So when you said the one dudes boat was destroyed by sea wyrms i immediately thought that he got caught in a whale orgy as a whale will put its penis out the water while waiting his turn and can easily be mistaken for a monster.
We actually got a confirmed date for the site. 1021. Exactly 1000 years ago. Dendrochronology of wood shavings at the site were able to match with a known solar flare. Able to pin the year down exactly.
Researchers also found a well preserved instruction pamphlet for a desk. In one of the Vinland colonies. The researchers tried to assemble the desk according to the instruction booklet but found it rather difficult. This lead the archeologists to conclude that it was of nordic origin.
That's actually why the colony was abandoned so quickly -- they kept losing those little metal inserts & pins that you turn to hold panels together. Scholars believe the indigenous Canadians were stealing them in a clever attempt to undermine the colonists
It’s amazing how much research the creator/team of the manga Vinland saga do. The hut in thumbnail is exactly like an abandoned home from a previous explorer before the main character arrives in Vinland
Some random Viking dude: "Ah, man, I lost my cloak pin." Some other random Viking: "It was just a cloak pin. No big deal." Archaeologists 1200 years later: "Oh... MY... GOD... ! A CLOAK PIN! This CHANGES EvErYtHiNg!!" Some random dude dropping a coin and another one dropping a cloak pin have NO IDEA how meaningful their slip of the fingers was.
Look at this, Deckart, it appears to be a rubber balloon refashioned as a container of human sperm for some reason. The knot seems to have been tied in a hurry, what may have caused the haste here in this most intimate of moments? Other findings suggest there may have been a music festival held here annually...perhaps the spiritual side of such gatherings inspired a certain atmosphere? We can only speculate
"Far to the west, across the sea, there is a land called Vinland. It's warm and fertile. A land where neither slave traders or the fires of war can reach." - Thorfinn Karlsefni
In the Amazon rainforest of Brazil, the indigenous tribes have oral legends of a race of Ghost Warriors, whose skin was white and would fight like demons. What is the over/under on a viking expedition that went WAY off course?
@@tripolarmdisorder7696 I haven't heard of that, but the Aztecs actually awaited the return of a white god that would come from the sea to reclaim Mexico. There's scientific evidence of nicotine and cocaine in an Egyptian mummy. Probably many things in history that have happened, that history books are not updated on, but I doubt a bit Vikings reaching Brazil. They might have been as far south as the current New York and the Hudson River, but there's no stories of this in the sagas. Historians used to consider the sagas something akin to a joke if anyone would claim them to be reliable, historical material, until Norwegian adventurer Helge Ingstad found evidence of Viking settlements in L'Anse aux Meadows, Canada.
The Vikings were amazing merchants and, of course, our common word for merchant today is salesman, as in the phrase “used car salesman.” I am always struck by the advertising strategy of calling a place with no timber, covered in ice, Greenland. Your man Thorfinn sounds like a medieval, Viking advertising copywriter.
Another interesting fact that you missed, Columbus actually travelled to Iceland and stayed for the winter in 1477. So it is entirely possible that he heard the stories of Vínland during this visit and that is what caused him to explore the Atlantic.
Would be true or interest if Columbus didn't go as far south that he did. If he heard about Vinland he would have claimed he could find new land instead of saying he could find a new route to India. Not enough adds up for that one. But nice theory all the same.
@@Harryjay6 it is not black and white. Much of his early life is not documented, but the speculated trip to iceland is a reasonable interpretation of some travel in the north that is mentioned. Personnally I give the Iceland story about 30% probability of being true, but I do think he heard stories of travel to land in the north west.
People were coming here , loooong before Columbus came , i just find it strange how his name "must" get included in everything to do with discovery of the new world, just my opinion, but seriously wished he would have just stayed where he was at, and let us come to where he was to 😉😜😂
The boring truth is probably that his writers added that in because the zoomers and millenials watching would be happy to see anime references and he doesn't give a sh*t about anime.
Both the "Graenlandinga saga" and the "Erik's saga" describe the journey to vinland as, first stopping at helluland (baffin island) then Markland (labrador) then they describe following the coast to what they initially think is a peninsula but after sailing around discovering it to be an island, which they called byarney (bear island), which lines up nicely with the placement of Newfoundland along the south coast of Labrador, the sagas then describe an island between two currents (straumsey) which lines up with Anticosti island at the mouth of the St. Lawrence river, it then describes a river flowing from a "great lake, and from there on to the sea" which in my opinion lines up with the region of the lower St. Lawrence, a region which historically has had naturally occurring grapes
this theory is actually presented in the museum at the l'anse aux meadows archeological site. glad to see more know about it. it really is an amazing part of history that not many recognize
A FullMetal Alchemist reference...YES! Vinland really does feel like a great fantasy epic came to life. Its not only a killer story, an amazing piece of archeology, but also and AMAZING manga/anime series as well! Thanks as always for the video!
A Fullmetal alchemist reference that he had no clue about and would have takent he piss off massively if this had been any of the channels where he isn't just reading the script ^_~ Sometimes I think his writers put these references in partially to make fun of him ^^
@@akatsukigajou1639 yes, correct, from his own mouth. Check out brain blaze, decoding the unknown or casual criminalise :) his complete lack of popcultural knowledge is well documented.
Newfoundlander here! Nice to see some discussion of L'anse aux Meadows, it's an incredible place and I can see how the Norse would have seen this place as a true find, Newfoundland is incredible in the spring and summers ... and the winters are surely no worse than what they would have been accustomed to.
Perfect, I got curious about Vinland while playing Assassin's Creed a few months back, and only remembered to actually look it up last week. To my dismay, there wasn't much from channels I watch and stuff, so this comes out as a treat.
Also so happy to see Canadian content on this channel -- and especially happy to see content pertaining to my home province of Newfoundland and Labrador!
I went to school, 6 7 and 8th grades in Vinland. Kansas. A mostly abandoned town that still had a school back in the 60's. It's gone now but yes I went to school in Vinland.
Lans auemeadows has to be one of the most starkly beautiful areas in Canada. Drove there on vacation in 2019 from Ontario...amazingly wonderful and educational
@@VikingNorway-pb5tm829Putt han i snikkerbua og slakt mannen og sylt han i en tønne!!! Er F@en meg så lei av det trynet han stikker frem i nitti prosent av illustrasjoner i hundrevis av kanaler, på RUclips, og forurenser med simpel, penge-grubbende info.
@@VikingNorway-pb5tm829 Snikkerbua hopp fallera og snikkerbua hopp fallerei er bra å ha, hopp fallera for stakars meg, hopp fallerei. Emiiiil! Til snekkerbua renner jeg!
