The WORST medieval creature

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2023
  • Jason Kingsley, the Modern Knight, discusses one of the most disruptive and useful medieval animals. What is it and why was it so important? #historyfacts #history #medieval
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    medieval pig. medieval animal. peasant food. surprising facts about medieval pigs.
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @nymphrodellsalavin
    @nymphrodellsalavin Год назад +1509

    Having worked on a farm that kept modern pigs, I can tell you I never think of them as plump little squeakers. They're cunning massive tricksters that will escape their pens whenever it's least convenient... like clockwork.

    • @user-xf2qt5il7n
      @user-xf2qt5il7n Год назад +50

      Ditto, but on a smallholding. I can imagine it was hell back then to keep them penned in; only a stout wall with good footings must have worked (but this would have been of lime not cement). Another reason they would /have little choice but to let them roam.

    • @FinnMacCuhl
      @FinnMacCuhl Год назад +81

      My daughter works with pigs at a restaurants small holding & every time I ask her about her day it starts with “the pigs got out overnight…”. Pigs are pranksters of the highest order

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Год назад +47

      That reminds me of a comics from the iconic Czech Rychlé šípy series by Jaroslav Foglar... these five boys from the city. In that one, they're spending the summer on a farm in the countryside. One of them lets the pig out of its small pen because he feels sorry for it, and when it shoots out like greased lightning they spend the rest of the page trying to recapture it. They lose to the pig, which proves unexpectedly fast and cunning. Since the author was a city boy with family or friends in the country, and also spent several months on a farm in Switzerland as a boy, I'm fairly certain it is partially autobiographical. :-)

    • @Kradlum
      @Kradlum Год назад +62

      I used to work in a pub which had a goat. He might have been a nice small goat when they got him, but he was a bloody big one-horned goat by the time I worked there. I had to take him out each morning, which usually meant him dragging me across the car park by his chain, and then bring him back in in the evening, which meant trying to get him down from whatever tree he had climbed, then me dragging him across the car park by his chain.
      One night, he broke out of his stall and chewed the pipe off the fuel oil tank... The pub cat managed to get covered in fuel oil, so, once I had got the pipe back on the tank, and the goat back in his stall, I had to then hold the cat under the shower for an hour until I got the oil off it.

    • @esm1817
      @esm1817 Год назад +35

      My older brother used to keep pigs. I can attest that they are indeed crafty. He renamed one Houdini--yes, because he was our escape artist. We were always looking for that sneaky little guy.

  • @johnny2hats329
    @johnny2hats329 Год назад +414

    In Ireland, the landlords would lend a piglet to each tenant every year so that they could fatten it on scraps then sell it to pay rent and pay back the price of the piglet. They were a tall, thin sort of pig called an Irish greyhound. There was a good poem about these Irish pigs which I'll paste below for anyone who wants to read.
    Twas an evening in November,
    As I very well remember,
    I was strolling down the street in drunken pride,
    But my knees were all aflutter,
    So I landed in the gutter,
    And a pig came up and lay down by my side.
    Yes I lay there in the gutter
    Thinking thoughts I couldn’t utter,
    When a colleen passing by did softly say,
    "Ye can tell someone that boozes
    By the company they chooses" -
    So the pig got up and quickly walked away.

    • @ModernKnight
      @ModernKnight  Год назад +57

      great poem

    • @lakshmibhaskara1516
      @lakshmibhaskara1516 Год назад +24

      Thanks for the poem . It's great!!

    • @johnny2hats329
      @johnny2hats329 Год назад +26

      @@lakshmibhaskara1516 Glad you enjoyed it. I was trying to find from when the poem originated but it may be unknown. I did find there was a song based on this poem from the 30s by a Clarke Van Ness. It's called 'the famous pig song' and has some funny verses about other farm animals.

    • @EastEndBen
      @EastEndBen Год назад +17

      my father's Irish and told me about wild pigs that used to roam Ireland when the oak forests were really heavy and there was plenty of mast for them to eat-they were long and thin beasts, like greyhounds, as you say. very funny poem too!

    • @kitronkid
      @kitronkid 10 месяцев назад +5

      That’s brilliant sir

  • @gruenzeugs
    @gruenzeugs Год назад +1158

    Given the fact that a feral hog can easily kill a person and is shockingly fast, going into the woods without a horse must have been quite the adventure if you heard a pig scream near you 😅

    • @HisameArtwork
      @HisameArtwork Год назад +31

      sounds like an ecofriendly person wanted a sustainable way to get rid of home waste, but didn't think it through.
      in the future we could have little robots that fee don plastic waste and at night you let them loose into the streets. I wouldn't eat them though.

    • @jamesanderson6769
      @jamesanderson6769 Год назад +37

      If my reenactment group, we would have a boar hunt where someone would dress up in furr and hide in the forest. He had two daggers to represent tusks. The rest of us would split up and try to get the boar. Boars are tough, so we had the beast be tough to kill. It often got a few of us. Turns out a boar spear works well.

    • @juandemarko8348
      @juandemarko8348 Год назад +16

      Always bring dogs

    • @warpdriveby
      @warpdriveby Год назад +36

      They can and have eviscerated taller modern horses, so smaller medieval horses would have been in as much danger as their riders! I'd much rather have two or three hounds and a pointy stick.

    • @gruenzeugs
      @gruenzeugs Год назад

      @@jamesanderson6769 Where did the "hog" put its daggers? 😅 I just imagined that person running after you guys and trying to kill you with their knives 😆😅

  • @DiaboLusitano
    @DiaboLusitano Год назад +722

    Portuguese here.
    First of all, thank you for your amazingly informative RUclips channel.
    That being said, you mentioned the "bristles" in the boar neck and back, and I immediately remembered that when I was young, whenever someone kill a wild boar it would be sold on the village "square", and several people would buy several parts of that boar. My grandfather would sometimes buy those "bristles" to make shoes or to sew leather.
    I also remember seeing pigs on the street and they were marked with some kind of dye, usually just the owner initials.
    I'm from a small village on the Portuguese countryside mountains, and I remember a number of things, traditions, that may well been preserved from the medieval times.

    • @sarahwatts7152
      @sarahwatts7152 Год назад +59

      This is so cool! Thanks for sharing your history

    • @jezblades9913
      @jezblades9913 Год назад +32

      Perhaps if you wrote down what you can remember it might be interesting for posterity?

