Not only that but it stands out more than a king's attire would've. It's like say "hey everyone look at me in my assassin uniform". Back when I was like 10 years old playing those video games I was always wondering why no one notices you
Unless you give your assassin uniform to a non assassin and then you, as the assassin, but no longer in uniform, are completely undetectable! Or is that not cricket?
@@PerfectAlibi1 any firearms made the 18th century( or earlier as well as reproductions) are not considered firearms today, so it wouldn't be that difficult to import them (at least in my country)
I admire all the people who agreed to talk in front of the camera You'd be walking around, enjoying the festival, and suddenly some British chap says "You are the first person wearing these nice shoe-thingies I've seen all day. How about you tell me everything you know about them?"
I've lived on Gotland all my life, and lived in Visby itself for about 8 years put together (moved out of town recently, but only about 20-25km out) and I really missed having Medeltidsveckan last year. When I was growing up, a lot of us from the countryside would dress up as defeated peasants to march in front of the "Danish soldiers" marching into the city (Intåget) at the commencement of the week. Smear our faces with soot and theater blood - or strawberry and lingonberry jam, if no theater blood was available. We used to lead the march all the way to Stora Torget and then slip into Munken ("The Monk", a restaurant-bar) and so while the victorious "Danish soldiers" had to stand for half an hour in the heat to listen to a history lesson for the crowd, the defeated peasant levies would go get drinks. A consolation prize, I suppose!
"Now I'm trying to interview you, they've started banging drums in the background." "Well, it's Visby in medieval week." Got to love the Nordic propensity for being very straight-faced about absolutely everything.
Haven't gotten that far in the video yet, but being a visitor to this great events I can say that if you manage to do ANYTHING for more than 30 minutes without interruption from from music, a jester, some other semi-random event...then you're on the wrong island. ;)
Yeah in my experience they tend to have difficulty with sarcasm a lot of the time. I'm told the Japanese are similar. Very literal people. Weirdly enough my Deaf relatives are like that, they definitely have a sense of humor. But sarcasm doesn't really translate unless you indicate that it's sarcasm, which kind of defeats the point.
@@nedisahonkey You would probably not understand sarcarsm either if you were communicating in a foreign language... If you are not 100% comfortable with a language, you will focus on other things while speaking and miss nuances that indicate sarcasm. Irony/sarcasm is in fact very advanced in Sweden, there is even "double irony".
@@nedisahonkey We Swedes do understand sarcasm very well. We also do irony. And yeah, sometimes the humour is quite dry like in that comment. Also, Lindy's comment is actually at the same level. He's clearly joking about it, but what he's saying is just a statement of facts. British and Swedish humour overlaps on that it's often quite "dry humour" like that. :)
Agreed. Been there a few times, and I'd say anytime that isn't Almedalsveckan is a great time to visit. :D Though my personal favourite time's definitely Medieval week.
I'm Australian and believe any place in Sweden is a wonderful place to visit. (Niklas Larsson - After checking 'Almedalsveckan' on Wikipedia I think I'll pass on that also.)
@@GarrisonFall Some special things to take a look at: - Stockholm in general. As former conscript of the armed forces, I recommend watching the mounted changing of the guards in summer. - Bingsjöstämman. Swedish folk music festival with tons of beer, it's amazing! - Uppsala/Linköping/Lund. University cities with lots of old buildings and histories. Best thing is to grab a hold of some Swedish person to guide you around though.
@@GarrisonFall Yeah, I can see why people enjoy it, but it's certainly not for me. :) I was about to disagree with you in general, but I suppose it's easy to take the scenery I see every day for granted. Beside, I'd very much like visiting Australia too, though the heat might be an issue. :P
After visiting Visby and Medeltidsveckan for 10 years straight, me and the family decided to stay on the island and we have been living here for 6 years now. Magical place all year round!
Over 40.000 tourists just that week, in a town with ca. 30.000 inhabitans. The whole city almost becomes medieval. Thanks for yet another brilliant video (from a swede 🇸🇪)
Yes. Visitors beware, when the evening breeze rolls in off the Baltic. It still brings with it some authenticold. So a cloak is definitely as good idea.
@@thewingedporpoise I can 100% picture an old CD-ROM point-and-click adventure game with Lindy as the main character. And now I desperately want to see someone make a retro fan game based on the concept.
@@collinmclaren6608 he goes around old ruins and catacombs and discovers stuff, possibly that's just the first part of the adventure and he finds a time machine or something, and goes through time, like helping Hannibal fight the romans, remarking on the clothing and culture
'For a lot of people, I suspect that a big part of what the like about the festival is sharing a tent, sitting around a real fire and just... wiling the nights away.' Said Lloyd... alone and in the dark.
You needed to wear your hood in 'that particular way' to entice the ladies, promote your availability. In the USA I'd reenact the French Fur Trade, and offer to show a lady what you stow under an overturned canoe.
If you ever visit, take a look at the street names in the old town. Many of them have german names since the hanseatic traders basically built the city. I think there's even a street named after Lübeck. :)
The real time diagram of the guy photobombing his piece to camera... is a lot of trouble to go to in order to saltmine about that guy. Absolutely brilliant, I love it. Classical Lloyd quality.
A bit of Swedish kazari-eigo. They put irreverent stuff in English from-time-to-time because everyone understands it except for small children. When in Sweden I get the sense that English is associated with informality in the Swedish culture. That, and their sense of humour is more irreverent than ours in general.
I'm from Poland and it's sometimes confusing in regards to writing. We use roman numerals for centuries. Thus, the above example would be "XII w.". I sometimes forget about the differences and use that form whilst writing in English
Seeing anything medieval related from Sweden always saddens me a bit because we lost so much knowledge about the period in 1697 when a fire consumed most of the national archive.
Well here in Blekinge King Waldemar Attedag spent several years burning anything with letters on it before going over and taxing Wisby, as is re-enacted every medieval week. With the oldest churches in southeastern Sweden we lost a lot of records then. Bookburnings is really amongst the most evil things one can ever undertake.
A favorite trick of tyrants was to burn historical records so they could rewrite history to buffer their claims to whatever great family tree they claimed to be a part of.
