If you haven't watched Joann Fletcher's series on mummies, I suggest it ! She's the best there is and all her shows are amazing! It's called Mummy Forensics, here on YT on the Timeline Channel. Anything with Joann Fletcher & skeletons will be superb lol !
This is fascinating you guys do such an awesome job determining who and what they did in life and teaching us how wonderful and respectful this can be thank you for showing all how respectful we can be to our death of others great job bless you all
If I may suggest the series 'Mummy Forensics' with Joann Fletcher.. here on YT on the channel Timeline.. Great Stuff! Similar to this & Joann is amazing!
lol. I can't help but wonder what Sir John Strickley would have thought about being called "a bit of beefcake" by the ladies of the team? The thought of it makes me laugh. Given that he was a fish eater and a duly sworn knight, I don't know that he would have seen the moniker in the same jovial light. But it is truly lovely that this team were able to bring Sir John back from the depths of oblivion. It's stuff like this that makes me a true Anglophile. Love it!
West Winds My plan was to become an archaeologist, preferably specialising in physical anthropology but was unable to major in it for my B.A as they weren’t offering the 2 final units I needed to complete my degree within the time allotted (I worked full time and we started our family while I was studying). I’m a hopeless Anglophile as well and we plan to emigrate there in the next decade. Such a beautiful country, I could never be bored living there. So much history, and most of it fascinating. Such diversity in such a tiny nation, and the people we met were all lovely.
@@mindrolling24Hope you managed to realize your dream & are living your best life in some lovely village or historic city. If not, hope you have a plan in motion that will see you there soon.
Great comment. It is ironically amusing that the "beefcake" had a diet of mostly fish. I wonder if he would also be amused & possibly see beefcake as a compliment.
I find it extremely fascinating how much they can deduce from examining a skeleton. Not just injuries that may have caused death, but also actions/activities they performed as well as other injuries/traumas sustained throughout their life. Being able to tell not only that he was a soldier, but also what kind of fighting he did is so interesting. I imagine future archeologists, a few hundred years from now, examining a skeleton & discovering he was a fellow archeologist because of the wear & tear on knees & back from all the digging they did bent over on their knees. 😄 It would be great if they could get the money to fund more of these in-depth analysis of ancient remains, especially with the scientific advances in forensic examinations that have occurred in recent years.
Proud to say I’m a descendent of Sir James Douglas, The Black Douglas. He was a BIG deal in the scottish war of independence. What I wouldn’t give to visit and just know everything about that era. History hits different when there’s a personal tie to it.
I'm related to two Scottish families that I know of, the Grahams and the Gunns. I traced my lineage back to the mid 1500s with the help of Ancestry and the records that the Mormon church maintains. The Gunns were almost completely wiped out by a rival clan. There are remains of the Gunn castle on the east coast of Scotland. Many of the Grahams fought and died at the battle of Culloden. I find history very interesting. This show is great! I hope they make more like it.
I agree, Janet Douglas was my 16xgrandmother when the King of Scotland had her burned at the stake so he could have Castle Glamis. This was before the Bowes-Lyons family came into owning the castle, Queen Elizabeth ll mother’s family. I’d give my eye teeth to visit Scotland also.
Continuous play throughout - no ads detected anywhere - and definitely no black screens (must be my installed ad blocker). Gripping documentary by the way.
@56:58 "for her it was always in his bones.." as we got the full monty! lol XD Also love how everyone (including the guy) say "wow!! niice" just as his side view turns front. I know...I'm a child...but the ending of this made me giggle sooo much.
I think chicken was also very expensive. A normal person would only eat a chicken once it had stopped laying. Chicken only became cheap and plentiful in the 1950s
Thank you so much for sharing this video. I wonder if that poor man and the others eventually were returned to their resting place? I hope he doesn't remain in a cardboard box on a shelf.
Unfortunately, being a historical specimen, I would bet he and all the rest, are still in a box. Once a skeleton is seen as a scientific subject, ceremonial burials aren't really done.
