I hope we all achieve such acclaim as Njal and Ravn, living a modest life with appropriate amounts of splendor, but still have your name praised throughout generations.
@@Baraodojaguary "Neo-Pagans have sometimes forgotten; when they set out to do everything that the old pagans did, that the final thing the old pagans did was to get christened." Like the great Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Suebi, and the Alemanni, so did the Nords, Swedes, Geats, and Danes also take up the cross. I see nothing wrong here.
I think it is because it describes the old times, of which the sagas talk. Crazy that even people over a thousand years ago still thought "everything was better back then."
Im an 17 year old dutchguy who is extremely passioned and obsessed about the viking age. Because of this song im sad that im not from Norway xD but hey the closest that the vikings have been is 35 min away from my home. To every scandinavian reading this. Don't forget this awesome period. The period where your country got famous. Greetings from the netherlands
There is a new Lidl opening in Dublin, where there is a ruined viking house under the floor, seen through glass. Dublin and Waterford, Ireland's 'viking city' , in the south east have many viking museums, attractions etc. Would recommend you visiting to both cities in the future.
If modern English hadn't been Influenced by french it's very likely most of us could understand it. I mean even just looking at the words compared to the subtitles I could get the gist of it fairly quick
Frisian is the closest living Germanic language to English. Its not very mutually intelligible anymore but it was mutually intelligible to Old English. You should check it out of you haven't.
@@AaronPaulIbarrola I would say that Platt more like old english is. The northern dialekts the most. I'm from Ostpfalen and our dialekts sounds more skandinavian. Like the dialekts of the Westfalen. We have more than two germanic languages in germany!
It feels great to listen to a song of a fellow germanic language that you may not speak but still manage to pick up a few sentences. These are the moments I wish Denmark ever lost us, Greetings from the former Duchy of Holstein.
@@eemil.894 I agree, probably i will buy CK3 in future, but for now, i'm CK2 fanatic. And yes, i will stay CK2 loyalist forever and i will back to CK2 from time to time even in future. B)
The Danish and Norwegians have a long history together anyhow. I'm of Danish and Norwegian descent myself. This song has the spirit of Scandinavia in it. Even though I've never visited I plan to soon.
I can't quite explain, but something about the sheer sound of this song makes me feel nostalgic for something I don't even know about. Like I'm longing for something I've long since forgotten or left behind.
@@merry3755I suppose the confusion comes from the fact that there are still earls today, but jarl seems ancient, unless I’m wrong and Jarl still is a title in Norway or Denmark.
This kind of reminds me of how today in Hungary there is a national event called the Kurultaj which is a gathering of distant ethnic peoples from all across Central and East Asia coming together to celebrate their common cultures, customs, traditions, values and they also do archery but it's horse archery (Y) :)
Proud to be Nordic in Heritage Proudly flying my Kalmar Union Flag next to My Daughters of Odin Banner in my window sills along I wish America could learn from these 5 great progressive countries Nordic Countries keep up the Progressive Work Love Ya! Greetings from Kansas , USA 🇩🇰🇫🇴🇫🇮🇬🇱🇮🇸🇳🇴🇸🇪
i Noticed that this was similar to Swedish so I translated the lyrics into modern day-Swedish: Kom sit ikring och lyssna på mig, så berättar jag händelser som hände i vår sagatid. Kända män från Island och Norge samlades, Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl. Kända män från Island och Norge samlades, Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl. Och också ifrån Shetland och ifrån Orkonöy, til samlingen var dem bjudna, både man och hustru. I kapplekarna på järda visar dem sin styrka, och därefter håller jarlen fest och spel. Kända män från Island och Norge samlades, Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl. Den första leken uppå järda, bågskytte det blev, og många spända långbågar då dagen fortsatte, men ingen träffade spjutet som var på en kulle, utom Einar ifrån Lade som dem kallar Tambarskjelv. Kända män från Island och Norge samlades, Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl. I den nästa leken ska dem ro etter Nidarfjorden. Och årveden knakade då jättarna tog i. Men Torgaut ifrån Orkonöy var en pajk som kunne ro, och Njål och Ravn från Island, dem kom som nummer två. Kända män från Island och Norge samlades, Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl. Den nästa leken på järda det var Hästtrav och spring, Med många välkända hästar bland ridande män. Men Eirik jarls Rimfakse han van som förväntat. Detta var en häst som inte hade konkurans. Kända män från Island och Norge samlades, Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl. Då lekarnas slut kom, på femte dagen det var. Då jarlen tutade hornet, slut på tävlingen nu. Nu bjuder vi allt folk in i fästarhallen in. Om dessa event skald ska sjunga, nästa samlingen. Kända män från Island och Norge samlades, Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl. I am a Swede
Obviously this is romanticised to a degree but I feel sad that this era is gone forever, an era where you could defeat someone called hjalfd the strong in an arm wrestling contest and have songs sung about you when you return to your village.
