It's no mystery or conspiracy that the Vikings reached North America before Columbus, it's well established history. It goes beyond a single coin, there are remnants of iron smelting and longhouses in Newfoundland as well, not to mention conflicts with natives recorded by the Vikings themselves throughout the East Coast.
The coin's presence in Maine is easily explained by the existence of Native American trade networks. Such an unusual trinket would have been valuable and thus could be traded multiple times until it was far from its original site in l'Anse Aux Meadows or elsewhere in Canada.
Maybe the Maine coin made its way to that location through trade? Vikings may have never stepped foot further into the North American continent, but that doesn't mean their artifacts and treasures couldn't have made it by hitching a ride with various Native American tribes at the time.
L'anse aux meadows is closer to Maine than it is to Greenland. Saying it's impossible for vikings to have made it that far south is absurd. We just don't know how far they made it. That being said, trade networks did exist. Guess we'll never know.
I used to be a stone cutter and setter. I hand cut cabachons on a stone wheel, using water cooling. The stone was mounted on a dowel with a hard melted tar. The precision one can achieve doing this by hand, with practice, is extraordinary. I do not believe a lathe would be necessary to achieve the level of result shown in these pictures. In fact, years later I worked for a small company making ruby styli for cutting record masters. Those were cut on lead disks, using diamond pastes. They had multiple facets, forming the cutting angles. BUT we also re-sold machine turned hemispherical ended ruby rods, used in some process of rounding, or deburring, record grooves (I was not sure exactly how or when they were used, but it was something like this). In any case, these factory made "deburrers" were not exact. Under a microscope, the arc was not consistent, and they had flats, and so on. I explained to my boss that I could do better, given my previous experience cutting stones. Mounting the ruby rods in a pin vise, on a wetted cutting abrasive wheel, I would spin the hemi shape on the end of these rods. The abrasive was made increasingly finer, until I had a high polish. My hand results were far better than the machine results. Under the microscope, they were indistinguishable from perfect, hemispherical form. I made many, and the buyers never complained. They worked perfectly. I doubt any machine more complex than a spinning stone, if that even, and the stone hand-held, was used to make these Visby lenses.
Wow! That's seriously amazing! You sound like a very talented individual. ❤ thank you for sharing that. 🙏🏻 I think modern day society doesn't give our ancestors enough credit. I mean, what else would you do back then but to have time to perfect your craft.
@@johndee2990 Probably, but I don't know if they are exactly the same processes for Obsidian or Jade, as I never cut those stones. But an interesting thing about Obsidian: At least back in the 1600's, polished obsidian mirrors... black mirrors... were made somehow. This is, as you know, a VERY hard stone. Some of these mirrors... speculums... made it to Europe, and were highly prized by "seers", spiritualists, and magicians. The famous doctor to Queen Elizebeth the first had one, and it is in a British Museum.
Dude, you are needed throughout the Internet!! So few people are technically skilled these days, they can't possibly believe humans can be this creative/precise with simple tools.
Pale skinned, red haired, green eyed antediluvian Giants were here WAY before the Siberian Nomads AKA "Native Americans" came around and killed them all off and stole their land. South America was the last refuge for the Giants, they built all those megalithic stone cities high up in the mountains until they slowly disappeared and other people found their abandoned cities and settled into them. The Spanish even recorded fighting Giants in Mexico when they were battling the Aztecs. The Paiutes have stories of killing off the last of the Red haired, white skinned, cannibal Giants (Sitecah) in the Lovelock Cave in Nevada.
Look, I get them not wanting the Rok Stone to be in the church. But if that stone is represents the beginning of Norse history it belongs in a museum. Not a park shelter.
It's translated but the interpretation is left to speculate about. Also the stone was not in the church, it was in a building where they stored the tithe. English wikipedia is for some reason incorrect about that part.
The little ice age is known in the myths and fairytales as the Fimbul Winter, and the villain in those stories is always Surt the undead wizard. Great stories, the one about Ottar is a good one to start with, if you're interested in folklore.
The lenses were used for maritime navigation , the lenses were part of a tool that let them see the position of the sun thru overcast clouds to shaft their position , I seen a great documentary on the subject a man was able to build a replica and used it just as advertised
Or Or ............The lenses were Monocles to make them look distinguished? Lol, joke, I saw that same documentary, and I believe Josh Gates did an episode as well!
It's pretty well known here in Canada that Vikings were here long before Christopher Columbus. There is the ruins of an entire settlement on the east coast with tons of evidence of their presence in North America. Mix that with the trade networks the Aboriginal peoples had established and you get European objects scattered across the continent.
Me too! When I was in 5th grade, we were taught about the Vikings but it was a small part of our learning. I've been hooked onto Viking lore and history since, I am currently 58yy🙂
To me here in modern times it makes sense the owner of a very valuable telescope would keep the required lens disguised as a sacred amulet. When the two are separated they were considered harmless.
Those lenses bring to mind both the Silmarils and the Palantiri of Tolkien. So much of what he wrote was grounded in as much truth as you'll ever find in myth. We know the vikings used calcite sunstones to navigate at sea during the night. These may have had a similar use, not necessarily telescopes, but augmenting human sight under difficult conditions of haze or low light. Their presence in the graves may be as a guide in the afterworld.
they were using the stars at night... and the sun in the day... but the sunshine up North is rare... so they were using these crystals to ''spot'' the sun through heavy clouds... It's been proven... don't ever take the ''dark'' series as a source of information... the all series is extremely inaccurate... pretty cool though... lol I like the '' guide to the Afterlife '' explanation you gave...