    • @DiaboLusitano
      @DiaboLusitano Год назад +38

      @@jezblades9913 I don't think it's needed. Many of the countryside people still remember or even keep the "old way" alive. There are still people cultivating and process linen for clothing, for example. This happens in the deep countryside, specially in the "Portuguese Highlands" like I use to call it.
      My village is in a mountain range plateau, 700 meters high.
      If any of you ever come to Portugal, please take a trip around that area...very welcoming and friendly people. And because most are well educated you'll have no problem finding someone that speaks English.

    • @jonawolf8023
      @jonawolf8023 Год назад +18

      @@DiaboLusitano i agree whit jez. Sadly lots of information get lost becaus it was belived that there are enough wo keep the traditonal way alive. 2 examples i am strugeling:1) the meaning of a white ribon on appletrees? (After time i have found the answer)
      2) there are evidence of pig brissel used for uppolsty, but no Information on how this was procesd/used.

    • @RoodiniCats
      @RoodiniCats Год назад +19

      @@DiaboLusitano thanks for the invite/recommendation! And for the story.🙂
      You may be right in that it's not "needed", but my guess is there are plenty of people who'd be interested in reading what you remember from that time, if you ever get the urge to write some of it down. 👍

  • @user-tb5pq9ml8m
    @user-tb5pq9ml8m Год назад +195

    I live in Hawaii, where there's a thriving wild boar population. They're classic ancient boars. Big, deadly tusks, packed with muscle, black skin, covered with long wiry bristles. Their screams come straight from a horror movie. They cause serious damage by breaking fences and demolishing gardens. A full-grown boar can weigh 200lbs/90kg, and never assume that they're 200lbs/90kg of lazy, and won't chase you down. My big brother is a hunter, and we shared ownership of a couple dogs. He and his hunting buddies had a pack that they use to track and take down pigs. Everyone in the party, man and dog (usually dog), would often turn up with massive, ugly gashes. As a kid I was warned never to go near a baby pig, because a mama is always nearby. Bear rules apply.

    • @BeNGun86
      @BeNGun86 Год назад +15

      Village boy from Germany ✌🏻
      Also grew up with that rule

    • @maximilianmustermann5763
      @maximilianmustermann5763 Год назад +11

      @@BeNGun86 Wild boar are hardcore. Most people here in Germany don't know that if we didn't have hunters, we'd all be killed by wild boar during the next decade. No kidding.

    • @Quasimodo-mq8tw
      @Quasimodo-mq8tw 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@BeNGun86 Southern Swabia here talking. The best look i had to a wild boar was at night on a better dirt path outside of a big village. One the left side was a steep slope down to a "primal forest ravine", on the right small Villas(and than wet fields...): And before us a very, very Big Boar. He was stepping slowy accross the road when he was caught in the headlights of our car. He was uninpressed. He faced us. walked to my moms OPEN window and made very low unhappy noises....that was when she hit the gas pedal. This Thing was big enough to look in our car while only half a armslenght away from the it.(granted he has to look up a bit but still) No dog, even our newfoundlander was even close as tall or big.

    • @1wandersmann
      @1wandersmann 8 месяцев назад +1

      calm down ok

    • @jamesbelcher896
      @jamesbelcher896 5 месяцев назад

      We had one here 986lbs state record.

  • @fairwhether1
    @fairwhether1 Год назад +170

    In doing some family history research I found that one of my ancestor's claim to fame was that he killed the last wild boar of Westmoreland. For doing that he received a 4,000 acre estate. There's also a poem written about it called “Minstrels of Winandermere.”

    • @lucaswatson1913
      @lucaswatson1913 Год назад +30

      There's a pub called the Wild Boar between Windermere and Kendal based on this very event! Grew up 15 minutes down the road from it

    • @fairwhether1
      @fairwhether1 Год назад +18

      @@lucaswatson1913 Oh, wow, I did not know that! Will definitely have to look into it some more--thanks!!!

    • @kimfleury
      @kimfleury Год назад +9

      That's fascinating history!

    • @NavvyMom
      @NavvyMom Год назад +10

      See? Easter eggs like these comments are icing on the cake with this channel.

    • @didibellini
      @didibellini 4 месяца назад +2

      I think that’s sad. The last one!

  • @TheWhimsicalMimzy
    @TheWhimsicalMimzy Год назад +259

    I grew up on a farm. Pigs are quite formidable creatures. When I was a child, a woman in my area was killed by her own pigs. Her small child was crying, and it triggered the pigs. The lady got her child out of the pen but they knocked her down before she could climb the fence.

    • @ModernKnight
      @ModernKnight  Год назад +103

      how awful and yes they can be super dangerous.

    • @TheWhimsicalMimzy
      @TheWhimsicalMimzy Год назад +47

      @@ModernKnight It's been about 55 years, and I've never forgotten to be careful of pigs. We have wild pig where I live, and subsistence hunting is an important part of the local economy.

    • @joy2bme
      @joy2bme Год назад +44

      I grew up on a farm also. My dad would never keep pigs. His parents had kept pigs when he was a child. He told me a story about his parents' pigs masacring the family's flock of chickens. There had been a particularly rainy week. The chickens got stuck in the mud, and the pigs completely tore them up. Once my dad was grown, he wouldn't have pigs on his farm. He wouldn't even eat pork after that.

    • @ineedabetterusername7424
      @ineedabetterusername7424 Год назад +45

      The university I went to had a massive Agricultural department, one of the largest single pig-holders in Alabama.
      My friend was getting his post-grad degree in pigs. He said, when the lab tech was taking them on the catwalk over the pigpen -- industrial-sized, we're talkkng several thousand pigs in one massive hangar -- the tech said ominously:
      "Don't fall in -- or else, by the time we get to you, there won't be enough left to bury."
      That is absolutely terrifying.

    • @folppki2256
      @folppki2256 Год назад +9

      @@ModernKnight this video raises an interesting question. What was pet ownership like back then? I mean did they have collars like we do for identification was there a pet shop in town for potential buyers? I'd love to see your research on it

  • @firelunamoon
    @firelunamoon Год назад +86

    I guessed wild boar! I live in Asia and wild boars can still be a serious problem in the rural places. These creatures are tough, aggressive and scary. I never realised that pigs were so ubiquitous in mediaeval European societies. They were important in ancient China - the Chinese character for 'house' is basically the character for 'pig' with the character for 'roof' over it. So if you had a roof over your head, and a pig in your backyard, you had a house.

    • @AbductionDevlog
      @AbductionDevlog 10 месяцев назад +1

      That's so funny but also pragmatic in hindsight haha
      I Would love to learn more about Chinese culture

  • @dustinf11
    @dustinf11 Год назад +396

    I also want to mention just how nice this comment section is. You should be proud of this Jason. Cultivating a viewership that is kind and friendly to one another is no small thing.