We have a Viking Stone marker here on Miscou island New Brunswick even the jesuits made a missionary in our islands harbour, but they only stayed like a year or two cause half the ppl died during the first whinter
Hearing Simon quoting A Full Metal Alchemist reference knowing he has never and will never watch them is hilarious! If this was Brain Blaze I can only imagine the ADHD ranting he would be doing at that point.
Small correction: the did not find wild grapes, but most likely golden currants (Ribes aureum). Currants are still called Vinbär in Swedish and in the Alemannic dialect of German - Tyrker was a member of the Alamannic tribe - currants are still called Trübli, which translates to small grape.
There are “frost grapes” that grow along the banks here in Canada in the Maritimes. A German member of the Viking crew claimed they were grapes but we don’t know what they were. This was also during a warning period in history so grapes could have been grown there, but only frost grapes are native here. There’s also some theory I’ve heard about it being blue berries. It’s strange that the Vikings didn’t use these grapes for wine, especially since wine is used for liturgical purposes, and the Viking liked their alcohol. I wonder what they stubbles upon back then, would be interesting to see the archeological records since I know now, grape farming is very highly improbable to grow on our soil.
Nice to see Simon keep to the fine British tradition of pronouncing names they way they're written, despite all information to the contrary - Bjarne does not have a G sound in it.
This is the first time I heard the theory that the Vikings may have mistaken gooseberries for grapes, I have had the thought that they may have made that mistake with blueberries. Blueberries definitely make good wine and they grow in literal tons in Newfoundland. Blueberries grow in abundance all over the regions proposed as parts of Vinland. With regard to the few artifacts, it's totally plausible that they would have been picked up by Native Americans and widely traded as curiosities or good luck tokens. Given how extensive Native American trade networks were, an occasional coin or brooch turning up as far away as New Orleans wouldn't surprise me too much.
Blueberry Hot Red Wine (blaubeeren gluhwein) is well known in Germany during a December month, I find it also much tastier than a typical hot red wine.
@@JackieWelles There's a winery in Homer, Alaska USA that makes wine from locally-sourced wild berries. Their blueberry wine is quite good. They also use a variety of other berries including raspberries, cranberries, and both black and red currants (gooseberries). I think both gooseberries and blueberries are good candidates for the "grapes" the Vikings found in Vinland.
I doubt that. Blueberries grow wild in Norway so there's no way they'd mistake them for something else. it's more likely that they just called blueberries grapes because making wine from blueberries is possible whereas grapes are much more popular in south europe.
@@splinter6479 It's my understanding that blueberries are native to North America and were imported to Norway. Given the similar climate, it's no surprise that they began to grow wild.
LAM is half an hour's drive from my hometown. I had a summer job as a guide there in 1980. My grandmother lived there for a while when she was a young girl.
Eiríkur rauði (Eric) and Leifur heppni (Leif) came from same area as I am, or in Dalasýsla in Iceland. They live in "Haukastaðir" in Dalasýsla. Exactly where my forefathers lived. My forefathers settle in Iceland, for 1100 years ago and after been doing Viking raids in Scotland (Ketill Flatnefur/ Auður Djúpauðga) so basically, I might be a relative . The word "Skrælings" it is the word "Skrælingar" ....it means barbarians, someone who is not civilized ...
My ancestor was a Dane named Hagan who settled in Northern Ireland in the late 880's . His people were eventually assimilated into the native culture and his descendants were nobility in the area until the English took their lands in 1625. My direct connection to the name comes from that time, when one of the younger sons indentured himself to the Virginia colony that same year. He worked alongside the first batch of slaves brought to the colony for seven years. After that,he settled in the Carolinas and started the line that I am part of.
Ketil Flatnefur my forfathers raided Scotish Hebride Islands and conquer on behalf of Norwegian king. But he did not pay taxes to Norwegian king, so my family was forced to move to Iceland. And my forfathers stayed in same location in 1100 years. My father moved tough south to Reykjavik. But my roots are in Dalasýsla.
Not really. That was a theory but it's not really supported by anything substansial. I was thought that aswell, kinda. That skräla means to make noise, and it was their way of describing their language that they did not understand. These days the consensus is that it comes from the Old Norse word skrá which means "skin". The Inuits and others they encountered wore animal hides, the Norsemen wore wool. But they were not kind to the skrälingar. They were described as small ugly creatures with weird hair and big eyes - they could be killed without remorse. At least one female skräling made it back to Iceland though (guess why) - that we know by studying the dna among the Icelandic population today.
@@user-lv6rn9cf8m what you mean...already found archeological remains, supported by Icelandic saga... what is going on? I can trace my ancestors list from beginning.....
@@IceglacierArnar Sources: Ásgeir Blöndal Magnússon (1989). Íslensk orðsifjabók [Icelandic Etymological Dictionary] and just google the word skrá. That's what all the scientists and experts hold as the most plausible explanation. And they know that skrá meant skin/hide. That's a fact. A Danish professor named William Thalbitzer theorized that it came from the Old Norse skrækja which meant what I said - to shout, yell, make noise. But that theory has been debunked. In modern Icelandic skrælingi means barbarian however. And there's only like 80-100 people who have that dna sequence, and it's only passed on from a mother to a daughter. Again, just google. "iceland inuit dna". And you know, the sagas tell different stories. Because they're just that. Sagas. Not a written account of history. Sadly. Otherwise Ragnar Lodbroke would have existed in reality etc...
Yes! Or should I say "Ja!"? Considering that etymology and phonetics are quite important for interpretation of historical references, I'd hoped that Simon would have a better grip on European languages by now. I'd like to see a concise prehistory into the early trade with native Australians in the format we have here. However, this requires some basic language skills. The blatant ignorance of English people towards foreign cultures retards our ability to learn.
Happy you mentioned Butternuts and NB...I planted some butternut seeds on the shores of the Wolastok (St John River) just a few weeks ago. The Wolastok would have been just the sort of river that Vikings would have travelled up.
Being as much of a seafaring people they were also shallow water explorers its been my belief these early "Viking" North American explorers followed the inland waterways throughout modern day Canada and the USA.
Unlikely because then they would have started to get a grasp of the immense size of North America. They thought these were just a few scattered islands at the end of the earth so why bother colonizing? If they had reason to believe they could sustain themselves (and then some, as later European colonists would do) their stay would have been a lot more permanent.
