scotland. It might have had to do with the climate, after all they never went into Scandinavia or other Northern regions in Europe, but that is just my interpretation on the latter part.
Provincia Britannia (English: British Province; Welsh: Talaith Prydain), today known as Roman Britain, was a province of the Roman Empire from 43 to 409, spanning at its height in 160, the southern three-quarters of the island of Great Britain.
Before the Roman invasion, begun in 43, Iron Age Britain already had established cultural and economic links with continental Europe, but the Roman invaders introduced new developments in agriculture, urbanisation, industry and architecture. Beyond the first few decades after the initial invasion, Roman historians generally mention Britannia only in passing. Thus, most knowledge of Roman Britain has derived from archaeological investigations, and the epigraphic evidence lauding the Britannic achievements of an Emperor of Rome, such as Hadrian (r. 117-38) and Antoninus Pius (r. 138-61), whose walls demarcated the northern borders of Roman Britain.
Julius Caesar conducted the first Roman campaigns in Britain in 55 BC. The conquest did not begin until AD 43, in the reign of the Emperor Claudius. Following the conquest of the native Britons, a distinctive Romano-British culture emerged under provincial government, which, despite steadily extended territorial control northwards, was never able to exert definite control over Caledonia. The Romans demarcated the northern border of Britannia with Hadrian's Wall, completed around the year 128. Fourteen years later, in 142, the Romans extended the Britannic frontier northwards, to the Forth-Clyde line, where they constructed the Antonine Wall, but, after approximately twenty years, they then retreated to the border of Hadrian's Wall. Around the year 197, Rome divided Britannia into two provinces, Britannia Superior and Britannia Inferior; sometime after 305, Britannia was further divided, and made into an imperial diocese. For much of the later period of the Roman occupation, Britannia was subject to barbarian invasions and often came under the control of imperial usurpers and pretenders to the Roman Emperorship.
Roman officials departed from Britain around the year 410, which began the sub-Roman period (5th-6th centuries), but the legacy of the Roman Empire was felt for centuries in Britain.
@@jeffreygao3956 There has to be a precursor weapon that existed before Claymores, that lead the Scots to forged their swords longer and longer, until they reach Claymore's length.
@@kairinase The Scots were named after the Scotti, Irish raiders, the werent even in Britain at the time of the Romans, and not for 100 years or so after they left. Other than pirates and raiders, the Claymore wasnt invented until a thousand years after the romans left, the Picts were eventually conquered by the Scots and Alba was formed from Dal Riata and Pictonia.
@@antonytye3484 Real history aside, Suppose that you are a Hero or a Warrior or maybe a mere soldier whose common equipment and weapon provided by your force, does not fit you and your fighting style. You take your earnings, go to the local or distant blacksmith, and ask him to forge you a custom weapon. One that could make you more lethal and not belitteled by your opponents. After some measuring, The blacksmith suggested a long blade with two handed grip. You agree, he forged, and the long sword was born. As it gets more used, it became more popular. Now it's the common weapon for your clan. After a thousand years, that first long sword is lost. So there's no telling if there's a precursor weapon. People just find the en massed version that your clan used... not the first one that you ask the blacksmith to forge. That's why I claim that all weapon, have their precursors, only the historians cannot find it.
thats probably true, they didn't bother invading Ireland basically because it was too cold- they called it Hibernia, as in winter [although they sometimes call it Scotia, as that is where the Scots lived, some Scots later lived to it now Scotland, hence the name] it is because of this that Ireland and Scotland remained Celtic in their language and culture
considering it was he first ever invasion of Britain, people shouldn't be surprised it failed, plus the first invasion was more of a reconnaissance operation
It sure took awhile, but eventually Rome settled. This time when Roman Britain had Boudica who, if I wasn't always sided with the Romans, was a pretty awesome woman. When Boudica eventually lost, she cursed the ninth legion, which suffered many hardships, until it marched into the mountains to settle the Picts, and never came back.