    • @ModernKnight
      @ModernKnight  Год назад +95

      Thanks, I try to keep it pleasant. These days, I don't have to deal with too many unpleasant comments.

    • @JamesThomas-pj2lx
      @JamesThomas-pj2lx Год назад +7

      @@ModernKnight and now I want to be rude, lol.... video bout pigs and all. Or the yankee in me... ;)

    • @ineedabetterusername7424
      @ineedabetterusername7424 Год назад +6

      @@ModernKnight He's right, you know. Your channel is such a refreshing atmosphere. Thank you for all you do to cultivate such a great channel and community!

    • @destonlee2838
      @destonlee2838 Год назад +2

      HEAR here!

    • @anonperson3972
      @anonperson3972 Год назад +7

      I fart in your general direction!

  • @docstockandbarrel
    @docstockandbarrel Год назад +81

    Had a friend in college come in late one day and said a hog messed up his truck. I was thinking "How did Wilbur" mess up a truck?"
    That's when I learned how insane wild hogs were.

  • @KamikazeKatze666
    @KamikazeKatze666 Год назад +224

    Last autumn I visited a manor in the Netherlands where pigs are kept basically wild in the forest. It is amazing to see how fast even piglets can turn pristine ground into a battle field.

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Год назад +21

      their nose looks soft but can magically escavate ground. Wondrous creatures I tell you

    • @emamag6455
      @emamag6455 Год назад +2

      Pigs can dig in the concrete with their snout. I live in a farm, I saw that

    • @Seelenschmiede
      @Seelenschmiede Год назад +8

      Lol. Into concrete 🤣 gtavel yes. But propper concrete? Nope, never happened. Biologist here

    • @masonmp1889
      @masonmp1889 Год назад +13

      @@Seelenschmiede i trust farmers over biologists on knowing what farm animals have done

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Год назад +12

      @@masonmp1889 you should doubt his knowledge of concrete. If an animal can do that it's more like stucco or something

  • @armandocampamartinez8307
    @armandocampamartinez8307 Год назад +82

    In Spain, a few towns still practice having a “comunal pig” though I suppose in medieval times it would’ve been a “comunal herd”. Basically this pig is allowed free roam and the whole town feeds it scraps etc, and when the time comes, the town enjoys a nice dinner

    • @TheMysteryDriver
      @TheMysteryDriver Год назад +8

      Rural Spain is so antiquated in lots of ways. It's pretty wild.

    • @JP-xd6fm
      @JP-xd6fm Год назад

      @@TheMysteryDriver Indeed!, they throw animals from towers, spit olive bones in competitions etc... Is very embarrasing for the rest of us tbh. They're our rednecks but without trucks

    • @Hekk.
      @Hekk. Год назад +3

      Awesome

    • @JenkinoJenkins
      @JenkinoJenkins Год назад +9

      This is amazing.
      Those are the sorts of unspoken binds between individuals which make for a cohesive group. Our modern lives sometimes seem so senseless in comparison.

    • @Borntolagagain
      @Borntolagagain Год назад +5

      There used to be a custom in Valencia in which the casal would set a pig free around town that people would feed scraps and such. When it was big enough it was sold to finance the Fallas. I don't know if any towns still do this, but that was the case during my father's childhood in the town I grew up in. He was born in 1959, so it wasn't that long back, especially for a town that today is considered quite rich, with a lot of suburban area with huge houses, and even has a couple of famous football players living around.

  • @lentulus01
    @lentulus01 Год назад +164

    I have a cousin who grows out a couple of pigs most years. The full scale domestic variety is still a dangerous animal, and they are also quite good escape artists.

    • @duckrivermama66
      @duckrivermama66 Год назад +21

      Most definitely. They are NOT cuddly little creatures. They are large, nasty, aggressive animals, and are absolutely dangerous.

    • @sherrieludwig508
      @sherrieludwig508 Год назад +32

      @@duckrivermama66 Farmers have a saying, "a fence needs to be horse high, bull strong, and pig-tight"

    • @allisonshaw9341
      @allisonshaw9341 Год назад +11

      We have hogs in large paddocks, the bottom of the fence buried down at least 2-1/2 ft with large rocks, and cement blocks to prevent them from digging under the fence, not to mention several strands of barbed wire from the ground to about 2-1/2 ft up, and gates that can't be lifted off the pins (yes, hogs will figure out how to lift a gate), and we still have to check daily to make sure they can't get out. They have water, shade, pasture, and woods to live their best lives with right up to when we sell or butcher them. When it comes down to it, cattle may be bigger, but hogs are faster, smarter, and more deadly to deal with. They are also prolific breeders, with the average sow have 2 litters of 8-12 pigs each, and those pigs grow rapidly, so they are a steady source of meat and not all that expensive to feed.
      We also turn some of them out in the garden early each spring to root around and loosen the soil up for planting.

    • @stephena1196
      @stephena1196 Год назад +2

      That reminds me of the Tamworth Two who escaped from an abattoir. They made their escape by getting through a fence and swam across a river.

    • @gwtpictgwtpict4214
      @gwtpictgwtpict4214 Год назад +8

      @@allisonshaw9341 My Dad grew up in rural southern Ireland and recalled a local farmer who would drive his pigs up to the orchard to eat the fallen apples. All good until there was a particularly wet period and the apples had fermented. My Dad reckoned a dozen drunk pigs staggering back from the orchard, bouncing off the walls and getting narky with each other was probably the funniest thing he ever saw.

  • @MisterDutch93
    @MisterDutch93 Год назад +174

    I always thought that the picture of pigs rummaging and scrounging through medieval cities was a stereotype. You see it in a lot of movies and shows depicting the so-called "Dark Ages". Pigs are mostly used in that way to exemplify how filthy and unsanitary those times were. Finding out that it's actually historically accurate was surprising to me! I never knew so many people kept pigs, and even in the cities too! Such an insightful little piece of information!

    • @jeffbenton6183
      @jeffbenton6183 Год назад +34

      It's kind of interesting on how that stereotype changes the view of the situation. Filmmakers and whoever else might show a bunch of pigs in the streets to make medieval cities look dirtier, but real-life urban pig-ownership was actually an important practical matter.

    • @TheMysteryDriver
      @TheMysteryDriver Год назад +19

      Even in cities in the 1700s and early 1800s there were farms and roaming animals.

    • @chrismath149
      @chrismath149 Год назад +15

      Some German towns actually did have laws - pigs were to be kept in pens and could only be moved on certain days and on certain streets.

