History is so interesting to me. Idk how people think it’s boring. It literally feels like an entirely different world that these people used to love on but it’s the same ground we walk on today. It’s breathtaking when you think about it
Its amazing. It shows the true dumbing down of our society. That people literally would rather watch idiots make videos of cats and duck dynasty than history documentaries or reading
This is probably the best documentary I've seen about the vikings. It answered many questions I had concerning social and economic typology prior to the "raids" . Very well done.
@Ordinary Pete (Paradox spoiler) if time travel where to be invented in the future chances are we would have it now due to a paradox event, i.e people would accidentally let the cat out of the bag
Beautiful! Something I would have in my home or office, for two reasons. One, the design is efficient and not bulky, yet shows plenty of strength to be used very comfortably. And two, it is handmade and not simply a piece of "production." It's more personal, and warm, both in the way it was constructed, and the very warmth of the wood itself! Awesome. Thank you!
In school I got an A* in history mock exam but after taking it as a option for gcse I was told I wasn’t going to be accepted as they thought It was too much work for a student like me (basically thought I wasn’t smart enough and was from a rough working class area) 8 years later I’m still amazed by all facets of history , great judgment by the teachers.
This series is so well done. Thank you for having real historians who are not blinded by modern politics/society discuss this topic. They cite evidence and are nuanced when it comes to making absolute assertions. Refreshing.
@@Justin.Martyr Yes the Saxon tribes are the same people . And yes they might have gone through where london is . At least by looking at old maps it is 99.999% possibly. We are all connected 😎
The emotional detachment from children in their early years would make sense. Graveyards from where I grew up and I have visited around the US, you find that until the early 20th century a lot of people didn't name their child until they reached 2 or 3 years old. Child mortality caused by influenza, typhoid, tetanus, diphtheria, and household accidents, was in some places as high as 60% for children 3 and under.
@Rakka Zakka Flakka If asked which , period of history I would love to live in if I could I tell them pre empiricist Rome, the Edo period of Japan, the late 1800s AKA the golden age of the cowboy, and other periods as well. BUT only if I can take modern medical with me.
I hope they upload the other episodes, they’re on Amazon prime but only available in the USA and I don’t want to get a VPN just for three episodes of vaguely factual docu-drama 😅😂 it’s so good though... I need the other episodes!
I would do anything to have the ability to time travel and see the way people lived in all eras of humanity from 10’s of thousands of years ago to even just 75-100 years ago
It would be interesting if you would explore the effect of the Holy Roman Empire massacre's of northern German and Scandinavian tribes. That might have caused the Viking raids on Europe.
As well as Charlemagne slaughtering people. Cutting down all the sacred trees(large oaks) The 5,000 pagans at the river Oller that lost their heads to Charlemagne. For one full week the river was inundated with mass amounts of blood. Charlemagne poked the bear...
OK, I'll watch this soon. I hope to be enlightened further. I have read the Heimskringla (the the real one not the fake when they put on Wikki). I have read a lot of the research done by the BBC when Magnus Magnusson was still host of "Master Mind" too.
My replies don't seem to understand. We're taught in geography class that the British Isles and the Scandinavian peninsula are part of the continent of Europe. So saying "the vikings went from Norway to Europe" is like saying "the cowboy went from Texas to America." The former is already within the latter.
It's not public its a heritage site so you have to pay to walk around it your not allowed amongst the stones to stop people chipping bits off or scratching names etc
I have pics of me and my bro climbing on them in 1975, not sure when they got put off limits...and I think it was free back then or we wouldn't have gone in, my Dad was cheap.
So why is no one mentioning the Saxon Wars?Started by Charlemagne to forcefully introduce Christianity to northern Europe. Refugee Saxons who shared a common religion with their Scandinavian cousins would relate tales of destruction of their way life. This surely left a bad taste in Scandinavian mouths about western Christian civilization and may have influenced some of their reactions to destroying Christian monestries in their raids in the following years.
Are all the village and war clips from movies? Or are they made for the document? The detail of daily life is very fine and the clothing and dress is as real as it was happening. Where do these clips come from?