Great video thanks Lucy.. i learnt today about how Baskerville got its font name.. i love font types.. one of my early hyper focus was font.. im such a nerd
@emilyr3451 I worked on the stationary counter at Smiths but was working in various forms of font, from research to data to programing to editing and even some print! So nerdy but so cool 😎
Yes it happened in 1525 when King François 1er ( king of France) was defeated by Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor. King François was taken hostage, sent to Spain and later freed in exchange for his two sons.
What, where are all these commercials ? I haven't seen them on this youtube video . Are you referring to those you might have seen when watching this live previously on the television ?
Southern England or Western France. That could mean anything. Scotland and France were allied for a long time. On the other hand, Normandy was English at the time. So even if he was french, he could be on either side.
All the faces look the same why bother another example of how shockingly bad computer programs perform sorry but it's true faces are rarely symmetrical
Stirling is not far from the upper tidal reaches on the River Forth, a major river and probable trading route. Easy to imagine fresh sea fish arriving at market there. Why the absolute outrage at Stirling not being on the coast! Maybe he didn't grow up in Stirling??
In the medieval days fish was eaten on Fridays and meat wasn't allowed. This was for religious reasons. There were many other fast days and festivals also where only fish was eaten.
they didn't really think beavers were fish, the church merely designated them thus so that they could eat them on Fridays without breaking the Christian law. mmmmmm, beaver!
@@mrs.cracker4622 Sex too.....which made it difficult to produce royal heirs....if Anne Boleyn and Catherine of Aragon's most fertile times were on religious festival dates, when they had to abstain. Also no sex during pregnancy, or the 40 days after giving birth. Queens not allowed to breast feed as they were supposed to get pregnant as quickly as possible, so they had some knowledge of that. Not thats it's foolproof. My fist prem baby w as still in the incubator when I found I was pregnant again....and I was expressing milk for the first who was tube fed in her incubator. They were born 10 months apart.
Another, serious and very interesting documentary totally ruined by inane music. Why do these people think that we need music in a serious case of trying to find out about someone's death? I am surprised that we don't have music during the national news as well according to some.
Me again, the square injuries on the female skull look like the blows from the spiked side of a war hammer rather than a mace, the mace would probably cave more of the skull in, the spike of a war hammer tends to make a clean squarish puncture but very deep and more of a killing or disabling strike. I am surprised at the lady experts lack of knowledge about dried or salt fish being available so far from the sea. Its been used a long way from the sea way before these dates.
I downloaded the video and when I tried to watch it, it keeps on prompting me to retry to connect. Even when online it doesn't want to play. So now I'm wondering, will I be refunded for the Megabytes when I downloaded this video and now it doesn't play?
bit obnoxious of sue to question another expert's dietary analysis, an area she's not a specialist in at all. fish from the Forth nearby is a reasonable conclusion.
Yeah, I've often thought there's something unlikeable about her, as if she's full of her own self importance. She's not someone I'd like to work with for any great length of time.
There are many becks (rivers) around Stirling as well, so the fish could have just as easily been caught there too. I feel that Sue would be a very difficult person to work with.She seems to have a difficult time accepting any experts opinion in any of these cases. I watched one of the episodes a few days back, about a man who the other experts believed that the man, (skeleton) was believed to have been a human sacrifice (Windy Pit I believe) Sue didn't like that hypothesis either. She didn't say anything but her face spoke volumes..
@@alesiaalbers6740 Fostering (fosterage) was when clan leaders, and sometimes those in different social classes, sent their kids to live with other families when they were around the age of 7. The foster family would educate them on what they needed to know, depending on whatever their gender and social status was, until they were considered an adult. It was a way to create or strengthen bonds/alliances with other clans.
A thought. The woman could have been his wife and was killed to keep from being captured after her husband died, or possibly was pregnant and killed to end the line of an English Knight.
I had began to associate this absorbing show as a bit of political correctness . This episode is rather refreshing. There is drum beat of English aggression, which is well deserved .However the Scots did as much invading of England and Ireland with or without continental allies. Fascinating all the same .