@@ragnarragnarson9393 Yes they did that with Blekinge (Which was part of Svithiod, but not goverened by any of the Svithiod Kings). The Dane King claimed it in 1050 and split most of the Listerlandet from Skania (Which was danish) and placed his men there to rule over Lister and Blekinge. And after this book burning quest the region is refered to as Blekinge, not Lister and Blekinge. The boarder is still night and day to this day, in old Blekinge they speak Småländska, since Blekinge was one of these little countries (Små = little, Länder = countries), and in the West they still speak Skånska.
Around 13-18% alcohol starts killing a lot of bacteria too. Might help mask the taste, might make it more hygienic, or just maybe make the person drinking forget that he is drinking from a bladder.
As a medeltidare (person who always go to the medieval week in Visby) i became very happy looking at this video. Everyone should feel how it is to be a part of this festival! It gets even better with medieval clothes. You dont need anything advanced. Just try. It is totally lovely there!
It always amuses me how when I see a Lindy epic length video, I say to myself "Oh I must watch it... but only for ten minutes...got stuff to do." 40 minutes later "It's over already? Whhhy?" Gets me every time.
I am impressed by the english skills of the swedish people! I was aware that it is normal to be able to speak english there, but the quality and ease of conversation was rather impressive! Though I assume the lady from 24:39 *must* be english!
I think she's Swedish. I went to Norway a few years back, weird how I was never sure if people were speaking English or Norwegian. The odd Norwegian phrase was so obviously recognisable to English speakers. When written down though you'd be hard pressed to see it. Phonetics and phrasing of informal speech reveals our common heritage. Very clearly the Scandinavians have had a huge influence on English culture, we are clearly cousins.
She's most certainly Swedish. As a Swede myself, I found her to be one of the few people in the video not awkward to listen to. I'd say many of the others were rather embarrassing, by Swedish standards.
@@lindybeige And a lot of people at the other end of the webcam, it's like it spreads out, like a virus... Hang on, bad thinking on my part.... I have no idea how that works. But we did it. Some people Liked it, and that is good enough for us. We got the horrible spot of 21:00 last friday (you come there Thursday the week before, don't you know anything?) until the end. And we even got makeup! Hence my pink eyeshadow! It was still magical. It's been our home for week 32 since -94 I think. We love it and we will be there, no matter what. And you can't stop us :-)
The pattern guy's backstory is so sad, I want a pattern comeback, and a movie about him pioneering modern patten fashion! -Jesus Christ thanks guys, I did not know much about pattens, but this is pretty cool!
In a sense here in the Netherlands they are still use by some. Farmers that still use wooden clogs out of convenience may also use the pattern version. But they often more use those later once as a slipper on it's own.
In one of the scenes "Ryska gården" a classic cafée in Visby on "Stora torget" appears in the background. Kind of surrealistic thinking about a huge movie made in Japan is based on a tiny swedish town on an island.
I agree Tallin is a thing to behold. Sure made me wonder what other gems the east has hidden from us in the west. Though I spent most of my time in Estonia at Mütofest close to the other border. Have you put up roadsigns now? Have to admit it was tricky to drive across the country with no roadsigns other than the rare speedlimit signs. (Was prior to GPS)
@@Throku I don't know about roadsigns but from my knowledge the Estonian goverment would rather do anything else in the world other then care about countryside infastructure. But of course things improve with time.
Mate you've got history on your side too I think, I've heard tell that swearing (in god's name something unpleasant will happen to someone) and cursing (someone to a horrible fate) were name-accurate and literal things, and using words we consider swear-words or curse-words were a lot more normalised in all sectors of social speech without much concern. TL;DR People 'back in the day' swore a lot too, so a sweary Visby is a lot more fuckin authentic than a non-sweary Visby. Source: Ask Shad on his Medieval Cursing video. I'm totally trusting his research skills because it's just a youtube comment, come on.
Seeing this reminds me to tell you about Campus Galli over here in good old Germany. Once this whole mess has come and gone it might be worth a visit. Campus Galli is the reconstruction of a monastery and the surrounding village, but only with authentic materials and methods, done by people living the historic lifestyle whilst they are helping to build in the village. It would really fit with the "normal people not warriors" atmosphere you mentioned.
A lot has to do with the way they carry themselves. They shuffle around, slouched, like old cripples.And 80 percent are obese.I remember when people semi-dressed up, or dressed up, to go shopping and travel. We would be taught (and corrected) about our posture by our parents and in school.
@@SSN515 True. My entire family agrees upon this - a long tail coat will ALWAYS look better than a modern hoodie. Just go and look at art of long tail coats and imagine them in hoodies 😂
The 21st century has the worst aesthetics of any period in human history. We might have great technology, but we also look like shit, and that goes for our surroundings too.
Yeah! Do more Swedish history.. as a non-Swede, the extent of my knowledge is: ??? > Vikings > ??? > Abba, Saab and Ikea. I'm sure there's more interesting stuff in between.
@@808bigisland Personally I only really put dill on fish. But you better not keep me away from my meatballs, brown gravy and lingonberry jam, or there's gonna be trouble.
Cloaks are really useful, if you have a good size and weight. That one guy did a video on the great kilt as survival clothes -- it gives you an idea of cloak uses.
"Dont people in modern clothes look rubbish" Im really surprised how much i agree! I'm no medieval type but in the time it took to watch this i was almost completely won over
I can atest to how much more comfortable they are as well. Unless I really have to it usually takes ma a few days to get back into modern clothes again. Only some things like viking bag-pants are unpractical (because you snag on everything.) but they have the weird trait of keeping you warm when it is cold and cool when it's hot, because they trap so much air.
@@DonBean-ej4ou It's trapped, so neither or a bit of bloth. The thing it does id provide a buffer of air around you to isloate you from whatever hot or cold is outside the pantsand is so unrestricling that it's not very far from the comforts of going naked. Tha puffy pants with all the folds in them do tend to snag on everything with a sharp corner though :P
@@Throku That's like cloaks, they love to get hooked on things too... But they're great for the cold and the rain (just not the wind, unless you keep them under control).
@@tyree9055 Oh cloaks have their issues, but they have nothing on bagpants when it comes to snagging. I don't recall ever snagging with a cloak, you're probably wearing it wrong.
@@fredosinsemilla3896 There was one last year, a digital one. There's going to one this year as well, digital or not. 95 % of Swedish people are vaccinated by then,
@@MartinAhlman I just imagined Ross Brunskill upstairs wanted the real deal, not the digital one. But otherwise yeah, if it's not possible, a digital solution would be better than nothing I guess.