The very wealthy, it seems have always shown their greed and punished unreservedly those less fortunate than themselves. So as "modern" as we think we are today, have we changed so much❓Sadly, I don't think so❗️ A fascinating and very enjoyable informative video. Thanks.👍🏼
Prior to what we now call the Viking Age, Scandinavians raided along Scandinavian shores, so the practice was folded into the culture, long before they began to raid in Continental Europe, and later, far afield places such as in the Mediterranean, and interior areas of Eastern Europe.
Not all the Norths were vikings, viking is the term of the action of some one who sails, pillages and plunders, or a pirate. But not all Nord were pirates.
@@squares4u you had Frisians, pagan Saxons, Slavs , Finns, Balts all go to raiding expeditions in similar boats, armor and weapons and to 8 century monks all these Heathens were called Danes or Vikings
I love that when discussing the data and research on the climate disaster that drove the peoples forth the guests say "they" or "them" when discussing the researcher(s). It was ONE MAN that discovered and did the initial research that discovered this HUUUUUGE and EXPANSIVE world disaster. Kudos to him.
So if I've followed the story/thesis correctly: the climate crisis starting in the mid-sixth century caused a severe population decline and freed-up land for the ruling classes to compete for. This lead to militarisation, culminating in the advent of Viking raiding - which was also helped by technological and societal advances allowing for production of sophisticated ships etc. This is interesting... it somewhat contrasts with the social changes thought to have followed a similar population decline after the Black Death in the 1300s (i.e. the weakening of the feudal system in England - brought about by the surviving peasants having greater bargaining power).
There is archeology evidence that the Dani came out of South Sweden. They filled in the Jutland peninsula after the Saxons and Angles basically left. And that the Dani Wich is what the word Denmark denotes, land of the, Dani or Danes. And there are many things that have came to light to support this. Including evidence that the Viking age began in Denmark.
southern Sweden was part of Denmark until year 1658 so the Danes didn't come out of Sweden, they spread from southern Sweden, the Jutes and Angles didn't all leave Jutland, dna studies show that Anglo Saxon dna in Britain is very similar to modern day Danes and Dutch and they åretty much can't see the diff. in Danish Viking dna and Anglo-Saxon dna , it was different tribes of the same people, the population in Jurtnd are still called Jutes , Jutes were part of what is called Anglo-Saxons the Danes took over power
tried to watch the series, but it's not for those who have vision problems and can't read fast. They can take the time to translate into text so you have to pause to read . Would be much easier to to do voice over or just get english speakers
Not sure which came first, Charlemagne killing all non Christians, Frankia before he went on his quest to become ruler in Rome and proclaim himself "God on Earth" Pope or the raid on the church. I know he proclaimed 25th December 800 AD, and he thought he's killed anyone who wouldn't convert. Before getting into a way with the Lombards (who were also Christians) Anyway, few from either side survived and there was "Peace on Earth" that year, as most of the Christians had been killed in battle fighting each other leaving Frankia wide open. One thing is for sure, the Norse thought they would be next to be put to the sword if they didn't nip in in the bud. So, Frankia was made to pay. Bordeax, Perigueux, Lomiges, Angoulele, Toulouse, Angers, Tours and Orleans made deserts Rouen invaded, sacked and set on fire Paris (3 times), Beauvais and Meaux are taken the fortress of Melun laide waste, Chantres occupied, Evreux and Bayeux looted and every town invested (not sure what that means back then) Says Ermentarius of Noirmoutier (they took that and used it as their base of operations) Some of the names on this list no longer exist, as they were never rebuilt
@sneksnekitsasnek It was as such. Pagan V Christians pretty much. Frankia under Charlemagne killed all who would not convert... Norse couldn't covert, and went for the Church first.
