By the way! I forgot to mention the leek thing! According to legend, the Welsh put leeks in their hats and tunics during a battle with the Saxons. Dewi Sant himself told the Cymry to wear them, and to this day we honour that by wearing a leek (cennin) or daffodil (cennin Pedr). So there!
My mother grew up in Llansteffan, so I visited that village a lot while growing up and spending the days either on the beach or running around the castle pretending I was Owain Glyndŵr. But one day stands out because an old man told me a story of a battle between Gruffydd ap Llywelyn and 20 Viking ships worth of Vikings that had sailed from Ireland and Gruffydd ap Llywelyn had won the battle right there on Llansteffan beach. I was then obsessed with digging up Viking treasure at Llansteffan and would spend the rest of my childhood just digging holes in Llansteffan beach whenever I had the chance. I remember him calling the battle "y Frwydr Abertywi" as the battle had taken place at the mouth of the Tywi river, I'm not sure if his story was even real or if he was just an old man telling stories, but in my heart that story will always be real and every time I visit Llansteffan I imagine the hoards of treasure hidden under its sands...
As a Bangor born lad now living in Wallasey I loved this video. My Welsh cousins in Texas, Virginia and North Carolina contacted me yesterday asking me about Welsh connections to the Vikings and your video appeared today. My ancestral roots are in Ynys Mon, Bangor and Pembrokeshire and my dna has trace Norwegian, Irish and Scottish dna. A few years ago I did a walk along the Pilgrim's Way to Bardsey. When I stood on Bardsey Mountain I understood the topography and how the sea links Wales and Ireland. I could see right down to Pembrokeshire and across to the Wicklow mountains. In the 1800s some of my family sailed from Ynys Mon to Pembrokeshire with all their furniture in a boat to settle near Fishguard. In 1979 when I was studying at Bangor University I spent the summer near Holyhead Mountain helping a mature student studying Archaeology to map a huge field covered with small circular stone dais. I think one was excavated but I don't know the results. Currently watching some Nordi noir programmes and it's amazing how much Scandinavian lilt there is in the Bangor accent!
Soo interesting!! I'm from Massachusetts & always assumed part of the Maine accent came from Scotland. I guess that could be true - but there seems to be Welsh as well - awesome!!
That fruit fly will probably tell tales of "that night I fell into some beer "by accident" and got rescued by a giant" until the little fruit flies go "Oh come on Uncle Zippy, that NEVER happened"...
glad to hear that my gpa's norwegian grandparents and and my gma's welsh grandparents would have possibly gotten along... i've also been told that the only people who can out stubborn scandinavians (especially norwegians) are the welsh.. which explains a lot about my grandparents
I don't know if it's safe for me to gurgle laugh this early in the morning. The great fly/beer rescue will be remembered. Also the "bugger off, we're Vikings". Thank you for the video!
Everything about this video is absolutely fascinating. From the battle of the 6 ships, the raiding of Powys, the idea of being given land or marrying mid way through Viking expeditions and the museum link to artifacts found in Wales. Would love to see more on this if it's possible..
The fly in the beer reminded me of the Brownies in the movie "Willow" ! ! In a tavern, they accidentally fall in a tankard, start screaming for help, then realize they have been rescued from beer and dive back in.
So uh, when covid is over would you maybe do some field trips to some of the sites you mention? I'd love to have a virtual tour of a place given by someone who knows what they're talking about.
My boy (9 years old) had a homework in school today where he was supposed to feel the moral dilemma that maybe some viking raiders might have felt immediately before raiding Lindisfarne and should write down what he would do? Leave them alone? Only raid half of everything? Raid them? His answer was: "Raid the monastery. Find more monasteries. Raid those" I think, he got the spirit. Your "They wouldn´t have turned round and sailed home just made me think of that.
I used to live in Pembroke Dock (left nearly 30 years ago though) - I had no idea there was so much Norse influence in the area, you learn something every day.
Me when there's a bug in my beverage: "That's it- throw it out, burn it. Burn it all down. I'm done!" This wholesome lad: "Oh hang in there little guy, I'll save you."
Great video! My Fathers side of the family (surname Jones) are welsh farmers from llanrwst and have been for generations, and my Mothers family originate from vikings (surname Longthorne) , her father made a family tree a few years back that had connections with norway etc, so i think it is possible there were welsh vikings about 🤞
If the Scandinavians who had been raiders at some point settled and intermarried with the locals, and there were years where there was a food shortage due to poor weather, I would find it very hard to imagine that the people who had previously been vikinger wouldn't go raiding again, and that others who were suffering a bad year for harvest wouldn't have joined them.
I always love your voice, pronunciation and the way you express things. I am Dutch and I do not always (immediately) understand what you are talking about. Still, I am happy with a new clip every time.
D'awww, you also save random insects you stumble upon? A kindred soul! Seriously though, still waiting for all those spiders and wild mice I saved and released into the wild from the hotel I work at to sew me a ball gown :-[
Hey Jimmy, I am an Aussie who knows very little about Welsh history but I happened to be listening to some lectures today on the legend of King Arthur that taught me a bit and I enjoyed learning some more from you as well. I have some Welsh and more Cornish ancestry and happened to meet some re-enactors at an event who I have joined with the start our own group re-enacting the Dumnonii through the Viking Age. So the topic of this video is right up our alley. I would love to see your Welsh Viking age kit some day. I remember you mentioning it in one of your videos. I am a new re-enactor and am enjoying the process of learning, finding sources and getting kit together for my son and I.