Vikings never successfully invaded as they never took Wessex. Romans never took the 'kingdom of England.' They took English lands off the Celts so not the kingdom of England. Same with the Saxons and when did the dutch successfully invade and conquer England?
Vikings in Denmark and Norway, they settled in it after pillaging it, it doesn't matter if it was Celts or Anglo, they still conquered what is now England, and there were Celts in Scotland, how come the Romans couldn't take their land?
Ollie Tyler that would be the glorious revolution of 1688 when James the second was overthrown for showing catholic practices so Parliament conspired with the Protestant William the third (William of Orange king of the Netherlands (dutch)) to throw James out so William could take the throne and marry Mary he brought a fleet and an army with him to secure the throne beat James the seconds army and became joint monarch of Britain with his wife Mary it kinda counts as an invasion but he was invited by Parliament so it kinda counts
... and then the Angles, Jutes and Saxons arrived. More war with Celts, only this time the Germanics accomplish what the Romans could not, and establish permanent kingdoms. Several centuries later, BOOM. Medieval England.
Your so beloved island was a part of the celt world so when the romans came they faced celt and not the today anglo-saxons who are and were germans tribes frome today's Denmark who sailed to invade the island. Only Scots and Welsh people remained Celts on the island. And you know what the majority of the ancient Brittania population evacuated to come in today's Bretagne, in North-West France. So you have nothing to see with romans unlike french population who are the mixture of the roman-gallish-german culture, because the Franks wanted then to developp and so they chose to keep some of latin traditions.
Actually, the English today are just as celtic as the welsh, we have been one nation for many centuries, so you can shut you your fat french gob and go eat some frogs. All I see you doing is hating on the English in TH-cam.
"Romans go home" Subtle Python reference methinks...
My thoughts exactly!!
Romans they go the house??
"A series of emperors from Rome calling themselves "Roman emperors""
"But not for long!" -ThatGuyFromTheHHReport
Kacper Niemiec how dare you disrespect Bob Hale like that
It’s Bob Hale
DISGRACEFUL
DISGRACEFUL
Dylan66 bruh this comment was 5 years ago
Bob Hale is loveable crazy, and the looks on Sam's face are priceless.
"... A tried and tested combination of smooth talk and unimaginable violence."
what's usually overlooked is that the Scottish weren't that hard to invade after all, it was their landscape that made the land impossible and virtually useless to conquer. One powerful Roman general actually reached so far into Scotland that he was being offered peace treaties and land treaties and he could have invaded the whole of Scotland if he had continued. However because of his victories, he was becoming extreamly popular in Rome and the emperor feared a popular uprising against him so he recalled the general back to Rome before he could complete the invasion. Most historical sources fail to mention such factors though
Sources?
CB Viperess it’s true
@@harleyokeefe5193 Ah, great that clears things out
@@harleyokeefe5193 Sources: Trust me, mate.
Saroyus yep, clever
His aunt Jesse is 3m tall. That's like 9ft. She should play for the WNBA.
Maybe she does. With arms like oak trees, imagine the dunks she'd make.
"If there's one thing I've learned about Rome's invasion of Britain...
A hairy, naked, screaming man wielding a blade can give even the most stalwart of attackers pause."
This is all done in one take, just wanna put that out there
That's Bob Hale for ya, mate.
Yesss
He did walk offscreen for a bit though, so they had room for another take if they so desired.
These are amazing! Can't believe I'm only just discovering them.
Sam's face tho XD. Also I stan Bob, he's awesome
the most famous quote of Bob Hale "...BUT not for long!!!"
I'm learning so much!!!
and me
My class loved this video!!!!
An Assassin's Creed game set during Septimus's attempted invasion of the Highlands would be dope!!
fr fr
lol love little animations of the Scottish attacking the Romans
I love this guy
Same
This is why Im Proud of being British :)
'using the tried and tested method of smooth talk and unimaginable violence'
so true.