I've used some of the same storyblocks clips in my videos, the last burial was very impressive of two stallions added. It gave me thought of cultures through centuries not only laying rest with great honors, but the belief material items necessary in passing...
I did a video on a island off Maine’s Coast that had a huge boulder that was under a 200+ year old tree. Once the tree fell Viking carvings are on the stone, crosses, a Viking Ship with oars and many other effigy’s. This stone is unknown by scientists and only known by a few. I did a video on it having been taken there.
We have UBBERS navigation stone in our village HUMBERSTON (ubbers stone), GRIMSBY,ENGLAND. its a BIG granite boulder with quartz stars embedded, it lays near our church, next to an AWESOME cafe called the GINGERBREAD HOUSE. History books dont say much about this, its said they settled in YORK first, but they need to TWEEK alot of our history dont they.haha.
Ever since I was a kid, I have been fascinated by the "Money Pit." A supposedly cursed buried treasure with flooded caverns and boobytraps that many people have lost fortunes to in an attempt to reveal its secrets.
It appears archaeologists and historians are outrageously arrogant about how primitive our ancestors were, and how advanced they think we are in the present day. They know little of the past, but assume everything about it.
It's not just the appearance. That is the fact. We aren't told what science has to say or archaeology has to say, we are told what scientists and archaeologists have to say and it's usually b*******.
I don't know anything, not a historian by any means, but in the Vikings series on the History channel, a Frenchman showed Ragnar a piece of crystal which was used in the sunlight to help them keep a true direction to cross the ocean, and those Visby lenses made me think of that. Maybe these were made by the French or the English, but were plundered by the Vikings. It probably isn't, but that's just the first thing I thought of when I saw them.
They didn't "discover" it- it'd already been settled for thousands of years before the Vikings arrived. Saying that the Vikings "discovered" America is like saying Buzz Aldrin "discovered" the Moon. 🙄 🍄
Sumerian artifact in South America; Phoenician artifacts in Amazon and Phoenician genetics in Peruvian natives(they say from about 2000 years ago, but I believe older), and there is even evidence of welsh people making it to North America almost 1000 years ago and getting absorbed into Native American cultures!
Actually you have to be completely ignorant of History to pretend that America was discovered by either Columbus, Amerigo Vespucci, or Leif Erikson. Stop promoting your ignorance out loud as if you were the smart one please. You only serve to further embarrass yourself.
"Were the English the fist to discover America?" Whoever wrote that newspaper article surely flunked History. Back when the Vikings were not known to have reached America, it was understood that Columbus discovered America and Ponce de León discovered part of what is now the US (Florida).
I once saw a demonstration of how the Viking lens was used for ocean navigation. It was used in foggy or low visibility conditions and was very accurate. If I recall the user would take two sightings to do it. I total fog. The Vikings were successful seafarers after all.
I've heard tell that the lenses helped em navigate on cloudy days by making the Sun's location more clear, even with it cloudy and overcast. Might also have been used as a firestarter.
@@jeffbudd7678 I think it's either a bot or someone heart hunting. They didn't have time to watch the first entry, much less the whole video on the time available.
I believe the Vikings landed in North America in more than the one documented site in Canada. There are many accounts of blonde, blue eyed Indians from European colonists from St. Augustine in Florida all the way up the east coast. Some artifacts have also been found in the midwest. This is in addition to accounts of Native Americans tribes telling the so called first settlers that they were not the first people with fair skin and light hair to arrive in the area in large boats. For some reason, most historians ignore all of this evidence, much like they do other ancient legends.
I recall that an artifact, maybe it was a coin, linked to the Varangian Guard (Viking mercenaries in service of Byzantine emperors) were found in the Persian Gulf region, implying that Vikings (or Byzantines) circumnavigated the African continent. They really got around!
I've heard that the Vikings used something called a Sunstone for navigation on overcast days when the sun's position wasnt identifiable. You could focus the diffused sunlight to determine the Sun's position.
One thing that gets me is at the end if the video, they changed the name from "the BIRKA WARRIOR" to "THE BIRKA FEMALE WARRIER" ? Why not call her what she is "THE BIRKA SHIELD MAIDEN" that sounds way more badass in my opinion. Still a dope video tho
I thought they used the lenses to see the sun on cloudy days so they wouldn't get lost. The clouds don't block the suns uv light and the crystal lets you see the UV the clouds can't block or something like that. They had something that they made for that purpose anyway.
The birka "warrior" has long ago been explained. The bones had no damage consistent with ancient combat and were surrounded by riches far exceeding a common warrior burial. However it was common for wives and slaves to be sacrificed or willingly self sacrifice to aid warriors in the afterlife. Considering we don't even see the type of stress damage you would find in slave bones and no damage to wrists, it is most likely this was a wife who self sacrificed to follow her husband whose body couldn't be recovered.
Are you trying to tell me snow white wasn't ambiguously brown and expected to be a warrior Queeng?! I just don't believe...oh my god a fairy died!! Awww ESG pay for play history, don't it just make you respect a previously loved channel less and question prior content? Like what else was up for interpretation sell? It's the best!
That doesn't prove the person in question was never in battle. Flesh wounds would not necessarily show on bones, especially after so many centuries in the grave. There is such a thing as being lucky. It is also possible this was the daughter of a king, who had claim to both a rich grave treasure and arms, without having won either in battle. Ancient literary sources are mostly on the pro-female warrior side of the equation, though, and at the end of the day, I trust primary sources, who were, after all, there.