On this one, once they have a possible name, couldn't they chase that name on his family records to see if there is mention onw here he was buried, etc? I am sure it was not the only knight ever to die around there.. :-)
Fish diet of the Christian faith. Which faith only eats fish but not meat? My father is of Catholic faith and he does eat fish, but he also eats lamb. Is fish only an early form of Catholic faith? Or is this something completely different?
I want to find this interesting, but I hate how they spend so much time talking about what they're going to do instead of just actually doing it. If they cut out the interminable setup this thing would be half as long.
every one of the reconstructions that they ever do end up looking like someone on steroids. I think that the butch women reconstructing the bones do it to feel more dainty . lets face it no body looks like that and what are the odds that every reconstruction that they have undertaken are related people and all look the same way
People were more muscular back then because they did more lifting etcetera they had less body fat. Their lives were built around hard work we've only changed our bodies over the last 150 years years to where we are milquetoast weaklings. Those that began to live in the cities their musculature unless they did Heavy jobs that just Tannery laundry draftsman excetera and Cooks because of the heavy pots etcetera pretty much became weaker thinner smaller they also eat less protein and ended up on a starch diet that gave them less strength. As a geneticist said he said that you can't change genetics in just a hundred years that's why we are obese we're software nothing unless we still live our original ways and replace are heavy work with exercise powerlifting weight lifting and balance training.
I imagine him as being the local blacksmith who, being charged with helping in the defence of Stirling while the lord was away, served as nobly as any knight but was slaughtered by the English along with his wife. I'd say he was buried there as a token of respect for his loyalty unto death. But that's just imagining. I wouldn't pretend I had access to these scientific tests and eminent historians.
As I was just talking bout sorry john n satin I dont feel this is a fair deal cuz they r 2 they get to see me in every kind of way if u know what I mean n they read all my thoughts n every thing is a terrible issue just sipple things r a big deal n sir john always wants satin to do something with me so I'm defending myself alone
What about the Scottish prisoners of Flodden who were force matched unfed to Durham and then starved to death.Why dont you talk about them? They were an independent people, not rebels.
because this is about the grave of some important well fed beefcake knight who took an arrow to the intestines instead of imprisoned starving Scots? thanks for the info though. I'll give it a google. been enjoying this episode
Wonder what the Scots did to English POWs up in Scotland? The Scots invaded England at Flodden, and got beaten back. Can't have any complaints about the treatment of the prisoners, considering it was the Medieval Ages.
I can't understand how they can treat these people with such analytical methods.. I would absolutely hate my ancient relatives, or anyone else's to be dug up and their bones drilled and analysed for any reason. There are some things which should be left alone. Our ancestors are no different from us today. We don't need to know everything just to satisfy our curiosity.
For someone with a channel name like Reel Truth History Documentaries, I sure do see a lot of "chainmail" made out of knitted twine, next time how about dressing up in unrolled wire sponges? At least they're made of metal. And, "at that time there would have been very little armor around"... At what? At that time Mr. Skeleton is from? What was it, he died somewhere from 1290 to 1400? And there was "very little armor around"? Is that dude on drugs?
There was armour around, the higher your status in life the better armour you could afford to buy..I think chain mail was starting to go out of fashion during Sir John's time, as you saw in the video it is very heavy and restricted easy movement.. It also caused more problems than it solved, if a knight in full armour was fighting in boggy conditions the weight of chain mail etc could weigh you down to the point where he would drown rather than being cut down by a weapon. Chain mail was invented really to help stop arrows and it did for a while, but then someone made an arrow to pierce through it and of course Chain mail became pretty ineffective after that. So Armour was constantly changing through the centuries just as weapons were to defeat it. Just out of interest as well some peasant soldiers did have armour, but like as not they stole off the dead after the battle was over....
This show is mesmerizing! I can't get enough! I wish there were more history cold case episodes!
Just came upon it and am already addicted to it
If you haven't watched Joann Fletcher's series on mummies, I suggest it ! She's the best there is and all her shows are amazing! It's called Mummy Forensics, here on YT on the Timeline Channel. Anything with Joann Fletcher & skeletons will be superb lol !