    • @jonawolf8023
      @jonawolf8023 Год назад +9

      @@chrismath149 the last dairyfarm in the heart of Berlin close his doors in 1982. Livestock in citys was not only a medieval thing.

    • @S3l3ct1ve
      @S3l3ct1ve Год назад +6

      Its still being done in villages across the world, mainly eastern parts of the world nowadays, as the western regions got considerably more wealth.

  • @margaritagerman
    @margaritagerman Год назад +101

    As a young child, my daily evening chore was to feed the pig the meal my mom had prepared for it. It would be butchered every fall. We would empty the pen of dirt and "stuff" every spring before getting the new pig. The dirt and stuff was then dumped on the vegetable garden. It sure made things grow! Lots of memories.

    • @Nemo-Nihil
      @Nemo-Nihil Год назад +9

      My opa raised pigs! Every fall he'd get three pigs. Two for him and his wife, and one for my family. During the winter whenever we go up to visit, we'd feed them expired milk that my opa picked up from the local food bank. Every spring around late March or early April, the pigs would be butchered and we'd spend the day cutting and packing the meat.

    • @manuellubian5709
      @manuellubian5709 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@Nemo-Nihil Couldn't imagine what they smelled like being given expired / soured milk.

    • @debbylou5729
      @debbylou5729 10 месяцев назад +5

      That sounds really strange. My grandmother and uncles owned farms. They were fed slop…..the remains of every edible things that were discarded. The idea of ‘preparing a meal’ is hilarious to me

  • @Cricket2731
    @Cricket2731 4 месяца назад +4

    I came across a magazine article some years ago that was about hogs. A varmint hunter of feral hogs was interviewed. In his opinion, there were 2 kinds of people in the world: "Them that has pigs, & them that WILL have pigs".

  • @parkeryourefired
    @parkeryourefired Год назад +59

    I wish I could remember the name, but in Germany there is a town that has a huge pig-roasting festival every year as a sort of revenge against pigs. From what I remember of the town’s story, back in the either late medieval or early Renaissance period, the gatekeeper for the main gate misplaced his key and could not properly seal the door for the night. Rather than miss out on going to the tavern, he decided a carrot would do quite nicely as a temporary door bar replacement. What he didn’t factor were the roaming pigs, one of which found an easily accessible carrot that would do quite nicely as a snack. With the impromptu door bar gone, the gate opened, and a large band of marauders (maybe an enemy army?) seized the opportunity to sack the town. Upon recovering from the attack and rebuilding, the town resolved to roast as many pigs as they could every year.

    • @luxste
      @luxste Год назад +16

      Shouldn't they get revenge against the lazy guard instead of the pigs that literally did nothing wrong? Humans can truly be awful. 🐗

    • @jackm2293
      @jackm2293 Год назад +1

      did they hang that gatekeeper for dereliction of duty? should have.

    • @TheMysteryDriver
      @TheMysteryDriver Год назад +23

      Wittlich, The story behind the Pig Fest or as legend has it, during ancient times the city was threatened by a horde of Huns. They felt secure behind their Roman walls; however, the night prior to the Huns arriving, the evening guard charged with locking the gate could not find the peg to secure the door. So a soldier placed a turnip in its place. (There seems to be some dispute as to whether it was a turnip or carrot but the official city statement does say turnip.) Well, during the night a pig came along and ate the turnip leaving the gate unlocked and allowing the Huns to enter and sack the city. Once the Huns left, the people of Wittlich slaughtered all of the pigs as punishment. Today the city cooks up over a 100 large pigs for the annual Pig Festival.

    • @skaldlouiscyphre2453
      @skaldlouiscyphre2453 Год назад +16

      @@luxste But the one guard didn't have enough meat to feed the town, the pigs on the other hand...

    • @luxste
      @luxste Год назад +4

      @@skaldlouiscyphre2453 lol! I suppose you're right. The meat of one average man wouldn't go far.

  • @StergiosMekras
    @StergiosMekras Год назад +77

    The more I watch these videos, the more I am convinced that Sir Jason is secretly an immortal that decided to do something with his first-hand knowledge of medieval life...

    • @Frostblast7
      @Frostblast7 Год назад +7

      He is the real highlander.

    • @Eowyn3Pride
      @Eowyn3Pride Год назад +8

      Psh! We all know THAT here!😁😉👍
      Though some of us ARE convinced he's actually a Gondorian from Minas Tirith, quite likely of Numenorian descent...🤔

    • @StergiosMekras
      @StergiosMekras Год назад +6

      @@Eowyn3Pride I mean, the two are not mutually exclusive...

    • @paulgibbons2320
      @paulgibbons2320 Год назад +4

      There can be only one.

  • @lh3540
    @lh3540 Год назад +37

    It's funny how medieval art always seems like badly drawn cartoons, then you realize it's actually pretty accurate.

    • @letsplaysvonaja1714
      @letsplaysvonaja1714 Год назад +8

      Including, of course, all those brave knights fighting the giant snails that used to haunt the medieval ages ;D

    • @CrusaderKnight2000
      @CrusaderKnight2000 Год назад +14

      @@letsplaysvonaja1714 As a knight who still fights giant medieval snails, they never left. They just got smarter and stealthier.

    • @istvansipos9940
      @istvansipos9940 Год назад

      usually it is not accurate, though.

  • @Kijnn
    @Kijnn Год назад +19

    German here. I just wanted to share an interesting anecdote concerning pigs: In German, there is the phrase "die Sau rauslassen" (="letting the sow out") for having lots of fun.
    The background to this phrase is that in medieval university towns, members of students' fraternities were sometimes required as a dare to sneak into a yard at night, open the pen, and chase the pigs out onto the street, where they'd cause chaos - and lots of fun for the other students (not so much for people trying to sleep).

    • @maximilianmustermann5763
      @maximilianmustermann5763 Год назад +2

      The good old days when German universities still had prison cells where they would keep unruly students on water and bread for up to a week. People were so much tougher back then. Today students faint when someone uses a wrong pronoun.

  • @ollietizzard5180
    @ollietizzard5180 Год назад +48

    "a swine in before nine saves a fine" - Chaucer, 1348 (probably)

    • @letsplaysvonaja1714
      @letsplaysvonaja1714 Год назад +6

      Or "A swine after nine lets you dine"

    • @charlieross-BRM
      @charlieross-BRM Год назад +3

      "Clean food never fattened a pig."- My father, a few occasions when someone freaked about dropping a bit of food. This was before the 5 second rule was passed.