Of course there are women warriors. We are born that way. The Amazon warrior women have proven to be real. And fearsome. I just listened to a martial arts expert who trains women and claims they are actually tougher than many men.
It's pretty accepted that the viking settlement of Vinland was the one found on Newfoundland. They landed in lands that were already inhabited(as the whole continent was), the homelands of the ancestors of mi'kmaq and inuit people, who have apparently passed down oral traditions that match up with alot of the viking accounts, which were also believed to have been passed down orally by Greenlanders before 2 different instances of being written down much later. What's clear that happened is that they made contact, traded with each other, and then eventually came into conflict with each other and the indigenous people chased them off of the island and back into the sea. This is the known extent of how far inland the vikings made it and claims of making it even further than that are all rooted in later colonial narratives and not any sort of real evidence. What's wild about the Maine penny is that it apparently dates to 500 (if I remember correctly) years after it is believed that vikings were chased off the island. And the location it was found in connects to a trade route that leads back to the island the Vinland settlement was on. So it likely followed a trade route from the same island. But this implies that trade between indigenous people and Greenlanders continued hundreds of years after the vikings were chased off.
10.50mins 'the warrior' may have been the beloved wife of a heartbroken warrior who buried his horses and large and very heavy weapons with her as a sign of his grief.
The lenses are really interesting. But the laws of refraction don’t really need to be understood for someone to look at a blob of glass and see that it is making things appear larger and smaller. A few decades of trial and error and someone could have easily figured out how to perfect them.
I HIGHLY DOUBT the lenses were used to burn wounds… why would they do that, when they could heat a piece of metal and cauterize the wound, instead of just “cooking” the flesh with a lens??? 😂 2:16
Vikings were in Newfoundland, however a “green land with fruits” isn’t a description of Newfoundland. Soooo would lead one to believe Vikings went further south.
Oh, you discovered?!? And where pray tell did you "discover" these revelations professor?!? Did some fancy book learning did you!!! It's fun to pretend sometimes!!!
@@ericanderson3453 yes a big story, but in FRENCH, I'll have to translate this, I'm talking about facts ; many are known by historians but they NEVER told about all of this
@@dawnanderson9628 Yes, Perou, Bolivia and more, it's going to take me months but I'll put videos on my channel about this whole story, in English of course
No- there's an area that was *thought* to be, but there is absolutely *no evidence* to support the claim, and it's now widely accepted that the original supposition was false. 🍄
I'm surprised there's no mention of Uruguay. The world's largest collection of Viking runes is on a mountain in Uruguay. I know it doesn't get much attention because the archeologist who published his findings was not a white-european, and he published in Portuguese, but still...
the Dorians came from the North... we don't know exactly where they came from... but we know that Appolon came from the ''Hyperborea''[ far North, or ''way too North''] in Greek, they crossed all of Greece and they end up in Lakaidemon, where they build Sparta... later a branch of them went up north and founded Macedonia ... that's what we know... around Sparta, you'll found blond hair and blue eyes to be the norm... not so much in the rest of Greece... so, yes!... you may be somehow right...
Are you not referring to sun stones? They used these to traverse the oceans. It allowed them to track the sun on cloudy days when navigation would be paramount and your only guide blocked.
Lathes were in use as far back as 1300 BC, it wasn’t high tech, and Vikings had trade routes all through Europe and the Middle East as far out as Iran by 1100 AD. That’s plenty of time to have picked up a lathe.
aliens flew millions of lightyears from outer space to give them a mchine made out of wood and metal so they could figure out how to cut rudimentary crystals into lenses, instead of just giving them an Ipad and GPS. The more I hear about these aliens, the more I realize how stingy they were with their toys.
The Vikings were masters of certain things, that's unquestionable. Fighting, screwing, robbing, navigation, trade, women's rights, shipbuilding, the list goes on and on.
Why are they shocked that it’s a woman buried with both of her horses and weapons. A Viking was wealthy if they carried a sword this shield maiden (because that’s what she is) had two! Along with her axe(both weapon and tool in the Viking world)battle knife,spear etc. This shield maiden was of extremely high rank and I bet she had a fearsome reputation on the battlefield. Now she sups and feasts and fucks and fights in the great golden hall of Valhalla…Skäl🔥
Come on guys. The coin got here in the pocket of a monkey that floated here from afar on a natural raft. I mean, it is like so totally obvious. Like duh.
@@johnbroadway4196 "Dude"- have you sat on your phone or something?? Are you having a stroke?! Would you like me to ring you an ambulance??!! I'm guessing that English isn't your first language...? 🤔 🍄
Haha yeah I remember that 2017 "birka warrior" thing popping up right around the same time it was "discovered" through ancient tapestry embroidery that vikings were actually all secretly Muslim. Though it's not nearly as exciting as the possibility of a real life Lagertha, if I remember correctly that 2017 claim was very misleading. Those pictures aren't the actual pictures. The tomb had multiple chambers with multiple burials and her skeleton just happened to be in one of the chambers. It isn't like the illustration portrays where there's a skeleton laid out wreathed in funeral offerings. Most of those were in other chambers, I think she had some sort of viking chess board with her which was what started the whole idea that maybe the other stuff could have belonged to her. Definitely not as it was presented in articles but it made for good girl power clickbait at the time.