@@Hallzilla Just proves to me the natives weren’t the peace-loving cultures that the propaganda tries to shove down our throats…humans are nasty…as for the historic significance, well if you’re not an un-educated moron these things are interesting to learn about even if the outcome is pretty grim…
The Ingstad's were quite brilliant. They knew that to find the Norse settlement they would need the help of local fishermen. They interviewed locals wherever they went until they met Mr. George Decker. When they explained what they were seeking George said "Yes by'! I knows right where that's at. I thought it was an old fish store (shed)". The rest is history.
Imagine being a Norseman, finding a new land, and the inhabitants also have bows and arrows. That would blow me away....how such a modern feeling invention found its way on another continent. (Not realizing people crossed the Bering Strait centuries before)
Probably wouldn't be that amazing to them considering all the peoples they came across had invented bows and arrows. They probably didn't imagine some people hadn't invented those yet.
@@MartinTedder Actually they did. The inuites. Vikings also conducted raids in Northern Africa. Or at least thet encoutered arabs in muslim controlled Iberian peninsula
@@jokuvaan5175 well aren't you the great historian? That still doesn't change my statement. The Norsemen come to a land, that might as well be a different planet and seeing the inhabitants using tools they are familiar with.
@@jokuvaan5175 the also founded Russia after barely surviving the mongols And the crusades were basically 9 vikings, 2 of the original 9 still had gothic names.
The Museum of Man happened to have a special show in Ottawa (actually Gatineau) when I was visiting in 2005 and to see the iron cloak pin that kept the wool cape enclosed over you was just amazing.
Agreed. I feel like everything even since I was a kid made him sound lazy and far far less than so so.... 🤷 And they were trying to glorify him 🤦♀️ Like hell proper looks into history even during his time most people thought the Vinland saga's might be an entirely new land mass between Asia and Europe and Africa and there's a plethora of references that implies he read the saga's 😤 as someone with both American and Spanish decent I'm embarrassed we even still talk about him in reference to these lands
@@Berengier817 The vikings had slaves. They were called thralls. They were taken as prisoners of war or born into slavery if their parents were thralls.
I don't want to be called a racist, but white English people were not the only group to have slaves I know this does not line up with 2021 social justice, but yea
Growing up and being raised in Maine I remember being taught about the Goddard Penny, or Maine Penny. Brooklin Maine’s elementary school mascot is the Vikings due to the historical shell missions, archaeological treasure troves in the area, where the Maine Penny was found.
Why is there about the same population of Danes, Norwegians, swedes and finn's in scandimerica as there is in their native countries? You mean to tell me the Vikings didn't explore baffin islands, find an inlet to the Hudson and have exclusive fur rights till HBC? And so, the Minnesota vikings are just named that cus why? Was the name Punics already taken? Or berber?
In my research into this topic almost 30 years ago I discovered that Portuguese fishermen knew of the Grand Banks of Canada and possibly Columbus knew of their findings as well although they obviously tried to keep it secret as any good fisherman does.
Yes, the basques. And yes, after friday the 13th the knights templar in Hispania were absorbed into the "knights of christ". Look at Portugal's flag, the knights templar flag, and colombuses.
I grew up 10 minutes drive from Lanse aux Meadows and know where there are long house mounds (as shown at 14:10) which are several km away from the confirmed site
Vikings: **give natives milk** Natives: **are lactose intolerant, and get stomach aches, which causes them to assume the Vikings tried to poison them** Natives: **attack the Vikings** Vikings: "🌚"
That's it. I'm convinced. The Kensington Runestone is real, Vikings wore horns on their heads and Mexico is the Norse word for "place where tequila causes bad choices."
New conspiracy theory just dropped! Mexico the las Vegas of Vikings 🤔 and that's why we don't know if they went any further. "Whatever happens in 1st century mexico stays in 1st century mexico" -some viking with a questionable sexy Olmec tattoo
New Dating Method Shows Vikings Occupied Newfoundland in 1021 C.E. Tree ring evidence of an ancient solar storm enables scientists to pinpoint the exact year of Norse settlement in L'Anse aux Meadows.
That's a pretty recent paper that has gotten almost no press, though, so I'm not surprised it wasn't included in the video. I wouldn't have known about it if it weren't for my Google keyword updates.
Lol after all the horror stories of Europeans wintering in N America for the first time, these Vikings experienced a Canadian winter and thought, “Huh, quite warm here eh?”
The original spelling of my last name before my Norwegian great grandparent went through Elis island, was Vindinland and we have a family myth that maybe our ancestors were involved before coming back to Norway after the failed settlement. Definitely just a family myth but it's fun to ponder.
At this point it doesn't matter if a "they" became an "I" during a retelling of the story. Get the oldest member of your family to retell the stories to the best of their ability and write it down. Who knows if there is a tiny detail in there that becomes a vital clue in 50 years when someone is digging on all four somewhere in North America and is going "huh?.. could this be...?".
I think that is probably more of a myth. Vin and vinding are two very different words, even in Proto-norse, old norse or modern Norwegian language. Vin can mean meadow in Proto-norse, wine (or appartently maybe even grapes) in old norse and just wine in modern Norwegian. Vinding/vinning/vindin on the other hand usually means curving or winding and is probably more used in Danmark and the south/south-western parts of Norway. A Dane could probably explain your family name better than a Norwegian, it may have a meaning this Norwegian doesn't know about.
@@AWindy94I'm from the Stavanger area, and the name was almost certainly "Vindingland", modern spelling "Vinningland". I've never seen it spelled without a G. As for the name having any link to Vinland, 100% guaranteed it doesn't. Hereditary surnames weren't common until very recently (like a century ago). Before that, your surname was usually a patronym + the farm/place you lived. So if you moved farm/place, you changed surname. Vinningland specifically is a small place (farm) south of Stavanger.
Subscribing to yet another of your many cool channels, Simon. Good stuff, and quick note: In December 1999, I home-brewed one of my first batches of beer, a pretty decent Red Amber, if I may say so. Called it "Erik the Red Amber", slapped the same hand-drawn image you have in this video on the bottle, along with mention of "Bold explorers entering a new century" and some such silliness, and offered a bottle to each of our guests that New Year's Eve. I'd like to think Erik and his young lad Leif would approve. Stay Groovy, my friend; really like all your history videos.
Northern Canada is massive and the Vikings loved exploring and voyages there’s no doubt in my mind northern Canada is loaded with stuff that the harsh winters slowly buried or consumed
Why does everyone think the Norse were great explorers? They were raiders and traders. They didn't just strike out into the great unknown for the hell of it.
A. I love this piece of history and discovering what was thought to be a tall tale at one point. B. It makes me question how many historical stories that were passed down from generations, get washed away as a tall tale because there’s no current evidence that proves them, even if they are real.