I remember some years ago someone hypothesized the prince Madoc in America based on a young prince going to sea with his Norse cousins. And a few days visit to Greenland (maybe Vinland), the bards put something together and home comes Madoc, lord of his own tribe.
OOO, Farming...That was not the f-word I thought you were going to say. Which I suppose says more about me then you. Also that Daffodil makes a very bold statement. lol Super glad to be back from the chaos of the past three... five months. :~O Okay off to binge everything I missed. Have a lovely day!
It's honestly getting amusing hearing your answer to most of these questions as "we don't know" the way you're just so unashamed about confidently not knowing what the rest of us think we take for granted xDDD
Im from swansea and my home town gets its name from a viking. You deserve a show on tv so more people can find out about the influence of the vikings on the british isles
@@caspakirby6270 really? I'm from Swansea and remember being taught that (can't remember if primary school, Grange, or secondary, Bishop Gore) To be fair, history was just about the onl;y class I paid attention in.
There’s a Swansea in Massachusetts. Obviously the welsh version must be the namesake. I didn’t know until now. I always assumed it had to do something with large seafaring white birds.
People are always looking for a better job/situation. Opportunity rises and is grasped. The whole point of the guild and other protective systems is to stop 'other' people from horning in on the opportunity. Blacksmith culture is fascinating for that reason. Usually attached to family groups - marriages of apprentices to daughters of the forge are numerous- and the always underlying theme of a cult/religion/magic entwined. I believe that Welsh vikings are inevitable for all the reasons you present, and a knowledge of geo-cultural systems as well.
There's similar under appreciated history in Cornwall. 836/8 (Depending on ASC version) you also have Vikings allied with Cornishmen fighting King Ecberht at Hingston Down. The eclectic nature of the Trewhiddle hoard also implies it may be a raiders collection. AND the Cardinham Cross is also the furthest southern example of a particular Norse spiral pattern. Would love to see your opinions on the Irish Sea as a wider cultural zone.
from uncle sven, lars lars and lars to vlaheim references your content is soooo much fun to hear and so informative, people dont give enough credit to what might be more parsimonious.... what is more plausible to happen and requires less... steps ... thanks a lot
Almost certainly there were Welsh vikings, as in Welsh locals that joined the Norse settlers on raids. Vikings were, as you point out, the furthest thing from insular.
Your excitement about Vikings in Wales is duly noted! I learned more about Vikings from this one video than I’ve ever learned before. What a concise, and entertaining presentation. And rescuing your your guest-star was kinda gross but kinda sweet. 👍🏼
I always wondered who would be recruited to go a Viking/ thanks for discussing all this- and the link! You bring it to us in a down to earth, practical way, awesome!
I'm really wanting a Viking Tour of Wales now. Another excellent video. Thank you for doing the small things :) Happy St. David's Day Side note: I can't wait until we have daffodils. We don't even have our robins yet, which are my first sign that Spring is coming. Right now it's windy, rainy, and cold and there's still snow on the ground. Soooon
I so want to do a Viking Wales adventure video when I'm allowed. Another limitation placed on the channel by COVID-19. Same to you! Thank you, Bree! :D
It looks like there is more Viking evidence in Wales than in mainland Scotland. Unfortunately, The Picts didn't leave us some writing records to let us know what might have happened. I always wonder whether the Picts trade with the Vikings or were wiped out by the raids.
Yay for the Wirral! (were I am from, in fact just down the road from the likely sight of Battle of Brunanburh). My dad did his dissertation on the comparative history of the developments of Liverpool and Chester which spent a lot of time looking at the River Dee and how important it was for centuries which is why Chester, the North Wales coast and the obscure little Wirral were so significant during a number of periods including with Vikings, long before the rise of Liverpool and the Mersey. Waterway access is a big deal when talking about a boat faring culture.
Excellent video Cymry! I want to move back to my homeland.. I am currently stuck in New England North East Pennsylvania across the pond here. I have always felt like I wasn't at home here & our families bloodline is strong! My Great Grandmother migrated to Plymouth Mt. Also known as (Welshmen Hill) in the early 20th century after the loss of her husband. Things have definitely changed for the worse and though the Mt. Communities are very close and the land is beautiful the politics and the corruption in my area especially is atrocious & utterly disgusting. The (Commonwealth) is the most corrupt idea anyone in history has ever come up with lol.
Sir Benfro has many Viking place names- I grew up in Hubberston (now part of Aberdaugleddau/Milford Haven), Herbrandston is up the road and Yerberston is across the Cleddau. Herbrand, Yerber and Hubber were minor Viking chiefs/princes that settled in the sheltered bays of the Daugleddau in the medieval period. Skomer, Skokholm, gateholm etc. are all islands with Viking names. The church in Hubberston is of Viking origin- you can tell by the arches- they are heavy duty and very unlike the Roman style.
LOVE THE WELSH PHRASE!!!!! I love how much knowledge there is out there. I know a story about a Viking raid and a Celtic cross from long ago, but back in my day, the knowledge was not so free flowing. So when I tried to find the actual facts of the story, I ran up against -- nothing! YAY, Jimmy, love your channel!!