@@Mandy-nt2cs I just looked this up and I thank you!! ❤
These shows are so fascinating! I wish they had more than only 2 seasons.
I live a 20 minutiae drive form the castle and I have visited the castle 16 times over the years. Never gets boring and it’s just so stunning
Lucky you! 😃
This is fascinating you guys do such an awesome job determining who and what they did in life and teaching us how wonderful and respectful this can be thank you for showing all how respectful we can be to our death of others great job bless you all
I can't believe this show aired over 10 years ago. If it had a sequal today, how amazing would it be with latest technology
I know. I love this show!
Adding modern genetics into the mix would be brilliant
Would be amazing! The return of this show , today, with new technology 🥹🤞🤞
10 to 15 years ago was prime TV, I don't watch anything anymore because it's just boring reality shows and stuff about toxic celebrities.
Please make more episodes it is sooo fascinating, I love this sort of programme
👍🏻 I love these history cold case. Thanks for the upload!
This Show is AMAZING!!! I wish you would make more!!!
Loved this program.
Fantastic!!! Haven't seen this particular episode before. Thank you for posting this. Wish we could have many more documentaries like this one!
If I may suggest the series 'Mummy Forensics' with Joann Fletcher.. here on YT on the channel Timeline.. Great Stuff! Similar to this & Joann is amazing!
@@Mandy-nt2cs Thank you for the info. I'll give it a try!
lol. I can't help but wonder what Sir John Strickley would have thought about being called "a bit of beefcake" by the ladies of the team? The thought of it makes me laugh. Given that he was a fish eater and a duly sworn knight, I don't know that he would have seen the moniker in the same jovial light. But it is truly lovely that this team were able to bring Sir John back from the depths of oblivion. It's stuff like this that makes me a true Anglophile. Love it!
West Winds My plan was to become an archaeologist, preferably specialising in physical anthropology but was unable to major in it for my B.A as they weren’t offering the 2 final units I needed to complete my degree within the time allotted (I worked full time and we started our family while I was studying).
I’m a hopeless Anglophile as well and we plan to emigrate there in the next decade. Such a beautiful country, I could never be bored living there. So much history, and most of it fascinating. Such diversity in such a tiny nation, and the people we met were all lovely.
@@mindrolling24Hope you managed to realize your dream & are living your best life in some lovely village or historic city. If not, hope you have a plan in motion that will see you there soon.
Great comment. It is ironically amusing that the "beefcake" had a diet of mostly fish. I wonder if he would also be amused & possibly see beefcake as a compliment.
I love y’alls shows! They’re so amazing! Keep up the wonderful work!
I want more of this. Fascinating!
This show is awesome!! I love it!!
Yet again simply amazing work, what a great team
Ahhh one of my favourite narrators….my bedtime story tonight. Thank you 🇨🇦
I find it extremely fascinating how much they can deduce from examining a skeleton. Not just injuries that may have caused death, but also actions/activities they performed as well as other injuries/traumas sustained throughout their life. Being able to tell not only that he was a soldier, but also what kind of fighting he did is so interesting. I imagine future archeologists, a few hundred years from now, examining a skeleton & discovering he was a fellow archeologist because of the wear & tear on knees & back from all the digging they did bent over on their knees. 😄
It would be great if they could get the money to fund more of these in-depth analysis of ancient remains, especially with the scientific advances in forensic examinations that have occurred in recent years.
I see him as a former soldier who fought and died for the monarchy. God Bless him and all who were like him.
take it from me he was no ordinary soldier to get buried in the castle, probably related to the King.
Sir john says he was not a soldier for the monarchy and thanks for the comment
@@douglastodd1947 he was liked maybe alot n I use to call him a king but he wasnt related to a king
@@douglastodd1947 n thanks for saying that
This team is amazing
Proud to say I’m a descendent of Sir James Douglas, The Black Douglas. He was a BIG deal in the scottish war of independence. What I wouldn’t give to visit and just know everything about that era. History hits different when there’s a personal tie to it.