yes some historians tried to said that was not the good skeleton they analized, but they did it again and proved definitively that was a woman. Same in iceland, they found the tomb of a princess, with everything for the woman of a high ranking jarl wife..... but analysis of the skeleton showed it was a male. Viking had no concept of woman/man segregation, at adult age all those who wanted passed the test to be a man... the test were both physically and mentally challenging, any one who was passing the test were becoming "man" and part of the warrior, all others, who don't wanted to pass them or failed them, were doing house shore
There is no evidence of the Birka warrior being female....so says the team that originally made the claim now that they have been called on the "judicious interpretation of the archaeological evidence" they used to reach their conclusion....now they won't repeat the claim...do better research
Re the Norse/Viking warrior who turned out to have been a woman the God of war in many ancient civilization,s were often female (Inanna [Ishtar],Athena Nike and Artemis [God of hunting]) so no surprise really. Plus I'd mention Boudicca (Bodacea) the Celtic queen of what is now part of England who apparently cost the Roman Empire when it was the power in Europe and the Mediterranean basin. Like your stuff guys thankyou X
I hate when people try to talk like every one was dumb and couldn't make perfect things with the tools they had. They had no TV no phone no anything it was work or die so of course 8/10 ish people was that skilled in their craft they had all day every day to do it.
It's no mystery or conspiracy that the Vikings reached North America before Columbus, it's well established history. It goes beyond a single coin, there are remnants of iron smelting and longhouses in Newfoundland as well, not to mention conflicts with natives recorded by the Vikings themselves throughout the East Coast.
l'anse aux meadows is the place your thinking of
Not to mention the ancient buddhas made of north American jade found throughout Asia.
The coin's presence in Maine is easily explained by the existence of Native American trade networks. Such an unusual trinket would have been valuable and thus could be traded multiple times until it was far from its original site in l'Anse Aux Meadows or elsewhere in Canada.
Maybe the Maine coin made its way to that location through trade? Vikings may have never stepped foot further into the North American continent, but that doesn't mean their artifacts and treasures couldn't have made it by hitching a ride with various Native American tribes at the time.
L'anse aux meadows is closer to Maine than it is to Greenland. Saying it's impossible for vikings to have made it that far south is absurd. We just don't know how far they made it. That being said, trade networks did exist. Guess we'll never know.
I used to be a stone cutter and setter. I hand cut cabachons on a stone wheel, using water cooling. The stone was mounted on a dowel with a hard melted tar.
The precision one can achieve doing this by hand, with practice, is extraordinary. I do not believe a lathe would be necessary to achieve the level of result shown in these pictures.
In fact, years later I worked for a small company making ruby styli for cutting record masters. Those were cut on lead disks, using diamond pastes. They had multiple facets, forming the cutting angles. BUT we also re-sold machine turned hemispherical ended ruby rods, used in some process of rounding, or deburring, record grooves (I was not sure exactly how or when they were used, but it was something like this). In any case, these factory made "deburrers" were not exact. Under a microscope, the arc was not consistent, and they had flats, and so on.
I explained to my boss that I could do better, given my previous experience cutting stones. Mounting the ruby rods in a pin vise, on a wetted cutting abrasive wheel, I would spin the hemi shape on the end of these rods. The abrasive was made increasingly finer, until I had a high polish.
My hand results were far better than the machine results. Under the microscope, they were indistinguishable from perfect, hemispherical form. I made many, and the buyers never complained. They worked perfectly.
I doubt any machine more complex than a spinning stone, if that even, and the stone hand-held, was used to make these Visby lenses.
Wow! That's seriously amazing! You sound like a very talented individual. ❤ thank you for sharing that. 🙏🏻 I think modern day society doesn't give our ancestors enough credit. I mean, what else would you do back then but to have time to perfect your craft.
So the process is somewhat similar to polishing Obsidian or Jade into smooth shapes?
@@johndee2990 Probably, but I don't know if they are exactly the same processes for Obsidian or Jade, as I never cut those stones.
But an interesting thing about Obsidian: At least back in the 1600's, polished obsidian mirrors... black mirrors... were made somehow. This is, as you know, a VERY hard stone. Some of these mirrors... speculums... made it to Europe, and were highly prized by "seers", spiritualists, and magicians. The famous doctor to Queen Elizebeth the first had one, and it is in a British Museum.
@@proto57 I should know, tis my personal possession
Dude, you are needed throughout the Internet!! So few people are technically skilled these days, they can't possibly believe humans can be this creative/precise with simple tools.
I can't believe you never heard of l'anse aux meadows in Canada. It proves vikings were here WAY before Columbus.
As a man descended from Nordic blood this is absolutely true
Agreed friend, unfortunately history is has ALWAYS been written by the victors until todays times along with technology…
Leif Ericsson. 1000-1100 AD Newfoundland Canada
@@tylerbrooks2492 me too! Northern Scotland was settled by a Nord named Gunni that my family decended from
Pale skinned, red haired, green eyed antediluvian Giants were here WAY before the Siberian Nomads AKA "Native Americans" came around and killed them all off and stole their land.
South America was the last refuge for the Giants, they built all those megalithic stone cities high up in the mountains until they slowly disappeared and other people found their abandoned cities and settled into them.
The Spanish even recorded fighting Giants in Mexico when they were battling the Aztecs.
The Paiutes have stories of killing off the last of the Red haired, white skinned, cannibal Giants (Sitecah) in the Lovelock Cave in Nevada.
Look, I get them not wanting the Rok Stone to be in the church. But if that stone is represents the beginning of Norse history it belongs in a museum. Not a park shelter.
White history is racist
That was no joke what i was thinking. Shelter my ass, its a roof wtf.
amen! why is the translation of the Rok stone beyond scholars? maybe a bit of protecting their own narrative of history?
