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Thank you very much. This needed to be done. I have never seen anything this comprehensive about the ancient roots of my people. You have made a great contribution to history
Far more coverage than any History channel documentary. I like how you covered post Roman occupation. Most medieval history picks up at the Age of Vikings. Very well done.
You are phenomenal. Please don't stop producing this type of content. It has done good to many who want to truly study history. Thank you for everything!
So nice having the source material come alive on screen with these amazing illustrations. The writer is honing his craft I see;) So many unexpected comedic relief points this is truly a masterpiece
It's always a blast to be able to learn about the ancient cultures of the past, especially the more obscure and mysterious ones like the Celtic ones, and even more so the Britons with their unique fusion culture they adopted later on in the days of the Roman Empire! ❤️🔥
Ah, I love this stuff so much. Before the Romans even set foot on British soil, there was over 1,200 years of history. Kingdoms and battles and lovers and betrayels. All of it. I wish the Celts wrote down or documented these, but we have awesome artefacts like hillforts and hoards. And then we have standing stones like Stonehenge which was 2,000 years before the Celts even stepped onto Britain!
We only have limited information to go off of unfortunately, usually imperial scribes writing about them, not much actual source code from Celts. Publius Tacitus wrote that a man from Briton could speak to a man from Anatolia with no language barrier for hundreds of years. Leads me to believe that while "Celts" or "Gauls" or "Goths" never considered themselves as such, there was a sort of anti-empire tribal understanding that preserved language and culture against the Greek and Roman empires of antiquity. It's like.. they weren't working together, but they hated the empires more than each other and over hundreds of years certain customs became universal.
By that logic Africa has much older history than Britain lol Plus Stonehenge is not a impressive monument There are many such monuments everywhere in the world
Loved this. An amazing encapsulation of British history. I'd love to see a similar history picking up where this one ends. Excellent work! Much appreciated.
Seriously, thank you for these long form documentaries. I love them. It's very obvious you put a lot of effort into the writing and it clearly shows. Great content.
@@waqstar7067 don't let your war charriots unguarded don't flog a tribal queen and abuse her daughters Caesar’s hot girl summer in Kent, but it didn't last long
Magnificent panorama of the Ancient Britons, I learnt more in 2.5 hours than in all of my school years. I wish I had watched K and G 50 years ago. Amazing quality and fantastic narration. The Roman palace in the South is Fishbourne, it has been excavated and is a marvellous thing to visit. Well done and thank you.
I learnt absolutely nothing about our ancient history when I was at school. The earliest they taught was the Norman invasion in 1066 but before that nothing.
@@Heatwave9000ours started with American history basically. Maybe a short run on ki ga a Queens an such. You have to take special classes in college level schools to learn about it now.
This documentary did a fantastic job of coherently linking the ancient continental celts with the Britons that descended from them, leading up to the clashes with the Anglo-Saxons which transitions somewhat neatly into the Normans and modern times. And it was even a little cheekier than normal. Combined with the other long-format documentary on the continental Celts, this is the most comprehensive history I've ever seen of the people who helped shape Rome and were the forefathers of the people who became the Irish. You have my deepest thanks for your efforts here.
Where the heck did you get the idea that Britons descended from continental Celts ? Much of the British Celtic monuments pre-dates anything found in France.
Thank you guys for another outstanding documentary. I love these long form episodes. That line about finishing your Wales before you can have Scotland cracked me up by the way lol. God be with you out there everybody. ✝️ :)
I'm only commenting because it was probably a lot of work, and the quality is great! This is the most comprehensive documentary I've seen on TH-cam on this subject and I need more! I'll be waiting for the 2 hour sequel about the british middle ages!
Excellent, thorough and comprehensive and compelling narrative. One of the best you can get anywhere of Britain before during and after Roman occupation.
English is an interesting language and reflects all the conquests described in this video. Modern English is based on the Germanic language of the Anglo-Saxons, but also include elements of the original Celtic Britons, Latin from the Roman conquest, Danish from the Viking invasions, and French from the Norman conquest.
Bob Quinn, an Irish historian, author and film maker pre-figured all the 'Atlantic Celtic Studies' with his book 'Atlantean' which he later turned into a series of films around the late 1990's/early 2000's.
@@Heatwave9000 as Indo Europeans yeah but it seems like the millennia apart had caused some noticeable differences. I think they have different variations of admixture and genetics too, for example most Celts carry predominantly R1b whereas it's mainly I1 for Germanic speakers
I love all the pop culture references you make throughout the video. I was also greatly amused by the Romans chanting, "Io, Saturnalia" when being led by a former slave. It was like an ancient form of memeing.