I think you are absolutely right, I am Norwegian and after a DNA test my family has been connected to the royal house in Norway, Sweden and Denmark and we can follow the lines all the way back to Ragnar Lotbrok and Bjørn iron side but we also have branches that follow us back to ireland, scotland and england royal houses. I have not found anything from Walsh yet but I reckon that Walsh is also connected to the other royal houses. Before I took the DNA test we thought it was just Norwegian. To my great surprise, I was told that I am 19% Irish / Scottish. This means that far back in the family there must have been more who have had children with people from the UK, otherwise the DNA test would not have shown such a high percentage. Harald the Fair-haired is my great-grandfather. 27 times backwards and Ragnar lotbrok Sigurdson is my 32 grandfather. Egill skalgrimmarson from Iceland is my 34 grandfather and I have 19% Irish / Scottish DNA. one of the lines to ireland stops at Ruaidri Saide Buide O Conchabhair king of Connaught ireland. It looks like we got married and had children in several generations that go back to the Viking Age. Since I am from a noble family, my lines are much easier to follow than ordinary people. since I now live in Norway there is good reason to believe that we were everywhere in the uk. and that they were on a raid otherwise I would not have been sitting here with 19% DNA from the UK in Norway today.
I'm not sure about you, but editing Jimmy seems to be very smart 😜 (In all seriousness: I found your channel a few weaks ago and I love it. The great research based informations in combination with your light hearted personality and humor makes it very binge-watchable 😍)
Stumbled across your very informative video while trying to find out more about Welsh DNA. I recently did a DNA test & found out I'm part Welsh so I'm curious as to any predominant physical traits or differences from the English. I live in the U.S. so I dont know anything about the Welsh but am glad I found your channel. I will be subscribing & look forward to your upcoming videos! ~Ginger
I'm sure the fly was half thrilled with being rescued and half, like, "I was enjoying that...*hic*". An entertaining and informative video, as always. It's so interesting to learn how far people managed to spread with the technologies of the time. Thanks for sharing your insights. Take care.
I had my dna done and I am Welsh/Scottish and a little bit Norwegian and trace German. I grew up in New Jersey USA (b.1954) and moved to Minneapolis Minnesota in 1979. My mom was born in Carmarthen, Wales and grew up in Aylesbury (last name Johns). My dad was 3rd generation German raised in Brooklyn, New York and met mom in the UK during the Korean War and they married in the US. I’m convinced the Norwegian part is Viking dna!!! Our family joke was that the only action my dad saw in the war was my mother. 🥰
I was a bit confused when I saw the Daffodil. In Canada it's the symbol for the Canadian Cancer Society and every year they have Daffodil Campaign in April (not March but still the confusion was there). They sell Daffodils to raise money for Cancer research. Anyway this was an interesting video. Would love to know more about Welsh history.
Another great video Jimmy,,,ah Bangor happy memories I lived o Anglesey for a short time and myself and two friends would regularly travel to Bangor from Llangaffo to watch Bangor blues band The Duke's,,,,and then walk all the way home 😃
Doesn’t surprise me that there were Vikings in Wales and that they intermarried with the locals. I haven’t looked into it but I’m fairly sure my surname (Carl) is derived from the Viking word for man (Karl), and as I’m Welsh, assuming my paternal lineage can’t be traced to elsewhere in Britain in the intervening years between now and the Viking Age and I’m not mistaken in my belief about the name derivation, that would imply if I’m not descended from Vikings that settled in Wales, then at the very least my forefathers would have had to have had close enough ties/dealings with Vikings in Wales for them to pick up the Viking word as an epithet.
Karl/Carl is just the Nordic version of the name Charles, and also means "free man" (as opposed to a thrall). The Old Norse word for man is mann/madr. But for sure the Norse would intermarry with locals wherever they settled and generally integrated into the local population over the span of a few generations. They were far from insular. So your theory is plausible.
I love maps of Viking settlements in the UK. It shows that they really could not be arsed with North East England. Well apart from raiding. It set the attitude from then on really. The last people who took an interest were the Romans.
Just found your channel! I like it. Love all things ancient. I was born in London, lived in America since 99. Not a whole lot of ancient culture here lol your comment about "goat land" reminded me that my younger half sister who is swedish, lives on Gotland Island. I call it Goat land because there's in fact more goats than people there lol she a Celtic Scandanavian, I'm a Celtic Saxon my Mum's German American. All things ancient are cool as hell.
Dydd Gwyl Dewi Hapus.. no accents because .. keyboards .. One of the things I remember from my Great Aunts visits to Canada.. I was afraid to make Welsh cakes for fear of stuffing them all into me today lol. Hope you have a wonderful day.
This reminds me of the very weird, oddly specific bit of family lore from my mom's side that states that a 'Dutch Viking' married into the family at some point. Not a regular Viking, or a regular Dutch person, very specifically a 'Dutch Viking'. That said, if this person did in fact exist they would have lived at least a thousand years ago, and I am skeptical that my family is competent enough at passing down information for it to stay in circulation this long, so who knows what it's actually based on at this point.