And here I was thinking "Bellend" would be better. At least as good as "knob head". I wish I was from Scotland so I could call him a "polyester cockwomble". Alas, poor polyester cockwomble, I... really didn't know him.
The Chaser crew (in Australia) decided that anyone deliberately putting themselves on camera or reacting out of the ordinary when they realised they were on camera was officially boneheading and therefore were boneheads. I've gone with that ever since.
I had the pleasure of visiting Visby 2 years ago and it was an incredible experience. I'm definitely going to visit again in the future and I'd highly recommend it to anyone.
If in the future you want to visit Carcassonne, AigueMorte or any of the other castles in the south of France I am happy to be your guide and interpreter :)
(40:15) There is something cosy about sitting outside late evening or night, and having people in the distance having a party. Not one with music, preferably just hearing the people.
The Spanish Inquisition was more of a Renaissance event then a Medieval one, but I suppose it falls near the tail end of the gray area of overlap between the two eras.
I visited Norwich and absolutely loved it. The city contains an astounding amount of medieval religious architecture (35 medieval churches and 2 cathedrals - although one cathedral is 19th century), as well as many non-religious buildings from the era (Castle, Guildhall, ‘The Halls’, The Great Hospital, Dragon Hall etc), loads of charming historic streets, beautiful buildings and a really lovely atmosphere. In this region of England I also really enjoyed visiting the beautiful city of Cambridge, Ely (with its incredible cathedral) and the charming historic centre of Lincoln (with yet another *spectacular* cathedral)!
to be fair, if lindybeige made a video about my house that i stay in every day, i'd still watch the video to hear his silly dry humor lol. He'd also probably research some crazy historical fact about what happened here 200 years ago
Having visited this island (not during the festival, but just in general) I recommend the museum in Visby, as well as the VERY MANY historical sites all over the island!
"i arrived by fairy." id imagine there wings were quite worn out after such a journey. 2:57 lindy; "this is the safety version." bystander; [ducks] "yeah, not so much." looks like great fun. wish i could attend one day.
My grandfather used to make key harps and was really at playing them. He died when I was just a baby so I never got to learn how to play one from him, but my mom still has one.
I think watching your videos is one of the best ways I've learning about insights into the past and really got to critically thinking of history. Thank you for everything you do Lloyd! Not to even mention the fact that you always talk without cuts or any notes(at least from what I've seen) which just goes to show how much of a passion you have for history!
1:35 - those monstrosities actually existed, just rather in Czechia, Hungary and Croatia and the bouts, they are called hurblats in English I think, and there is a few records of them in England I believe.
@@Lattamonsteri yeah, watching it back, he was making fun of the thrower's outfit. Although, I too thought he meant the weapons on the first pass, so I'm glad you made this comment to make me watch it again.
@@Lattamonsteri yeah, I only picked it up when I was paying close attention and caught the "he's wearing it back to front", clearly referring to the ball cap.
The first thing i do when i get to the ragged flagon is to change everyone's uniforms to average clothes. Makes the flagon ten times more immersive. I'm surprised no one has made a mod to redress those guilds. Personally i use a mod called Tailor's measure that makes it easy to change peoples outfits and armor with a dialogue option.
Been to the medieval week eight times i think. Dressed up, living under a cloak and out of a persedelpåse m/39 with a leather strap sown on and sleeping in the rough, in vaults of the wall, beneath a tree on the hill behind the still maintained church. Always a good time :)
I've been to the Medeltidsveckan in Visby more times than I can count, and I still find myself in love with the atmosphere. In some cases, you'll feel like you've fallen into a time machine.
You should visit the 'Jorvik Viking center' Loyd, not only is it an interesting archaeology museum but its quite controversial for being to 'disneylandish'. Haven't been there since the River Ouse submerged York in 2015 and I think a ton of stuff in the museum was destroyed, so it might have changed since then.
As always, I’m treated with an interesting perspective on things from this creator. Since I’m a Swede who’s seen (and heard) a Hell of a lot about this specific festival over the years, that’s actually saying quite a lot about this creators amazing skill in NOT making this ”yet another” report on this lovely festival. Well done Sir Lindybeige, well done indeed!
Hey Lindy you should really come to Memmingen, we have the biggest Medieval Festival in Germany, called Wallenstein Festival with huge Rennaisanse Reinactment groups.
Well this is/was a lovely surprise and great timing too as summer is Almost upon us :) I can wholeheartedly say that Gotland is paradise on earth (got a summer home in Gothem). The island can be described as ”Hawaii of the nordic”
I live in Sweden and went to Gotland every summer since I was 7 so it's really nice seeing the place getting some recognition from outsider youtubers and it's also feels pretty odd seeing almost all of the popular locations I've been to in a proper documentary/vlog :)
I’m so impressed how well the Swedish speak English. Still, if you had a medieval festival in Wisbeach, I’m sure that the majority would speak fluent Swedish 😎
Bravo! Well done and well received Lloyd. And a thankyou to the re-enactors too. I've done a bit of fur trade era re-enacting myself. It was fun to show the "civilians" a bit of history. When you can amaze a lady and her young son with your fire-starting prowess it's all worth it. Flint and steel with a bit of char cloth, and you're a hero! lol
"An assasins uniform, possibly the stupidest idea for a uniform"
Good point
Almost as bad as a ninja suit.....
Not only that but it stands out more than a king's attire would've. It's like say "hey everyone look at me in my assassin uniform". Back when I was like 10 years old playing those video games I was always wondering why no one notices you
@@ArcanisUrriah its a black suit. For sneaking... in the *dark*. Whats the problem?
Unless you give your assassin uniform to a non assassin and then you, as the assassin, but no longer in uniform, are completely undetectable! Or is that not cricket?
@@rakino4418 But it's white...
"And this is a shoe from what period?"
"This morning."
😂
Lindy: "Only 26000 kroner"
Me: "Well, for a cannon that might actually be a steal"
Does it work?
And how difficult will it be to get it back to your own country through customs?
@@PerfectAlibi1 If it works, getting it back to your country won't be a problem, you have a cannon! :p
@@NoobLord98
You'll be fighting off the army of your country, who have FAR better cannons than your little peashooter (by comparison) :P
I bet you'd have a blast with it
@@PerfectAlibi1 any firearms made the 18th century( or earlier as well as reproductions) are not considered firearms today, so it wouldn't be that difficult to import them (at least in my country)
I admire all the people who agreed to talk in front of the camera
You'd be walking around, enjoying the festival, and suddenly some British chap says "You are the first person wearing these nice shoe-thingies I've seen all day. How about you tell me everything you know about them?"