  • @marcogenovesi8570
    @marcogenovesi8570 Год назад +89

    "domesticated" pigs can revert pretty quickly to a wild form, if you let them free in a year tops will regrow fur and act more aggressively. Not a boar but still very tanky

    • @PasqualItizzz
      @PasqualItizzz Год назад +8

      So take a party with high DPS, possibly include a Bard for buffs!

    • @Metalhammer1993
      @Metalhammer1993 Год назад +6

      @@PasqualItizzz they are solid as DPS as well, these suckers are VICIOUS

    • @michaelnurse9089
      @michaelnurse9089 Год назад +5

      And they interbreed with wild boars to make larger yet still well adapted to being free animals. Some can grow to hundreds of kgs.

    • @Indubidably0
      @Indubidably0 Год назад +5

      Their snouts will even change and they'll grow tusks. It's pretty amazing.

    • @charaznable9209
      @charaznable9209 Год назад +10

      @@michaelnurse9089 Yep Giant Domestic Pig + Wild Boar = Hogzilla.

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk Год назад +118

    Great video! Thoughts on the marking of pigs - it's a problem shared among many kinds of livestock, and I've read that before branding was super common, ear notches may have been preferred. The trouble with branding, I think, usually had to do with the risk of infection, and the notching of an ear might have been less troublesome - plus you could notch them very young and the mark would remain visible. Branding on cattle tends to be placed on the hindquarters if I understand right, but with these pigs I don't know if the hind end is any less bristly than the rest of it.
    Though I find it extremely amusing to contemplate painted pigs, I feel like that would not have been so common. When you say writing on them I first thought "yes, the skin would show color well" but then I remembered, these are hairy beasts. So I wonder if pigment of any sort would really stay, or if the animal would just rub it off over the course of a day.
    "Municipal swineherd" sounds like a fabulous insult though, haha!

    • @nahtanha
      @nahtanha Год назад +7

      On sheep ear notches are very clear identification even after the hair grows back in, I'm sure it would work well on pigs. Was standard practice to punch the ears of non stud animals through the 80s and 90s here (unsure if it's still done)
      ...come to think of it, we tattooed the ears of the stud flock. And I doubt that was a modern invention!

    • @davidcarothers3311
      @davidcarothers3311 Год назад +2

      @@nahtanha Ear notches work well on my GF...

    • @winifredryan8223
      @winifredryan8223 Год назад +5

      You and I are of a mind! I was considering ear notching as well.

    • @e.s.lavall9219
      @e.s.lavall9219 Год назад +9

      My degree was in Animal Science, came here to say the pigs were almost certainly ear notched.

    • @MarkHarrisonBNE
      @MarkHarrisonBNE Год назад +12

      And this is the origin of the term “earmark”. A term still in use in the English speaking countries today. For example; funds could be earmarked for a particular project or use.
      According to one source I found; the first recorded usage of that term is 1515. I expect that the origin is far more ancient.

  • @rhysodunloe2463
    @rhysodunloe2463 Год назад +13

    When I was a kid the old forest warden in my home village in Southwestern Germany had a wild sow that he found as a piglet. He raised her alongside his new dog and taught both the same commands. Even though she wasn't fully domesticated she always behaved. But it was clear that getting her back into the wild wasn't an option because she was too accustomed to humans and might have caused problems with hiking tourists.
    It was pretty funny though to go down main street and see a grown wild sow sitting next to a comparably tiny dachshund outside the grocery shop.
    But I've also seen what chaos can be caused by a sounder running in panic. Happens quite often in Schleswig-Holstein in Northern Germany because here they have lots of agriculture and only small woodlands.
    Not like in the dense Palitanate Forest where I grew up. There they sometimes messed up an unfenced garden at the edge of the forest in the middle of the night.
    But here wild boars often come to the fields in the middle of the day, especially in harvest season to feast on the maize or simply get to another spot.
    When they get surprised by a tractor or combine harvester and can't escape back into the woods, they run into human settlements. A few years ago a few boars even showed up in the middle of a small town and one ran into a optometrist shop where it crashed into the stands and broke lots of glass. Luckily no one was injured.
    Another rather funny thing happened at a lake. A sow and her piglets came to a swimming pond in the middle of the day to search for food. But instead the sow ran away with a nudist sunbather's laptop bag and he chased behind her. Luckily the sow was pretty chill around all those humans even though she had her piglets with her or else the chase could have ended pretty bad.

  • @paulherman5822
    @paulherman5822 Год назад +16

    They possibly identified individual hogs by notching ears. Was still done until fairly recently in the United States for many types of livestock. Early version of an ear tag.

  • @jessecunningham9924
    @jessecunningham9924 Год назад +56

    Great subject! I also watch Goldshaw Farm and he has talked at length about the destructiveness of even just a few pigs. I can’t imagine the havoc in a town if everyone had one!

    • @niall_sanderson
      @niall_sanderson Год назад +6

      Another good demonstration of the havoc pigs can cause is how much of a problem feral pigs currently are in much of the US and in many other parts of the world. They're extremely good at finding food, reproduce like mad, and in the US at least have essentially no natural predators other than humans (the states that have massive feral pig problems generally lack big predators like Cougars, Wolves, Grizzly Bears, and Jaguars that can kill them). They even look just like the medieval pigs that Jason describes in this very video.
      The feral pig problem is so bad in some parts of the US that not only do many states allow hunters to kill as many of them as they want, they actively encourage hunters to kill them. In Texas, for instance, it's legal to hunt them from helicopters; the helicopters are generally used to flush the pigs out into the open where they can be shot and killed more easily, not unlike how some dog breeds are used to flush prey animals out of burrows and vegetation.

    • @stephaniewilson3955
      @stephaniewilson3955 Год назад

      There is someone who posts on RUclips who kills wild pigs in the Australian bush for a living. He makes a very good living from it.

  • @OrbGoblin
    @OrbGoblin Год назад +37

    I was able to guess the beast after watching videos of hog trapping in Texas. If it's that hard to to trap/contain pigs in the modern time, I can't imagine how hard it must have been then.

    • @SilverIchimaru
      @SilverIchimaru Год назад +9

      Ugh, I volunteered at a ranch in Texas and the dratted things were such a pain. They tore up one field so badly and got so bold we had to move the horses out and stop using it for a while. The owner of the ranch did allow hunting on his property for them, which, after dealing with the damage, was completely understandable.

    • @daisukidatotoro
      @daisukidatotoro Год назад +6

      Texan here. As soon as the title of the video popped up, my first thought was "feral hog." They are such a nuisance.