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows? It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports.
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows? It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports.
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows? It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows? It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports.
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows? It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports.
I lived up there briefly in early 80s. Cold, little other than hunting & fishing getting drunk to do. The sight is not worth the multi hr trip. I abandoned the place too!🤣 Abandoned the place too.
Since I am an American named Erich I have always been fascinated by Lief Eriksons voyages since I was a child. When I found out not long ago that my German heritage also included Scandinavian / Viking DNA markers I have been especially reinterested in Viking lore. Thanks for this fascinating look at my ancestor’s stories.
The name Löher, Löher and loeh comes from Lohgerber which is a old German word for tanner. The word derives from middlehighgerman loh meaning wood with small trees because of the tenbark they used
Sad that it didn't last, I wouldn't have minded a world history where the pilgrim fathers got off the Mayflower and were immediately rumpled by a bunch of vikings.
There's a story here in Virginia that a Norse exploratory party ventured as far south as the Delmarva Peninsula and explored north into what is now the Chesapeake Bay, venturing as far as the Potomac river. No evidence to support it, but that's the story.
It's interesting to note that the explorers returned to Greenland with bison pelts. As far as I'm aware, there've never been bison on Newfoundland, or anywhere on the east coast of North America. So either they acquired them in trade with the 1st Nations, or they harvested them themselves. That lends some plausibility to tales of further inland exploration, & possibly even the Kensington Runestone in MN. Further investigation is certainly called for. Your family traditions may well be true!
Could really be facts. If they were Basques. Basques seems to have been fishing cod near todays Labrador or New Foundland before Columbus even thought of go sailing.
According to the Segas there were 3 settlements. We've only found one of them and as of the other two they were so briefly occupied that there were likely no permanent buildings constructed, which is likely why the physical remains can't be found.
Thanks to Shaker & Spoon for sponsoring today's video. Visit shakerandspoon.com/geographics to get a $20 off coupon at checkout.
Welp, I know what I'm getting my sister for Yule!
So when you said the one dudes boat was destroyed by sea wyrms i immediately thought that he got caught in a whale orgy as a whale will put its penis out the water while waiting his turn and can easily be mistaken for a monster.
Dislike button is gone, time for 2-minute ad spots right at the start! :D
"There's ALWAYS time for cocktails" 😉😁❤...!
It sounds SO good but I can’t drink alcohol due to meds&health. I wish they had mocktail versions?
We actually got a confirmed date for the site. 1021. Exactly 1000 years ago. Dendrochronology of wood shavings at the site were able to match with a known solar flare. Able to pin the year down exactly.
I was looking for this
@williamperese you must be pretty old ;)
@williamperese I know it was a lame joke but it had to be written
Damn, that is all sorts of amazing!
@williamperese ...alledgedly
Researchers also found a well preserved instruction pamphlet for a desk. In one of the Vinland colonies. The researchers tried to assemble the desk according to the instruction booklet but found it rather difficult. This lead the archeologists to conclude that it was of nordic origin.
Ikea before foundation
@@bottledwaterprod swedish is Nordic.
That's actually why the colony was abandoned so quickly -- they kept losing those little metal inserts & pins that you turn to hold panels together.
Scholars believe the indigenous Canadians were stealing them in a clever attempt to undermine the colonists
😂🤣 nothing worse than flat pack
@@bottledwaterprod Nordic relates to all the Scandinavian countries Sweden, Norway, Denmark
It’s amazing how much research the creator/team of the manga Vinland saga do. The hut in thumbnail is exactly like an abandoned home from a previous explorer before the main character arrives in Vinland
Yukimara does the research himself and even visited Iceland for it
Wait he actually makes it to vinland? Or is that manga only? Im probably gonna get spoiled here but im genuinely curious
@@Swggs. read the manga
@@Swggs.yup
Some random Viking dude: "Ah, man, I lost my cloak pin."
Some other random Viking: "It was just a cloak pin. No big deal."
Archaeologists 1200 years later: "Oh... MY... GOD... ! A CLOAK PIN! This CHANGES EvErYtHiNg!!"
Some random dude dropping a coin and another one dropping a cloak pin have NO IDEA how meaningful their slip of the fingers was.
I leave empty beer cans in every forest I visit! I'm like a Viking! 🍺🍻 Skol! 🍻🍺
That is
That is funny..
Maybe my lost wireless earbuds will one day change people’s understanding of history!!!
Unlikely, I know.
Look at this, Deckart, it appears to be a rubber balloon refashioned as a container of human sperm for some reason. The knot seems to have been tied in a hurry, what may have caused the haste here in this most intimate of moments? Other findings suggest there may have been a music festival held here annually...perhaps the spiritual side of such gatherings inspired a certain atmosphere? We can only speculate
"Far to the west, across the sea, there is a land called Vinland. It's warm and fertile. A land where neither slave traders or the fires of war can reach."
- Thorfinn Karlsefni
In the Amazon rainforest of Brazil, the indigenous tribes have oral legends of a race of Ghost Warriors, whose skin was white and would fight like demons.
What is the over/under on a viking expedition that went WAY off course?
@@tripolarmdisorder7696 I haven't heard of that, but the Aztecs actually awaited the return of a white god that would come from the sea to reclaim Mexico. There's scientific evidence of nicotine and cocaine in an Egyptian mummy. Probably many things in history that have happened, that history books are not updated on, but I doubt a bit Vikings reaching Brazil. They might have been as far south as the current New York and the Hudson River, but there's no stories of this in the sagas.
Historians used to consider the sagas something akin to a joke if anyone would claim them to be reliable, historical material, until Norwegian adventurer Helge Ingstad found evidence of Viking settlements in L'Anse aux Meadows, Canada.
The Vikings were amazing merchants and, of course, our common word for merchant today is salesman, as in the phrase “used car salesman.” I am always struck by the advertising strategy of calling a place with no timber, covered in ice, Greenland. Your man Thorfinn sounds like a medieval, Viking advertising copywriter.
Another interesting fact that you missed, Columbus actually travelled to Iceland and stayed for the winter in 1477. So it is entirely possible that he heard the stories of Vínland during this visit and that is what caused him to explore the Atlantic.
Would be true or interest if Columbus didn't go as far south that he did. If he heard about Vinland he would have claimed he could find new land instead of saying he could find a new route to India. Not enough adds up for that one. But nice theory all the same.
I've never heard such a thing, which makes me really doubt this claim.
@@Harryjay6 I have.
@@Harryjay6 it is not black and white. Much of his early life is not documented, but the speculated trip to iceland is a reasonable interpretation of some travel in the north that is mentioned. Personnally I give the Iceland story about 30% probability of being true, but I do think he heard stories of travel to land in the north west.