@sneksnekitsasnek I know what Swedes did. 922 13th warrior etc. Christians also attacked other Christians... Lombards for one, which is why Charlemagne ended with very troops left and couldn't defend Frankia, leaving it wide open. I'll chat more with you later some time. A bit busy at the moment (Got a lot of Viking history in books, and the coat of arms was given to us by King of Sweden, and they ran Norway until 1903, asaa well as Finland and have been doing since Cnut married a Swedish princess)
I'm a proud half Norwegian anforth sheepish. my moms GPA came from Norway an her mom an fam still reside in minnosota. she was adopted. 4 a long x I was a mutt. didn't kno wat I was. peeps assumed and most rite an dam .im proud an luv to learn. so thanku sooo very much. I also did DNA an was confermed
@@meeeka also thr back to Africa migration of natufians whose descendants became ancient Egyptians, berbers and Cushites, some natufians also went into Europe, introducing their new farming agricultural invention to hunter gatherer Europeans
It was not JUST Scandinavians who raided from the sea. The Gaelic Celts launched raids across the Irish Sea into Scotland, England, and Wales. Although their coracles were perhaps not up to the standards of the sea-going Knarrs and Longships, they were sufficient to raid for treasure and slaves to import to Ireland. The most well known case, is the historical Paidric, ( Patrick ) who later became the bringer of Catholicism to pagan Ireland.
I would love if these kids would actually preface their statements with more, "This is speculation". I mean really this is poor docu drama. Horrendously so.
Now we have dad working a 40 hour work week, hopefully making a living wage, so mom can go shopping 2 or 3 times a week at Walmart or Costco for clothes and food items. Maybe take the kids to a water park in summer on wkends, or a ski event in winter. Things haven't changed much in all these centuries, except the human race has gotten softer.
Peace loving natives frolicking happily through flowery meadows.....NOT the reality of NA tribes who butchered and enslaved each other for millennia before Europeans saw the NA shores. There are areas where the tribal brutality was so bad that it is "possessed" or "haunted" by demonic spiritual forces. The areas are very well known by tribal members and avoided.
@@daneaxe6465 I thought I said that North American tribes did war on each other? Oh well. The reason I thought of our Native tribes is because watching the vikings history reminded me strongly of the American tribes (which really includes Central and South Americas as well as North America. And there are still people who think the natives didn't know war until the Settlers came.
@@hotbam37 historians have identified the medjay elite warriors and police border protection force of ancient Egypt as the ancestors of the Beja tribe who still own the lands of South Egypt (Halaib triangle for example), the beja are Cushites...the only people that joke of we wuz kangz applies to, are nilotes, bantu and other sub saharan africans, not to Cushites who even European academic scholars admire deeply for their impressive ancient history of documented advanced civilisations and powerful kingdoms such as Land of Punt, Kerma, Kush kingdom, macrobia, Aksum kingdom, dmt, Macrobia etc
The real wealth sought was the people they took as slaves, the economics of ship and crew don’t figure with the few trinkets they took from monasteries.
Always wondered whether the Vikings were really only from Norway? Or were they made up of peoples who eventually mostly settled in Iceland, Norway, Finland, and Sweden.
Vikings were not just one people, Veronica. Research has shown that the famous Viking Rurik was of Finnic descent as opposed to Norse: yes, some people from what is today Finland (and by extension other Finnic peoples from Baltic region) joined up with Vikings. The very original Vikings were from around Denmark, Norway and Sweden, but as the Vikings traveled, many other people joined up with them - even people from what is today the UK and Ireland, where the Vikings raided extensively and established domains of their own. Those Vikings who traveled East established a powerful entity centered around Kiev in Ukraine. The Vikings were very colorful in this regard.
Exactly so, Niko. As the Vikings raided Frankish lands, the Frankish King thought of reducing further raids by giving some of the Vikings a region of their own in which to settle - they became known as the Normans (literally Northmen) of Normandy.
@@NikoChristianWallenberg I’d say Finland and the Baltic’s weren’t Norse by culture. Just a few stragglers that went Viking. That’s what I meant. But that happened in a lot of coastal settlements through every place they went.