Been reading Coming of the King, by Nikolai Tolstoy. It's a tough read but packed to bursting with Celtic and Welsh mythological references. Looking forward to this, hoping it will really put the myths into perspective.
This channel is one of my fav History channels . Brilliant doc. We always appreciate your hard work time and dedication towards these videos. We know it take lot of time and lot of hard work. A huge fan of you from Sri Lanka ❤️.
A few weeks ago I was already wondering if you'd do this. Amazing work as always. I myself got the chance to visit Hadrian's wall last May - even got the chance to cosplay as a Roman soldier. Roman conquest of Hispania when?
Cosplaying as roman soldier there sounds super cool, I hope to visit there this year, could you please share where that was? Unless it's a common tourist attraction everywhere there lmao
Really great work as always guys, and the latest visual improvements are awesome! However, although I am not a historian and realise the Romans were influential on British history, a *lot* of this video is devoted to Roman Britain. It would have been nice to see more about the evolution of the Celtic (sorry if that isn't the right term!) kingdoms, cultures, and languages, after Rome left and through the Medieval era, seeing as what little there was in this video is so interesting.
There is a knowledge gap. Most of what we know about Britain of the era is from the Romans. Our next series - check the description, talks about the Britons after the Romans were gone in more detail.
@@masterofthejuice9981 As a Welshman myself I can attest to this, almost nothing is known of the period between the Romans leaving the British Isles and the arrival of the Anglo Saxons. There are a few bits recorded here and there, but most of it has, unfortunately, been lost to history.
I live in Chichester, formerly Noviomagus Reginorum. The Roman walls are still very intact and well worth a walk around. The cricket wicket in Priory Park was built directly above and running parallel with one of the main Roman shopping streets!
Love to hear about the ancient history of my home, I have lived in Ramsgate all my life and Pegwell Bay today is a well preserved nature reserve for nesting birds. It’s a lovely place to go for a walk just don’t hit the nature reserve. To think that 2100 years ago it was the site of Roman Eagles landing on the shore of Britain to now being the well protected site for Turtle Doves and other nesting birds strikes a stark contrast. Thank you for this excellent video. There is the Replica Hugin Viking Longboat about half a mile up the coast from Pegwell Bay in Cliffsend which was gifted by the Danish in 1949 to commemorate 1500 years since the Anglo-Saxon invasion and there is a sign near it saying Kent Welcomes Viking Invaders as a dual historical reference. As well, the town of Ramsgate is the site where St Augustine brought Christianity to the British Isles. Our little corner of the country is steep with important pivotal national history but we scarcely advertise it. Hopefully that will change in years to come.
@@pronounshismajesty3542 no they're also predominantly Celtic actually, they were assimilated into the minority Anglo-saxon culture by conquest. Brittanians might be more Celtic but it the english are still predominantly Celtic
We’ve been loving these Celtic peoples videos- would you ever be able to drop into the history of the Cornish? Or maybe lump it with a Manx/Cornish/Cumbric video? We’re feeling a bit left out!
Looking forward for a video on our Celtic brothers too! Manx, a Q-Celtic language (related to Irish & Scottish Gaelic), is the home of Kingdom of the Sea! 🇮🇲
Id say a well done job here lads, the memes could be a bit jarring, bit they were used sparringly enough to not derail the video's tone and in very appropriate situations, keep on the grind
Nice touch of tolkiens admiration for the celtic heritage which shows in LOTR, real history is as fantastical and in a way as magickal as the fantasy world he has created in LOTR
I’ve heard that Hadrian’s wall may also have served as a very long trading post, making it an easier way of acquiring Greco- Roman goods than outright raiding.
I`m Welsh and to me Arthur comes from arth, meaning bear, so it`s possible it was a nickname for a great warrior and not just one single person. Also around 536, there was a huge volcanic explosion in the Indonesian region which greatly affected crop yields across the world which would have also held up anglo-saxon expansion.