Method is so succesful usa still uses it.
Hail Bob!
Reply your answer:
Is this a news report on the Romans or a news report on his family?
Yes.
Ben McGuire
Both
Kinda late what you think?
It's odd that when Britain is invaded it's an "invasion", but it's "colonisation" when Britain invades others....at any rate, good clip.
How far are you going with that Alison? I'll call mass immigration into Britain an invasion and what do you call it? Enrichment?
Let them turn the colonial Britons out by spite, the colonial Africans and Asians better get off the Thames and Humber and out of England then.
@@ishmaelforester9825 ummm…no? I’d call it an invasion when colonial powers invade an otherwise self-sufficient, independent, proud nation under the guise of “settlement”.
Not enrichment, no.
and taking their noses with them
Lmao that's how Voldie lost his nose
'' But not for long !!! '' .... lvoe him .. xD
Go Scotland!!!
Or so we thought!
Honestly who needs comedy when you have “BUT NOT FOR LONG” and “HI, I’M A SHOUTY MAN
Yaaaaaassss
I mean.. that is as close as you can get to comedy XD
My grandpa learned some more history on the Romans FROM that vid
I'd love to see the Yugoslavia Report:
"Slobodan Milošević is offered what's called the Carrington Plan, which will make all the Yugoslav republics independent, but talks break down after he 'Slobodan' the proposal and refused to sign."
Did he just say Septimus Severus.... coz if he did.... I have been brought immense joy. Septimus Weasley is Ron Weasley's grandfather. And obviously Severus Snape
Yeshhhh
The original Bill Wurtz
They could have done it but it would have required diverting Legions away from the Rhine & other more value provinces also being threatened, The rugged terrain in the highlands was not suited for their style of warfare & the country did not offer them much.
Very informative and funny
Romans: invade Britain
Poor economy, Visigothic invaders and Saxons: allow us to introduce ourselves
So Cool!
SAYING THAT THE ROMANS WENT BACK TO ROME ITS LIKE SAYING AMERICANS WENT BACK TO ENGLAND.
? The Romans did go back to Rome as they needed the men to help defend the city from barbarians.....
@@Alucard-gt1zf Do you need a video
great video well explained
no, actually I got the word 'satis' from a story called venalicius in cambridge latin course book 1
This guy was doing oversimplified history before oversimplified history
This is a good video !!!!!👍👍👍
right? WROOONGGGGGG!!
But not for LOOONGGGGGG!!!
I guess the Gauls didn't want to get involved in all of that.
I remember on Masterpiece Theater Alistair Cooke quoted from a Roman document, which he claimed you don't scream about in Scotland is that the Romans never wanted Scotland. It might have had to do with the climate, after all they never went into Scandinavia or other Northern regions in Europe, but that is just my interpretation on the latter part.
I've noticed they repeat disproven myths a lot which is a shame since they're supposed to be educational.
There's about as much history on here as I have on my toast
Provincia Britannia (English: British Province; Welsh: Talaith Prydain), today known as Roman Britain, was a province of the Roman Empire from 43 to 409, spanning at its height in 160, the southern three-quarters of the island of Great Britain.
Before the Roman invasion, begun in 43, Iron Age Britain already had established cultural and economic links with continental Europe, but the Roman invaders introduced new developments in agriculture, urbanisation, industry and architecture. Beyond the first few decades after the initial invasion, Roman historians generally mention Britannia only in passing. Thus, most knowledge of Roman Britain has derived from archaeological investigations, and the epigraphic evidence lauding the Britannic achievements of an Emperor of Rome, such as Hadrian (r. 117-38) and Antoninus Pius (r. 138-61), whose walls demarcated the northern borders of Roman Britain.