Which is stupid. Iceland should not be included. Iceland was not part of Norway until the 13th century and Icelanders have fought long for their own identity that keeps being undermined by Nationalists Norwegians who adamantly claim all Icelanders were Norwegians. Any man born in Iceland is an Icelander to us, Icelanders did not and do not consider themselves to be Norwegians. be it during the Viking era or later. The Icelandic Commonwealth was founded in opposition to the Norwegian crown, created by people fleeing the rule of Norway in the hopes to create their own land. There is not a single point in the sagas when an Icelandic-born man is called a Norwegian and they are always called Icelanders and Icelanders had to fight a 40-year long civil war before swearing fealty to Norway. Out of all the countries to have ruled Iceland Norway did so by far the shortest. With effective Norwegian ending as soon as the monarchy joined a union with the crown of Denmark in 1380 and ending officially when the kingdom of Norway was integrated into the Kingdom of Denmark in 1537. Even under Norway Iceland was pretty much always considered separate off it, maintaining its own separate parliament and legal code throughout Norwegian rule. I'm sure many will point out that the map refers to the "Norse" world, not the Norwegian one and I would then just like to point out the double standard, When it's an Icelandic "Norse" song or a Faroese "Norse" song the map only shows those countries and their flag, But if it's a Norwegian one it shows a united "Norse" world but not even completely because it doesn't include Denmark and Sweden. Norse does not mean Norwegian.
@@ostekakeutenost1308 An Icelander on its own is an ethnicity. One created from the mix of Norwegians, Danes and Celts and Iceland was quet literally founded in opposition to the Norwegian crown, Settled by people fleeing Norway, a people who created their own Republic and very quickly began calling themselves Icelanders. The Sagas call even firat generation Icelanders that. Iceland would exist as an Independent Republic until the latter half of the 13th century after having existed for over 330 years.
lol I read up on him and turns out he actually betrayed the king Olav Tryggvason to get the throne, and sold off half his country to Denmark, and swore loyalty to the Danish king in the little terretory he had domain over. Eirik Jarl was basically one big douche, low key regret making this video xD
I was always curious about how much Scandinavian languages look alike with each other and with the German language. For example, if someone speaks Swedish, can (s)he understand and communicate with someone from Norway? And if someone knows German, can (s)he understand Swedish and at what extend?
Im german and I can't understand Swedish danish or Norwegian. I just understand the word "Langbogen" in this song. But it's possible to understand dutch.
@@heiratsschwindler6749 Hmm, I see. Thanks for sharing! It seems that the opposite (from northern to German) is difficult too. But, if you speek one of them, I think it is not that hard to learn the others as well.
@@Giazaco yes, some people from sweden said they could understand this song. I think between german and english and of course dutch there are many similar words. As a german you can often guess what the words in english mean for example: water=wasser, apel=Apfel (in dialects it's also sometimes apel in german but with different pronounciacion), sword=Schwert, reaktion=Reaktion, music=Musik and so on.
@@Giazaco Im Swedish and i get around 70% of the song. But it has more to do with dialects. If i am from the middle part of Sweden and live close to the Norwegian border, it's likely that we speak more similar then i would compared to someone from southern Sweden.
Im happy humankind has so many cultures. I love folk music from every culture. It shows their indivituality and that non of them are just barbarians without a brain. It presents a cultures best moment and I love to see the diversity that exists on earth. We are one humankind in many cultures.
Quiet. Listen this masterfull piece of ancient culture helps me to accept our little importance in the face of the flow of events, brings you to accepting death, this is the greatest achievement of a song. The greatness of past and forgotten kings, if not tomorrow the day after tomorrow every ruler will be forgotten, but as men we can greet the world with joy if we have generated culture.
@@hickspaced2963 It's written in description. It's not ancient and I knew it. "Ancient culture" ≠ "Ancient song", but the facts narrated are from a remote era, it does not matter that the poet is of our day, when he tells of ancient mythology, of forgotten days, recreating those days, those moments, then we are talking about an ancient culture completely different from the modern Norwegian one. If I recreate a Gregorian chant keeping its features then what I create isn't a product of modern culture.