The term Viking means "raider" but the 'Vikings' or Norse were far more than raiders. Also, most Norse women had equal rights under law and as the "Viking" series thankfully accurately shows many women learned to fight and were buried with their weapons as numerous graves have shown. Viking women who were oracles or bards held more societal power than the male chieftains. Christianity saw the rights - and rites - of Norse women disappear.
at the start got the dates wrong when they started raiding they were doing it n the 7th century and along france belguim, holland and russia back in the late 6th century ,due to a bad 90 years or more of very cold weather ,in sweden ,norway denmark ect ,and the romans never went up as far as the boaders of the franks,and less folks for the high lords the lower class had more power as they would be offered more from other lords as well,and women were held in high reguard even held power over the village or settlement in some places,and the word vikger was a bay dweeler ,and alot of the metals were mainly silver from england and the europeian coast lines,the different norseman fought against eachother as early as the 6th century and even from the same countries,the idea they didnt is a strange one also that the franks king charlimayne was a main reason for the attacks against his ideas of christians takeing over the pagan gods and the vikings were in a holy war was nonsense
History is so interesting to me. Idk how people think it’s boring. It literally feels like an entirely different world that these people used to love on but it’s the same ground we walk on today. It’s breathtaking when you think about it
Xx
I have that same passion for history too my friend.
School i think is why they do
Q ees
Its amazing. It shows the true dumbing down of our society. That people literally would rather watch idiots make videos of cats and duck dynasty than history documentaries or reading
This is probably the best documentary I've seen about the vikings. It answered many questions I had concerning social and economic typology prior to the "raids" . Very well done.
I would love to go back in time to get a glimpse of how these people lived and acted. In all eras... Amazing!
Yeah me too. I'd give my soul up for that
Same here
@@circusbrains And everyone had worms.
@Ordinary Pete (Paradox spoiler) if time travel where to be invented in the future chances are we would have it now due to a paradox event, i.e people would accidentally let the cat out of the bag
astral travel and past life regressions.
Best documentary on the Vikings EVER . Thank you so much for sharing with us :)
I’m SO in love with this channel! I miss the “old” history channel on tv!
How do you make documentaries so quick? Your upload rate is so high, I mean your work is cinema quality
They say above.. Content licensed from DRG to Little Dot Studios. I assume they use various production companies / studios from around the world.
www.imdb.com/title/tt11318610/
A lot of it is finding the information and doing the research, many of us do that, especially when it is their family timelines involved
Beautiful! Something I would have in my home or office, for two reasons. One, the design is efficient and not bulky, yet shows plenty of strength to be used very comfortably. And two, it is handmade and not simply a piece of "production." It's more personal, and warm, both in the way it was constructed, and the very warmth of the wood itself! Awesome. Thank you!
This was well made, great documentary. Thanks so much.
My 10 year old is learning about the Vikings at school, so this documentary will come in handy
@@thebeatcreeper it's a cash grab, all the coal fire power plants, and cars back then?
@liam nicklin the factual evidence is not nonsense. What might you be basing your opinion on?
@Arturius magnificent scientist 🤣🤣🤣🤣
This was an incredible documentary, filmed and produced at the highest standard. Well done and thank you! Also Vikings rule!!
King Alfred: I’d like a word.
In school I got an A* in history mock exam but after taking it as a option for gcse I was told I wasn’t going to be accepted as they thought It was too much work for a student like me (basically thought I wasn’t smart enough and was from a rough working class area)
8 years later I’m still amazed by all facets of history , great judgment by the teachers.
This series is so well done. Thank you for having real historians who are not blinded by modern politics/society discuss this topic. They cite evidence and are nuanced when it comes to making absolute assertions. Refreshing.
Camera work during the interview segments is really great.
I did a dna test recently and found out im related to danish vikings so I have come to love this kind of content!
As descendent from Saxons l express my displeasure
Without the visitation of my ancestors there would not be english...
.. or a town called Bath or York.
🇮🇸
@@Justin.Martyr 👍 during Saxons wars people with same DNA kill each other with great enthusiasm
@KING UNDERBELLY you are definitely descended from great Hardicanute
@@Justin.Martyr Yes the Saxon tribes are the same people .
And yes they might have gone through where london is . At least by looking at old maps it is 99.999% possibly.
We are all connected 😎
Thank you for sharing!😊 It's nice to learn about history around the world!😊👍🏾💯
If Dan Snow introduces a programme.
It's going to be very good! 👍🏻
Thank you so much for uploading this video. It is helping me get through the pandemic!