It's translated but the interpretation is left to speculate about. Also the stone was not in the church, it was in a building where they stored the tithe. English wikipedia is for some reason incorrect about that part.
Nah, it’s just recipe for great tasting stale fish.
The little ice age is known in the myths and fairytales as the Fimbul Winter, and the villain in those stories is always Surt the undead wizard. Great stories, the one about Ottar is a good one to start with, if you're interested in folklore.
Thank you for this
The lenses were used for maritime navigation , the lenses were part of a tool that let them see the position of the sun thru overcast clouds to shaft their position , I seen a great documentary on the subject a man was able to build a replica and used it just as advertised
Were they used with the Sunstones?
Yeah we all watched the show Vikings 😂
I haven't watched the show, Vikings..so I appreciate you informing the rest of us about what the lenses were used for. ❤
Or Or ............The lenses were Monocles to make them look distinguished?
Lol, joke, I saw that same documentary, and I believe Josh Gates did an episode as well!
It's pretty well known here in Canada that Vikings were here long before Christopher Columbus. There is the ruins of an entire settlement on the east coast with tons of evidence of their presence in North America. Mix that with the trade networks the Aboriginal peoples had established and you get European objects scattered across the continent.
The Irish had also already been to America - Christopher Columbus's navigator was from Galway
I live in east anglia where towns like maldon were viking towns, love the viking history, and I love this channel and the way it's all explained,
Me too!
When I was in 5th grade, we were taught about the Vikings but it was a small part of our learning. I've been hooked onto Viking lore and history since, I am currently 58yy🙂
The visby lenses allow you to see the sun's position in a cloudy sky.
Brilliant Viking invention.
To me here in modern times it makes sense the owner of a very valuable telescope would keep the required lens disguised as a sacred amulet.
When the two are separated they were considered harmless.
Awesome content as always! Love this channel!
The Quartz Lens was held up to the sky on a cloudy day and it would give you the exact position of the sun. It was used for navigation.
that's exactly what I was thinking
I believe they even referenced this on that show Vikings.
Wow how'd you get so smart without even seeing the artifact up close?
@@CollaborativeDataAccounts It's my history. My family has many items over a thousand years old. Including navigation quartz.
@@Darkice77 Cool story bro. Maybe you can fill in these befuddled scientists and historians of the period, they seem to be lost without your guidance.
Those lenses bring to mind both the Silmarils and the Palantiri of Tolkien. So much of what he wrote was grounded in as much truth as you'll ever find in myth. We know the vikings used calcite sunstones to navigate at sea during the night. These may have had a similar use, not necessarily telescopes, but augmenting human sight under difficult conditions of haze or low light. Their presence in the graves may be as a guide in the afterworld.
Most do not know about the sunstones… i have heard of them and it blew my mind!
That's a very interesting theory you have there... Tell us more please !
they were using the stars at night... and the sun in the day... but the sunshine up North is rare... so they were using these crystals to ''spot'' the sun through heavy clouds... It's been proven... don't ever take the ''dark'' series as a source of information... the all series is extremely inaccurate... pretty cool though... lol
I like the '' guide to the Afterlife '' explanation you gave...
@@secretagent86 I recall the mention of sunstones in the tv show, Vikings a few years back.☠️
I've used some of the same storyblocks clips in my videos, the last burial was very impressive of two stallions added. It gave me thought of cultures through centuries not only laying rest with great honors, but the belief material items necessary in passing...
The Dark 5 channels are so under-rated.
I did a video on a island off Maine’s Coast that had a huge boulder that was under a 200+ year old tree. Once the tree fell Viking carvings are on the stone, crosses, a Viking Ship with oars and many other effigy’s. This stone is unknown by scientists and only known by a few. I did a video on it having been taken there.
You have a lot of videos haha, help me out with the title to look for? I'd be interested to see this stone artifact
@@CamMackay96
VIKINGS IN MAINE? WE FIND EVIDENCE IN THIS EPISODE | METAL DETECTING IN MAINE WITH CAPT'N BILLY
th-cam.com/video/sqAw3aMrfxo/w-d-xo.html
@@CamMackay96 I think I found it. Look for:
Vikings in Maine? We Find Evidence in This Episode | Metal Detecting in Maine with Capt'n Billy
I'll check it out. I do the same with my children.
We have UBBERS navigation stone in our village HUMBERSTON (ubbers stone), GRIMSBY,ENGLAND. its a BIG granite boulder with quartz stars embedded, it lays near our church, next to an AWESOME cafe called the GINGERBREAD HOUSE.
History books dont say much about this, its said they settled in YORK first, but they need to TWEEK alot of our history dont they.haha.
What's wild is we have already proven the Vikings landed WAY WAY WAY before Columbus. I wish our academics would be more receptive to the findings.
Ever since I was a kid, I have been fascinated by the "Money Pit." A supposedly cursed buried treasure with flooded caverns and boobytraps that many people have lost fortunes to in an attempt to reveal its secrets.
Fascinating!
And when you finally get past all the flooded caverns and boobytraps. You'll find the Treasure Room guarded by Voldo from Soul Calibur.
Great job on this video.
It appears archaeologists and historians are outrageously arrogant about how primitive our ancestors were, and how advanced they think we are in the present day.
They know little of the past, but assume everything about it.
It's not just the appearance. That is the fact. We aren't told what science has to say or archaeology has to say, we are told what scientists and archaeologists have to say and it's usually b*******.
A great video. Thanks for sharing.