Also being Welsh you have heard of yma o hyd! Magnus Maximus Welsh: Macsen Wledig 383 to 388 was the Roman Emperor that thought for us against the invasions The Dream of Emperor Maximus), where he not only marries a wondrous British woman (thus making British descendants probable), but also gives her father sovereignty over Britain (thus formally transferring authority from Rome back to the Britons themselves). The earliest Welsh genealogies give Maximus (referred to as Macsen/Maxen Wledig, or Emperor Maximus) the role of founding father of the dynasties of several medieval Welsh kingdoms, including those of Powys and Gwent. He is given as the ancestor of a Welsh king on the Pillar of Eliseg, erected nearly 500 years after he left Britain, and he figures in lists of the Fifteen Tribes of Wales Also to let you know magnus maximus was great great grand father to King Arthur
There is some evidence that some groups of "britons" speaking some form of brythonic might of still been around in Eastern England in the late saxon or early Norman periods. And the place names in doomsday book imply some in western England although that could have been old English speakers still using Celtic based names... In the North, Cumbric seems to have lasted to around that period in reasonable use (apparently some farmers might still use a form for counting sheep)
These videos are truly fascinating, keep up the good work! 13:54 "And then got UNO reversed by rome." These lines are, together with all the memes, just amazing😂
@@KingsandGenerals Are there enough historical sources to have such information? Sounds very interesting! Although, I would like to see a more detailed description for their way of life and development since most videos are mostly describing battles. Thank you for answering and thank you for your work!
Most celtic peoples believed in reincarnation as well. It's one of the major reasons why the romans stomped out the druids. Belief in reincarnation made celtic warriors too rebellious.
Really.....it was more to do with the excuse using the Druidic practice of human sacrifice that was abhorant to the Romans, but rather the power held by the Druids in the Celtic tribes and the fact that they were a glue between different tribes, so therefore did not benefit the Roman normality of divide and conquer. The Druids believed in Rebirth rather than reincarnation.....and reason why badly sick people were euthanised, and only after the creation of modern Druidism was reincarnation referred to.
I love listening to this dialog exponentially going off the rails in chaos. "Ceasars hot girl summer in kent." fucks sake! I'm dying harder than the druids 😂
Thanks for this. Very interesting and comprehensive. A minor observation is that Cardiff seems to have shifted at least 100 miles North on your map at 2:24.
At 2:14:04 It was not the WESTERN half of England that was firmly in the hands of Angles, Saxon & Jutes, it was the EASTERN half. The region known as East Anglia, gives the game away.
I just got my mind blown. Buddha was born ~550BC in Nepal and if the Hallstatt D age is correct at 600 BC that means these two events were contemporary. Furthermore while the British isles were being populated by ancient Celts Sri Lanka was being populated by ancestors Bengal or then Magadh region. THAT IS ABSOLUTELY WILD!!
@@Sajangrg69 Yes i know was thinking of the entire region. Both Nepal and India as nations didnt exist back then. They were all individual ganasanghas in the mahajanapada period.
Hadrians wall was merely a herding boundary in parts. Probably more of a regulation point for tolling main roads in. It was not a formidable or massive defensive structure like the Great Wall by any means. What a video, thanks a million for outing this together! I couldn’t imagine the effort this took you and your team. Cheers
As much as I enjoyed this, I feel like Caractacus could have gotten a bit more press here as he's always forgotten about in favour of Boudicca. He fought an effective gurrilla war against the Romans for 7 years. This is unfortunately a forgotten part of the protracted conflict that persisted in the frontier following Plautius' invasion. His nemsis (so to speak), Scapula, died of stress likely caused by the pressure that was on his shoulders to end the resistance.
Difference is that one was an irritation and the other put fear into them by attacking and burning London down....but more importantly that one had more information that survived through to today than the other.
Yeah I agree, first couple i did a double take (the tik tok reference), but ignored it. The "Cassivellaunus' fast and furious street racers" and "tokyo drifted away" was when it started to get on my nerves. Doesn't ruin it by any means, still excellent, but it strikes me as unnecessary. Tell the script writer to give it a rest! :)
I've lived here, in Colchester, for decades mate. We have an enormous amount of Roman artifacts, buildings and actually, there are quite a lot of sections of the Roman wall and gateways which surround the town. The Norman Castle, which is the largest in Europe by the way, is built on top of the older Roman structure which had the famous temple that burnt down. Oh, and lastly......... there's also a lot of roads in numerous areas of the town which are named after the Iceni tribe, our warrior Queen etc and then there's even more Roman themed roads as well.
Conquer with Greece. Rise to Greatness. Download Rise of Kingdoms: bit.ly/GreeceRoK_KaG Join the amazing Civilization Clash Event: www.rok.games/?kol=KingsandGenerals, vote for the most powerful civilization to win amazing awards like Apple Vision Pro, Sony PS5 and Nintendo Switch OLED! Use promo code GREECE4ROK and get 20 SILVER KEYS!
British isles and Ireland.