Julius Caesar conducted the first Roman campaigns in Britain in 55 BC. The conquest did not begin until AD 43, in the reign of the Emperor Claudius. Following the conquest of the native Britons, a distinctive Romano-British culture emerged under provincial government, which, despite steadily extended territorial control northwards, was never able to exert definite control over Caledonia. The Romans demarcated the northern border of Britannia with Hadrian's Wall, completed around the year 128. Fourteen years later, in 142, the Romans extended the Britannic frontier northwards, to the Forth-Clyde line, where they constructed the Antonine Wall, but, after approximately twenty years, they then retreated to the border of Hadrian's Wall. Around the year 197, Rome divided Britannia into two provinces, Britannia Superior and Britannia Inferior; sometime after 305, Britannia was further divided, and made into an imperial diocese. For much of the later period of the Roman occupation, Britannia was subject to barbarian invasions and often came under the control of imperial usurpers and pretenders to the Roman Emperorship.
Roman officials departed from Britain around the year 410, which began the sub-Roman period (5th-6th centuries), but the legacy of the Roman Empire was felt for centuries in Britain.
Scottish Claymore are almost two meters in length, how could any Roman beat that?
I don’t know, but Bob’s aunt Jessie could. She’s 3m tall, you know, with arms like oak trees.
Claymores were only invented in 1400.
@@jeffreygao3956 There has to be a precursor weapon that existed before Claymores, that lead the Scots to forged their swords longer and longer, until they reach Claymore's length.
@@kairinase The Scots were named after the Scotti, Irish raiders, the werent even in Britain at the time of the Romans, and not for 100 years or so after they left. Other than pirates and raiders, the Claymore wasnt invented until a thousand years after the romans left, the Picts were eventually conquered by the Scots and Alba was formed from Dal Riata and Pictonia.
@@antonytye3484 Real history aside, Suppose that you are a Hero or a Warrior or maybe a mere soldier whose common equipment and weapon provided by your force, does not fit you and your fighting style.
You take your earnings, go to the local or distant blacksmith, and ask him to forge you a custom weapon. One that could make you more lethal and not belitteled by your opponents.
After some measuring, The blacksmith suggested a long blade with two handed grip. You agree, he forged, and the long sword was born.
As it gets more used, it became more popular. Now it's the common weapon for your clan.
After a thousand years, that first long sword is lost. So there's no telling if there's a precursor weapon. People just find the en massed version that your clan used... not the first one that you ask the blacksmith to forge.
That's why I claim that all weapon, have their precursors, only the historians cannot find it.
thats probably true, they didn't bother invading Ireland basically because it was too cold- they called it Hibernia, as in winter [although they sometimes call it Scotia, as that is where the Scots lived, some Scots later lived to it now Scotland, hence the name] it is because of this that Ireland and Scotland remained Celtic in their language and culture
considering it was he first ever invasion of Britain, people shouldn't be surprised it failed, plus the first invasion was more of a reconnaissance operation
It sure took awhile, but eventually Rome settled. This time when Roman Britain had Boudica who, if I wasn't always sided with the Romans, was a pretty awesome woman. When Boudica eventually lost, she cursed the ninth legion, which suffered many hardships, until it marched into the mountains to settle the Picts, and never came back.
It came back,as the Ninth Legion disappeared in the eastern part of the Empire, in Palestine or against the Parthian.
Didn't only part of it come back? I mean, they never reformed it.
Boudica's Celtic army ambushed the ninth legion while marching, effectively wiping it out. She lost to the 14th and 20th legions.
Remicas What happened to the ninth is up for debate among historians I think, in any case it vanished.
Britons AD0 aagh the Roman's are here!
Britons AD2022 Oo, the Roman's were here!
love this
that's what I was about to comment! Lol!
Bob Hale rocks!!!
I wanna see Bob Hale's Coronavirus report
"Satis est satis!"
So basically Donald Trump's foreign policy is from 120-odd AD...
Trousers made of bacon. Sounds lovely.
But Not for long!
1:34 Horray! Or boo depending on how you like to look at it.