The instruments used are recreated based on archelogical evidence and studied. I'm not knowledgeable enough on the subject to give a concrete answer but based on my assumption of their competence, I'd say it most likely sounded this way.
For Scandinavia! Unite our Nordic brother and sisters in 🇩🇰Denmark🇩🇰🇳🇴Norway🇳🇴🇸🇪Sweden🇸🇪🇮🇸Iceland🇮🇸🇫🇮Finland🇫🇮🇪🇪Estonia🇪🇪🇱🇻Latvia🇱🇻🇱🇹Lithuania🇱🇹🇫🇴Faroe Islands🇫🇴🇬🇱Greenland🇬🇱!!! From Sweden.
Near my village there is a place called the Norman's stone. It was the site of a great battle where my ancestors the Rhomaioi defeated the Northmen who came to Greece to dismantle our Empire. They came so close but the GrecoRomans prevailed. I think there is also a saga about this southern campaign.
@@paganrevolutionary1269 These were written by Harald Foss in modern times. They're based on ancient history, such as the battle at Stamford bridge in 1066.
It is Norwegian due to the fact that og is modern Norwegian compared to the word Auk is "and" in old Norse if I recall correctly. I assume it is most likely Bokmal
@hickspaced He doesn't have to, the creators are dead, like normally very long dead, And if the images are something he bought off a stock photo seller he doesn't have to credit them
Proto-Norse and early Old Norse had many S- and Z-sounds where late Old Norse had R. Also, early Old Norse had W where later Old Norse had V or no sound at all (e.g. wormiz became ormr). At the time of Eirik Jarl it is unclear how much of this shift had happened, so the "var" was either "var", "war" or "was". English "was" is borrowed from Old Norse, so that is the strongest evidence we have for it still being "was". When the sagas were written in the late Medieval the shift from "was" to "var" was completed.
Ever had a party so epic that they still sing about it a thousand years later?
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Props to Njål and Ravn, even though they got second place in rowing they were noteworthy enough to be mentioned in the song
Thank you
I hope we all achieve such acclaim as Njal and Ravn, living a modest life with appropriate amounts of splendor, but still have your name praised throughout generations.
According to legend, they actually tied for first with the other guy coming in seconds later. They were disqualified for performance enhancing drugs
Other Norse songs: about darkness and scary stuff
Norway: *celebrates in north*
🍺💪😎🇳🇴
You forgot 🇸🇪🧆
@@rullvardi so you speak swedish
1:29 Is that the Ingen that posted this song?
wtf? what songs are about darkness and scary stuff? i think you watched too much "vikings" on HBO
Brothers, in blood and in spirit, forever. 🇮🇸🇳🇴
Everybody gangsta till Eirik of Nidaros shows up
Fun fact: Nidaros was the old name of the city Trondheim in Norway
Go Away Deus Vult here we are all Odin worshippers
@@Baraodojaguary "Neo-Pagans have sometimes forgotten; when they set out to do everything that the old pagans did, that the final thing the old pagans did was to get christened." Like the great Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Suebi, and the Alemanni, so did the Nords, Swedes, Geats, and Danes also take up the cross. I see nothing wrong here.
What about the fregdamen frå Island og Noreg?
@@alpenschatz i m not neo pagan its just a joke
I love the sound of a Norwegian singing, it just sounds so beautiful. Dont know why
Same buddy
It's fordi Norway is da best
It's because you haven't heard yet Armenian singing.
@Ethan Pearson no it is norwegian. "og" is also norwegian and "Eg" is norwegian to (nynorsk form of "jeg") and tid is the norwegian word for time
@Ethan Pearson the Text is pretty modern so i guess it is surely after the contact👌😁
the tone to this song is so unique
feels almost upbeat and joyful, but also maybe slightly melancholy?
So perfectly descriptive of northern europe :D
Yeah
I definitely got a sad vibe from this one despite the upbeat lyrical subject matter
I think it is because it describes the old times, of which the sagas talk. Crazy that even people over a thousand years ago still thought "everything was better back then."
Im an 17 year old dutchguy who is extremely passioned and obsessed about the viking age. Because of this song im sad that im not from Norway xD but hey the closest that the vikings have been is 35 min away from my home. To every scandinavian reading this. Don't forget this awesome period. The period where your country got famous. Greetings from the netherlands
There is a new Lidl opening in Dublin, where there is a ruined viking house under the floor, seen through glass. Dublin and Waterford, Ireland's 'viking city' , in the south east have many viking museums, attractions etc. Would recommend you visiting to both cities in the future.