I recommend a visit with your family, health and wellness to all
I'm related to two Scottish families that I know of, the Grahams and the Gunns. I traced my lineage back to the mid 1500s with the help of Ancestry and the records that the Mormon church maintains. The Gunns were almost completely wiped out by a rival clan. There are remains of the Gunn castle on the east coast of Scotland. Many of the Grahams fought and died at the battle of Culloden. I find history very interesting. This show is great! I hope they make more like it.
I agree, Janet Douglas was my 16xgrandmother when the King of Scotland had her burned at the stake so he could have Castle Glamis. This was before the Bowes-Lyons family came into owning the castle, Queen Elizabeth ll mother’s family. I’d give my eye teeth to visit Scotland also.
Read proper books. Don't do all that empathizing nonsense the SNP do nowadays to teach fact-free history.
What a great chanell. This is excellent ! Thank you much 💕👌
Love these cold case shows
If you have problem with the ad,s just run the red time bar to the ending with you finger and refresh ads won't play then, great show btw
Thanks
OR...dont be a cheapskate and buy premium yt or just dl ad blocker!
“All we had was a bit of a scar and a bit of beefcake.” I love Prof Sue Black… 😂❤
What a dreadful weapon that killed the poor lady 😥😢
Fascinating and so well presented. I do find the music a bit intrusive though.
Continuous play throughout - no ads detected anywhere - and definitely no black screens (must be my installed ad blocker). Gripping documentary by the way.
ADVERT ALERT!
Amazing thank you. The amount of work you put in - again - amazing Thank you 🙏🙏🙏🙏🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
@56:58 "for her it was always in his bones.." as we got the full monty! lol XD Also love how everyone (including the guy) say "wow!! niice" just as his side view turns front. I know...I'm a child...but the ending of this made me giggle sooo much.
Narrator = Laurence Fox - really nice! Brilliant series imho.
I thought I recognised that voice!
@@teresalanham2678 It sounded familiar to me too.😊
Many people ate preserved salted fish when fresh isn’t available and still do.
Sir john says that's not true
Back then, beef was still considered a bit of a rarity, and significantly more expensive than chicken or fish. Great documentary btw.
I think chicken was also very expensive. A normal person would only eat a chicken once it had stopped laying. Chicken only became cheap and plentiful in the 1950s
Sir john says that's not even true that people dont even know about that stuff
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
I wonder if that poor man and the others eventually were returned to their resting place? I hope he doesn't remain in a cardboard box on a shelf.
Unfortunately, being a historical specimen, I would bet he and all the rest, are still in a box.
Once a skeleton is seen as a scientific subject, ceremonial burials aren't really done.
Very interesting
Great video thanks Lucy.. i learnt today about how Baskerville got its font name.. i love font types.. one of my early hyper focus was font.. im such a nerd
Same here. Perhaps it's because I've worked in the printing industry for almost 30 years??? 🤪
@emilyr3451 I worked on the stationary counter at Smiths but was working in various forms of font, from research to data to programing to editing and even some print! So nerdy but so cool 😎
48:55 Was it a common thing to swap out a parent for a child in a hostage situation back then? That sounds like some next level bad parenting.
@Kat Harper This is one of the most informative responses I have ever seen on youtube. Thanks!
Yes it happened in 1525 when King François 1er ( king of France) was defeated by Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor. King François was taken hostage, sent to Spain and later freed in exchange for his two sons.
@Vincent Magnin interesting!
@@jrideout2802 tryouts fog♡♡gfuiygi
They found the Mountain, the first thought that came to mind describing this guy.
"Would've Not Been Pleasant." Haha. British Isles understatement. Would've hurt like HELL! "
The number of commercials really takes away from the enjoyment of this documentary!
What, where are all these commercials ? I haven't seen them on this youtube video . Are you referring to those you might have seen when watching this live previously on the television ?
back ground music is way to loud, please, but I love these shows, thank you
Southern England or Western France.