    • @jphilb
      @jphilb Год назад +1

      Also in Texas they have helicopter hog hunts. Just to try to keep them somewhat controlled since they breed so fast.

  • @Tennouseijin
    @Tennouseijin Год назад +12

    In my city, boars are somewhat frequently seen on the streets. They live in the nearby woods, but aren't afraid of paying a visit to the suburbs (where they often dig around for food in people's gardens) and the recreational areas. A family of boars walking on the beach promenade is not an uncommon sight. Trash is usually kept in enclosed sheds, so nowadays they don't often get the opportunity to dig around in trashcans.
    People just know to keep their distance, especially from families, knowing that sows can be quite aggressive around their young. Somehow, this approach of just keeping distance and letting them be is sufficient. Accidents are very rare, and more often than not if something bad does happen, it's either a car accident involving a boar, or a boar that somehow got lost in the more urban areas and vets/police had to intervene. Haven't heard of any injuries caused by boars in a while. Though my parents complain about boars digging under their fence and plundering the vegetable garden.

  • @SusanLand
    @SusanLand Год назад +15

    I'm imagining Hawk the Slayer doing battle with a huge, ferocious were-pig on the night of a full blood moon. Hawk slashes at the beast, dealing it a fatal blow. Through the power of the mind stone, we hear the dying thoughts of the abomination: "swill. . . all I wanted was some swill. . . gasp. . . what does a pig have to do around hear to get a fresh cup of swill?"

  • @wilfrid-robertdoucet2179
    @wilfrid-robertdoucet2179 Год назад +19

    Considering old manuscripts I expected snails 😂

  • @muzerhythm2242
    @muzerhythm2242 Год назад +8

    Fascinating. It brought back memories of a project did in high school economics class. The teacher had us in Medieval times and we drew a role out of hat...I got the job as Pig Farmer. We were given $50 (monopoly money of course🤣) and was a semester long project to see how well we did with business and making a profit. I did well (bartering, then buying as little as possible and having NOTHING go to waste...even had hides tanned for water bottles, shoes, ect.) I made it to top ten in the class. But I didn't know for sure how things REALLY were in Medieval times. From what I learned from the video...I probably would have done well.😁

  • @edspace.
    @edspace. Год назад +11

    Interesting to hear about the municipal Swineherd being a thing back then as well, I happened to come across them in the Victorian era in my home town.
    There were some interesting rules as well (although I don't know how far back they all went but they happened to be mentioned in the Victorian period);
    "It is an offence to give any pig, boar or any manner of hog; any wine, beer, brandy, whiskey or any manner of strong drink, though small beer is accepted, within the town, nor is it permissible to take a pig to be patron of a public house (tithed or free standing), Inn or tavern. No pig may walk or be walked through the streets of the town on a Sunday, lest it has permission in writing from the vicar to do, is attending church with it's owner or taking part in other business of a lawfully congregated church. Any pig, boar or hog consuming tobacco in the streets or public places of the town shall result in a fine for its owner. Any violations of these offenses shall be subject to fines as to the amount the magistrate sees fit in accordance with any relevant statute or common law."
    There is also legend of a law requiring pigs to wear a hat in public but historians of the town have found no trace of such a bylaw.

    • @eric2500
      @eric2500 7 месяцев назад +1

      I have seen pet pigs at The Blessing of the Animals - the only time I have seen pigs attending church!

    • @edspace.
      @edspace. 7 месяцев назад

      @@eric2500 I guess they wrote the law that way just in case. Laws can get strange in the wording, since they 'have to' cover every eventuality.

  • @jackglossop4859
    @jackglossop4859 Год назад +8

    I remember being too drunk in a pub garden one night when the landlord released his two large pigs for their evening run about. One of them ran straight into the smoking area and in three gulps, devoured an entire bucket of fag ends mixed with sand.
    It remains one of the most disgusting things I’ve ever witnessed and I’ve never looked at pigs the same way.

  • @whoareyou1034
    @whoareyou1034 Год назад +17

    Shepherds can identify their sheep by a glance. It would not be farfetched to think that people could identify their pigs back in the day, especially if they only had one or two.

    • @james0000
      @james0000 Год назад +6

      "All those pigs are mine, I don't care if they are in your pen."

    • @johnkilmartin5101
      @johnkilmartin5101 Год назад

      I think it's important to remember till quite recently pigs were generally multicoloured as opposed to the ubiquitous Polish Whites of today.

    • @psychedashell
      @psychedashell Год назад

      That’s when rank comes into play.

    • @tomobedlam297
      @tomobedlam297 Год назад +2

      Before the days of plastic ear tags we used to "earmark" our animals by clipping notches in their ears. Each farm had its own particular earmark.

    • @margaretwordnerd5210
      @margaretwordnerd5210 Год назад +1

      When my family had 2 dozen horses, most bay, I could identify each from a considerable distance or parts visible past the barn wall, or by whinney. Besides appearance, animals will have different personalities and reactions to familiar people which would make semi domesticated swine easy to identify.

  • @joelgarner2588
    @joelgarner2588 Год назад +2

    So glad that you're posting again. Your videos are always interesting and informative. Thank you.

  • @highloughsdrifter1629
    @highloughsdrifter1629 3 месяца назад +3

    Pigs are still turned out into the New Forest (southern England) in the autumn. The New Forest is known for free-range ponies and these can suffer from eating too many acorns. The pigs are able to eat the acorns and so keep the ponies safe.

  • @KorKhan89
    @KorKhan89 Год назад +52

    I read there were multiple cases of pigs attacking and even killing people in city streets. Children were especially vulnerable, but even as an adult, an angry pig isn’t something I’d want to tangle with.

    • @GallowglassAxe
      @GallowglassAxe Год назад +4

      Yep and there was cases of the pigs (not the pig owners) being put on trial for those reasons. If found guilty they were executed (usually by hanging). I couldn't find if the meat is good to eat or not or would that be consider cannibalism.

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Год назад +3

      yeah it has mass, speed and it's very tanky.

    • @julienielsen3746
      @julienielsen3746 Год назад +2

      Killer Pigs !

    • @NemeanLion-
      @NemeanLion- Год назад

      You can see here how dangerous a wild boar can be, when it terrorizes a Russian community. It literally took multiple hits with a car and was eventually taken out by a kitchen sink.
      ruclips.net/video/eg_shDIaRIs/видео.html

    • @james0000
      @james0000 Год назад

      @@GallowglassAxe They would actually try the pigs who didn't stop the other pigs and the other pigs. Yes, you could eat the meat, that style of death does not transform them from one species into another. Pretty funny how stupid people were not that long ago. This was still being done in Europe in the mid to late 1700s.