@@Daniel-vj9oq Dyflin & Veðrafjǫrðr ;)
Greetings from Norway, Glorie aan het Nederlandse rijk!
Skål, Nederland
@@MyUsersDark Greetings from the Netherlands buddy. Ære til det norske imperiet! (don't know or thats correct in Norse though)
If modern English hadn't been Influenced by french it's very likely most of us could understand it. I mean even just looking at the words compared to the subtitles I could get the gist of it fairly quick
Frisian is the closest living Germanic language to English. Its not very mutually intelligible anymore but it was mutually intelligible to Old English. You should check it out of you haven't.
You trying to say that Anglo-Saxons and Norsemen could understand each other? I tend to doubt that.
@@ThoseColoniesAreMine It depends on the timeline.
@@AaronPaulIbarrola I would say that Platt more like old english is. The northern dialekts the most. I'm from Ostpfalen and our dialekts sounds more skandinavian. Like the dialekts of the Westfalen. We have more than two germanic languages in germany!
@@jarlnils435 linguistically speaking Plattdeutsch is closer to English than to german, although in regards to grammar and vocabulary not so much.
It feels great to listen to a song of a fellow germanic language that you may not speak but still manage to pick up a few sentences. These are the moments I wish Denmark ever lost us, Greetings from the former Duchy of Holstein.
Greetings from formerly Jorvik
Greetings from the Shetland’s
Greetings from Västra Götaland Sweden.
I feel like this with English, I pick up some but not as much as I think German or Danish would with Norwegian, but I pick up some
@@space-3415 1066, terrible year innit?
This was the song that started my love for folk music. Glædelig dag fra Danmark ♥
God dag från Svea Rike
Góðan dag frá íslands
God dag fra Norge
Goddag fra Jylland!
*When you play CK2 with 867. starting date*
More specifically, when hosting feasts. And Nidaros is where it's at ;)
@@eemil.894 CK2 is better in my opinion. I still play it, with mods it's perfect game, and it has much more content than CK3 even without mods.
@@eemil.894 I agree, probably i will buy CK3 in future, but for now, i'm CK2 fanatic. And yes, i will stay CK2 loyalist forever and i will back to CK2 from time to time even in future. B)
@@eemil.894*id love to but I have no money*
@@eemil.894 I’ve already taken enough kidneys, and sold them but paradox is too expensive
Greetings from Sweden nordic brothers 🇸🇪🇳🇴🇮🇸🇩🇰
🇫🇴
Iceland belongs to Norway!!!
@@Northy777.Norway belongs to Sweden 😆
I am of Danish descent but I love this song... Something about the thought of sailing Fjords makes me very emotional.
The Danish and Norwegians have a long history together anyhow. I'm of Danish and Norwegian descent myself. This song has the spirit of Scandinavia in it. Even though I've never visited I plan to soon.
Ingen vibe check
Vibbe sjekk*
In swedish this means no vibe check so I got confused
@@janneplayz2370 Korleis høyrast denne songen ut for nokon som snakkar svensk? Det er ganske annleis frå den norsken du sikkert har høyrt tidlegare.
@@kukifitte7357 Ska jag vara helt ärligt så förstår jag norskan i den här sången nästan bättre än modern norska, även om ordföljden är lite gammaldags
@@joeljanssonhernstrom1819 So det er aksangen som gjer det lettare å skjøna?
I can't quite explain, but something about the sheer sound of this song makes me feel nostalgic for something I don't even know about. Like I'm longing for something I've long since forgotten or left behind.
Evropa. We mvst RETVRN
This feeling is called Anemoia
Even though this isn't in Swedish, I completely understood everything in this song.
FanboyGrodan Norwegian is extremely similar to Swedish.
@The Swedish Fascist oy vey there, you cant have such a name ;^) (very good)
same people, different dialects called languages
Russgolian President Were not the same people just because we have similar languages.
@@williamb5662 yes you are, lmao
What a beautiful song!👏👏💐💖💖
I admire traditional Norwegian culture and music. It’s very mystical and pure. Oh what a truly beautiful country Norway is.😊
Hilsen fra Tyskland❤️
Hilsen fra Norge :)
We are buituful Scandinavia in buituful
And I admire German culture and music ♥️
Danke
It took me entirely too long to realize that earl is etymologically descended from the word jarl.
it is not a descendent but a cousin
They both come from the Proto-Germanic word “erilaz”, but “earl” is closer to the source than “jarl”.