That could mean anything. Scotland and France were allied for a long time. On the other hand, Normandy was English at the time. So even if he was french, he could be on either side.
54:51. Her Face! Brilliant.
All the faces look the same why bother another example of how shockingly bad computer programs perform sorry but it's true faces are rarely symmetrical
Ooo sir john is kinda mad at ur comment n says loudly IT IS MY FACE
Shame Victor Ambrus isn t around anymore.
If you watch “Knight Fight” and you see how those guys are built, it’s the same!
What a great show!! Very informative!! Wouldn’t it be fascinating if DNA could be gathered and stored as an Ancient data base of all of the victims.
Stirling is not far from the upper tidal reaches on the River Forth, a major river and probable trading route. Easy to imagine fresh sea fish arriving at market there. Why the absolute outrage at Stirling not being on the coast! Maybe he didn't grow up in Stirling??
I too thought her reaction was a little unexpected. Fish being eaten as part of the practice of a pious knight was really interesting.
And there were so many meatless fast-days!@@cdd4248
He says he di not grow up in sterling
@@cdd4248 he wasnt no pious knight
@@janetmackinnon3411 he didnt fast he ate when he was hungry he says
In the medieval days fish was eaten on Fridays and meat wasn't allowed. This was for religious reasons. There were many other fast days and festivals also where only fish was eaten.
They also thought that Beavers were fish , and so were geese because they spawned from barnicles.
they didn't really think beavers were fish, the church merely designated them thus so that they could eat them on Fridays without breaking the Christian law. mmmmmm, beaver!
@@stevedoggart2805 did the Church know about before Beavers before 1492?
I thought about the number of days on the calendar back then when meat was forbidden, too. Good point.
@@mrs.cracker4622 Sex too.....which made it difficult to produce royal heirs....if Anne Boleyn and Catherine of Aragon's most fertile times were on religious festival dates, when they had to abstain. Also no sex during pregnancy, or the 40 days after giving birth. Queens not allowed to breast feed as they were supposed to get pregnant as quickly as possible, so they had some knowledge of that. Not thats it's foolproof. My fist prem baby w as still in the incubator when I found I was pregnant again....and I was expressing milk for the first who was tube fed in her incubator. They were born 10 months apart.
Love the show...but WAY too many commercials!
Another, serious and very interesting documentary totally ruined by inane music.
Why do these people think that we need music in a serious case of trying to find out about someone's death? I am surprised that we don't have music during the national news as well according to some.
Me again, the square injuries on the female skull look like the blows from the spiked side of a war hammer rather than a mace, the mace would probably cave more of the skull in, the spike of a war hammer tends to make a clean squarish puncture but very deep and more of a killing or disabling strike. I am surprised at the lady experts lack of knowledge about dried or salt fish being available so far from the sea. Its been used a long way from the sea way before these dates.
Wonderful work, history and technology. Yes this Knight was a beef cake.
I use to call him a stud muffin
I downloaded the video and when I tried to watch it, it keeps on prompting me to retry to connect. Even when online it doesn't want to play. So now I'm wondering, will I be refunded for the Megabytes when I downloaded this video and now it doesn't play?
Nope.
I wish they would have done a metalalergic test on the arrowhead to see it origins.
Him being a knight meant he had a squire or more then one and access to servants he could order people to go get him fish. Not surprising. :'D
Sir john was probly mean to them to
It's unwatchable too many freaking ads
use adblock
TH-cam vance
bit obnoxious of sue to question another expert's dietary analysis, an area she's not a specialist in at all. fish from the Forth nearby is a reasonable conclusion.
Yeah, I've often thought there's something unlikeable about her, as if she's full of her own self importance. She's not someone I'd like to work with for any great length of time.
There are many becks (rivers) around Stirling as well, so the fish could have just as easily been caught there too. I feel that Sue would be a very difficult person to work with.She seems to have a difficult time accepting any experts opinion in any of these cases. I watched one of the episodes a few days back, about a man who the other experts believed that the man, (skeleton) was believed to have been a human sacrifice (Windy Pit I believe) Sue didn't like that hypothesis either. She didn't say anything but her face spoke volumes..