  • @donnieeck3176
    @donnieeck3176 Год назад +7

    Just Joined a SCA group as well as been doing HEMA, and your videos are a great resource for garb, cutlery and general information 🤺

  • @Memorixt
    @Memorixt 7 месяцев назад +2

    I consider myself a (above all classic ancient and medieval) history enthusiast, but I I have to confess I never thought on that, though it makes absolutely sense as you tell it. Great documentary!

  • @lauragovernali4332
    @lauragovernali4332 Год назад +7

    Always a delightful wealth of information and always a fantastic subject! It's great to see you! Got a preorder at Amazon on your new book. Happy February! May spring come early to you in the UK this year!! 🌹💕🌹

  • @dustinf11
    @dustinf11 Год назад +6

    I love these odd history lessons. Funny, and info that I'm actually really happy to now know. Favorite channel on YT.

  • @akoilady9097
    @akoilady9097 Год назад +6

    We have this problem in the USA. Feral pigs are causing havoc in our rural areas. Very hard on wildlife. Apparently it doesn't take long for a domestic pig to turn feral.

  • @paulgibbons2320
    @paulgibbons2320 4 месяца назад +3

    In York we have an area called Swine gate where the pigs would be driven through.

  • @buckodonnghaile4309
    @buckodonnghaile4309 10 месяцев назад +2

    3:37 when my Gran would watch my brothers and I 40 years ago shed say she felt like a swine herder. It was a fitting description. Cheers from Canada, great video.

  • @rileyernst9086
    @rileyernst9086 Год назад +4

    Must have been a ruckus after dark in Canterbury. Imagine the sounds of pigs running around fighting eachother or encountering stray dogs.

  • @helmort
    @helmort Год назад +10

    Do you agree if I say that the intros with Jason on horseback on each video are the most epic things on RUclips? This music makes me feel like King Arthur in person!
    "𝐓𝐚𝐤𝐞 𝐲𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐬𝐰𝐨𝐫𝐝𝐬, 𝐦𝐲 𝐤𝐧𝐢𝐠𝐡𝐭𝐬, 𝐢𝐭'𝐬 𝐭𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐚𝐧𝐨𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐫 𝐢𝐧𝐜𝐫𝐞𝐝𝐢𝐛𝐥𝐞 𝐣𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐧𝐞𝐲!"
    ☠💀☠💀☠💀☠

  • @yannieangerer8558
    @yannieangerer8558 11 дней назад +1

    As a kid our school went to this national park where they kept boars. We were reminded that while these boars were roaming free there (albeit behind a small fence) and we can touch them, they are still wild animals and to look out for signs of aggression. Most of them actually let themselves be petted like a dog, but this one boar kept chasing a small boy all around the place. We kids just stood there like "what the hell ...?" while the staff tried to catch the boar and put him back in his little house behind the fence. Apparently this one was notorious for being a little aggressive. 😅 The other ones obviously were much tamer, which makes me wonder if those were bred a certain way to be more tame.

  • @sinkhole777
    @sinkhole777 Год назад +8

    I've spent many days, often solo in the Australian bush, with snakes, Saltwater crocs, dingos, Kangaroos, buffalo, spiders, sharks on the coast, wedgetailed Eagles, wild horses, cattle, camels, horses and donkeys. The animal I have ALWAYS respected, nay feared the most is the feral pig. Almost every other animal will hurt you if you mess with them,but pigs! Smarter than dogs, pack hunters, and they like the way we taste!

    • @maximilianmustermann5763
      @maximilianmustermann5763 Год назад

      In the case of an apocalypse, the final battle on earth will be fought between termites and wild boar. Everything else will already be dead 🤣

    • @Cricket2731
      @Cricket2731 4 месяца назад

      ​@@maximilianmustermann5763, cockroaches are tough li'l survivors, too! Add them to the list.

  • @simplepixel5617
    @simplepixel5617 Год назад +11

    I love watching your videos. Please make more!! ❤

  • @metallica520771
    @metallica520771 Год назад +7

    I'd quite like a video on how the medieval English kept chickens and cattle as well.
    I'm learning more about history from channels like this than I ever did when I went to scool.

  • @Aurwenn
    @Aurwenn Год назад +2

    The quality of your show and also the format is up there with what you would see back in the day in cable TV like History channel, this sort of semi-documentary shows with a more down to earth approach with the host on screen, very relaxing, before they devolved into complete nonsense with car shows. Very good job as always.

  • @susancutler9403
    @susancutler9403 Год назад +2

    In the town of York (now Toronto) by-laws 1794-1820's show that pigs were identified by notches, nicks or slits cut into left ear, right ear or both ears. Every year there were new by-laws about how sturdy fences and gates needed to be - pigs being escape artists.

  • @gtbkts
    @gtbkts Год назад +13

    Thank you for the awesome content!

  • @gallendugall8913
    @gallendugall8913 Год назад +11

    That was delightful. Really paints the picture of the past. Thank you.

  • @enriquemendez1507
    @enriquemendez1507 Год назад +2

    Yes! These videos have become among my favorite to watch and look forward to.

  • @jeffarmstrong1308
    @jeffarmstrong1308 Год назад +16

    Gday from Downunder
    I guessed it would be the pig. Anyone who has run into feral pigs (and the damage they do to the landscape) here would not be surprised.
    Thanks you and similar channels I was very aware of the importance of pigs to a household be it Gentle, Townsman, Serf or Villein.
    Thank you for the content.

  • @jamespaul6315
    @jamespaul6315 Год назад +8

    Always enjoy these

  • @jazzmusician46
    @jazzmusician46 Год назад +3

    Terrific video! As an aside, speaking of pigs, back in the 1980’s when I was a policeman in Victoria, Australia, we had a PIG lapel badge we used to wear on our uniform or plain clothes. It had the word PIG = Pride. Integrity. Guts. A slightly different slant, but it was in the face of detractors. 🐖

  • @viatorinterra
    @viatorinterra Год назад +10

    Wild boars used to be quite plentiful around where I live. They were still hunted. Recently, though, wild boars are now being domesticated more and more. Sometimes they're hybridized with domestic pigs.

    • @drworm5007
      @drworm5007 Год назад

      Presumably the sows as well.

    • @boguslav9502
      @boguslav9502 Год назад +2

      In Poland its becoming dangerously common to meet a boar in the woods, earlier the population was at a sustainable level but with more "green" activists they are growing out of control to the point of damaging not only farmers land, but also the woodlands and plains.