Families do have a strange way of hanging into family lore, stories, or simple words or phrases. My mother who is 92, recently told me about how here mother used the word "rench" for rinse. My mom was so embarrassed about her mom using this weird term for rinse, she made a point to not use it. Years later, mom finds out "rench" is a 16th century word for rinse. I only find this out in my 50s, with my daughter already in her 20s. My grandmother died before I was born, so I never heard her use it. I feel today like a piece of my heritage has been taken from me, because I was never given the option to know about it earlier. The term lived in my family for around 500 years, until my mom decided to end it. The irony of that, with how my mother has been a genealogist since the 1970s and has traced parts of the family back to the 12th century is certainly not lost on me. Keep that family story about the Dutch Viking and pass it on, it's fine to add your caveats, but keep the story circulating as you keep a lookout for more into.
Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Hapus !! Another amazing video that taught me something new and made me want to go and research everything from history to languages to lovely yellow flowers! 🤓 That’s one of the many reasons I love your content!! 😍 You are a GENIUS man! Keep doing what you do! P.S. An ad played while I was watching the video in between the “then this happened” and the fruit fly rescue. I don’t know how this works, but if it was you who put it exactly there...chef’s kiss!! Got me cackling after my initial “wtf just happened?” reaction 😂
YES!!!! I have been wondering about the leek on St Davies day since I watched Sir Branagh play Henry V in the 1989 movie. Wait...WHY WEAR A LEEK ON St.DAVIES' DAY?
Do you recall the S4C program that researched DNA for , I think it was 1,000 Welsh and found abundant Viking traces in coastal populations some of the stalwarts of Plaid Cymru Daffyd Wigley included !
@@greata80 I have to apologize then, mu sarcasm meter hasn't been working properly for a day or two, I intend to immediately contact customer service and have them send a repair truck
I had a little look at the museum site and ended up looking up the meaning of ogam. Considering the complexity, I don't think there will be any finds that clearly say a Welsh viking was here, but maybe a birch tree mention instead. Amazing history!
Have you checked out Caernarfon? Since you’re from Bangor, could Segontium (a ruined Roman fort) been a place for trading, and it’s also close to Bangor. Maybe even the castle built by Edward the 1st. Although a Saxon king, Norsemen/women still could have lived there
By the way! I forgot to mention the leek thing!
According to legend, the Welsh put leeks in their hats and tunics during a battle with the Saxons. Dewi Sant himself told the Cymry to wear them, and to this day we honour that by wearing a leek (cennin) or daffodil (cennin Pedr). So there!
Thank you for adding this most important of details.
Daffodils already?! Vacationing Vikings: that’s gotta be the reason for Anglesey. At home, they’d still be watching snow melt.
What was the supposed reason for them to wear them in their caps or tunics? I’m really curious about this
The bigger the leek, the more terrifying to the enemy, right? 😉
My mother grew up in Llansteffan, so I visited that village a lot while growing up and spending the days either on the beach or running around the castle pretending I was Owain Glyndŵr.
But one day stands out because an old man told me a story of a battle between Gruffydd ap Llywelyn and 20 Viking ships worth of Vikings that had sailed from Ireland and Gruffydd ap Llywelyn had won the battle right there on Llansteffan beach. I was then obsessed with digging up Viking treasure at Llansteffan and would spend the rest of my childhood just digging holes in Llansteffan beach whenever I had the chance.
I remember him calling the battle "y Frwydr Abertywi" as the battle had taken place at the mouth of the Tywi river, I'm not sure if his story was even real or if he was just an old man telling stories, but in my heart that story will always be real and every time I visit Llansteffan I imagine the hoards of treasure hidden under its sands...
I want my door bell to say "bugger off! We're vikings!" In exactly that voice.
The “bugger off we’re vikings” voice though 😂
Thought it was Ross noble for a minute
12:01
The fly rescue was so endearing 😂
Compassionate Welsh Viking. 😁
Right? 🥺
It was. That fly wouldn't have been nearly so lucky if he had ended up in my wine.
As a Bangor born lad now living in Wallasey I loved this video. My Welsh cousins in Texas, Virginia and North Carolina contacted me yesterday asking me about Welsh connections to the Vikings and your video appeared today. My ancestral roots are in Ynys Mon, Bangor and Pembrokeshire and my dna has trace Norwegian, Irish and Scottish dna. A few years ago I did a walk along the Pilgrim's Way to Bardsey. When I stood on Bardsey Mountain I understood the topography and how the sea links Wales and Ireland. I could see right down to Pembrokeshire and across to the Wicklow mountains. In the 1800s some of my family sailed from Ynys Mon to Pembrokeshire with all their furniture in a boat to settle near Fishguard.
In 1979 when I was studying at Bangor University I spent the summer near Holyhead Mountain helping a mature student studying Archaeology to map a huge field covered with small circular stone dais. I think one was excavated but I don't know the results.
Currently watching some Nordi noir programmes and it's amazing how much Scandinavian lilt there is in the Bangor accent!
Soo interesting!! I'm from Massachusetts & always assumed part of the Maine accent came from Scotland. I guess that could be true - but there seems to be Welsh as well - awesome!!
That fruit fly will probably tell tales of "that night I fell into some beer "by accident" and got rescued by a giant" until the little fruit flies go "Oh come on Uncle Zippy, that NEVER happened"...
glad to hear that my gpa's norwegian grandparents and and my gma's welsh grandparents would have possibly gotten along... i've also been told that the only people who can out stubborn scandinavians (especially norwegians) are the welsh.. which explains a lot about my grandparents
He stopped the video to save a fly from his beer. Need I say why I love this channel?