People were coming here , loooong before Columbus came , i just find it strange how his name "must" get included in everything to do with discovery of the new world, just my opinion, but seriously wished he would have just stayed where he was at, and let us come to where he was to 😉😜😂
5:31 didn’t expect an FMA analogy here
Simon using pop culture analogies he definitely doesn't understand is my favourite factboi meme.
Yeah that kinda came outa nowhere uh? 🤣
FMA references are always appreciated
The boring truth is probably that his writers added that in because the zoomers and millenials watching would be happy to see anime references and he doesn't give a sh*t about anime.
@@neo-didact9285 SAd but true. Anime changed my life. Or should I say their stories did.
Both the "Graenlandinga saga" and the "Erik's saga" describe the journey to vinland as, first stopping at helluland (baffin island) then Markland (labrador) then they describe following the coast to what they initially think is a peninsula but after sailing around discovering it to be an island, which they called byarney (bear island), which lines up nicely with the placement of Newfoundland along the south coast of Labrador, the sagas then describe an island between two currents (straumsey) which lines up with Anticosti island at the mouth of the St. Lawrence river, it then describes a river flowing from a "great lake, and from there on to the sea" which in my opinion lines up with the region of the lower St. Lawrence, a region which historically has had naturally occurring grapes
*Anticosti island
@@CaptHollister ty
this theory is actually presented in the museum at the l'anse aux meadows archeological site. glad to see more know about it. it really is an amazing part of history that not many recognize
A FullMetal Alchemist reference...YES! Vinland really does feel like a great fantasy epic came to life. Its not only a killer story, an amazing piece of archeology, but also and AMAZING manga/anime series as well! Thanks as always for the video!
A Fullmetal alchemist reference that he had no clue about and would have takent he piss off massively if this had been any of the channels where he isn't just reading the script ^_~ Sometimes I think his writers put these references in partially to make fun of him ^^
@@pmsavenger nah wrong
@@akatsukigajou1639 yes, correct, from his own mouth. Check out brain blaze, decoding the unknown or casual criminalise :) his complete lack of popcultural knowledge is well documented.
There is an anime called Vinland Saga that is pretty good. If your into such things I would recommend it, even the english VO isn't terrible.
Concur!
My thoughts exactly!
Im from newfoundland, vinland, and i enjoy the manga
Check out the manga with possible, much better in the earlier part
It's more than pretty good. It's a masterpiece
Newfoundlander here! Nice to see some discussion of L'anse aux Meadows, it's an incredible place and I can see how the Norse would have seen this place as a true find, Newfoundland is incredible in the spring and summers ... and the winters are surely no worse than what they would have been accustomed to.
remember it would have been much warmer than now
Well boys, seems like we're going on a saga here.
Perfect, I got curious about Vinland while playing Assassin's Creed a few months back, and only remembered to actually look it up last week. To my dismay, there wasn't much from channels I watch and stuff, so this comes out as a treat.
Also so happy to see Canadian content on this channel -- and especially happy to see content pertaining to my home province of Newfoundland and Labrador!
how did you not get irritated by new finland. ? it is a mainlander test and he failed.
Its not "Canadian content " .
Its Icelandic content.
@@bensmith5288 the fact he mentions Canada and doesn't just generalize with "america" is enough to make us happy..
as a swede, i wanna visit newfoundland
I went to school, 6 7 and 8th grades in Vinland. Kansas. A mostly abandoned town that still had a school back in the 60's. It's gone now but yes I went to school in Vinland.
I have no enemies
Lans auemeadows has to be one of the most starkly beautiful areas in Canada. Drove there on vacation in 2019 from Ontario...amazingly wonderful and educational
L'Anse aux Meadows. Yes, it's big news here now.
Was there still a Viking cooking bacon inside?
The way Simon pronounces the nordic names cracks me up (I'm from Sweden). Anyway, good stuff.
Hei naboen, mulig han gjør et hyss som Emil? Tanken var god og resultatet.. snikkerbua :) hehe
As an Englishman even I don't understand how he's that far off the mark.
@@VikingNorway-pb5tm829Putt han i snikkerbua og slakt mannen og sylt han i en tønne!!! Er F@en meg så lei av det trynet han stikker frem i nitti prosent av illustrasjoner i hundrevis av kanaler, på RUclips, og forurenser med simpel, penge-grubbende info.
He is butchering the words. :)
@@VikingNorway-pb5tm829 Snikkerbua hopp fallera og snikkerbua hopp fallerei er bra å ha, hopp fallera for stakars meg, hopp fallerei. Emiiiil! Til snekkerbua renner jeg!
We have a Viking Stone marker here on Miscou island New Brunswick even the jesuits made a missionary in our islands harbour, but they only stayed like a year or two cause half the ppl died during the first whinter
and we have granberries here, in the plains. its preaty in the fall everything turns red
Hearing Simon quoting A Full Metal Alchemist reference knowing he has never and will never watch them is hilarious! If this was Brain Blaze I can only imagine the ADHD ranting he would be doing at that point.
Small correction: the did not find wild grapes, but most likely golden currants (Ribes aureum). Currants are still called Vinbär in Swedish and in the Alemannic dialect of German - Tyrker was a member of the Alamannic tribe - currants are still called Trübli, which translates to small grape.
There are “frost grapes” that grow along the banks here in Canada in the Maritimes. A German member of the Viking crew claimed they were grapes but we don’t know what they were. This was also during a warning period in history so grapes could have been grown there, but only frost grapes are native here. There’s also some theory I’ve heard about it being blue berries. It’s strange that the Vikings didn’t use these grapes for wine, especially since wine is used for liturgical purposes, and the Viking liked their alcohol. I wonder what they stubbles upon back then, would be interesting to see the archeological records since I know now, grape farming is very highly improbable to grow on our soil.
3:15 - Chapter 1 - Stepping stones
6:50 - Chapter 2 - The land of wine
10:40 - Chapter 3 - Vikings in america
14:15 - Chapter 4 - In this colony
18:05 - Chapter 5 - American Armageddon
21:15 - Chapter 6 - Rediscovery
🐐
Canada actually. Not the lesser nation known as America....
Thanks king
Actually it's the continent of North America not the country the United States of America he's referring to.....
@@evarussell5261 Yes, but the viking ruins are in Canada....tired of europeans thinking of us as a state.
Nice to see Simon keep to the fine British tradition of pronouncing names they way they're written, despite all information to the contrary - Bjarne does not have a G sound in it.