I don't know anything, not a historian by any means, but in the Vikings series on the History channel, a Frenchman showed Ragnar a piece of crystal which was used in the sunlight to help them keep a true direction to cross the ocean, and those Visby lenses made me think of that. Maybe these were made by the French or the English, but were plundered by the Vikings. It probably isn't, but that's just the first thing I thought of when I saw them.
I thought the same thing
Uncertain? Not! Leif Erikson made landfall in North America in the year 1000, of that there is no doubt!
I am sticking with Dark5's channels I know Im listening to a real person with a pulse and not the soulless delivery of an AI ..
Oh contraire, mon frere.
badass video, thanks
I think we all know that the Vikings were highly advanced. They created bluetooth, after all.
LOL!
your comment failed to connect
Nailed it !!!!!!lol!!!!!!!
You have to know nothing about history to not know that the Vikings discovered America.
They didn't "discover" it- it'd already been settled for thousands of years before the Vikings arrived.
Saying that the Vikings "discovered" America is like saying Buzz Aldrin "discovered" the Moon.
🙄
🍄
They didn’t discover it either there’s evidence of an Irish monk arriving before also possibly the Chinese and others
Sumerian artifact in South America; Phoenician artifacts in Amazon and Phoenician genetics in Peruvian natives(they say from about 2000 years ago, but I believe older), and there is even evidence of welsh people making it to North America almost 1000 years ago and getting absorbed into Native American cultures!
My guess is that the people who "discovered" it were also the people who populated it...long before Columbus or the Vikings did.
Actually you have to be completely ignorant of History to pretend that America was discovered by either Columbus, Amerigo Vespucci, or Leif Erikson. Stop promoting your ignorance out loud as if you were the smart one please. You only serve to further embarrass yourself.
I subbed! Awesome video!
"Were the English the fist to discover America?"
Whoever wrote that newspaper article surely flunked History. Back when the Vikings were not known to have reached America, it was understood that Columbus discovered America and Ponce de León discovered part of what is now the US (Florida).
The sword with the len attachment looks like a Viking version of the magnifying glass from "Rommer Room" LoL
Another interesting video 👍👍
King Olaf The Peaceful.
Superb!
I once saw a demonstration of how the Viking lens was used for ocean navigation. It was used in foggy or low visibility conditions and was very accurate. If I recall the user would take two sightings to do it. I total fog. The Vikings were successful seafarers after all.
I've heard tell that the lenses helped em navigate on cloudy days by making the Sun's location more clear, even with it cloudy and overcast. Might also have been used as a firestarter.
Wow i had no idea about any of these. truly treasures. but hard to pinpoint origin due to all of their raids.
How could you know what items he's discussing on 12 minute video that has only been out 3 minutes?
How did you NOT know the Vikings made it here before Columbus?
@@jeffbudd7678 I think it's either a bot or someone heart hunting. They didn't have time to watch the first entry, much less the whole video on the time available.
Excellent
I believe the Vikings landed in North America in more than the one documented site in Canada. There are many accounts of blonde, blue eyed Indians from European colonists from St. Augustine in Florida all the way up the east coast. Some artifacts have also been found in the midwest. This is in addition to accounts of Native Americans tribes telling the so called first settlers that they were not the first people with fair skin and light hair to arrive in the area in large boats. For some reason, most historians ignore all of this evidence, much like they do other ancient legends.
IMO, this is reason to save books from destruction
Also prince Madog from north Wales 🏴
I recall that an artifact, maybe it was a coin, linked to the Varangian Guard (Viking mercenaries in service of Byzantine emperors) were found in the Persian Gulf region, implying that Vikings (or Byzantines) circumnavigated the African continent. They really got around!
Especially after they split in many directions, with different Families going their separate ways.
The visby lenses, I picked up somewhere they were used to find the direction of the sun reliably in overcast conditions
I've heard that the Vikings used something called a Sunstone for navigation on overcast days when the sun's position wasnt identifiable. You could focus the diffused sunlight to determine the Sun's position.
Cool stuff
One thing that gets me is at the end if the video, they changed the name from "the BIRKA WARRIOR" to "THE BIRKA FEMALE WARRIER" ? Why not call her what she is "THE BIRKA SHIELD MAIDEN" that sounds way more badass in my opinion. Still a dope video tho
The Visbi lenses are symbolic of the Firmament; they work in the same way.
I have to wonder if those crystals were the ancient “sunstones” Vikings used for incredibly accurate navigation!?
More of this would be my choice!
I like the idea of shield maidens. The Viking culture to me is fascinating.
I thought they used the lenses to see the sun on cloudy days so they wouldn't get lost. The clouds don't block the suns uv light and the crystal lets you see the UV the clouds can't block or something like that. They had something that they made for that purpose anyway.
yeah I remember a show hosted by Josh Gates where they demonstrated that
yep... you're right... dark is wrong again... dumb AI...lol
I wonder if those lenses were used as refined birefringent calcite sunstones for navigation
Shieldmaidens did not fight in combat they only carried the weapons for the for the Warriors
Snorri Sturluson says you're wrong.
were you there? i was I'm 1400 yrs old.
@@bob7975 seriously he was a Christian and a liar very non credible source
It was a good for skipping coins across the atlantic!
The birka "warrior" has long ago been explained.
The bones had no damage consistent with ancient combat and were surrounded by riches far exceeding a common warrior burial. However it was common for wives and slaves to be sacrificed or willingly self sacrifice to aid warriors in the afterlife. Considering we don't even see the type of stress damage you would find in slave bones and no damage to wrists, it is most likely this was a wife who self sacrificed to follow her husband whose body couldn't be recovered.