They’re cognates, one is not descended from the other.
@@merry3755I suppose the confusion comes from the fact that there are still earls today, but jarl seems ancient, unless I’m wrong and Jarl still is a title in Norway or Denmark.
probably one of the best songs ive heard in my life, no joke
This kind of reminds me of how today in Hungary there is a national event called the Kurultaj which is a gathering of distant ethnic peoples from all across Central and East Asia coming together to celebrate their common cultures, customs, traditions, values and they also do archery but it's horse archery (Y) :)
Wow
@@mathandcflmao Yep (Y) Go look it up (Y) :)
@@theuralictribes5689 Sure. Are you Hungarian?
@@mathandcflmao Yea I am. Except that I was born in Upper Hungary, modern day Slovakia.
@@theuralictribes5689 ohhh👍🏼
This song is beautiful. Thank you!
Proud to be Nordic in Heritage Proudly flying my Kalmar Union Flag next to My Daughters of Odin Banner in my window sills along I wish America could learn from these 5 great progressive countries Nordic Countries keep up the Progressive Work Love Ya! Greetings from Kansas , USA 🇩🇰🇫🇴🇫🇮🇬🇱🇮🇸🇳🇴🇸🇪
i Noticed that this was similar to Swedish so I translated the lyrics into modern day-Swedish:
Kom sit ikring och lyssna på mig, så berättar jag
händelser som hände i vår sagatid.
Kända män från Island och Norge samlades,
Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl.
Kända män från Island och Norge samlades,
Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl.
Och också ifrån Shetland och ifrån Orkonöy,
til samlingen var dem bjudna, både man och hustru.
I kapplekarna på järda visar dem sin styrka,
och därefter håller jarlen fest och spel.
Kända män från Island och Norge samlades,
Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl.
Den första leken uppå järda,
bågskytte det blev,
og många spända långbågar då dagen fortsatte,
men ingen träffade spjutet som var på en kulle,
utom Einar ifrån Lade som dem kallar Tambarskjelv.
Kända män från Island och Norge samlades,
Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl.
I den nästa leken ska dem ro etter Nidarfjorden.
Och årveden knakade då jättarna tog i.
Men Torgaut ifrån Orkonöy var en pajk som kunne ro,
och Njål och Ravn från Island, dem kom som nummer två.
Kända män från Island och Norge samlades,
Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl.
Den nästa leken på järda det var Hästtrav och spring,
Med många välkända hästar bland ridande män.
Men Eirik jarls Rimfakse han van som förväntat.
Detta var en häst som inte hade konkurans.
Kända män från Island och Norge samlades,
Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl.
Då lekarnas slut kom, på femte dagen det var.
Då jarlen tutade hornet, slut på tävlingen nu.
Nu bjuder vi allt folk in i fästarhallen in.
Om dessa event skald ska sjunga, nästa samlingen.
Kända män från Island och Norge samlades,
Nidaros var staden och Eirik han var jarl.
I am a Swede
Eirik Jarl of Nidaros - Host of the Norse Olympics
Quite a similarity between the Norse and Homer's Achaeans, don't you think?
So nice, again you can hear the similarities between Northern german and scandinavian music!
This is so much true to real Viking culture than the well known tv show.
Greetings from Azerbaijan to all Nordic countries 🇦🇿💜🇸🇪🇩🇰🇳🇴🇫🇮🇮🇸
No
@@Doug.Dimmadome ?
Obviously this is romanticised to a degree but I feel sad that this era is gone forever, an era where you could defeat someone called hjalfd the strong in an arm wrestling contest and have songs sung about you when you return to your village.
This is definitely my favorite Norse/Icelandic song.
It’s Norwegian
Neither icelandic nor Norse lad. Are You american by any chance?
A language that sounds so happy!
I just noticed that the Einar from this song also appears in the Omurin Langi
You are a man of culture too, I see
Jepp, Einar Tamberskjelve, mentioned in the sagas as the best viking with a bow and arrow :) He also came from Skaun, where Ragnar`s Lagertha grew up.
A famed politician and archer, killed by Harald Hardrada due to being a political rival.
Einar fought against Eirik Jarl in the battle at Svolder (i.e. the “hildarting” in Ormen Lange) but was pardoned after king Olav Tryggvason’s defeat.
What a wonderful discovery! Made my day.