I have a strong feeling many people in the festival knows who this British chap is ;)
Quite possibly so. I didn't know about him at that time, though.
@@OlleCarnevale wait
hold up
det är ju du
lol nice
I've lived on Gotland all my life, and lived in Visby itself for about 8 years put together (moved out of town recently, but only about 20-25km out) and I really missed having Medeltidsveckan last year. When I was growing up, a lot of us from the countryside would dress up as defeated peasants to march in front of the "Danish soldiers" marching into the city (Intåget) at the commencement of the week. Smear our faces with soot and theater blood - or strawberry and lingonberry jam, if no theater blood was available. We used to lead the march all the way to Stora Torget and then slip into Munken ("The Monk", a restaurant-bar) and so while the victorious "Danish soldiers" had to stand for half an hour in the heat to listen to a history lesson for the crowd, the defeated peasant levies would go get drinks. A consolation prize, I suppose!
"Now I'm trying to interview you, they've started banging drums in the background."
"Well, it's Visby in medieval week."
Got to love the Nordic propensity for being very straight-faced about absolutely everything.
Haven't gotten that far in the video yet, but being a visitor to this great events I can say that if you manage to do ANYTHING for more than 30 minutes without interruption from from music, a jester, some other semi-random event...then you're on the wrong island. ;)
He probably mean it in a "Well, that's Visby's medieval week for ya". Nothing particulary Nordic about it really.
Yeah in my experience they tend to have difficulty with sarcasm a lot of the time. I'm told the Japanese are similar. Very literal people. Weirdly enough my Deaf relatives are like that, they definitely have a sense of humor. But sarcasm doesn't really translate unless you indicate that it's sarcasm, which kind of defeats the point.
@@nedisahonkey You would probably not understand sarcarsm either if you were communicating in a foreign language... If you are not 100% comfortable with a language, you will focus on other things while speaking and miss nuances that indicate sarcasm. Irony/sarcasm is in fact very advanced in Sweden, there is even "double irony".
@@nedisahonkey We Swedes do understand sarcasm very well. We also do irony. And yeah, sometimes the humour is quite dry like in that comment. Also, Lindy's comment is actually at the same level. He's clearly joking about it, but what he's saying is just a statement of facts. British and Swedish humour overlaps on that it's often quite "dry humour" like that. :)
"Inspiring, not criticising" is a brilliant mindset to have, I love it.
And then he goes having a rant at the assassin's uniform lol ;)
@@Classic_Frog It was not Lindy who said "Inspiring, not criticising", it was the chief of the festival.
If you love him so much why don’t you marry him?
Criticism makes people defensive and pushes them away.
Inspiration makes people *curious* and draws them in.
And, (gasp!) from his use of the word "inclusive," it's evident that he was one of the rare people who knows what the word really means.
For anyone non-Scandivanian: Visby is actually a wonderful city to visit, outside of the medieval week. Highly recommend it!
Agreed. Been there a few times, and I'd say anytime that isn't Almedalsveckan is a great time to visit. :D Though my personal favourite time's definitely Medieval week.
I'm Australian and believe any place in Sweden is a wonderful place to visit. (Niklas Larsson - After checking 'Almedalsveckan' on Wikipedia I think I'll pass on that also.)
@@GarrisonFall Some special things to take a look at:
- Stockholm in general. As former conscript of the armed forces, I recommend watching the mounted changing of the guards in summer.
- Bingsjöstämman. Swedish folk music festival with tons of beer, it's amazing!
- Uppsala/Linköping/Lund. University cities with lots of old buildings and histories. Best thing is to grab a hold of some Swedish person to guide you around though.
@@GarrisonFall Yeah, I can see why people enjoy it, but it's certainly not for me. :) I was about to disagree with you in general, but I suppose it's easy to take the scenery I see every day for granted. Beside, I'd very much like visiting Australia too, though the heat might be an issue. :P
I'm from Finland, and I've visited Visby. I Love it! But Finland is nordic, not scandinavian country. So I suppose I was a total foreigner. :D
After visiting Visby and Medeltidsveckan for 10 years straight, me and the family decided to stay on the island and we have been living here for 6 years now. Magical place all year round!
I am happy for you
Over 40.000 tourists just that week, in a town with ca. 30.000 inhabitans. The whole city almost becomes medieval. Thanks for yet another brilliant video (from a swede 🇸🇪)
40 thousand is a low count. More like 100...
Yes. Visitors beware, when the evening breeze rolls in off the Baltic. It still brings with it some authenticold.
So a cloak is definitely as good idea.
Or a dagger?
Cloaks are wonderful until the wind starts blowing them every which way...
😅👍
@Darren Munsell I think they'd call that an inauthentibag...
😆👎
Sn authenticloak
I love how Lloyd describing every item he interact with sounds like those item description in videogames
Lindy does seem like a point and click adventure protagonist
@@thewingedporpoise I can 100% picture an old CD-ROM point-and-click adventure game with Lindy as the main character. And now I desperately want to see someone make a retro fan game based on the concept.
@@collinmclaren6608 he goes around old ruins and catacombs and discovers stuff, possibly that's just the first part of the adventure and he finds a time machine or something, and goes through time, like helping Hannibal fight the romans, remarking on the clothing and culture
'For a lot of people, I suspect that a big part of what the like about the festival is sharing a tent, sitting around a real fire and just... wiling the nights away.' Said Lloyd... alone and in the dark.
And getting absolutley shitfaced
You needed to wear your hood in 'that particular way' to entice the ladies, promote your availability.
In the USA I'd reenact the French Fur Trade, and offer to show a lady what you stow under an overturned canoe.
On a serious note, when is the last time poor Lindy swing-danced with a lady? This lockdown has to be KILLING him.
Or, he could just have walked up to any party of folks, and they would have gladly let him, join in!
@@scredesign Making it all the more tragic that Lloyd stayed in the shadows, apart from the merry revelers.
I like Visby, cause I am from Lübeck, and every member of the Hanseatic league is a friend.