(Don't)
I need to know more about khusan empire. How was rise and fall.Plz make a detail video about khusan empire...
Muslim history please. I am waiting for it
#KingsandGenerals I started laughing bad seeing Julius Caesar having Twitch Steamer on his statues head is hilarious. 🤣🤣🤣😂
How did you misplace cardiff in 20:33
Thank you very much. This needed to be done. I have never seen anything this comprehensive about the ancient roots of my people. You have made a great contribution to history
Opp myr skröppel ab da skribbildibab mösenmemmsch
Welsh?
@@covidwasaconShut your mouth and take your meds
You might be interested in the British History Podcast :)
"Cunk on Britain" is another important source for British history, albeit in a different angle of presentation.
Far more coverage than any History channel documentary. I like how you covered post Roman occupation. Most medieval history picks up at the Age of Vikings. Very well done.
That's because Medieval History starts in the Medieval era.This is Bronze age, Iron age and Dark age History.
@@Polycarp-g6zyes there's bit of ignorance going on
Coverage but we're any salient points made
You are phenomenal. Please don't stop producing this type of content. It has done good to many who want to truly study history. Thank you for everything!
So nice having the source material come alive on screen with these amazing illustrations. The writer is honing his craft I see;) So many unexpected comedic relief points this is truly a masterpiece
PLOT TWIST: Tacitus was said to have Celtic blood!
Yes indeed Mr Barwick! Yes indeed!
Ashton. Granpappy got into the baked beans and shit all over himself
What source material
@@waqstar7067 the source material was baked beans and the output was my bung hole all over the couch
It's always a blast to be able to learn about the ancient cultures of the past, especially the more obscure and mysterious ones like the Celtic ones, and even more so the Britons with their unique fusion culture they adopted later on in the days of the Roman Empire! ❤️🔥
Britons have a romance to them I love.
@@BOZ_11guess you didn't bother watching this then? .Shame given the effort put into.capturing and sharing so much knowledge
@@BOZ_11So the accounts of a Leader on his enemies that he thought were lesser
Dosn't sound like a biased source at all
the roman empire adopted the greek culture and civilization and not the inferior culture of the british.
@@BOZ_11 rude😂 what is your ethnicity
I never thought I would hear the narrator say the words “whoever the heck they were” or “hunky dory”. I love it
Thank you! Ancient British history is one of my favorite things to learn about
Ah, I love this stuff so much.
Before the Romans even set foot on British soil, there was over 1,200 years of history. Kingdoms and battles and lovers and betrayels. All of it. I wish the Celts wrote down or documented these, but we have awesome artefacts like hillforts and hoards.
And then we have standing stones like Stonehenge which was 2,000 years before the Celts even stepped onto Britain!
We only have limited information to go off of unfortunately, usually imperial scribes writing about them, not much actual source code from Celts. Publius Tacitus wrote that a man from Briton could speak to a man from Anatolia with no language barrier for hundreds of years. Leads me to believe that while "Celts" or "Gauls" or "Goths" never considered themselves as such, there was a sort of anti-empire tribal understanding that preserved language and culture against the Greek and Roman empires of antiquity. It's like.. they weren't working together, but they hated the empires more than each other and over hundreds of years certain customs became universal.
Papa Westry in Scotland is 3500 BC while Stone Hedge is 2500 years BC gues the Scots have the oldest monument!
@@BOZ_11but much less people and cleaner environments....which must have helped
By that logic Africa has much older history than Britain lol
Plus Stonehenge is not a impressive monument
There are many such monuments everywhere in the world
Cope harder. @@Ankit-d9f4u
Loved this. An amazing encapsulation of British history. I'd love to see a similar history picking up where this one ends. Excellent work! Much appreciated.
Britain is just a great Celtic nation with a wonderful history and great scientific achievements!
Seriously, thank you for these long form documentaries. I love them. It's very obvious you put a lot of effort into the writing and it clearly shows. Great content.
Three points that you learnt?
@@waqstar7067 don't let your war charriots unguarded
don't flog a tribal queen and abuse her daughters
Caesar’s hot girl summer in Kent, but it didn't last long
Magnificent panorama of the Ancient Britons, I learnt more in 2.5 hours than in all of my school years. I wish I had watched K and G 50 years ago. Amazing quality and fantastic narration. The Roman palace in the South is Fishbourne, it has been excavated and is a marvellous thing to visit. Well done and thank you.
“Caesar’s hot girl summer in Kent” was a masterpiece, if I ever become a history teacher I’ll steal that
😂 Should!