Poor little thing was swimming! How could I not?
@@TheWelshViking you just didn’t want to share the beer!! lol
@@robintheparttimesewer6798 or waste it lol
I don't know if it's safe for me to gurgle laugh this early in the morning. The great fly/beer rescue will be remembered. Also the "bugger off, we're Vikings". Thank you for the video!
Everything about this video is absolutely fascinating. From the battle of the 6 ships, the raiding of Powys, the idea of being given land or marrying mid way through Viking expeditions and the museum link to artifacts found in Wales. Would love to see more on this if it's possible..
I love your absolutely bursting enthusiasm! And the fact you have a completely rat-arsed fruit fly somewhere in your flat :D
He honestly probably zipped off to the loo to be sick XD
@@TheWelshViking At least you didn't ask him to spit out anything he'd swallowed!
The actual content was really great too, but I'm very happy the fly made it.
Sure did - and today I rescued a honey bee!
The fly in the beer reminded me of the Brownies in the movie "Willow" ! ! In a tavern, they accidentally fall in a tankard, start screaming for help, then realize they have been rescued from beer and dive back in.
I LOVE the movie Willow!!
So uh, when covid is over would you maybe do some field trips to some of the sites you mention? I'd love to have a virtual tour of a place given by someone who knows what they're talking about.
My boy (9 years old) had a homework in school today where he was supposed to feel the moral dilemma that maybe some viking raiders might have felt immediately before raiding Lindisfarne and should write down what he would do? Leave them alone? Only raid half of everything? Raid them? His answer was: "Raid the monastery. Find more monasteries. Raid those" I think, he got the spirit. Your "They wouldn´t have turned round and sailed home just made me think of that.
I used to live in Pembroke Dock (left nearly 30 years ago though) - I had no idea there was so much Norse influence in the area, you learn something every day.
That comment about Valheim, throwing stones at people behind a fence.
" Bugger off, we're Vikings." 🤣
Glorious! We even had brief bursts or Sospan Fach - well done lovely boy - a joy to listen to
Me when there's a bug in my beverage: "That's it- throw it out, burn it. Burn it all down. I'm done!"
This wholesome lad: "Oh hang in there little guy, I'll save you."
I made some progress- the other day I saw a mosquito hawk in my bedroom and I trapped it with a glass and a piece of paper and released it outside!
thank god The Welsh Viking channel lore is expanding, can't wait to see where the series is gonna go
I'm now going to imagine every Odinist and Brosatru saying 'bugger off we're vikings' in the jimmyvoice.
Had no idea about the Battle of Anglesey Sound, how cool!
Rescuing the fly was the most wholesome thing I've seen so far in 2021.
Omg!! Thank you for rescuing the fly! Even if it was just so he wouldn’t ruin your beer! lol
Great video! My Fathers side of the family (surname Jones) are welsh farmers from llanrwst and have been for generations, and my Mothers family originate from vikings (surname Longthorne) , her father made a family tree a few years back that had connections with norway etc, so i think it is possible there were welsh vikings about 🤞
I wish I had found this channel earlier! Great content and personality 👏
If the Scandinavians who had been raiders at some point settled and intermarried with the locals, and there were years where there was a food shortage due to poor weather, I would find it very hard to imagine that the people who had previously been vikinger wouldn't go raiding again, and that others who were suffering a bad year for harvest wouldn't have joined them.
“Welp, this season’s crop is ruined… hit the boats!!”
My boyfriend has Welsh and Norse ancestors. His family on his Dad's side are from North Wales. Caernarfon area.
I always love your voice, pronunciation and the way you express things. I am Dutch and I do not always (immediately) understand what you are talking about. Still, I am happy with a new clip every time.
That’s the Welsh lilt. Never leaves you listen Richard Burton after years of Hollywood
dude, you took an obscure topic related to stuff you're passionate about and expanded it. respect.
D'awww, you also save random insects you stumble upon? A kindred soul!
Seriously though, still waiting for all those spiders and wild mice I saved and released into the wild from the hotel I work at to sew me a ball gown :-[
Maybe ill get a jar of honey from all the bees I've scooped from pools
Happy St. David's Day!
I will sail to Anglesey from Dublin to join you in a great ol' (reenactment) Battle, from an Irish Viking.
"I have stolen a flower from a public park!"
Hey Jimmy, I am an Aussie who knows very little about Welsh history but I happened to be listening to some lectures today on the legend of King Arthur that taught me a bit and I enjoyed learning some more from you as well.
I have some Welsh and more Cornish ancestry and happened to meet some re-enactors at an event who I have joined with the start our own group re-enacting the Dumnonii through the Viking Age. So the topic of this video is right up our alley.
I would love to see your Welsh Viking age kit some day. I remember you mentioning it in one of your videos.
I am a new re-enactor and am enjoying the process of learning, finding sources and getting kit together for my son and I.
I remember some years ago someone hypothesized the prince Madoc in America based on a young prince going to sea with his Norse cousins. And a few days visit to Greenland (maybe Vinland), the bards put something together and home comes Madoc, lord of his own tribe.