If you ever visit, take a look at the street names in the old town. Many of them have german names since the hanseatic traders basically built the city. I think there's even a street named after Lübeck. :)
The real time diagram of the guy photobombing his piece to camera... is a lot of trouble to go to in order to saltmine about that guy. Absolutely brilliant, I love it. Classical Lloyd quality.
Loved the detail depicting the video camera.
The poor pattern guy, awww my heart
He seemed so crushed that no one else wore them anymore...
How many shoes that one pair of pattens have saved!
If there are no more stalls he can't replace them later either
I suspect it's cyclical. One year everyone wears them, the next nobody, the next year it's all "Wait, where are all the pattens? Must wear pattens!"
W00d&uknow it
Timestamp pls :)
I think rebuilding and repairing a wall with modern materials is about the most authentic thing anyone could do for a wall
Eh, I’d rather not tamper with it. Keep it original
@@charlesmiv3842 You have to do something to fix it, otherwise you're leaving a clear weakspot for the enemy to attack through!
I'm almost certain they did it back in the day too.
@@charlesmiv3842 then there will not be a wall in a few decades. A bit selfish to not let future generations enjoy it
@@Fjottle if the wall is well built, there will be. Just look at all the Roman structures still standing
“Approved by the Spanish Inquisition” 🤣
I wasn’t expecting that
@@ocean6828 nobody does
Oh hey, it's that person YT keeps recommending in my feeds. Happy 10 years, cheers.
@@purpleey But he then goes on to something completely different 🤣
A bit of Swedish kazari-eigo. They put irreverent stuff in English from-time-to-time because everyone understands it except for small children. When in Sweden I get the sense that English is associated with informality in the Swedish culture. That, and their sense of humour is more irreverent than ours in general.
24:22, I feel with that guy. As a Swede it's always hard to think that 12th century is 1100-1200. because we say it like "1100-talet".
I'm from Poland and it's sometimes confusing in regards to writing. We use roman numerals for centuries. Thus, the above example would be "XII w.". I sometimes forget about the differences and use that form whilst writing in English
Seeing anything medieval related from Sweden always saddens me a bit because we lost so much knowledge about the period in 1697 when a fire consumed most of the national archive.
Well here in Blekinge King Waldemar Attedag spent several years burning anything with letters on it before going over and taxing Wisby, as is re-enacted every medieval week. With the oldest churches in southeastern Sweden we lost a lot of records then. Bookburnings is really amongst the most evil things one can ever undertake.
A favorite trick of tyrants was to burn historical records so they could rewrite history to buffer their claims to whatever great family tree they claimed to be a part of.
@@ragnarragnarson9393 Yes they did that with Blekinge (Which was part of Svithiod, but not goverened by any of the Svithiod Kings). The Dane King claimed it in 1050 and split most of the Listerlandet from Skania (Which was danish) and placed his men there to rule over Lister and Blekinge. And after this book burning quest the region is refered to as Blekinge, not Lister and Blekinge. The boarder is still night and day to this day, in old Blekinge they speak Småländska, since Blekinge was one of these little countries (Små = little, Länder = countries), and in the West they still speak Skånska.
Don't let them take your history!
A new lindybeige 40min upload? we've been blessed.
Yes
Well i was watching his videos right as he uploaded, Guess i got one more to watch!
Edit: CARALHO TEM BRASILEIRO EM TODO LUGAR SHSISBSUSHSUSHSU
@@eisenkrahe7125 kkkkk somos onipresentes mano
If I hadn't seen your comment I wouldn't have realized, it felt like 10 minutes
Agreed
2200 was actually less than I was expecting for a cannon
True. Much less. Even if its made with modern equipment.
Iron isn't an expensive material
@William Mulvaney Yeah, sure, and any modern hatchback will beat a Triumph Spitfire. But, seriously, which one do you want to be seen with?
But remember it’s an earl Bofors gun.
wonder if it got sold lol
That woman was not impressed by your attempts to inauthenticate her entire stock
From what I understand, wine, mead or beer was safer than water to drink back then. It would have masked the taste of the pigs bladder as well.
@@GarrisonFall Oh I meant the lantern lady
@@MB-st7be Yeah, bladder canteen lady was cool, lantern lady not so much.
Around 13-18% alcohol starts killing a lot of bacteria too. Might help mask the taste, might make it more hygienic, or just maybe make the person drinking forget that he is drinking from a bladder.
@@MB-st7be D'oh! Sorry.
As a medeltidare (person who always go to the medieval week in Visby) i became very happy looking at this video. Everyone should feel how it is to be a part of this festival! It gets even better with medieval clothes. You dont need anything advanced. Just try. It is totally lovely there!
It always amuses me how when I see a Lindy epic length video, I say to myself "Oh I must watch it... but only for ten minutes...got stuff to do." 40 minutes later "It's over already? Whhhy?" Gets me every time.
I am impressed by the english skills of the swedish people! I was aware that it is normal to be able to speak english there, but the quality and ease of conversation was rather impressive! Though I assume the lady from 24:39 *must* be english!
My Swedish ears pick up a slight accent. I would guess east central Sweden, although that's hard to tell of course.
I think she's Swedish.
I went to Norway a few years back, weird how I was never sure if people were speaking English or Norwegian.
The odd Norwegian phrase was so obviously recognisable to English speakers. When written down though you'd be hard pressed to see it.
Phonetics and phrasing of informal speech reveals our common heritage.
Very clearly the Scandinavians have had a huge influence on English culture, we are clearly cousins.
She's most certainly Swedish. As a Swede myself, I found her to be one of the few people in the video not awkward to listen to. I'd say many of the others were rather embarrassing, by Swedish standards.
@@egodreas agreed
He even speaks too much.
I've been meaning to go to this ever since seeing the first videos on the festival. Fingers crossed for 2022
They currently plan to go ahead this year(2021).
@@lindybeige awesome
@@lindybeige And our band will be there again, as we were last year.
@@MartinAhlman playing to an audience of webcams?
@@lindybeige And a lot of people at the other end of the webcam, it's like it spreads out, like a virus... Hang on, bad thinking on my part.... I have no idea how that works. But we did it. Some people Liked it, and that is good enough for us. We got the horrible spot of 21:00 last friday (you come there Thursday the week before, don't you know anything?) until the end. And we even got makeup! Hence my pink eyeshadow!
It was still magical.