He doesn't care
This is the first time I heard the theory that the Vikings may have mistaken gooseberries for grapes, I have had the thought that they may have made that mistake with blueberries. Blueberries definitely make good wine and they grow in literal tons in Newfoundland. Blueberries grow in abundance all over the regions proposed as parts of Vinland.
With regard to the few artifacts, it's totally plausible that they would have been picked up by Native Americans and widely traded as curiosities or good luck tokens. Given how extensive Native American trade networks were, an occasional coin or brooch turning up as far away as New Orleans wouldn't surprise me too much.
Blueberry Hot Red Wine (blaubeeren gluhwein) is well known in Germany during a December month, I find it also much tastier than a typical hot red wine.
@@JackieWelles There's a winery in Homer, Alaska USA that makes wine from locally-sourced wild berries. Their blueberry wine is quite good. They also use a variety of other berries including raspberries, cranberries, and both black and red currants (gooseberries). I think both gooseberries and blueberries are good candidates for the "grapes" the Vikings found in Vinland.
I doubt that. Blueberries grow wild in Norway so there's no way they'd mistake them for something else. it's more likely that they just called blueberries grapes because making wine from blueberries is possible whereas grapes are much more popular in south europe.
@@splinter6479 It's my understanding that blueberries are native to North America and were imported to Norway. Given the similar climate, it's no surprise that they began to grow wild.
@@itsapittie no.
Queue Vikings, Vinland Saga, and Assassin's Creed Valhalla references.
Ah I see, you’re a man of culture as well.
@@sirstrinkalot More like a simpleton.
When I hear Simon’s voice my anxiety and depression goes away. I love all his channels.
I know you can overcome your anxiety and depression. I’m praying for you.
@@multiyapples thank you my friend
Simon: mixes a 24yo bottle of single malt scotch with ingredients for a rum cocktail
Also Simon: somehow does not get smited by the gods
LAM is half an hour's drive from my hometown. I had a summer job as a guide there in 1980. My grandmother lived there for a while when she was a young girl.
Hi Simon.
Here's a little hint for you.
In EVERY Norwegian name, when there's a E at the end, it's NOT silent.
I’m in New Brunswick and I still want to visit Newfoundland ,when I was on the boat with my grandfather he would always teach me about the Vikings
Eiríkur rauði (Eric) and Leifur heppni (Leif) came from same area as I am, or in Dalasýsla in Iceland. They live in "Haukastaðir" in Dalasýsla. Exactly where my forefathers lived.
My forefathers settle in Iceland, for 1100 years ago and after been doing Viking raids in Scotland (Ketill Flatnefur/ Auður Djúpauðga) so basically, I might be a relative .
The word "Skrælings" it is the word "Skrælingar" ....it means barbarians, someone who is not civilized ...
My ancestor was a Dane named Hagan who settled in Northern Ireland in the late 880's . His people were eventually assimilated into the native culture and his descendants were nobility in the area until the English took their lands in 1625. My direct connection to the name comes from that time, when one of the younger sons indentured himself to the Virginia colony that same year. He worked alongside the first batch of slaves brought to the colony for seven years. After that,he settled in the Carolinas and started the line that I am part of.
Ketil Flatnefur my forfathers raided Scotish Hebride Islands and conquer on behalf of Norwegian king. But he did not pay taxes to Norwegian king, so my family was forced to move to Iceland. And my forfathers stayed in same location in 1100 years. My father moved tough south to Reykjavik. But my roots are in Dalasýsla.
Not really. That was a theory but it's not really supported by anything substansial. I was thought that aswell, kinda. That skräla means to make noise, and it was their way of describing their language that they did not understand.
These days the consensus is that it comes from the Old Norse word skrá which means "skin". The Inuits and others they encountered wore animal hides, the Norsemen wore wool.
But they were not kind to the skrälingar. They were described as small ugly creatures with weird hair and big eyes - they could be killed without remorse.
At least one female skräling made it back to Iceland though (guess why) - that we know by studying the dna among the Icelandic population today.
@@user-lv6rn9cf8m what you mean...already found archeological remains, supported by Icelandic saga... what is going on?
I can trace my ancestors list from beginning.....
@@IceglacierArnar Sources: Ásgeir Blöndal Magnússon (1989). Íslensk orðsifjabók [Icelandic Etymological Dictionary] and just google the word skrá. That's what all the scientists and experts hold as the most plausible explanation. And they know that skrá meant skin/hide. That's a fact.
A Danish professor named William Thalbitzer theorized that it came from the Old Norse skrækja which meant what I said - to shout, yell, make noise. But that theory has been debunked. In modern Icelandic skrælingi means barbarian however.
And there's only like 80-100 people who have that dna sequence, and it's only passed on from a mother to a daughter. Again, just google. "iceland inuit dna".
And you know, the sagas tell different stories. Because they're just that. Sagas. Not a written account of history. Sadly. Otherwise Ragnar Lodbroke would have existed in reality etc...
I think this is your best one yet Simon. Thank you!
As someone who pronounces Björk as Buhdjzork, Simon's rendering of Bjarni as Buhdjzarni makes me giggle a lot more than it prolly should. xD
This comment made me laugh pretty good
Yes! Or should I say "Ja!"?
Considering that etymology and phonetics are quite important for interpretation of historical references, I'd hoped that Simon would have a better grip on European languages by now.
I'd like to see a concise prehistory into the early trade with native Australians in the format we have here. However, this requires some basic language skills.
The blatant ignorance of English people towards foreign cultures retards our ability to learn.
I’ve yet to see a British/UK person make any effort on pronouncing foreign names/words.
Video starts at 2:08
Happy you mentioned Butternuts and NB...I planted some butternut seeds on the shores of the Wolastok (St John River) just a few weeks ago. The Wolastok would have been just the sort of river that Vikings would have travelled up.
Being as much of a seafaring people they were also shallow water explorers its been my belief these early "Viking" North American explorers followed the inland waterways throughout modern day Canada and the USA.
Unlikely because then they would have started to get a grasp of the immense size of North America. They thought these were just a few scattered islands at the end of the earth so why bother colonizing? If they had reason to believe they could sustain themselves (and then some, as later European colonists would do) their stay would have been a lot more permanent.
Having grown up in Newfoundland, I’ve visited L’ance aux Meadows a few times. Truly a fascinating place!