My mama used to sing this for me before i go to sleep and now i been listening to this sense then
What a beautiful sound that reached my ears 😀
Can't believe I missed Eric's party
Took me an embarrassingly long time to realize the "tears" in the paintings are Iceland and Norway. ^^
Which is stupid. Iceland should not be included. Iceland was not part of Norway until the 13th century and Icelanders have fought long for their own identity that keeps being undermined by Nationalists Norwegians who adamantly claim all Icelanders were Norwegians. Any man born in Iceland is an Icelander to us, Icelanders did not and do not consider themselves to be Norwegians. be it during the Viking era or later. The Icelandic Commonwealth was founded in opposition to the Norwegian crown, created by people fleeing the rule of Norway in the hopes to create their own land. There is not a single point in the sagas when an Icelandic-born man is called a Norwegian and they are always called Icelanders and Icelanders had to fight a 40-year long civil war before swearing fealty to Norway. Out of all the countries to have ruled Iceland Norway did so by far the shortest. With effective Norwegian ending as soon as the monarchy joined a union with the crown of Denmark in 1380 and ending officially when the kingdom of Norway was integrated into the Kingdom of Denmark in 1537. Even under Norway Iceland was pretty much always considered separate off it, maintaining its own separate parliament and legal code throughout Norwegian rule.
I'm sure many will point out that the map refers to the "Norse" world, not the Norwegian one and I would then just like to point out the double standard, When it's an Icelandic "Norse" song or a Faroese "Norse" song the map only shows those countries and their flag, But if it's a Norwegian one it shows a united "Norse" world but not even completely because it doesn't include Denmark and Sweden. Norse does not mean Norwegian.
@@ThatIcelandicDude im pretty sure it's because of all the fregdamenn frå Ísland og Noreg
@@sanjaysreejith973 Every single Norwegian "Norse" song of his includes this picture.
@@ThatIcelandicDude well all Icelanders are ethnic Norwegian and Norwegians made Iceland
@@ostekakeutenost1308 An Icelander on its own is an ethnicity. One created from the mix of Norwegians, Danes and Celts and Iceland was quet literally founded in opposition to the Norwegian crown, Settled by people fleeing Norway, a people who created their own Republic and very quickly began calling themselves Icelanders. The Sagas call even firat generation Icelanders that. Iceland would exist as an Independent Republic until the latter half of the 13th century after having existed for over 330 years.
Eirik jarl my man ;)
lol I read up on him and turns out he actually betrayed the king Olav Tryggvason to get the throne, and sold off half his country to Denmark, and swore loyalty to the Danish king in the little terretory he had domain over. Eirik Jarl was basically one big douche, low key regret making this video xD
Ingen yeah he wasent the most honourable man, but hey, atleast i carry the name of the absolute madman
@@Ingenting den idioten
That idiot
@@Ingenting Don't regret, the sound is amazing and the games and gatherings in Nidaros were truly amazing.
@@Ingenting Olav killed Eriks father, it was pure revenge. Olav was a torturer, murdurer and a psykopat. Erik did nothning wrong!
I was always curious about how much Scandinavian languages look alike with each other and with the German language. For example, if someone speaks Swedish, can (s)he understand and communicate with someone from Norway? And if someone knows German, can (s)he understand Swedish and at what extend?
Im german and I can't understand Swedish danish or Norwegian.
I just understand the word "Langbogen" in this song.
But it's possible to understand dutch.
@@heiratsschwindler6749 Hmm, I see. Thanks for sharing! It seems that the opposite (from northern to German) is difficult too. But, if you speek one of them, I think it is not that hard to learn the others as well.
@@Giazaco yes, some people from sweden said they could understand this song.
I think between german and english and of course dutch there are many similar words. As a german you can often guess what the words in english mean for example: water=wasser, apel=Apfel (in dialects it's also sometimes apel in german but with different pronounciacion), sword=Schwert, reaktion=Reaktion, music=Musik and so on.
@@Giazaco Im Swedish and i get around 70% of the song. But it has more to do with dialects. If i am from the middle part of Sweden and live close to the Norwegian border, it's likely that we speak more similar then i would compared to someone from southern Sweden.
@@zoom5024 Thanks a lot for answering. It seems that there is a lot of common ground between norse languages.
Så kjempe kult! Jeg rekomenderer og høre på kongerekka, der har du historien om Erik jarl og mange andre norske konger!
Im happy humankind has so many cultures.
I love folk music from every culture.
It shows their indivituality and that non of them are just barbarians without a brain.
It presents a cultures best moment and I love to see the diversity that exists on earth. We are one humankind in many cultures.
Exactly. Nations must remain proud of their ancestors and history.