Are you trying to tell me snow white wasn't ambiguously brown and expected to be a warrior Queeng?! I just don't believe...oh my god a fairy died!! Awww ESG pay for play history, don't it just make you respect a previously loved channel less and question prior content? Like what else was up for interpretation sell? It's the best!
That doesn't prove the person in question was never in battle. Flesh wounds would not necessarily show on bones, especially after so many centuries in the grave. There is such a thing as being lucky. It is also possible this was the daughter of a king, who had claim to both a rich grave treasure and arms, without having won either in battle. Ancient literary sources are mostly on the pro-female warrior side of the equation, though, and at the end of the day, I trust primary sources, who were, after all, there.
Of course there are women warriors. We are born that way. The Amazon warrior women have proven to be real. And fearsome.
I just listened to a martial arts expert who trains women and claims they are actually tougher than many men.
The lenses could also have been used to create the shapes of Star constellations for navigation when teaching.
It's pretty accepted that the viking settlement of Vinland was the one found on Newfoundland. They landed in lands that were already inhabited(as the whole continent was), the homelands of the ancestors of mi'kmaq and inuit people, who have apparently passed down oral traditions that match up with alot of the viking accounts, which were also believed to have been passed down orally by Greenlanders before 2 different instances of being written down much later. What's clear that happened is that they made contact, traded with each other, and then eventually came into conflict with each other and the indigenous people chased them off of the island and back into the sea. This is the known extent of how far inland the vikings made it and claims of making it even further than that are all rooted in later colonial narratives and not any sort of real evidence. What's wild about the Maine penny is that it apparently dates to 500 (if I remember correctly) years after it is believed that vikings were chased off the island. And the location it was found in connects to a trade route that leads back to the island the Vinland settlement was on. So it likely followed a trade route from the same island. But this implies that trade between indigenous people and Greenlanders continued hundreds of years after the vikings were chased off.
How much would that suck if were the only time in history that an alien race isnt helping or making cool shit with us....
The Vikings were trading with the Arabs and many of them were ahead of their time.
they were selling Slavs to the Arabs [mostly females] as slaves, and actually the word ''slave'' comes from the word ''Slav''...
10.50mins 'the warrior' may have been the beloved wife of a heartbroken warrior who buried his horses and large and very heavy weapons with her as a sign of his grief.
What is a veeking?
Wait a minute, the vikings were there before anyone else. And it's been proven.
Anyone? There have been hominids in the Americas since the last ice age, over 12k years ago. Vikings didn't even exist at that point
Says who?!?!
It feels like I'm exploring another world
".......some say, many believe........"
it's like Ancient Aliens one drip at a time
Anybody else getting cut off at the end?
The Vikings believed in Valkyries, who were warrior women, so the idea of Viking women as warriors should not have been too unusual.
The lenses are really interesting. But the laws of refraction don’t really need to be understood for someone to look at a blob of glass and see that it is making things appear larger and smaller. A few decades of trial and error and someone could have easily figured out how to perfect them.
I HIGHLY DOUBT the lenses were used to burn wounds… why would they do that, when they could heat a piece of metal and cauterize the wound, instead of just “cooking” the flesh with a lens??? 😂 2:16
IIRC, they've even found native american arrowheads in viking burials in europe.
Vikings were in Newfoundland, however a “green land with fruits” isn’t a description of Newfoundland. Soooo would lead one to believe Vikings went further south.
I discovered a whole story about the Vikings, they went far beyond South America, are you interested in knowing?
Oh, you discovered?!? And where pray tell did you "discover" these revelations professor?!? Did some fancy book learning did you!!! It's fun to pretend sometimes!!!
@@ericanderson3453 yes a big story, but in FRENCH, I'll have to translate this,
I'm talking about facts ; many are known by historians but they NEVER told about all of this
Bolivia....
@@dawnanderson9628 Yes, Perou, Bolivia and more, it's going to take me months but I'll put videos on my channel about this whole story, in English of course
There a mastodon processing area outside of San Diego that dates back 130 thousand years.
No- there's an area that was *thought* to be, but there is absolutely *no evidence* to support the claim, and it's now widely accepted that the original supposition was false.
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I'm surprised there's no mention of Uruguay. The world's largest collection of Viking runes is on a mountain in Uruguay. I know it doesn't get much attention because the archeologist who published his findings was not a white-european, and he published in Portuguese, but still...
It's no wonder. They were very tall women. Probably much bigger than many of their male enemies.
I believe the Vikings were originally the migrating Spartans
the Dorians came from the North... we don't know exactly where they came from... but we know that Appolon came from the ''Hyperborea''[ far North, or ''way too North''] in Greek, they crossed all of Greece and they end up in Lakaidemon, where they build Sparta... later a branch of them went up north and founded Macedonia ... that's what we know... around Sparta, you'll found blond hair and blue eyes to be the norm... not so much in the rest of Greece... so, yes!... you may be somehow right...
If AI is so good and all. you have to wonder how come they do not use it to translate these old stones and makers and ancient writings?
@@mewoozy2 Well see now I have learned something... thank you kindly. Jim
@@ChileExpatFamily AI's are processing input that is provided [things we know already] so they're good for things we're too lazy to do... simples...
@@user-McGiver okay 👍
@@user-McGiver I was thinking that maybe the ai could collate the data that some of us are not aware of and come up with a more informed answer 😁. Jim
@@ChileExpatFamily go ahead... worship your new God!... get off my back!...