Loved this video! Thanks for the info! Also a Daffodil suits you very well!
OOO, Farming...That was not the f-word I thought you were going to say. Which I suppose says more about me then you. Also that Daffodil makes a very bold statement. lol Super glad to be back from the chaos of the past three... five months. :~O Okay off to binge everything I missed. Have a lovely day!
It's honestly getting amusing hearing your answer to most of these questions as "we don't know" the way you're just so unashamed about confidently not knowing what the rest of us think we take for granted xDDD
As a person who has random bugs in winter, thank you for rescuing the fruit fly, and also then drinking your drink. After all, he didn't drink much!
Wouldn't you just LOVE to have him as your friend!!
Im from swansea and my home town gets its name from a viking. You deserve a show on tv so more people can find out about the influence of the vikings on the british isles
in school my Welsh teacher always used to tell me that Swansea is a bastardisation of a Viking town name
It's true! Sweyn's ey
Thats fascinating... I'm from Swansea and we never got told that. That would have made me pay more attention in history class!
People from Swansea always pronounce Swansea with a Z swanzy not swan sea
@@caspakirby6270 really? I'm from Swansea and remember being taught that (can't remember if primary school, Grange, or secondary, Bishop Gore)
To be fair, history was just about the onl;y class I paid attention in.
There’s a Swansea in Massachusetts. Obviously the welsh version must be the namesake. I didn’t know until now. I always assumed it had to do something with large seafaring white birds.
I came for vikings. I stayed for the "priscilla" references lol
Dude! I dig your channel mucho! Keep kick ass my man. Hello from Oregon USA
People are always looking for a better job/situation. Opportunity rises and is grasped. The whole point of the guild and other protective systems is to stop 'other' people from horning in on the opportunity. Blacksmith culture is fascinating for that reason. Usually attached to family groups - marriages of apprentices to daughters of the forge are numerous- and the always underlying theme of a cult/religion/magic entwined. I believe that Welsh vikings are inevitable for all the reasons you present, and a knowledge of geo-cultural systems as well.
You make me so proud of my heritage...even if we’ve been here for 280 years. Keep sharing! 💜
There's similar under appreciated history in Cornwall.
836/8 (Depending on ASC version) you also have Vikings allied with Cornishmen fighting King Ecberht at Hingston Down. The eclectic nature of the Trewhiddle hoard also implies it may be a raiders collection. AND the Cardinham Cross is also the furthest southern example of a particular Norse spiral pattern.
Would love to see your opinions on the Irish Sea as a wider cultural zone.
Going to look up that hoard etc. - thanks!!
from uncle sven, lars lars and lars to vlaheim references your content is soooo much fun to hear and so informative, people dont give enough credit to what might be more parsimonious.... what is more plausible to happen and requires less... steps ... thanks a lot
Almost certainly there were Welsh vikings, as in Welsh locals that joined the Norse settlers on raids. Vikings were, as you point out, the furthest thing from insular.
Your excitement about Vikings in Wales is duly noted! I learned more about Vikings from this one video than I’ve ever learned before. What a concise, and entertaining presentation. And rescuing your your guest-star was kinda gross but kinda sweet. 👍🏼
"A sea-based raiding...
profession" Yes!
I always wondered who would be recruited to go a Viking/ thanks for discussing all this- and the link!
You bring it to us in a down to earth, practical way, awesome!
Could be kidnapped, forced into duty.
I'm really wanting a Viking Tour of Wales now. Another excellent video. Thank you for doing the small things :) Happy St. David's Day
Side note: I can't wait until we have daffodils. We don't even have our robins yet, which are my first sign that Spring is coming. Right now it's windy, rainy, and cold and there's still snow on the ground. Soooon
I so want to do a Viking Wales adventure video when I'm allowed. Another limitation placed on the channel by COVID-19.
Same to you! Thank you, Bree! :D
@@TheWelshViking Maybe that can be a thing by the time I can come visit and we can grab a pint :D
Ha, I stayed at that campsite as a kid back in the early 80's,
Love all the interesting info but the fly saving was the best part. Jimmy is just such a sweet person. Love that that stuff doesn't get edited out.
It looks like there is more Viking evidence in Wales than in mainland Scotland. Unfortunately, The Picts didn't leave us some writing records to let us know what might have happened. I always wonder whether the Picts trade with the Vikings or were wiped out by the raids.
I love this! Really want to get back into Viking re-enactment again now! 😊
Yay for the Wirral! (were I am from, in fact just down the road from the likely sight of Battle of Brunanburh). My dad did his dissertation on the comparative history of the developments of Liverpool and Chester which spent a lot of time looking at the River Dee and how important it was for centuries which is why Chester, the North Wales coast and the obscure little Wirral were so significant during a number of periods including with Vikings, long before the rise of Liverpool and the Mersey. Waterway access is a big deal when talking about a boat faring culture.
Thank you for this. I was always curious about why there never seemed to be much talk about Vikings in Wales!
Excellent video Cymry! I want to move back to my homeland.. I am currently stuck in New England North East Pennsylvania across the pond here. I have always felt like I wasn't at home here & our families bloodline is strong! My Great Grandmother migrated to Plymouth Mt. Also known as (Welshmen Hill) in the early 20th century after the loss of her husband. Things have definitely changed for the worse and though the Mt. Communities are very close and the land is beautiful the politics and the corruption in my area especially is atrocious & utterly disgusting. The (Commonwealth) is the most corrupt idea anyone in history has ever come up with lol.