It's been our home for week 32 since -94 I think. We love it and we will be there, no matter what. And you can't stop us :-)
The pattern guy's backstory is so sad, I want a pattern comeback, and a movie about him pioneering modern patten fashion!
-Jesus Christ thanks guys, I did not know much about pattens, but this is pretty cool!
In a sense here in the Netherlands they are still use by some.
Farmers that still use wooden clogs out of convenience may also use the pattern version.
But they often more use those later once as a slipper on it's own.
He needed telling that he is so cool as no one else is copying him now. That's cool.
I am more concerned about what may be the matter with his eyes
@@Kim-the-Dane-1952 It could be as simple as being tired.
@@Kim-the-Dane-1952 probably a tic, I've met someone who had it
My wife and I visited Visby on our honeymoon. One of the best days of my life. Visby is a very special place.
If youve seen the movie "Kiki's Delivery Service", Visby along with Stockholm was the primary inspiration for the city!
I love that movie!
And if you haven't seen the movie, I implore you to do so! It's magnificent and I can highly recommend it to anyone.
In one of the scenes "Ryska gården" a classic cafée in Visby on "Stora torget" appears in the background. Kind of surrealistic thinking about a huge movie made in Japan is based on a tiny swedish town on an island.
This feels wonderfully whimsical
As a person living in Visby all of my life, I highly approve of this and enjoy seeing my home represented!
Man spends the whole day crafting a shoe.
Lindy:That sole won't last long,smh
17:00 Gotta love how he took the time to animate the entire background story to a single frame
I think the guy that photo bombed was actually laying a curse on the camera which caused it to break.
It really amazes me how many obscure and intricate instruments were created throughout history
The little finger-flipped thing with the metal flaps was made with torx-head screws....
@@grizzlygrizzle No they were authenti-screws!
Like the "key harp"? I've got one...
If you're interested in medieval towns then the Old Town of Tallinn is a great place to go.
Petition for Tallin-Riga-Vilnius tour
Yep, Tallinn is fantastic!
I just did an image search for Tallin. I see what you mean.
I agree Tallin is a thing to behold. Sure made me wonder what other gems the east has hidden from us in the west. Though I spent most of my time in Estonia at Mütofest close to the other border.
Have you put up roadsigns now? Have to admit it was tricky to drive across the country with no roadsigns other than the rare speedlimit signs. (Was prior to GPS)
@@Throku I don't know about roadsigns but from my knowledge the Estonian goverment would rather do anything else in the world other then care about countryside infastructure. But of course things improve with time.
Visby is where my great grandfather and his family lived before immigrating to the US in the early 1900s. I’ve always wanted to go visit
I lived there for a year and can say that it is the best city I know. In the summer lots of tourists, and in the winter almost completely deserted
I wonder why he left?
@@dragoonTT Probably because at that time Sweden was one of Europe's poorest countries.
Go visit! It's a very cozy little town and on a cozy little island.
@@Naugur Gotland is Sweden's largest island though, out of around 260,000 islands. But it is very nice and cozy indeed.
As a swede, i always laugh whenever i hear a swedish person swear and someone bleps it out.
Swedes swear casually, it's just how a lot of us speak.
Hot damn, I knew it was genetic. Ima tell my Mom to put the soap away.
Australians: You fucking call fucking that shit casual? HA!
A monk swearing and sounding slightly drunk!! Authentic reenactment or not?
Mate you've got history on your side too I think, I've heard tell that swearing (in god's name something unpleasant will happen to someone) and cursing (someone to a horrible fate) were name-accurate and literal things, and using words we consider swear-words or curse-words were a lot more normalised in all sectors of social speech without much concern.
TL;DR People 'back in the day' swore a lot too, so a sweary Visby is a lot more fuckin authentic than a non-sweary Visby.
Source: Ask Shad on his Medieval Cursing video. I'm totally trusting his research skills because it's just a youtube comment, come on.
Yet another reason I should move there.
Seeing this reminds me to tell you about Campus Galli over here in good old Germany. Once this whole mess has come and gone it might be worth a visit. Campus Galli is the reconstruction of a
monastery and the surrounding village, but only with authentic materials and methods, done by people living the historic lifestyle whilst they are helping to build in the village. It would really fit with the "normal people not warriors" atmosphere you mentioned.
"Don't people in modern clothes look rubbish"
I've been saying this for the past 10 YEARS. Thought I was the only one.
Exactly! Modern clothing just looks like cheap fabric rolled around people.
A lot has to do with the way they carry themselves. They shuffle around, slouched, like old cripples.And 80 percent are obese.I remember when people semi-dressed up, or dressed up, to go shopping and travel. We would be taught (and corrected) about our posture by our parents and in school.
@@SSN515 True. My entire family agrees upon this - a long tail coat will ALWAYS look better than a modern hoodie. Just go and look at art of long tail coats and imagine them in hoodies 😂
The 21st century has the worst aesthetics of any period in human history. We might have great technology, but we also look like shit, and that goes for our surroundings too.
@@quintiniusverginix7827 we might look like shit now, but at least we don't wade through shit when we step over the hearth.
As a swedish person i love this. Do more about sweden please we have alot of history!
If you were really Swedish you wouldn't have attracted attention to yourself!
Yeah! Do more Swedish history.. as a non-Swede, the extent of my knowledge is: ??? > Vikings > ??? > Abba, Saab and Ikea. I'm sure there's more interesting stuff in between.
Salted licorice, dill on everything and Pippi Longstocking?
@@808bigisland Personally I only really put dill on fish.
But you better not keep me away from my meatballs, brown gravy and lingonberry jam, or there's gonna be trouble.
@@808bigisland Who puts dill on Pippi?
"If you go, take a cloak." That's just generally sound advice full stop.
"Don't forget your towel".
Just remember, in windy weather both your hands will be busy controlling it to prevent it from tackling other people and taking them to the ground!
🤣👍
@@tyree9055 In a hurricane I suppose. Otherwise a single hand has always been enough for that task in my experience.
But not an assassin's cloak, for heaven's sake.
Cloaks are really useful, if you have a good size and weight. That one guy did a video on the great kilt as survival clothes -- it gives you an idea of cloak uses.
Well. I had no intention of watching 41 minutes of Visby at 1 AM, but here we are.
Same here, but at 2:53 am. Just finished it and reading the comments.