Gosh I wish the gentleman had shown maps of where this knight had been fostered.
What do u mean fosterd
@@alesiaalbers6740 Fostering (fosterage) was when clan leaders, and sometimes those in different social classes, sent their kids to live with other families when they were around the age of 7. The foster family would educate them on what they needed to know, depending on whatever their gender and social status was, until they were considered an adult. It was a way to create or strengthen bonds/alliances with other clans.
Now to dress him in his warrior clothes
forgot to say that if you would like to see similar man, in REAL life, and are unaware about Rugby....call up images of England Rugby player DAN COLE.
omg, just add the scar on the head and it's the same guy!
Can they actually know what size his muscles were based on what they see on his bones??
Yes bu certain markings where muscles were and I believe thickness of their bones
@@Ian-mj4pt : wow
@@Ian-mj4pt : Makes sense... The denser the bones the more stress they've been under as a result of physical exertion...
A thought. The woman could have been his wife and was killed to keep from being captured after her husband died, or possibly was pregnant and killed to end the line of an English Knight.
Interesting.
Again this is so painful for him n yes she is his wife he loves her very much
I've watched these episodes quite often. What a fantastic show! It's just brilliant and the team a wonderful🌹😃🌏🪐🌕🙏🍀🦉🦋🌹
Wondering who voices the voice overs? Very nice voice and accent😍
Laurence Fox.
He says he has a little accent but I dont notice it
He died during the reign of Edward III.
I had began to associate this absorbing show as a bit of political correctness . This episode is rather refreshing. There is drum beat of English aggression, which is well deserved .However the Scots did as much invading of England and Ireland with or without continental allies. Fascinating all the same .
peut on l'avoir en francais, je trouve cela très enrichissant mais je ne parle par anglais
merci
Mais oui mon Cherie! M
too bad there are ads every six minutes
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@@mariahammarstrom7934 indeed
Could they have done any DNA on him? And the female?
On this one, once they have a possible name, couldn't they chase that name on his family records to see if there is mention onw here he was buried, etc? I am sure it was not the only knight ever to die around there.. :-)
They ate better than we did.
Fish diet of the Christian faith. Which faith only eats fish but not meat? My father is of Catholic faith and he does eat fish, but he also eats lamb. Is fish only an early form of Catholic faith? Or is this something completely different?
Shame the clowns who bought TH-cam insert commercials every 2 minutes. Time for software to block their ads
The Stirling man was English.
"Reel history" channel should be renamed "reel of ads" channel. Ridiculous amount of ads, added to copyrighted BBC material.
Infuriating a couple of minutes into it, and the screen goes black
Sue was incredulous.....who would imagine a possible knight with a high fish diet?
😁
I thought the knights eating fish for piety sake was really interesting.
Whats so hard to imagine about that
I thought she came across a bit rude when hearing the isotope results. Sure she’d love someone reacting to her findings in such a way.
Maybe he liked fish 🤔
They could have found out where the knight in the list grow up and lived, if it was Southern England that would have tied him in bit more.
He was an absolute hottie, lol!
I wish this awesome show was still on!
I wonder iif it would have possible to trace his place of birth or place of upbringing in case he was this particular knight?
I want to find this interesting, but I hate how they spend so much time talking about what they're going to do instead of just actually doing it. If they cut out the interminable setup this thing would be half as long.
every one of the reconstructions that they ever do end up looking like someone on steroids. I think that the butch women reconstructing the bones do it to feel more dainty . lets face it no body looks like that and what are the odds that every reconstruction that they have undertaken are related people and all look the same way
People were more muscular back then because they did more lifting etcetera they had less body fat. Their lives were built around hard work we've only changed our bodies over the last 150 years years to where we are milquetoast weaklings. Those that began to live in the cities their musculature unless they did Heavy jobs that just Tannery laundry draftsman excetera and Cooks because of the heavy pots etcetera pretty much became weaker thinner smaller they also eat less protein and ended up on a starch diet that gave them less strength. As a geneticist said he said that you can't change genetics in just a hundred years that's why we are obese we're software nothing unless we still live our original ways and replace are heavy work with exercise powerlifting weight lifting and balance training.