Pfffffffffffft!!!!!!! I had to truly focus after the heroic fly rescue.
Sir Benfro has many Viking place names- I grew up in Hubberston (now part of Aberdaugleddau/Milford Haven), Herbrandston is up the road and Yerberston is across the Cleddau. Herbrand, Yerber and Hubber were minor Viking chiefs/princes that settled in the sheltered bays of the Daugleddau in the medieval period. Skomer, Skokholm, gateholm etc. are all islands with Viking names. The church in Hubberston is of Viking origin- you can tell by the arches- they are heavy duty and very unlike the Roman style.
LOVE THE WELSH PHRASE!!!!! I love how much knowledge there is out there. I know a story about a Viking raid and a Celtic cross from long ago, but back in my day, the knowledge was not so free flowing. So when I tried to find the actual facts of the story, I ran up against -- nothing! YAY, Jimmy, love your channel!!
Did a reenactment event in Anglesey many years ago
I think you are absolutely right, I am Norwegian and after a DNA test my family has been connected to the royal house in Norway, Sweden and Denmark and we can follow the lines all the way back to Ragnar Lotbrok and Bjørn iron side but we also have branches that follow us back to ireland, scotland and england royal houses. I have not found anything from Walsh yet but I reckon that Walsh is also connected to the other royal houses. Before I took the DNA test we thought it was just Norwegian. To my great surprise, I was told that I am 19% Irish / Scottish. This means that far back in the family there must have been more who have had children with people from the UK, otherwise the DNA test would not have shown such a high percentage.
Harald the Fair-haired is my great-grandfather. 27 times backwards and Ragnar lotbrok Sigurdson is my 32 grandfather. Egill skalgrimmarson from Iceland is my 34 grandfather and I have 19% Irish / Scottish DNA. one of the lines to ireland stops at Ruaidri Saide Buide O Conchabhair king of Connaught ireland. It looks like we got married and had children in several generations that go back to the Viking Age. Since I am from a noble family, my lines are much easier to follow than ordinary people. since I now live in Norway there is good reason to believe that we were everywhere in the uk. and that they were on a raid otherwise I would not have been sitting here with 19% DNA from the UK in Norway today.
Pretty impressive indeed!!
Loving the different intros to the segments! Scared the crap outta me while getting ready for work but I paid more attention!
9:50ish: Himself & me loved performing in Anglesey previously. We'd be well up for a Norse/Dark Age event (after C19 etc of course).
I'm not sure about you, but editing Jimmy seems to be very smart 😜
(In all seriousness: I found your channel a few weaks ago and I love it. The great research based informations in combination with your light hearted personality and humor makes it very binge-watchable 😍)
Stumbled across your very informative video while trying to find out more about Welsh DNA. I recently did a DNA test & found out I'm part Welsh so I'm curious as to any predominant physical traits or differences from the English. I live in the U.S. so I dont know anything about the Welsh but am glad I found your channel. I will be subscribing & look forward to your upcoming videos! ~Ginger
Thank u for the knowledge!
I'm sure the fly was half thrilled with being rescued and half, like, "I was enjoying that...*hic*". An entertaining and informative video, as always. It's so interesting to learn how far people managed to spread with the technologies of the time. Thanks for sharing your insights. Take care.
When I got the notification for this it said "Welsh Viking the final" and I was like WHAAAATTT!!!
Fascinating! This was one of my favorite videos you've done. Diolch yn fawr iawn!👍❤️
Phrase of the week happened! Yay!!!
I had my dna done and I am Welsh/Scottish and a little bit Norwegian and trace German. I grew up in New Jersey USA (b.1954) and moved to Minneapolis Minnesota in 1979. My mom was born in Carmarthen, Wales and grew up in Aylesbury (last name Johns). My dad was 3rd generation German raised in Brooklyn, New York and met mom in the UK during the Korean War and they married in the US. I’m convinced the Norwegian part is Viking dna!!! Our family joke was that the only action my dad saw in the war was my mother. 🥰
Thank you for sharing!
Like your way of thinking.
Daffodils barely grow in Colorado :( I miss British Spring.
I want to replace my doorbell chime with the impression of the Insular Welsh Viking.
Quality content!! Love you doing a double take for the fly in your beer again at the end!
Thank you for the video! It was a lot of fun. I wish I could manage a better comment but Im knackered so have a second thank you, and a good day.
I was a bit confused when I saw the Daffodil. In Canada it's the symbol for the Canadian Cancer Society and every year they have Daffodil Campaign in April (not March but still the confusion was there). They sell Daffodils to raise money for Cancer research.
Anyway this was an interesting video. Would love to know more about Welsh history.
It's an emblem of Marie Curie Cancer Research in the UK as well as the national flower of Wales.