Are you not referring to sun stones? They used these to traverse the oceans. It allowed them to track the sun on cloudy days when navigation would be paramount and your only guide blocked.
Author Robert Temple's book on Cristal lenses...🤩
the first thing I thought of when I saw the lens was navigation
Bluetooth, the wireless connection method, is named after Harold Bluetooth. That is why a rune is used as it's symbol.
A stone cutting lathe is Not primitive in any way
I want someone to explain how they had this technology
Lathes were in use as far back as 1300 BC, it wasn’t high tech, and Vikings had trade routes all through Europe and the Middle East as far out as Iran by 1100 AD. That’s plenty of time to have picked up a lathe.
Aliens gave them it.
🙄
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aliens flew millions of lightyears from outer space to give them a mchine made out of wood and metal so they could figure out how to cut rudimentary crystals into lenses, instead of just giving them an Ipad and GPS. The more I hear about these aliens, the more I realize how stingy they were with their toys.
@@kevind1650 what the Fuck are you talking about foo
@@xodiaq then go dig one up dummy
We have the Alexandria rune stone in Minnestoa. You betch ya.
Who's to say that the Vikings made the lens....
Remember they pillaged everywhere they went
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FYI Bluetooth technology was named after King Harald Bluetooth.
The lenses were used to find the sun on foggy days for navigation.
The Vikings were masters of certain things, that's unquestionable. Fighting, screwing, robbing, navigation, trade, women's rights, shipbuilding, the list goes on and on.
Why are they shocked that it’s a woman buried with both of her horses and weapons. A Viking was wealthy if they carried a sword this shield maiden (because that’s what she is) had two! Along with her axe(both weapon and tool in the Viking world)battle knife,spear etc. This shield maiden was of extremely high rank and I bet she had a fearsome reputation on the battlefield. Now she sups and feasts and fucks and fights in the great golden hall of Valhalla…Skäl🔥
I thought those lens were for finding the sun on cloudy days.
Please tell me you’re not referring to the Vikings tv show lol 😂
@@justinmckiernan4661 trust the ''dark'' to lead you to enlightenment... LOL DUDE!
I hope those excavating the graves are cursed forever.
Come on guys. The coin got here in the pocket of a monkey that floated here from afar on a natural raft. I mean, it is like so totally obvious. Like duh.
You can polish a lens on a diamond surface.
Yeah Na, you can make a lense out of a crystal and sand.
Those lenses with a dried out funghi catches fire in 3 seconds on a Sunny day
HEAR THAT ! 500 YEARS !
WE ARE TRULY IGNORANT OF HISTORY.
SISU !!!!! ⚡
WE?
Speak for yourself.
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@@the_unrepentant_anarchist. Dude, please let me give you the personification in rhetorical. Good day citizens.
@@johnbroadway4196
"Dude"- have you sat on your phone or something??
Are you having a stroke?!
Would you like me to ring you an ambulance??!!
I'm guessing that English isn't your first language...?
🤔
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@@the_unrepentant_anarchist.
I am certifiably fine.
Just felt like I should " ink blast you '.
Groovy to say Misha gosh. 😜😁🤟
@@johnbroadway4196
I'm not sure that "certifiable" is the word you should have used there, but., hang on.., maybe it *is...*
😉
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How about navigation?
Could be used for navigation yeah
Haha yeah I remember that 2017 "birka warrior" thing popping up right around the same time it was "discovered" through ancient tapestry embroidery that vikings were actually all secretly Muslim. Though it's not nearly as exciting as the possibility of a real life Lagertha, if I remember correctly that 2017 claim was very misleading. Those pictures aren't the actual pictures. The tomb had multiple chambers with multiple burials and her skeleton just happened to be in one of the chambers. It isn't like the illustration portrays where there's a skeleton laid out wreathed in funeral offerings. Most of those were in other chambers, I think she had some sort of viking chess board with her which was what started the whole idea that maybe the other stuff could have belonged to her. Definitely not as it was presented in articles but it made for good girl power clickbait at the time.
yes some historians tried to said that was not the good skeleton they analized, but they did it again and proved definitively that was a woman.
Same in iceland, they found the tomb of a princess, with everything for the woman of a high ranking jarl wife..... but analysis of the skeleton showed it was a male.
Viking had no concept of woman/man segregation, at adult age all those who wanted passed the test to be a man... the test were both physically and mentally challenging, any one who was passing the test were becoming "man" and part of the warrior, all others, who don't wanted to pass them or failed them, were doing house shore
Vikings made it down to Martha's vineyard Island, the true Vinland
Vinland is USA…
Ya they definitely where i can't get how you didn't know that
There is no evidence of the Birka warrior being female....so says the team that originally made the claim now that they have been called on the "judicious interpretation of the archaeological evidence" they used to reach their conclusion....now they won't repeat the claim...do better research
Re the Norse/Viking warrior who turned out to have been a woman the God of war in many ancient civilization,s were often female (Inanna [Ishtar],Athena Nike and Artemis [God of hunting]) so no surprise really. Plus I'd mention Boudicca (Bodacea) the Celtic queen of what is now part of England who apparently cost the Roman Empire when it was the power in Europe and the Mediterranean basin. Like your stuff guys thankyou X
I hate when people try to talk like every one was dumb and couldn't make perfect things with the tools they had. They had no TV no phone no anything it was work or die so of course 8/10 ish people was that skilled in their craft they had all day every day to do it.
The vikings probably stole the lenses from a European monastery