The show would have been better if they would stop talking over each other and stop finishing each other's sentences.
I imagine him as being the local blacksmith who, being charged with helping in the defence of Stirling while the lord was away, served as nobly as any knight but was slaughtered by the English along with his wife. I'd say he was buried there as a token of respect for his loyalty unto death. But that's just imagining. I wouldn't pretend I had access to these scientific tests and eminent historians.
Who is the narrator Please?
Laurence Fox
Why there is not DNA análisis?
I accidently say things i think one of them might say n it messes me up bad
He looks like a past relative of Mike Tindal :)
He was an English Knight or an enemy of the Scots, the latter unfortunately
too much noise!!!
You left out cause of death on the Sterling man
He died of the arrow wound
It was a arrow
I'm in Birmingham and I eat fish!!!!
As I was just talking bout sorry john n satin I dont feel this is a fair deal cuz they r 2 they get to see me in every kind of way if u know what I mean n they read all my thoughts n every thing is a terrible issue just sipple things r a big deal n sir john always wants satin to do something with me so I'm defending myself alone
Thats wayne Rooney.
What about the Scottish prisoners of Flodden who were force matched unfed to Durham and then starved to death.Why dont you talk about them? They were an independent people, not rebels.
because this is about the grave of some important well fed beefcake knight who took an arrow to the intestines instead of imprisoned starving Scots? thanks for the info though. I'll give it a google. been enjoying this episode
Wonder what the Scots did to English POWs up in Scotland? The Scots invaded England at Flodden, and got beaten back. Can't have any complaints about the treatment of the prisoners, considering it was the Medieval Ages.
@@elwulfcoe1696 Fair comment.
at 22:40 she ??
My Scots blood (I'm a half) wishes they would put clothes on him - kilt? suit of armor? If he were "mine" I couldn't resist doing so!)
One name in one document and it's him, really ?
Great record keeping folks!,!!!
I can't understand how they can treat these people with such analytical methods.. I would absolutely hate my ancient relatives, or anyone else's to be dug up and their bones drilled and analysed for any reason. There are some things which should be left alone. Our ancestors are no different from us today. We don't need to know everything just to satisfy our curiosity.
Sgt. Hathaway, you have fallen so far. I won’t watch these any more. Shame.
For someone with a channel name like Reel Truth History Documentaries, I sure do see a lot of "chainmail" made out of knitted twine, next time how about dressing up in unrolled wire sponges? At least they're made of metal. And, "at that time there would have been very little armor around"... At what? At that time Mr. Skeleton is from? What was it, he died somewhere from 1290 to 1400? And there was "very little armor around"? Is that dude on drugs?
I had alot of armour n I had the best armour u could buy
Ok first hes not a skeleton he is sir john destricktly n he was killed 1441 like oct 8th or 9th
N I gave the 👎
There was armour around, the higher your status in life the better armour you could afford to buy..I think chain mail was starting to go out of fashion during Sir John's time, as you saw in the video it is very heavy and restricted easy movement.. It also caused more problems than it solved, if a knight in full armour was fighting in boggy conditions the weight of chain mail etc could weigh you down to the point where he would drown rather than being cut down by a weapon. Chain mail was invented really to help stop arrows and it did for a while, but then someone made an arrow to pierce through it and of course Chain mail became pretty ineffective after that. So Armour was constantly changing through the centuries just as weapons were to defeat it. Just out of interest as well some peasant soldiers did have armour, but like as not they stole off the dead after the battle was over....
@@mrsdinosaur1009 sir john said there wasnt that much armor even at higher staus
Sounds like another Sir William WALLACE he was massive as well , if you want proof just go to the Wallace Monument and see the size of his sword.
Sword eh? Is that what they're calling it now
I gave the 👎