You just got that from Google Translate.
But not for long !! 🤣🤣🤣
I guess anyone who tried to take Scotland had failed miserably, but other people have been able to take over England with little problems.
Hahahhahaha the Kingdom of England has only ever been successfully invaded once.
The Romans, Saxons, Normans, Vikings, Dutch, they all took over England.
Vikings never successfully invaded as they never took Wessex. Romans never took the 'kingdom of England.' They took English lands off the Celts so not the kingdom of England. Same with the Saxons and when did the dutch successfully invade and conquer England?
Vikings in Denmark and Norway, they settled in it after pillaging it, it doesn't matter if it was Celts or Anglo, they still conquered what is now England, and there were Celts in Scotland, how come the Romans couldn't take their land?
Ollie Tyler that would be the glorious revolution of 1688 when James the second was overthrown for showing catholic practices so Parliament conspired with the Protestant William the third (William of Orange king of the Netherlands (dutch)) to throw James out so William could take the throne and marry Mary he brought a fleet and an army with him to secure the throne beat James the seconds army and became joint monarch of Britain with his wife Mary it kinda counts as an invasion but he was invited by Parliament so it kinda counts
can someone pls tell me which season this is cos im tryna learn about the romans so someone pls tell me!
Hadrian loved walls
... and then the Angles, Jutes and Saxons arrived. More war with Celts, only this time the Germanics accomplish what the Romans could not, and establish permanent kingdoms. Several centuries later, BOOM. Medieval England.
Thanks people:)
There is a now-blocked account on Scratch called hhtvnews
are they related to the greeks?
Bong goes caligula
satis satis est!!1
so where did the romans come from then?
100bc, has laptop.
Your so beloved island was a part of the celt world so when the romans came they faced celt and not the today anglo-saxons who are and were germans tribes frome today's Denmark who sailed to invade the island. Only Scots and Welsh people remained Celts on the island. And you know what the majority of the ancient Brittania population evacuated to come in today's Bretagne, in North-West France. So you have nothing to see with romans unlike french population who are the mixture of the roman-gallish-german culture, because the Franks wanted then to developp and so they chose to keep some of latin traditions.
And the Scots came from north Ireland.
BROLYCURLYable
No. The Scottish are a mix of picts(From an un knowen orign) And Gaels from ireland.
Didn't the Gaels wipe out most of the Picts?
BROLYCURLYable
No. The Gaels and the picts joined together to form the Kingdom of alba.
Actually, the English today are just as celtic as the welsh, we have been one nation for many centuries, so you can shut you your fat french gob and go eat some frogs. All I see you doing is hating on the English in TH-cam.
People called Romanes they go the house.
and the greeks did the same about the same. egyptian math and medicine, phoenician writting system, mesopotamian governing and architecture.
what is that wall called ?
This is for history homework help and I realise now that I am very clueless as this made no sense with the speed
"No, Sir i" iPhone reference Bob?
"No siree" is what it was.
Siri wasn’t a thing back then.
you know theres a show that take place in a universe were ceasar won the battle called code geass
Its wrong to say the Romans went back to Rome, the Romans colonized Britain and the colonist remained in Britain.
Keith what the hell
But not for long!
It meant that the roman soldiers went back to rome.
what do you mean
What the HELL!!!!!!
Hadrien's Wall
what happended to the greeks?
But NOT FOR LONG !!!!
& that's the end of the video
BUT NOT FOR LOOOONG
But not for long
No siree... whoever that is
the wall was a bit stupid
Britain was conquered by Julius Caesar in BCE
If you went to school you wasted your time.
actually most did go back to rome in the end and on your first comment dont you mean english going back to england?
LOL love it :p
This is my history hw 😔
You should be grateful your teacher used the right video.
Man, what a man of culture.
No I mean seriously, what's with the sad emoji. This show is great!
It is funny
I lvoe him to .. xD