Its crazy how this history isn't talked about more often it's amazing
We don't learn about the Russian Holocaust either
I learnt absolutely nothing about our ancient history when I was at school. The earliest they taught was the Norman invasion in 1066 but before that nothing.
@@Hoonificnor the holodomor.
@@Heatwave9000ours started with American history basically. Maybe a short run on ki ga a Queens an such. You have to take special classes in college level schools to learn about it now.
This documentary did a fantastic job of coherently linking the ancient continental celts with the Britons that descended from them, leading up to the clashes with the Anglo-Saxons which transitions somewhat neatly into the Normans and modern times.
And it was even a little cheekier than normal.
Combined with the other long-format documentary on the continental Celts, this is the most comprehensive history I've ever seen of the people who helped shape Rome and were the forefathers of the people who became the Irish.
You have my deepest thanks for your efforts here.
Where the heck did you get the idea that Britons descended from continental Celts ? Much of the British Celtic monuments pre-dates anything found in France.
"Marauding Sea People, whoever the heck they were" A pretty good way of describing a people we know basically nothing about 😂
Sea peoples were whites from the holy lands, also greeks
The earliest wave of phonecian pples
@@Jennifer-bj6ow That's one of the proposed theories yes
@@Jennifer-bj6ow Philistines.
@@richardscanlan3419the philistines were the named people of the Roman inhabitants of Jerusalem in Israel. in short they are just Roman’s
2 hours of documentary from a great history channel about a historic people that I'm really fascinated by? I need to make some time for this.
Everyone gangsta till the britons start tokyo drifting with chariots
The storytelling in this ancient history documentary is top-notch. It's like watching history unfold before your eyes!
You guys should make these complete histories into podcast episodes on another platform so I can listen to them at work. Great as always.
Upgrade to TH-cam Premium, can switch to podcast mode and no ads 👍
@@benpaterson377 You're right. I'm used to the old world method of moving platforms. 😂
Oh, this is my afternoon sorted! My favourite period of history and one of my favourite historians!
Thank you guys for another outstanding documentary. I love these long form episodes. That line about finishing your Wales before you can have Scotland cracked me up by the way lol.
God be with you out there everybody. ✝️ :)
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
Worse system have been tried. And not so long ago, the British system was quite similar.
@@str.77 it’s a monty python quote
@@str.77 Whooshhh
@@jordanvangundy975 I know, I know.
That's right! Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.
I'm only commenting because it was probably a lot of work, and the quality is great! This is the most comprehensive documentary I've seen on TH-cam on this subject and I need more! I'll be waiting for the 2 hour sequel about the british middle ages!
Excellent, thorough and comprehensive and compelling narrative. One of the best you can get anywhere of Britain before during and after Roman occupation.
I'm from the horn of Africa and I find Celtic history and culture unique and fascinating, cool stuff
The horn of Africa was the start of migration for human beings from Africa to the rest of the world, including Britain!
@SolracCAP I appreciate you for acknowledging this, most people don't know that❤️💪🏾
I am SO EXCITED for this series! Thank you KAG!
English is an interesting language and reflects all the conquests described in this video. Modern English is based on the Germanic language of the Anglo-Saxons, but also include elements of the original Celtic Britons, Latin from the Roman conquest, Danish from the Viking invasions, and French from the Norman conquest.
Bob Quinn, an Irish historian, author and film maker pre-figured all the 'Atlantic Celtic Studies' with his book 'Atlantean' which he later turned into a series of films around the late 1990's/early 2000's.
Honestly, this and the celtic video are my favorite videos here. its nice to learn about my non-saxon ancestors in such a detailed lens
Is there a clearly noticeable phenotypic difference between descendants of Celts as opposed to Germanic people? I seem to notice it
@@NoRockinMansLand Aren't they from the same area?
@@Heatwave9000 as Indo Europeans yeah but it seems like the millennia apart had caused some noticeable differences. I think they have different variations of admixture and genetics too, for example most Celts carry predominantly R1b whereas it's mainly I1 for Germanic speakers
What did u learn?
@@waqstar7067 guard your goddamn war chariots
I love all the pop culture references you make throughout the video.
I was also greatly amused by the Romans chanting, "Io, Saturnalia" when being led by a former slave. It was like an ancient form of memeing.
Been reading Coming of the King, by Nikolai Tolstoy.
It's a tough read but packed to bursting with Celtic and Welsh mythological references.
Looking forward to this, hoping it will really put the myths into perspective.
Is it any good?
What's it about?