Love being a Newfoundlander - such rich history! Thanks again Simon and the team for producing great content (as always!). :)
Hello from pei
Isit history worth telling though as nothing come from it? Killed by natives which are no longer around. So its not even like its your history
@@Hallzilla oh god there’s always one isn’t there, all caught up in white historical guilt🙄
@@Hallzilla Just proves to me the natives weren’t the peace-loving cultures that the propaganda tries to shove down our throats…humans are nasty…as for the historic significance, well if you’re not an un-educated moron these things are interesting to learn about even if the outcome is pretty grim…
@@matty6848 how is that guilt??? quite insecure there it seems
I needed sleep, and I knew your wonderful, peaceful, soothing voice would help. Will return to rewatch this video when I wake up. Sweet dreams Simon
Glad to hear it's not just me that considers his voice soothing and helps me when I get bad insomnia
The FMA reference made me happy
The candied ginger is good for putting in a hot tea. Just a tiny bit.. it's also quite good for your heart.
The Ingstad's were quite brilliant. They knew that to find the Norse settlement they would need the help of local fishermen. They interviewed locals wherever they went until they met Mr. George Decker. When they explained what they were seeking George said "Yes by'! I knows right where that's at. I thought it was an old fish store (shed)".
The rest is history.
Dirt bike, atv's, skidoo's, boats and trips to cabin's were all the fare. I loved it.
Imagine being a Norseman, finding a new land, and the inhabitants also have bows and arrows. That would blow me away....how such a modern feeling invention found its way on another continent.
(Not realizing people crossed the Bering Strait centuries before)
Probably wouldn't be that amazing to them considering all the peoples they came across had invented bows and arrows. They probably didn't imagine some people hadn't invented those yet.
@@jokuvaan5175 they never came across anyone from another continent....that's the entire point of this video
@@MartinTedder Actually they did. The inuites. Vikings also conducted raids in Northern Africa. Or at least thet encoutered arabs in muslim controlled Iberian peninsula
@@jokuvaan5175 well aren't you the great historian? That still doesn't change my statement. The Norsemen come to a land, that might as well be a different planet and seeing the inhabitants using tools they are familiar with.
@@jokuvaan5175 the also founded Russia after barely surviving the mongols
And the crusades were basically 9 vikings, 2 of the original 9 still had gothic names.
The Museum of Man happened to have a special show in Ottawa (actually Gatineau) when I was visiting in 2005 and to see the iron cloak pin that kept the wool cape enclosed over you was just amazing.
Them Vikings certainly got about, makes Columbus look like a lazy so and so... :P
Agreed. I feel like everything even since I was a kid made him sound lazy and far far less than so so.... 🤷 And they were trying to glorify him 🤦♀️ Like hell proper looks into history even during his time most people thought the Vinland saga's might be an entirely new land mass between Asia and Europe and Africa and there's a plethora of references that implies he read the saga's 😤 as someone with both American and Spanish decent I'm embarrassed we even still talk about him in reference to these lands
And unlike Columbus, they didn't appear to force children into slavery
@@Berengier817 The vikings had slaves. They were called thralls. They were taken as prisoners of war or born into slavery if their parents were thralls.
@@gwynnmccallan8856 but did they enslave native Americans
I don't want to be called a racist, but white English people were not the only group to have slaves
I know this does not line up with 2021 social justice, but yea
Growing up and being raised in Maine I remember being taught about the Goddard Penny, or Maine Penny. Brooklin Maine’s elementary school mascot is the Vikings due to the historical shell missions, archaeological treasure troves in the area, where the Maine Penny was found.
Do you mean shell middens?
Very in-depth video. And thank you for not mentioning the Kensington stone. If I never hear about that blunder of a forgery again, it'll be too soon.
Why is there about the same population of Danes, Norwegians, swedes and finn's in scandimerica as there is in their native countries?
You mean to tell me the Vikings didn't explore baffin islands, find an inlet to the Hudson and have exclusive fur rights till HBC?
And so, the Minnesota vikings are just named that cus why? Was the name Punics already taken? Or berber?
The full metal alchemist clip made my day
In my research into this topic almost 30 years ago I discovered that Portuguese fishermen knew of the Grand Banks of Canada and possibly Columbus knew of their findings as well although they obviously tried to keep it secret as any good fisherman does.
Yes, the basques.
And yes, after friday the 13th the knights templar in Hispania were absorbed into the "knights of christ".
Look at Portugal's flag, the knights templar flag, and colombuses.
You comparing both Full Metal Alchemist shows….love to see it.
I grew up 10 minutes drive from Lanse aux Meadows and know where there are long house mounds (as shown at 14:10) which are several km away from the confirmed site
I'm really loving all these videos involving Canada! 🇨🇦
Ahem.. given the just presented evidence I must insist that you use the correct term which is now West Scandinavia! :P
Hi, Icelander her, love your content, one small comment. The statue at 13:02 is of Leif Ericsson, otherwise good stuff
How did you like his pronounciation of Bjarni?
It was hard to listen to.
The fact that you talked about FMA instantly requires a sub. Thank you Simon.
Mandem is literally talking ab vinland saga here too
You're making a cocktail with 24 yr old Glenlivet?
Sacrilege.
Vikings: **give natives milk**
Natives: **are lactose intolerant, and get stomach aches, which causes them to assume the Vikings tried to poison them**
Natives: **attack the Vikings**
Vikings: "🌚"
weeeb
we visited Newfoundland in 2018 for a week and plan to go back for much longer real soon
That's it. I'm convinced. The Kensington Runestone is real, Vikings wore horns on their heads and Mexico is the Norse word for "place where tequila causes bad choices."
New conspiracy theory just dropped! Mexico the las Vegas of Vikings 🤔 and that's why we don't know if they went any further. "Whatever happens in 1st century mexico stays in 1st century mexico"
-some viking with a questionable sexy Olmec tattoo
@@foxhoundp9949 🤣👍
@ 16:00 -- 1000 AD was within the Midieval Warm Period, so the climate at Vinland would be as described by the Vikings.
That is correct, and after the little ice age they migrated into the great lakes area from the hudson to survive.
New Dating Method Shows Vikings Occupied Newfoundland in 1021 C.E.
Tree ring evidence of an ancient solar storm enables scientists to pinpoint the exact year of Norse settlement in L'Anse aux Meadows.
That's a pretty recent paper that has gotten almost no press, though, so I'm not surprised it wasn't included in the video. I wouldn't have known about it if it weren't for my Google keyword updates.
This
Watched for Viking history and rewarded with FMA analogy.
"next on into the shadows, the disappearance of the Greenland colony"
Lived in newfoundland for College, drank a LOT of local bakeapple wine, blueberry wine, among other berry wines lol.
Wow, I'm so early, that Norsemen were raiding Lindisfarne
It's worth the drive to visit it. Wonderful piece of mega history.
"I have no enemies"
How can anyone NOT like watching Simon drinking cocktails.