@@julianmancipeacuna7314 Im from Sweden and even I had no intention of watching any lenght about Visby at 2 am .. but here I am
"Dont people in modern clothes look rubbish"
Im really surprised how much i agree! I'm no medieval type but in the time it took to watch this i was almost completely won over
I can atest to how much more comfortable they are as well. Unless I really have to it usually takes ma a few days to get back into modern clothes again. Only some things like viking bag-pants are unpractical (because you snag on everything.) but they have the weird trait of keeping you warm when it is cold and cool when it's hot, because they trap so much air.
@@DonBean-ej4ou It's trapped, so neither or a bit of bloth. The thing it does id provide a buffer of air around you to isloate you from whatever hot or cold is outside the pantsand is so unrestricling that it's not very far from the comforts of going naked. Tha puffy pants with all the folds in them do tend to snag on everything with a sharp corner though :P
@@Throku That's like cloaks, they love to get hooked on things too... But they're great for the cold and the rain (just not the wind, unless you keep them under control).
@@tyree9055 Oh cloaks have their issues, but they have nothing on bagpants when it comes to snagging. I don't recall ever snagging with a cloak, you're probably wearing it wrong.
@Darren Munsell Chemise, tunic, drawers and cloak, plus a belt to hang your purse on (unless you're concerned with cutpurses)...
😅👍
My inner child is just pitching a fit at the idea of one day going to this place. I will visit Visby if it's the last thing I do.
And so you should! And your welcome as well! Get your ass on a plane and a ferry and BOOOM! You're there!
@@MartinAhlman There could possibly not be a festival this year under current circumstances?
@@fredosinsemilla3896 There was one last year, a digital one. There's going to one this year as well, digital or not. 95 % of Swedish people are vaccinated by then,
@@MartinAhlman I just imagined Ross Brunskill upstairs wanted the real deal, not the digital one. But otherwise yeah, if it's not possible, a digital solution would be better than nothing I guess.
Ahh yes. Festivals. I never thought i would have nostalgia on every single human interaction
Remember outside? I wonder if it still exists.
@@johnladuke6475 outside ain't real. Tis but a mere concept constructed by the government.
@@njung1990able Nothing more than the carrot they dangle from a stick... XD
The guy who bombed your interview about Pattens got too much exposure. You should have just put a caption above him that said "knob head"
And here I was thinking "Bellend" would be better. At least as good as "knob head". I wish I was from Scotland so I could call him a "polyester cockwomble". Alas, poor polyester cockwomble, I... really didn't know him.
@@MartinAhlman i feel like knob head is more the kind of insult Lloyd uses, but polyester cockwomble is my new default, cheers :D
Should've just blurred his face and denied him any of the attention he so desperately craves
Nearly choked on my tea when I read that.
The Chaser crew (in Australia) decided that anyone deliberately putting themselves on camera or reacting out of the ordinary when they realised they were on camera was officially boneheading and therefore were boneheads. I've gone with that ever since.
From those of us who aren't allowed out to go to places like this anymore - thank you for bringing your camera, so we can see it through your eyes.
No wonder they died in plaques in the middle ages, they should have stayed at home
This footage is pre-covid.
Whenever Beige adds sound effects they are 10x louder than the video. The "VIKINGS" chant nearly killed me.
There’s nothing better than a Lindybeige video on a Saturday morning!
It's certainly nothing to run away from!
I had the pleasure of visiting Visby 2 years ago and it was an incredible experience. I'm definitely going to visit again in the future and I'd highly recommend it to anyone.
You're always welcome!
If in the future you want to visit Carcassonne, AigueMorte or any of the other castles in the south of France I am happy to be your guide and interpreter :)
could be neat bit is it wise to invite a English man in to France? He might get the urge to try and take over that apart of France.
@@sirBrouwer If he would be german he would do so, but english… Nah
@@sirBrouwer I'll keep an eye on him !
@@khadajhin5130 English and French people have the habit of going to war for about 100 years over who owns France.
@@sirBrouwer Ik now, I referred to modern history, as German invaded France in 1870 1914 and 1940
I am swedish but even I was stunned by how freaking beautiful Visby is!!!! Been there twice only.
Haha! Nice to find you here Andreas!
(40:15) There is something cosy about sitting outside late evening or night, and having people in the distance having a party. Not one with music, preferably just hearing the people.
So nice of them to give this homeless man a tour. Humanity sure is glorious sometimes!
Underrated comment
37:10 Wardruna!
"approved by the spanish inquisition"
I did not expect that.
No-one expects the Spanish Inquisition
@@FindecanorNotGmail Apart from the people they're after, since they give a two weeks' notice.
The Spanish Inquisition was more of a Renaissance event then a Medieval one, but I suppose it falls near the tail end of the gray area of overlap between the two eras.
In case anyone wonders, the music which can be heard at 37:12 for some seconds is Wardruna (I think Helvegen, but could be mistaken on that).
Thank you for sharing this! Watched it with my girlfriend and we both are incredibly envious of you European-types and your castles and whatnot.
28:21 i feel you, that's my favourite wine too
Highly recommend Norwich if you're feeling like Medieval architecture closer to home! Great video as usual Lindybeige!
The Norman castle is worth a look for certain.
@@lindybeige Ever been to Tewkesbury and the reenactment of the battle?
I visited Norwich and absolutely loved it. The city contains an astounding amount of medieval religious architecture (35 medieval churches and 2 cathedrals - although one cathedral is 19th century), as well as many non-religious buildings from the era (Castle, Guildhall, ‘The Halls’, The Great Hospital, Dragon Hall etc), loads of charming historic streets, beautiful buildings and a really lovely atmosphere. In this region of England I also really enjoyed visiting the beautiful city of Cambridge, Ely (with its incredible cathedral) and the charming historic centre of Lincoln (with yet another *spectacular* cathedral)!
Sitting just outside Visby and watching this video.
to be fair, if lindybeige made a video about my house that i stay in every day, i'd still watch the video to hear his silly dry humor lol. He'd also probably research some crazy historical fact about what happened here 200 years ago
Username checks out
Same
In visby here, Tjena.
@@andnor Hallå hallå!
Having visited this island (not during the festival, but just in general) I recommend the museum in Visby, as well as the VERY MANY historical sites all over the island!
"i arrived by fairy." id imagine there wings were quite worn out after such a journey.
2:57 lindy; "this is the safety version."
bystander; [ducks] "yeah, not so much."
looks like great fun. wish i could attend one day.