This channel is one of my fav History channels . Brilliant doc. We always appreciate your hard work time and dedication towards these videos. We know it take lot of time and lot of hard work. A huge fan of you from Sri Lanka ❤️.
oh yes please, 2 1/2 hours of high quality history content? thank you!
Spectacular. Thank you so much, this was such a fascinating and gripping documentary.
A day off with no errands for once, now with 2+hrs of quality content. Blessings be and thanks
What a documentary, maybe the best on here I have ever watched
A few weeks ago I was already wondering if you'd do this. Amazing work as always. I myself got the chance to visit Hadrian's wall last May - even got the chance to cosplay as a Roman soldier.
Roman conquest of Hispania when?
The conquest of Iberia started with Carthage, they laid the foundation for the Roman's to take over the place.
Cosplaying as roman soldier there sounds super cool, I hope to visit there this year, could you please share where that was?
Unless it's a common tourist attraction everywhere there lmao
@@freddekl1102 I believe it was the museum near the Chesters Roman Fort.
I've never seen a more detailed documentary on the origins of my nation
I’ve learned more from this ancient history documentary than I ever did in school. Incredible!
For the end, read Bernard Cornwell's Warlord chronicles.
He's the person who wrote Sharpe.
Super excited for this one 🍀
Really great work as always guys, and the latest visual improvements are awesome! However, although I am not a historian and realise the Romans were influential on British history, a *lot* of this video is devoted to Roman Britain. It would have been nice to see more about the evolution of the Celtic (sorry if that isn't the right term!) kingdoms, cultures, and languages, after Rome left and through the Medieval era, seeing as what little there was in this video is so interesting.
There is a knowledge gap. Most of what we know about Britain of the era is from the Romans. Our next series - check the description, talks about the Britons after the Romans were gone in more detail.
@@KingsandGenerals Ah, that makes sense. Thanks for the quick reply!
@@masterofthejuice9981 As a Welshman myself I can attest to this, almost nothing is known of the period between the Romans leaving the British Isles and the arrival of the Anglo Saxons. There are a few bits recorded here and there, but most of it has, unfortunately, been lost to history.
@@alganhar1 goddamit celtic habit of not leaving written records behind
Wow, this is so great! I hope to see this continued in this format!
You guys making history more enjoyable
Ahh finally. What a great video thank you
Wow, an impressive documentary!
I've watched many, but this ancient history documentary stands out for its depth and clarity. Fantastic work! 📜🕵♂
The Bronze Age and Neolithic period would be an interesting thing to cover as well. There was a lot of activity in the British Isles.
Amazing piece of work. I can watch your videos for hours ❤
How lucky we are to have this content for free
This was really good. Thank you.
The Kings and Generals logos over each of the Celtic Pelvic Swords is peak K&G animation.
I live in Chichester, formerly Noviomagus Reginorum. The Roman walls are still very intact and well worth a walk around. The cricket wicket in Priory Park was built directly above and running parallel with one of the main Roman shopping streets!
Love to hear about the ancient history of my home, I have lived in Ramsgate all my life and Pegwell Bay today is a well preserved nature reserve for nesting birds. It’s a lovely place to go for a walk just don’t hit the nature reserve. To think that 2100 years ago it was the site of Roman Eagles landing on the shore of Britain to now being the well protected site for Turtle Doves and other nesting birds strikes a stark contrast. Thank you for this excellent video. There is the Replica Hugin Viking Longboat about half a mile up the coast from Pegwell Bay in Cliffsend which was gifted by the Danish in 1949 to commemorate 1500 years since the Anglo-Saxon invasion and there is a sign near it saying Kent Welcomes Viking Invaders as a dual historical reference. As well, the town of Ramsgate is the site where St Augustine brought Christianity to the British Isles. Our little corner of the country is steep with important pivotal national history but we scarcely advertise it. Hopefully that will change in years to come.
Thank you. I love your work. This era is especially mysterious to me. You gave me a lot to think about.
Given the normal seriousness, hearing the narrator say "whoever the heck they were" at 9:03 is extremely funny to me
This is such a fantastic, clear, and deep but understandable history. (British) school kids would absolutely benefit from seeing this. Thanks so much!
The average Brit is less Celtic than the average Frenchman in Brittany (genetically)
yeah you are right, but that does not mean British kids would not benefit from seeing this :)
@@pronounshismajesty3542 lies
@@NoRockinMansLand Britains how are mainly Germanic/Nordic/Celtic. The Frenchman of Brittany are pure celrs
@@pronounshismajesty3542 no they're also predominantly Celtic actually, they were assimilated into the minority Anglo-saxon culture by conquest. Brittanians might be more Celtic but it the english are still predominantly Celtic
We’ve been loving these Celtic peoples videos- would you ever be able to drop into the history of the Cornish? Or maybe lump it with a Manx/Cornish/Cumbric video? We’re feeling a bit left out!