The emotional detachment from children in their early years would make sense. Graveyards from where I grew up and I have visited around the US, you find that until the early 20th century a lot of people didn't name their child until they reached 2 or 3 years old. Child mortality caused by influenza, typhoid, tetanus, diphtheria, and household accidents, was in some places as high as 60% for children 3 and under.
@Rakka Zakka Flakka If asked which , period of history I would love to live in if I could I tell them pre empiricist Rome, the Edo period of Japan, the late 1800s AKA the golden age of the cowboy, and other periods as well. BUT only if I can take modern medical with me.
Thank You for sharing and posting.
I am loving the fact that the documentary has English, French, and Norwegian (??? Or is it Icelandic??) featured in it.
Swedish
And French
Very well done documentary, really worth your time
This was on Amazon Prime too! Great show.
love this stuff
AT 2:42 Viking third from the front is the best Viking I've ever seen.
Is that you? 🤔
I hope they upload the other episodes, they’re on Amazon prime but only available in the USA and I don’t want to get a VPN just for three episodes of vaguely factual docu-drama 😅😂 it’s so good though... I need the other episodes!
Timeline taking advantage on the Valhalla hype 👍
I would do anything to have the ability to time travel and see the way people lived in all eras of humanity from 10’s of thousands of years ago to even just 75-100 years ago
I think it would be fascinating but also frequently horrifying. I am not sure that I would have the stomach for it.
Well this was awesome.
You can tell that the BBC had nothing to do with this excellent documentary.
The BBC make great historical documentaries
Awesome video. Is there another part ?
Awesome 🤩 I love ❤️ history and this is an amazing documentary. I recommend it!
It would be interesting if you would explore the effect of the Holy Roman Empire massacre's of northern German and Scandinavian tribes. That might have caused the Viking raids on Europe.
Good idea.
As well as Charlemagne slaughtering people. Cutting down all the sacred trees(large oaks)
The 5,000 pagans at the river Oller that lost their heads to Charlemagne. For one full week the river was inundated with mass amounts of blood.
Charlemagne poked the bear...
Who had the last laugh though certainly Britain was hugely influenced by the viking invasions after the Romans fled
@@danielnielsen1977 all roads lead to ROME
Absolutely! From Charlemagne alone.
So to, The Bronze Age collapse is not that big a mystery...
Great documentary.
Wonderful to hear a small reference to Sandby Borg at Oland Sweden. Excellent film
OK, I'll watch this soon. I hope to be enlightened further. I have read the Heimskringla (the the real one not the fake when they put on Wikki). I have read a lot of the research done by the BBC when Magnus Magnusson was still host of "Master Mind" too.
so much for their "honor" and "bravery"
They were irrefutably brave and honour is subjective.
@sneksnekitsasnek they didn’t flee… they just ran out of monks to murder.. duh
Amazing 🤗👍🙏💕
19:40 it's still like that today, especially in farmer families. Kids help on the field ect. since young age
As an American I always scratch my head when Brits, or Scandinavians talk about going to "Europe" as if it's a different continent.
Back then it was seen as a different world
Back when anything outside scandinavia was a new and unknown world.
My replies don't seem to understand. We're taught in geography class that the British Isles and the Scandinavian peninsula are part of the continent of Europe. So saying "the vikings went from Norway to Europe" is like saying "the cowboy went from Texas to America." The former is already within the latter.
[Q] What is the Worst place, in a hospital, to play Hide & go seek?
[A] the Intensive care unit (ICU)
👉👀🤘=🤣🤣🤣
ha.. ha... ha.......
😂
is stonehenge no longer a public site and only Timeline has access to?
It's a public site , but you cant walk amongst the stones anymore, just around them on the path.
It's not public its a heritage site so you have to pay to walk around it your not allowed amongst the stones to stop people chipping bits off or scratching names etc
I have pics of me and my bro climbing on them in 1975, not sure when they got put off limits...and I think it was free back then or we wouldn't have gone in, my Dad was cheap.
Influenced by the latest AC game?
I was literally searching for this very comment!
The Viking age just proofs that the gangsters from one generation are the heroes of the next.