Visby is an amazing place, for sure worth visiting. Greetings from Finland
Please come again, will drink and fight and have a great time!
What is the easiest route to Visby from Finland?
@@sendhelp9534 If I recall correctly, we at least took a cruise from Helsinki to Stockholm and then Visby
Damn I miss this kind of festivals
That play at the end was magical!
I'm usually not moved by acting but that was just whimsical towards the last few minutes, what a sound!!
Watching the video I was reminded again just how good Lloyd is at interviewing people. It's a skill that few people have.
Visby seems a great medieval city! Beautiful festival! 😍 Greetings from Romania! 🤗
Thanks Lindy for all of the fascinating and well-presented content. :D
One of the best parts about Sweden
My grandfather used to make key harps and was really at playing them. He died when I was just a baby so I never got to learn how to play one from him, but my mom still has one.
My dad built them too. I've got one as well.
I think watching your videos is one of the best ways I've learning about insights into the past and really got to critically thinking of history. Thank you for everything you do Lloyd! Not to even mention the fact that you always talk without cuts or any notes(at least from what I've seen) which just goes to show how much of a passion you have for history!
1:35 - those monstrosities actually existed, just rather in Czechia, Hungary and Croatia and the bouts, they are called hurblats in English I think, and there is a few records of them in England I believe.
You mean the cap or the throwing weapon? ;D
@@Lattamonsteri yeah, watching it back, he was making fun of the thrower's outfit. Although, I too thought he meant the weapons on the first pass, so I'm glad you made this comment to make me watch it again.
@@bow-tiedengineer4453 :P heh to be honest, i wasn't a hundred percent sure what lindy said so i'm also glad you confirmed it.
@@Lattamonsteri yeah, I only picked it up when I was paying close attention and caught the "he's wearing it back to front", clearly referring to the ball cap.
There is also a very good medieval fair in August in Santa Maria da Feira - Portugal.
Yes! This has always bothered me about the Elder Scrolls, more than anything else. Thieves Guild and Dark Brotherhood uniforms/specialised armour.
The first thing i do when i get to the ragged flagon is to change everyone's uniforms to average clothes. Makes the flagon ten times more immersive.
I'm surprised no one has made a mod to redress those guilds. Personally i use a mod called Tailor's measure that makes it easy to change peoples outfits and armor with a dialogue option.
@@AndreasSweden That's a neat idea.
25:32. They still use those today for ace bandages here in the States. Of course, the hooks look a lot different.
What a beautiful town. Thank you for showing it to us. Excellent video.
Been to the medieval week eight times i think. Dressed up, living under a cloak and out of a persedelpåse m/39 with a leather strap sown on and sleeping in the rough, in vaults of the wall, beneath a tree on the hill behind the still maintained church. Always a good time :)
Thanks for the directions to affordable accommodation. 😉
@@michellebyrom6551 Fair warning tho, cops might wake you up and tell you to move along :P
Lindybeige: "... sharing a tend with friends"
Me: Here they are, my two problems.
Lloyd please, it's hard enough already to have to miss out on this stuff without being reminded. :(
I've been to the Medeltidsveckan in Visby more times than I can count, and I still find myself in love with the atmosphere. In some cases, you'll feel like you've fallen into a time machine.
i love to see the children involved i wish i had some cool stuff like that to do in my small town as a kid
You should visit the 'Jorvik Viking center' Loyd, not only is it an interesting archaeology museum but its quite controversial for being to 'disneylandish'. Haven't been there since the River Ouse submerged York in 2015 and I think a ton of stuff in the museum was destroyed, so it might have changed since then.
I was there many years ago. I think it has changed a lot since.
went there a few summers ago, great city
There’s an 80% chance you’ll go back.
The monk really did go all out, even had some authentidentalwork done on his teeth!
I think that was snus.
I've never heard of Visby. Looks nice. Lots of authentic things to see.
As always, I’m treated with an interesting perspective on things from this creator. Since I’m a Swede who’s seen (and heard) a Hell of a lot about this specific festival over the years, that’s actually saying quite a lot about this creators amazing skill in NOT making this ”yet another” report on this lovely festival. Well done Sir Lindybeige, well done indeed!
This is much MUCH cooler than it has any right to be. Fantastic!
Hey Lindy you should really come to Memmingen, we have the biggest Medieval Festival in Germany, called Wallenstein Festival with huge Rennaisanse Reinactment groups.
Well this is/was a lovely surprise and great timing too as summer is Almost upon us :)
I can wholeheartedly say that Gotland is paradise on earth (got a summer home in Gothem).
The island can be described as ”Hawaii of the nordic”
That's true. I dont know why, but every time I go there the sun always shines.
@@rovhalt6650 I'm swedish what is this "sun" you talk about
Most sun hours per year!
This has the very first sponsor’s pitch on youtube that I didn’t skip altogether. Good recommendations. Thanks!
My tent and out camp at 12:46 :-) The red A-viking tent are mine, which was there at 1989 the first time.
I hope your visit was pleasant and exciting!
Best regards
-A Swedish subscriber
I live in Sweden and went to Gotland every summer since I was 7 so it's really nice seeing the place getting some recognition from outsider youtubers and it's also feels pretty odd seeing almost all of the popular locations I've been to in a proper documentary/vlog :)
I’m so impressed how well the Swedish speak English. Still, if you had a medieval festival in Wisbeach, I’m sure that the majority would speak fluent Swedish 😎
Gör Sverige svenske egen.
@Tammy XoX You're a loon.
@@coreyhunt2822 that would be Norwegian.
The swedish spelling is "Gör Sverige svenskt igen"
@Tammy XoX Sist jag kollade var det ganska svenskt här i landet...
@@Seriouskai Fantastiska antaganden är rätt vanliga att göra när det kommer till vårt land dessvärre.
I loved every second of this video, thanks for sharing this with us lindy
Bravo! Well done and well received Lloyd. And a thankyou to the re-enactors too. I've done a bit of fur trade era re-enacting myself. It was fun to show the "civilians" a bit of history. When you can amaze a lady and her young son with your fire-starting prowess it's all worth it. Flint and steel with a bit of char cloth, and you're a hero! lol
Lindy: "Still, there was no Space Marines"
Me: "Next year, baby"
40k is fun but the fans do tend to annoyingly force 40k on everything else