Looking forward for a video on our Celtic brothers too! Manx, a Q-Celtic language (related to Irish & Scottish Gaelic), is the home of Kingdom of the Sea!
🇮🇲
This was an amazing video! Keep up the awesome work probably one of the best documentaries, I would love to see a video like this but on Ireland
Similar ancestory. Where they ran to
Pre-Roman Britton has always fascinated me
Absolutely incredible stuff being made here.
Id say a well done job here lads, the memes could be a bit jarring, bit they were used sparringly enough to not derail the video's tone and in very appropriate situations, keep on the grind
I must say, This is one of the best docs out there, The content is as good as any historical show seen on t.v. thank you and a new subber
Thank you so much!
I lost it when you said "invasion 2: Electric Boogaloo" 😂
My tribe, my heritage, my family ❤
Captions go absolutely crazy at 2:03:26
Will check!
Thoroughly enjoyed this, thank you!
Nice touch of tolkiens admiration for the celtic heritage which shows in LOTR, real history is as fantastical and in a way as magickal as the fantasy world he has created in LOTR
Yes, Amazon would do well to take note!
Εξαιρετική παρουσίαση! Συγχαρητήρια!!
I’ve heard that Hadrian’s wall may also have served as a very long trading post, making it an easier way of acquiring Greco- Roman goods than outright raiding.
One of the best and most well made documentaries I've ever seen! I would love to see a similar one about the Iberian Tribes, please!
A perfect documentary , clear and well narrated as always , this is crazy how you guys make this insanely good videos !! Love it as always
I really enjoyed this, watched it in one go. Thanks.
I`m Welsh and to me Arthur comes from arth, meaning bear, so it`s possible it was a nickname for a great warrior and not just one single person.
Also around 536, there was a huge volcanic explosion in the Indonesian region which greatly affected crop yields across the world which would have also held up anglo-saxon expansion.
Krakatoa is a beast.
Also being Welsh you have heard of yma o hyd! Magnus Maximus Welsh: Macsen Wledig 383 to 388 was the Roman Emperor that thought for us against the invasions The Dream of Emperor Maximus), where he not only marries a wondrous British woman (thus making British descendants probable), but also gives her father sovereignty over Britain (thus formally transferring authority from Rome back to the Britons themselves).
The earliest Welsh genealogies give Maximus (referred to as Macsen/Maxen Wledig, or Emperor Maximus) the role of founding father of the dynasties of several medieval Welsh kingdoms, including those of Powys and Gwent. He is given as the ancestor of a Welsh king on the Pillar of Eliseg, erected nearly 500 years after he left Britain, and he figures in lists of the Fifteen Tribes of Wales
Also to let you know magnus maximus was great great grand father to King Arthur
Amazing video, illustrations and narration. Great documentary! I love it. 👏
There is some evidence that some groups of "britons" speaking some form of brythonic might of still been around in Eastern England in the late saxon or early Norman periods. And the place names in doomsday book imply some in western England although that could have been old English speakers still using Celtic based names...
In the North, Cumbric seems to have lasted to around that period in reasonable use (apparently some farmers might still use a form for counting sheep)
One of the best documentaries I have seen in ages thank you 🙏
OMG "Caesar's hot girl summer in Kent" line had me rolling🤣
Amazing video about historical content
These videos are truly fascinating, keep up the good work! 13:54 "And then got UNO reversed by rome." These lines are, together with all the memes, just amazing😂
28:56 "I want more followers on my Twitch stream than Crassus and Pompey" 😂
Was looking for a comment on this cos it made me laugh so much xD Kings and Generals amazing as always!
Nah these lines were whack, out of place and just sounded weird
@@SaiKiran-fd3gq That’s just not true at all mate
Would never have expected a reference to Toyko Drift in your vids. Great channel, very enjoyable and informative to watch
Saying that the Welsh would "not go quietly into the night" was a wonderful tribute to Wales's premier poet, Dylan Thomas.
That was great! Do you plan to make one such extensive episode for Anglo Saxon Britain? It will be great..
Cheers from Greece
Something like that, but from the POV of the Britons
@@KingsandGenerals Are there enough historical sources to have such information? Sounds very interesting!