Some cultures are better than others
@@j22563
No. Just No
@@vinz4066 Yes, absolutely yes
@@j22563 No, definetly not.
Quiet. Listen this masterfull piece of ancient culture helps me to accept our little importance in the face of the flow of events,
brings you to accepting death, this is the greatest achievement of a song.
The greatness of past and forgotten kings, if not tomorrow the day after tomorrow every ruler will be forgotten, but as men we can greet the world with joy if we have generated culture.
This song is not ancient my guy, it’s a modern song.
@@hickspaced2963 It's written in description. It's not ancient and I knew it.
"Ancient culture" ≠ "Ancient song", but the facts narrated are from a remote era,
it does not matter that the poet is of our day, when he tells of ancient mythology, of forgotten days, recreating those days, those moments, then we are talking about an ancient culture completely different from the modern Norwegian one.
If I recreate a Gregorian chant keeping its features then what I create isn't a product of modern culture.
My God who knew so some could talk so much about my ancestors
This would work so perfectly in a game
Good pick for my Civ 6 Norway playlist.
I love this song! Finally now on itunes (Australia)!❤️❤️❤️
Is the melody authentic?
No, the vikings did not have musical notation that we know of
The instruments used are recreated based on archelogical evidence and studied. I'm not knowledgeable enough on the subject to give a concrete answer but based on my assumption of their competence, I'd say it most likely sounded this way.
Jeg elsker norge fra Nederland 🇳🇱❤️🇳🇴
Isn't that the kingdom that invaded England,then failed,and then Normans invaded?
No they succeded under Cnut the Great
@@aethelberht4938 oh ok
@@dabtican4953 ok
@@aethelberht4938Yeah in England we learnt about that a bit. I would have prefered one of the Harolds to win the war but the worst result happened.
They failed because a Norman shot an arrow through their king's eye.
Epic, my Norwegian blood comes from here.
Also mine!
This song is stuck in my head
Tribute to who recorded this tune in the mid-900s
You responded... his rival!! HIS R I V A L IS HERE!!!
@@kadeadams2308 Wouldn't that be "någon"?
1:27 hidden channel name moment..!
I CRAVE MORE NORSE MUSIC
It is sung in norwegian.
as you dont know, nidaros is basically an older name of the city Trondheim
I could have expected that, I play Hearts of Iron IV and Crusader Kings 3
Thank you for this..! Ya..! Viking Love to my brothers and sisters..!
Jeg elsker min norrøne arv
Skål! 🍺
@@N0RZC Skål brør! Hyll Norge det vakre!🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴🍻🍻🍻
@@Jürgen_von_Schumacher Rette die skandinavisch-deutsche Schönheit🇩🇪🇦🇹🇧🇻🇸🇪🇩🇰🇮🇸🇫🇴👏👏👏
Random soldier from Wessex in the 1000s *probably*: For Wessex!!!
Meanwhile the NSE vikings:
outstanding music
For Scandinavia! Unite our Nordic brother and sisters in 🇩🇰Denmark🇩🇰🇳🇴Norway🇳🇴🇸🇪Sweden🇸🇪🇮🇸Iceland🇮🇸🇫🇮Finland🇫🇮🇪🇪Estonia🇪🇪🇱🇻Latvia🇱🇻🇱🇹Lithuania🇱🇹🇫🇴Faroe Islands🇫🇴🇬🇱Greenland🇬🇱!!!
From Sweden.
baltics are considered nordic? huh
Thenn germany to!
@@varangianguard7102 Yes
You forgot Åland.
🇦🇽
I'm going to be listening to a lot of Scandinavian & Nordic Folk this Leif Erikson day.
Hello from the United States 🇺🇸👍🇳🇴🇸🇪🇫🇮🇩🇰🇮🇸
Keep in mind that this is a modern song
POV: You're a Viking in a fantasy world who had just arrived back home after adventuring with some outsiders.
Beautiful.
Am I the only one who feels a weird sense of nostalgia when listen to this
Do Singapore plzzzzzzzzz I love your vids
more of these pls
This goes well with Ck3 tours & tournaments!
Broderlandet Norge laver bra musik
Broder 🇳🇴🇩🇰💪🍺😎
Near my village there is a place called the Norman's stone. It was the site of a great battle where my ancestors the Rhomaioi defeated the Northmen who came to Greece to dismantle our Empire. They came so close but the GrecoRomans prevailed. I think there is also a saga about this southern campaign.
That moment when you find a cheerful Viking song (that doesn't include war or pillaging) on Ingen.