Content starts @ 2:16
Best documentary yet on vinland. Proper job
Lol after all the horror stories of Europeans wintering in N America for the first time, these Vikings experienced a Canadian winter and thought, “Huh, quite warm here eh?”
Vinland Saga on 1000-1100AD Viking Colony
Vinland Saga on 1900s the Americans Loves the Book
Vinland Saga on 2022 ohhh i love that anime
Nice to see this being covered. I live a 20 minute drive from l'anse aux meadows, very interesting place.
Yooooooo thankyou for this video. I love learning all i can about Vikings. It's fascinating !!!
The original spelling of my last name before my Norwegian great grandparent went through Elis island, was Vindinland and we have a family myth that maybe our ancestors were involved before coming back to Norway after the failed settlement. Definitely just a family myth but it's fun to ponder.
At this point it doesn't matter if a "they" became an "I" during a retelling of the story. Get the oldest member of your family to retell the stories to the best of their ability and write it down. Who knows if there is a tiny detail in there that becomes a vital clue in 50 years when someone is digging on all four somewhere in North America and is going "huh?.. could this be...?".
I think that is probably more of a myth. Vin and vinding are two very different words, even in Proto-norse, old norse or modern Norwegian language. Vin can mean meadow in Proto-norse, wine (or appartently maybe even grapes) in old norse and just wine in modern Norwegian.
Vinding/vinning/vindin on the other hand usually means curving or winding and is probably more used in Danmark and the south/south-western parts of Norway. A Dane could probably explain your family name better than a Norwegian, it may have a meaning this Norwegian doesn't know about.
@@dags123 You are correct in your placement of where my ancestors came from! My paternal ancestors came from Stavanger Norway.
@@AWindy94I'm from the Stavanger area, and the name was almost certainly "Vindingland", modern spelling "Vinningland". I've never seen it spelled without a G. As for the name having any link to Vinland, 100% guaranteed it doesn't. Hereditary surnames weren't common until very recently (like a century ago). Before that, your surname was usually a patronym + the farm/place you lived. So if you moved farm/place, you changed surname. Vinningland specifically is a small place (farm) south of Stavanger.
Subscribing to yet another of your many cool channels, Simon. Good stuff, and quick note: In December 1999, I home-brewed one of my first batches of beer, a pretty decent Red Amber, if I may say so. Called it "Erik the Red Amber", slapped the same hand-drawn image you have in this video on the bottle, along with mention of "Bold explorers entering a new century" and some such silliness, and offered a bottle to each of our guests that New Year's Eve. I'd like to think Erik and his young lad Leif would approve. Stay Groovy, my friend; really like all your history videos.
1 word - LIDAR! Come on, let's GO!
Northern Canada is massive and the Vikings loved exploring and voyages there’s no doubt in my mind northern Canada is loaded with stuff that the harsh winters slowly buried or consumed
But nothing has been found.?
Why does everyone think the Norse were great explorers? They were raiders and traders. They didn't just strike out into the great unknown for the hell of it.
@@EdinburghFiveto find stuff you gotta explore, right?
A. I love this piece of history and discovering what was thought to be a tall tale at one point.
B. It makes me question how many historical stories that were passed down from generations, get washed away as a tall tale because there’s no current evidence that proves them, even if they are real.
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows?
It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports.
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows?
It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports.
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows?
It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows?
It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports.
What's your opinion on the boogeyman that would stare into children's windows?
It sort of matches up with the swamp booger/wood booger/skunk ape/sabe/momo/sasquatch reports.
You pulling the FMA Comparison made me love your content even more
I have no enemies land
I lived up there briefly in early 80s. Cold, little other than hunting & fishing getting drunk to do. The sight is not worth the multi hr trip.
I abandoned the place too!🤣 Abandoned the place too.
I’m mind blown that the Vinland saga manga is based on real “history”
Was NOT expecting the fma reference, I like
Simon would probably make a great bartender.
Since I am an American named Erich I have always been fascinated by Lief Eriksons voyages since I was a child. When I found out not long ago that my German heritage also included Scandinavian / Viking DNA markers I have been especially reinterested in Viking lore. Thanks for this fascinating look at my ancestor’s stories.
The name Löher, Löher and loeh comes from Lohgerber which is a old German word for tanner. The word derives from middlehighgerman loh meaning wood with small trees because of the tenbark they used
viking dna 😂😂 as silly as banker dna! viking was a profession, not a people!
@@sarahgilbert8036 he said Scandinavian first.
So if my parents were in the master race and bankers, I could say my parents are Zionist bankers.
Bi-JArni?
*My Icelandic Brain*
Don't ever change Simon, please I beg you 🤣
Yeah that pronounciation hurt my ears and I’m not even Scandinavian.
Red River is huge in Manitoba. It flows north as well.
Without the liquor being provided shaker and spoon is worthless
*Thorfinn furiously taking notes
Sad that it didn't last, I wouldn't have minded a world history where the pilgrim fathers got off the Mayflower and were immediately rumpled by a bunch of vikings.
Wow I was NOT expecting a direct anime reference
Hear stories of the Heaver Stone here in Oklahoma, stories of vikings sailing the rivers.
Thank you
Thank you
Vinland AND a Full Metal Alchemist reference!? you're spoiling us Simon!
There's a story here in Virginia that a Norse exploratory party ventured as far south as the Delmarva Peninsula and explored north into what is now the Chesapeake Bay, venturing as far as the Potomac river.
No evidence to support it, but that's the story.
It's interesting to note that the explorers returned to Greenland with bison pelts. As far as I'm aware, there've never been bison on Newfoundland, or anywhere on the east coast of North America. So either they acquired them in trade with the 1st Nations, or they harvested them themselves. That lends some plausibility to tales of further inland exploration, & possibly even the Kensington Runestone in MN. Further investigation is certainly called for. Your family traditions may well be true!
been waithing for you to talk about vinland since I wathced vinland Saga!! thanks man!
Asterix and Obelix reached America first whilst on a long fishing expedition. Haw.
I was waiting for this comment !!! 🤣
Could really be facts. If they were Basques.
Basques seems to have been fishing cod near todays Labrador or New Foundland before Columbus even thought of go sailing.
@@oneshothunter9877 yeah but asterix and obelix were in what is now Britanny
According to the Segas there were 3 settlements. We've only found one of them and as of the other two they were so briefly occupied that there were likely no permanent buildings constructed, which is likely why the physical remains can't be found.
The Glorious Liberation of the People's Technocratic Republic of Vinnland by the Combined Forces of the United Territories of Europa