@sneksnekitsasnek I’m sure they do in those cultures
So why is no one mentioning the Saxon Wars?Started by Charlemagne to forcefully introduce Christianity to northern Europe. Refugee Saxons who shared a common religion with their Scandinavian cousins would relate tales of destruction of their way life. This surely left a bad taste in Scandinavian mouths about western Christian civilization and may have influenced some of their reactions to destroying Christian monestries in their raids in the following years.
Are all the village and war clips from movies? Or are they made for the document? The detail of daily life is very fine and the clothing and dress is as real as it was happening. Where do these clips come from?
All filmed for the doc in Co. Wicklow Ireland.
One word ...Santorini . It was huge. Impacted most of Europe
Excellent. Cheers.
Wheres the next episode? I need it
really good :)
The very wealthy, it seems have always shown their greed and punished unreservedly those less fortunate than themselves. So as "modern" as we think we are today, have we changed so much❓Sadly, I don't think so❗️ A fascinating and very enjoyable informative video. Thanks.👍🏼
I’m becoming obsessed with Vikings. Don’t know.
Prior to what we now call the Viking Age, Scandinavians raided along Scandinavian shores, so the practice was folded into the culture, long before they began to raid in Continental Europe, and later, far afield places such as in the Mediterranean, and interior areas of Eastern Europe.
Not all the Norths were vikings, viking is the term of the action of some one who sails, pillages and plunders, or a pirate. But not all Nord were pirates.
No matter how many times this said by historians or people that bother to actually learn history idiots still use it as ethnic term
Certainly seems to be the norm to call any Scandinavian invaders during this period of history
They were Norse, right? Vikings were all Norse, but not all Norse(men) were Vikings. I hope that’s correct.
@@squares4u you had Frisians, pagan Saxons, Slavs , Finns, Balts all go to raiding expeditions in similar boats, armor and weapons and to 8 century monks all these Heathens were called Danes or Vikings
I love that when discussing the data and research on the climate disaster that drove the peoples forth the guests say "they" or "them" when discussing the researcher(s).
It was ONE MAN that discovered and did the initial research that discovered this HUUUUUGE and EXPANSIVE world disaster.
Kudos to him.
Interesting choice of narrator
I hope they talk about Charlemagne
So if I've followed the story/thesis correctly: the climate crisis starting in the mid-sixth century caused a severe population decline and freed-up land for the ruling classes to compete for. This lead to militarisation, culminating in the advent of Viking raiding - which was also helped by technological and societal advances allowing for production of sophisticated ships etc.
This is interesting... it somewhat contrasts with the social changes thought to have followed a similar population decline after the Black Death in the 1300s (i.e. the weakening of the feudal system in England - brought about by the surviving peasants having greater bargaining power).
0:37 it starts
"Large... tracts of land." 🤣😂🤣 11:59. You know you thought it, too. 😂👍
wasn't Charlemagnes crusade (782) against the north before the viking raids(792)?
@sneksnekitsasnek hmm sounded like it was implied that Charlemagnes crusade was in retaliation to the raids but sounds like it was the opposite
There is archeology evidence that the Dani came out of South Sweden. They filled in the Jutland peninsula after the Saxons and Angles basically left. And that the Dani Wich is what the word Denmark denotes, land of the, Dani or Danes. And there are many things that have came to light to support this. Including evidence that the Viking age began in Denmark.
southern Sweden was part of Denmark until year 1658 so the Danes didn't come out of Sweden, they spread from southern Sweden, the Jutes and Angles didn't all leave Jutland, dna studies show that Anglo Saxon dna in Britain is very similar to modern day Danes and Dutch and they åretty much can't see the diff. in Danish Viking dna and Anglo-Saxon dna , it was different tribes of the same people, the population in Jurtnd are still called Jutes , Jutes were part of what is called Anglo-Saxons the Danes took over power
guess you cant have vikings on ships without screaming. lel
tried to watch the series, but it's not for those who have vision problems and can't read fast. They can take the time to translate into text so you have to pause to read . Would be much easier to to do voice over or just get english speakers
Not sure which came first, Charlemagne killing all non Christians, Frankia before he went on his quest to become ruler in Rome and proclaim himself "God on Earth" Pope or the raid on the church. I know he proclaimed 25th December 800 AD, and he thought he's killed anyone who wouldn't convert. Before getting into a way with the Lombards (who were also Christians) Anyway, few from either side survived and there was "Peace on Earth" that year, as most of the Christians had been killed in battle fighting each other leaving Frankia wide open.