It is a modern song
Is "Jarl" where we get the word "Earl"?
I believe so
Yes, imposed to England by Cnut, earl is basically the anglosaxon version of jarl
When was this written?
Alexios Tsipras around 600-700 ad?
Alexios Tsipras correction; i saw 1066 in another song
Voluntaryist Gentleman thanks for the info
@@paganrevolutionary1269 These were written by Harald Foss in modern times. They're based on ancient history, such as the battle at Stamford bridge in 1066.
im from the USA but my ancestry is Norwegian and im trying to reconnect with it and its so beautiful all of it
Can someone please explain the letters "å" and "ø" to me? My knowledge of the northern languages is not too good.
ö/ø is a bit like the "i" in "bird".
å is like the "oo" in door, or "o" in "more".
Hope that helps.
ein sehr glücklich lieder!
No dislikes? Nice!!!
19 villages that are in need of burning.
Forgive the ignorant question, but is this modern Norwegian or some older variant? It sounds more archaic to my ears
It's a bit old fashioned, but not by any means old norse :)
This is a modern song.
FYI: Nidaros is now Trondheim
Nidaros er et bedre bavn og Kristiania er også et bedre navn for Oslo
@@norwegiannationalist7678 Ja, det er sant
@@norwegiannationalist7678 Kristiania er det dannske kongen ga, det het oslo før kristiania
York was Jorvik
@@rubens2004 yes
Why the glitches in the vid, also gud
lets go back to eirk jarl boys Eirk jarl 2021 make norway grate again
❤️ from Bosnia to Norway and Island🇳🇴🇧🇦🇮🇸
Makes me sad for the great and wonderful times that we as Germanic/Nordic peoples have traded in for...what?
Fun fact this song was made in 2020 by harald foss.
Very beautiful singing. I’m from Kazakhstan, and the Viking songs remind me a little of Turkic folks songs
This one is not a viking song
The Scandinavian Olympics.
Is this Norwegian or Icelandic?
@@Urshilaku196 Thanks a lot!
It's Norwegian, Faroese is perhaps the closest to Old Norse, and this definitely isn't Faroese.
It is Norwegian due to the fact that og is modern Norwegian compared to the word Auk is "and" in old Norse if I recall correctly. I assume it is most likely Bokmal
Either some sort of eastern dialect due to some words he uses or maybe this is even old west norse or middle norwegian idk
It sounds pretty "gøtu danskt'ish", which is Danish/Norwegian sung with heavy Faroese dialect.
Certified Viking Moment
Is this in Nynorsk? Norway is spelt as Noreg.
Yes it is
Maybe, it’s probably old Nynorsk.
Is there a link to the artwork used?
@hickspaced "absolute bottom"
Dude, the description isn't even that long.
@hickspaced Someones salty
@hickspaced He doesn't have to, the creators are dead, like normally very long dead, And if the images are something he bought off a stock photo seller he doesn't have to credit them
@hickspaced He did literally say the song was created by Harald Foss
I was expecting some kind of disaster to happen at the end during whole song.
I can definitely hear how the Norse influenced English in this song.
well technically this is in modern norwegian but norse definitely did influence the english language
is this a remix of a song? i remember it from somewhere.
3:29, this channel's very name!
Someone know which kind of jawharp is used for this song ?
Why does this rhythm seem so familiar?
Sounds like that one Irish song
A bit like ”tell me ma”
Efjay 3 yes that's the song!
is this song copy right protected or could i possibly listen to this on my twitch livestreams?
The audio track is protected because it‘s quite recent, idk about the lyrics though
@@lahusa_ ah, I see. Thanks for the info
Its so beutifule
Disclaimer: If I'm not mistaken, the word "var" like in "han var Jarl" is pronounced "wahr" not with a V sound.
In Old Norse maybe, but this is Norwegian.
Proto-Norse and early Old Norse had many S- and Z-sounds where late Old Norse had R. Also, early Old Norse had W where later Old Norse had V or no sound at all (e.g. wormiz became ormr). At the time of Eirik Jarl it is unclear how much of this shift had happened, so the "var" was either "var", "war" or "was". English "was" is borrowed from Old Norse, so that is the strongest evidence we have for it still being "was". When the sagas were written in the late Medieval the shift from "was" to "var" was completed.
There's a very old song in my country that resembles this one... probably just a coincidence
Title should say it’s sung in Norwegian.
It’s not, this is not Norwegian.
@@JarkaKavraizhkiTH-cam it is in modern Norwegian, just uses some old words