Although, I would like to see a more detailed description for their way of life and development since most videos are mostly describing battles.
Thank you for answering and thank you for your work!
Indeed many extra humor script points & THANKS THANKS THANKS! Also I quite liked the "Cauldron of Disaster"
I love how you say "uno-reverse" like it's a normal verb.
Love this! This doesn't exist anywhere else I've looked.
BUT PLEASE NO ANNOYING SOUND AFFECTS!!!!
Most celtic peoples believed in reincarnation as well. It's one of the major reasons why the romans stomped out the druids. Belief in reincarnation made celtic warriors too rebellious.
Really.....it was more to do with the excuse using the Druidic practice of human sacrifice that was abhorant to the Romans, but rather the power held by the Druids in the Celtic tribes and the fact that they were a glue between different tribes, so therefore did not benefit the Roman normality of divide and conquer.
The Druids believed in Rebirth rather than reincarnation.....and reason why badly sick people were euthanised, and only after the creation of modern Druidism was reincarnation referred to.
That was absolutely mesmerizing! Wow!
I love listening to this dialog exponentially going off the rails in chaos. "Ceasars hot girl summer in kent." fucks sake! I'm dying harder than the druids 😂
Thanks for this. Very interesting and comprehensive.
A minor observation is that Cardiff seems to have shifted at least 100 miles North on your map at 2:24.
At 2:14:04
It was not the WESTERN half of England that was firmly in the hands of Angles, Saxon & Jutes, it was the EASTERN half. The region known as East Anglia, gives the game away.
Thank you, a great production!
I just got my mind blown. Buddha was born ~550BC in Nepal and if the Hallstatt D age is correct at 600 BC that means these two events were contemporary. Furthermore while the British isles were being populated by ancient Celts Sri Lanka was being populated by ancestors Bengal or then Magadh region. THAT IS ABSOLUTELY WILD!!
You can't compare Buddha or indian history with British
British were way backward and barbaric compared to indians
We're all Humans and we all evolved similarly, all over the world. We are an amazing species.
Buddha was born in Lumbini, Nepal. Get your facts right kiddo.
@@Sajangrg69 Yes i know was thinking of the entire region. Both Nepal and India as nations didnt exist back then. They were all individual ganasanghas in the mahajanapada period.
Hadrians wall was merely a herding boundary in parts. Probably more of a regulation point for tolling main roads in. It was not a formidable or massive defensive structure like the Great Wall by any means. What a video, thanks a million for outing this together! I couldn’t imagine the effort this took you and your team. Cheers
As much as I enjoyed this, I feel like Caractacus could have gotten a bit more press here as he's always forgotten about in favour of Boudicca. He fought an effective gurrilla war against the Romans for 7 years. This is unfortunately a forgotten part of the protracted conflict that persisted in the frontier following Plautius' invasion. His nemsis (so to speak), Scapula, died of stress likely caused by the pressure that was on his shoulders to end the resistance.
.mmm..mmm.mmmm mmmm.mmmm.m.mmmmmmm.mm.m 1:40:00 😊
Difference is that one was an irritation and the other put fear into them by attacking and burning London down....but more importantly that one had more information that survived through to today than the other.
Here here! ⚔️
My only reference to caractacus is from disneys chitty chitty bang bang and was confused for a minute 😂
I love that you brought Tolkien into this your the best man.
Not gonna lie, the modern references and jokes kinda take away from the timelessness of this amazing documentary. Everything else is great!
i feel the exact same!
for me, one or two were fun but it lost the charm really fast and just felt out of place
Yeah I agree, first couple i did a double take (the tik tok reference), but ignored it. The "Cassivellaunus' fast and furious street racers" and "tokyo drifted away" was when it started to get on my nerves. Doesn't ruin it by any means, still excellent, but it strikes me as unnecessary. Tell the script writer to give it a rest! :)
Yeah, I cringed every time because they're just so out of place.
Sounds like you just wanted something to complain about
@@carlsonkearley3727 everyone feels the same way bud. the only one complaining here is you
Loved this longer video and very much hope for more!
I've lived here, in Colchester, for decades mate. We have an enormous amount of Roman artifacts, buildings and actually, there are quite a lot of sections of the Roman wall and gateways which surround the town.
The Norman Castle, which is the largest in Europe by the way, is built on top of the older Roman structure which had the famous temple that burnt down.
Oh, and lastly......... there's also a lot of roads in numerous areas of the town which are named after the Iceni tribe, our warrior Queen etc and then there's even more Roman themed roads as well.