One thing is for sure, the Norse thought they would be next to be put to the sword if they didn't nip in in the bud. So, Frankia was made to pay.
Bordeax, Perigueux, Lomiges, Angoulele, Toulouse, Angers, Tours and Orleans made deserts Rouen invaded, sacked and set on fire Paris (3 times), Beauvais and Meaux are taken the fortress of Melun laide waste, Chantres occupied, Evreux and Bayeux looted and every town invested (not sure what that means back then) Says Ermentarius of Noirmoutier (they took that and used it as their base of operations)
Some of the names on this list no longer exist, as they were never rebuilt
@sneksnekitsasnek It was as such. Pagan V Christians pretty much. Frankia under Charlemagne killed all who would not convert... Norse couldn't covert, and went for the Church first.
@sneksnekitsasnek I know what Swedes did. 922 13th warrior etc. Christians also attacked other Christians... Lombards for one, which is why Charlemagne ended with very troops left and couldn't defend Frankia, leaving it wide open. I'll chat more with you later some time. A bit busy at the moment (Got a lot of Viking history in books, and the coat of arms was given to us by King of Sweden, and they ran Norway until 1903, asaa well as Finland and have been doing since Cnut married a Swedish princess)
I'm a proud half Norwegian anforth sheepish. my moms GPA came from Norway an her mom an fam still reside in minnosota. she was adopted. 4 a long x I was a mutt. didn't kno wat I was. peeps assumed and most rite an dam .im proud an luv to learn. so thanku sooo very much. I also did DNA an was confermed
My Family Was, and Is, These Survivors= Peopled The Earth! RESPECT!!
How much does history hit tv cost ?
Key element, were their vercital, long boats . At home on rivers or the oceans.
Man’s first great explorers
You're joking, right?
There were hundreds of thousands of years of the first great explorers o humanity; out of Africa to settle the entire world.
@@meeeka amazin’
@@meeeka also thr back to Africa migration of natufians whose descendants became ancient Egyptians, berbers and Cushites, some natufians also went into Europe, introducing their new farming agricultural invention to hunter gatherer Europeans
It was not JUST Scandinavians who raided from the sea. The Gaelic Celts launched raids across the Irish Sea into Scotland, England, and Wales.
Although their coracles were perhaps not up to the standards of the sea-going Knarrs and Longships, they were sufficient to raid for treasure and slaves to import to Ireland.
The most well known case, is the historical Paidric, ( Patrick ) who later became the bringer of Catholicism to pagan Ireland.
21:25 Why? Because you should not throw dead children's carcasses away...THERE IS NO 'AWAY'.
Yay! He's not sitting in his Lancaster
Bomber... he's at Stonehenge.
So because the Vikings came from a better organized social background, did their axes hurt any less in a monk's skull?
6:17 Speak English! Damn it. I usually listen to this while working.
I would love if these kids would actually preface their statements with more, "This is speculation". I mean really this is poor docu drama. Horrendously so.
Now we have dad working a 40 hour work week, hopefully making a living wage, so mom can go shopping 2 or 3 times a week at Walmart or Costco for clothes and food items. Maybe take the kids to a water park in summer on wkends, or a ski event in winter. Things haven't changed much in all these centuries, except the human race has gotten softer.
Would have liked to see a mongol vs viking
Vikings mainly fought on foot
There could be another Viking age of raiding yet to come.
Certain Native American tribes fought other tribes for what "goods" they could plunder as the spoils of war.
Peace loving natives frolicking happily through flowery meadows.....NOT the reality of NA tribes who butchered and enslaved each other for millennia before Europeans saw the NA shores. There are areas where the tribal brutality was so bad that it is "possessed" or "haunted" by demonic spiritual forces. The areas are very well known by tribal members and avoided.
@@daneaxe6465 I thought I said that North American tribes did war on each other? Oh well. The reason I thought of our Native tribes is because watching the vikings history reminded me strongly of the American tribes (which really includes Central and South Americas as well as North America. And there are still people who think the natives didn't know war until the Settlers came.