@@janetgraham-russell4476 That’s really cool. Thank you for sharing 😀
Another great video Jimmy,,,ah Bangor happy memories I lived o Anglesey for a short time and myself and two friends would regularly travel to Bangor from Llangaffo to watch Bangor blues band The Duke's,,,,and then walk all the way home 😃
After thinking about it it might have been menai Bridge not Bangor sorry Jimmy 🙁
Doesn’t surprise me that there were Vikings in Wales and that they intermarried with the locals. I haven’t looked into it but I’m fairly sure my surname (Carl) is derived from the Viking word for man (Karl), and as I’m Welsh, assuming my paternal lineage can’t be traced to elsewhere in Britain in the intervening years between now and the Viking Age and I’m not mistaken in my belief about the name derivation, that would imply if I’m not descended from Vikings that settled in Wales, then at the very least my forefathers would have had to have had close enough ties/dealings with Vikings in Wales for them to pick up the Viking word as an epithet.
Karl/Carl is just the Nordic version of the name Charles, and also means "free man" (as opposed to a thrall). The Old Norse word for man is mann/madr. But for sure the Norse would intermarry with locals wherever they settled and generally integrated into the local population over the span of a few generations. They were far from insular. So your theory is plausible.
I love maps of Viking settlements in the UK. It shows that they really could not be arsed with North East England. Well apart from raiding.
It set the attitude from then on really.
The last people who took an interest were the Romans.
That hogback looks familiar, I said to myself, then I saw the caption. It's in a churchyard just fifteen minutes from where I live.
Just found your channel! I like it. Love all things ancient. I was born in London, lived in America since 99. Not a whole lot of ancient culture here lol your comment about "goat land" reminded me that my younger half sister who is swedish, lives on Gotland Island. I call it Goat land because there's in fact more goats than people there lol she a Celtic Scandanavian, I'm a Celtic Saxon my Mum's German American. All things ancient are cool as hell.
When you do the phrase could you do it once slowy and then again like a normal speaker?
Very nice and educative video, mate. Cheers
Dydd Gwyl Dewi Hapus.. no accents because .. keyboards .. One of the things I remember from my Great Aunts visits to Canada.. I was afraid to make Welsh cakes for fear of stuffing them all into me today lol.
Hope you have a wonderful day.
This reminds me of the very weird, oddly specific bit of family lore from my mom's side that states that a 'Dutch Viking' married into the family at some point. Not a regular Viking, or a regular Dutch person, very specifically a 'Dutch Viking'. That said, if this person did in fact exist they would have lived at least a thousand years ago, and I am skeptical that my family is competent enough at passing down information for it to stay in circulation this long, so who knows what it's actually based on at this point.
Families do have a strange way of hanging into family lore, stories, or simple words or phrases. My mother who is 92, recently told me about how here mother used the word "rench" for rinse. My mom was so embarrassed about her mom using this weird term for rinse, she made a point to not use it. Years later, mom finds out "rench" is a 16th century word for rinse. I only find this out in my 50s, with my daughter already in her 20s. My grandmother died before I was born, so I never heard her use it. I feel today like a piece of my heritage has been taken from me, because I was never given the option to know about it earlier. The term lived in my family for around 500 years, until my mom decided to end it. The irony of that, with how my mother has been a genealogist since the 1970s and has traced parts of the family back to the 12th century is certainly not lost on me. Keep that family story about the Dutch Viking and pass it on, it's fine to add your caveats, but keep the story circulating as you keep a lookout for more into.
You have very talented eyebrows!
*waggles*
Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Hapus !!
Another amazing video that taught me something new and made me want to go and research everything from history to languages to lovely yellow flowers! 🤓 That’s one of the many reasons I love your content!! 😍 You are a GENIUS man! Keep doing what you do!
P.S. An ad played while I was watching the video in between the “then this happened” and the fruit fly rescue. I don’t know how this works, but if it was you who put it exactly there...chef’s kiss!!
Got me cackling after my initial “wtf just happened?” reaction 😂
YES!!!! I have been wondering about the leek on St Davies day since I watched Sir Branagh play Henry V in the 1989 movie.
Wait...WHY WEAR A LEEK ON St.DAVIES' DAY?
Oh! I meant to mention this. Hang on, I'll do a pinned comment!
Do you recall the S4C program that researched DNA for , I think it was 1,000 Welsh and found abundant Viking traces in coastal populations some of the stalwarts of Plaid Cymru Daffyd Wigley included !
More! Give us more!
Now that we've figured that out, I can't help but ask if there were Vikings in whales as well. Easily defendable, Very aquatic, Big.
psst, *Wales is a place, Whales are sea mammals
not judging, just explaining
Well the reverse was true, as they did sometimes eat whale if they managed to catch one. So, clearly the whales weren't always defendable enough...
@@Bluebelle51 lol I know. Just making a joke (:
@@Amy_the_Lizard Hmmm... Might have to install arrow loops or something
@@greata80 I have to apologize then, mu sarcasm meter hasn't been working properly for a day or two, I intend to immediately contact customer service and have them send a repair truck
I had a little look at the museum site and ended up looking up the meaning of ogam. Considering the complexity, I don't think there will be any finds that clearly say a Welsh viking was here, but maybe a birch tree mention instead. Amazing history!
Have you checked out Caernarfon? Since you’re from Bangor, could Segontium (a ruined Roman fort) been a place for trading, and it’s also close to Bangor. Maybe even the castle built by Edward the 1st. Although a Saxon king, Norsemen/women still could have lived there
No evidence has been found whatsoever, and prior to Edward there was certainly no Saxon king living there!