We faught other tribes for slaves, mostly women, horses, and hunting land. Most of all honor within your own tribe.
Only “certain” tribes? Imo this is the human condition, practiced (with a few temporary pauses) by humans of every culture.
Godt klaret.
I find it hilarious that so many ppl in comments are flexing their inability to follow the subtitles. Wow.
Charlemagne dinasty also had its role in this.
in some ways the mentality is still there, in some people, at some times
Great Stone people's not all them were so called pirate's they were Nomads Nomadic if you think about it
We Pharaoh's Medjays like Vikings Barbarians Tribes we Medjays in Egypt seen many Vikings like the Vandal's
we wuz kangz!!!
@@hotbam37 historians have identified the medjay elite warriors and police border protection force of ancient Egypt as the ancestors of the Beja tribe who still own the lands of South Egypt (Halaib triangle for example), the beja are Cushites...the only people that joke of we wuz kangz applies to, are nilotes, bantu and other sub saharan africans, not to Cushites who even European academic scholars admire deeply for their impressive ancient history of documented advanced civilisations and powerful kingdoms such as Land of Punt, Kerma, Kush kingdom, macrobia, Aksum kingdom, dmt, Macrobia etc
I'm from Latvia, Vikings family.
The real wealth sought was the people they took as slaves, the economics of ship and crew don’t figure with the few trinkets they took from monasteries.
Tasmania Australia Hello thanks
7:59 :)
Always wondered whether the Vikings were really only from Norway? Or were they made up of peoples who eventually mostly settled in Iceland, Norway, Finland, and Sweden.
Not Finland. Finns are an entirely different people and culture.
Vikings were not just one people, Veronica. Research has shown that the famous Viking Rurik was of Finnic descent as opposed to Norse: yes, some people from what is today Finland (and by extension other Finnic peoples from Baltic region) joined up with Vikings. The very original Vikings were from around Denmark, Norway and Sweden, but as the Vikings traveled, many other people joined up with them - even people from what is today the UK and Ireland, where the Vikings raided extensively and established domains of their own. Those Vikings who traveled East established a powerful entity centered around Kiev in Ukraine. The Vikings were very colorful in this regard.
Exactly so, Niko. As the Vikings raided Frankish lands, the Frankish King thought of reducing further raids by giving some of the Vikings a region of their own in which to settle - they became known as the Normans (literally Northmen) of Normandy.
@@NikoChristianWallenberg I’d say Finland and the Baltic’s weren’t Norse by culture. Just a few stragglers that went Viking. That’s what I meant. But that happened in a lot of coastal settlements through every place they went.
The term Viking means "raider" but the 'Vikings' or Norse were far more than raiders. Also, most Norse women had equal rights under law and as the "Viking" series thankfully accurately shows many women learned to fight and were buried with their weapons as numerous graves have shown. Viking women who were oracles or bards held more societal power than the male chieftains. Christianity saw the rights - and rites - of Norse women disappear.
How tf did they stack those giant stones man
Time to get BAKED boys!
Could they not get permission to use clips from Vikings then. Pity😔
Tess of durbervilles !
at the start got the dates wrong when they started raiding they were doing it n the 7th century and along france belguim, holland and russia back in the late 6th century ,due to a bad 90 years or more of very cold weather ,in sweden ,norway denmark ect ,and the romans never went up as far as the boaders of the franks,and less folks for the high lords the lower class had more power as they would be offered more from other lords as well,and women were held in high reguard even held power over the village or settlement in some places,and the word vikger was a bay dweeler ,and alot of the metals were mainly silver from england and the europeian coast lines,the different norseman fought against eachother as early as the 6th century and even from the same countries,the idea they didnt is a strange one also that the franks king charlimayne was a main reason for the attacks against his ideas of christians takeing over the pagan gods and the vikings were in a holy war was nonsense
Ma la visione senza confini nazionali 😬o guerre c'è 🤔🤣😇🕺🌌
Which language is the lady speaking in? One lady is speaking French. The other?
Viking
Charlemagne? Rollo obtained Normandy a hundred or so later.
Kracatoa maybe