    • @maximilianmustermann5763
      @maximilianmustermann5763 Год назад

      @@boguslav9502 There's this weird religious cult in my area, they own a large lot of forest and they are vegans and want to live in harmony with all animals. The hunters in the surrounding areas can hardly keep up with the hogs there. And the hogs are intelligent enough to know where to run to when being shot at. The cult will take every hunter to court who trespasses on their property, so it's really hard for them. They basically only shoot hogs all season long, they don't even have time for deer.

  • @judldoodles
    @judldoodles Год назад +2

    I think it was in 2006, there was a Drive hunt or battue on our side of the river. The wild boars swam across the river and destroyed fences, gates and shops in the village on the other side.

  • @mackz9687
    @mackz9687 Год назад +5

    Great to have another video!

  • @Asri_
    @Asri_ Год назад +3

    Feral hogs are a big problem in Alabama; they are invasive here from stock introduced in the 1500s. Extremely dangerous and destructive and have no natural predators. It's such a problem that instead of limiting hunting, there are no bag limits, it's always open season, day or night hunting is permitted, and occassionally they send out notices asking hunters to take hogs.

  • @grahamcann1761
    @grahamcann1761 Год назад +2

    I appreciated your story, however as others have noted, "plump little squeakers"? I think not. For no sane reason, I've had chance to visit farms in Australia, Canada, and England. And in England they had a lot of pigs, and the farmers told me many stories. Then years later I read a story by famed author Harry Harrison, "The man from P.I.G." (a interplanetary law man who traveled, and worked with, Pigs) who gave quite an interesting (and humorous) description of pigs and their history/abilities.
    Thank you so very much for your videos.

  • @captaincodpiece3263
    @captaincodpiece3263 Год назад +1

    In 1920s east London some people did keep pigs in the garden, as accounts reveal, chickens were also kept

  • @peterhoulihan9766
    @peterhoulihan9766 Год назад +3

    I'm surprised you didn't arrange a visit to one of the farms rearing iron age pigs. They're probably the closest thing we have today to medieval breeds like the greyhound pig (survived in Ireland up until the 50s).

  • @jamesbechtel7736
    @jamesbechtel7736 Год назад +3

    Pigs are one of the fastest domestic animals to go wild. Irc it takes about 2 weeks for them to basically go from a pink oinker into a hairy, tusked, feral hog. They are a massive problem in certain parts of the US to this day. My pappy used to hunt them. I have one on mounted on the living room wall wearing a tattered old scarf. His name is doug.

  • @hollish196
    @hollish196 Год назад +2

    May I just say what an utter joy it is to watch you ride. You are excellent on horseback! When I was young I could post bareback, so I consider myself able to judge a good rider. This video was completely fascinating. I know about pigs being problematic as there are areas in the southern USA that are overrun by massive numbers of wild pigs. They are dangerous and incredibly destructive.

  • @brucewalton1886
    @brucewalton1886 Год назад +3

    This is no surprise to people who live in rural areas of the US southeast. Feral pigs do a great deal of damage to crops. There have been some attacks against humans, and while the injuries can be severe, they are not usually fatal.

  • @marissabulso6439
    @marissabulso6439 Год назад +5

    Delightful video, thank you! I love to think how astounded people in the past would be to know our interest in their common ways. Like how they identified whose pig was whose. 😂
    I wonder what future people will wonder about us that we can’t imagine.

  • @LynneFarr
    @LynneFarr Год назад +17

    What a fun video! Complete with pig dialog. Do you think the porcine bells were crotal bells? Must have been confusing to hear crotal bells around a corner and not know whether a horse or a pig was coming.

    • @ModernKnight
      @ModernKnight  Год назад +7

      The mention doesn't say, but it's certainly plausible.

    • @jonawolf8023
      @jonawolf8023 Год назад +7

      A Bit of information from southern Germany. Bells are still used for sheep, cows and goats. The traditon requiers that the shape, material and sound of the bell must be acording to the animal including the age and position in the flock. Somone who is familiar to the sound of a flock can distingish the individuals only by listen the bells.

  • @kinjiru731
    @kinjiru731 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm glad you addressed how they were identified even if you didn't have an answer to the question, because I immediately wondered that!

  • @stunningfreefall
    @stunningfreefall Год назад +1

    We read an old case in law school about pigs roaming New York City streets. Apparently it was quite a problem for them as well!

  • @robertn2
    @robertn2 Год назад +6

    Only heard of one account while station in Germany and out in the field doing training. One of our guys was walking along others watch him as a few Wild Bores follow him.

  • @danielmadar9938
    @danielmadar9938 Год назад +3

    Beautiful. We don't have pigs, but we have chickens that take care for our (and even a few other families) food waste. Once in a while we bring a pair of ponies to mow the yard 🐴🦄. A few times we brought a camel and a donkey for that, but the camel demolished our fences, so we stopped that...🤣🐪

  • @j.b.4340
    @j.b.4340 Год назад +1

    Today, in Louisiana, I photographed hog damage, that was undermining an elevated roadway. We drove past miles of rooting along tree lines. One friend killed 500 last year, and didn’t dent the population.

  • @bishop9757
    @bishop9757 Год назад +2

    Pigs are also really good at clearing under-brush, which is quite useful especially before mechanisation.

  • @kathleenorr9237
    @kathleenorr9237 Год назад +2

    Bred saddleback pigs few years ago..one sow was spicy to say the least. Wild feral ones would like these would definitely scare me!

  • @transvestosaurus878
    @transvestosaurus878 Год назад +3

    It's definitely giant enemy snails.

  • @peppercornbingbong5491
    @peppercornbingbong5491 Год назад +1

    Coming from the midwestern region of the continental United States. I knew old-time Farmers that would cut notches and shapes into the hogs ears. That was a form of identifying what pig belong to what farm.

  • @Nagassh
    @Nagassh Год назад +2

    Got a micro-pig pet that turned out to be not so micro and now lives out back as a giant black hairy thing with a bristly spine, tusks and is practically big enough to ride.
    He's enough to make you appreciate how unpleasant it'd be to get on the wrong side of a big boar that wasn't as domesticated as he is.

    • @jonawolf8023
      @jonawolf8023 Год назад +1

      A Friend of mine has a "micro-pig" as pet, now this pig is huge and live in the garden but it stil comes every morning in to the hous to use the litter box, just like it learned as a piglet.

  • @ukaszgrzesik7231
    @ukaszgrzesik7231 Год назад +6

    I did managed to guess that it was about pigs, but I had no idea about urban pigs or the municipal swine herder, thanks!
    Also, do not underestimate modern pigs. They can still kill a man!

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +1

      “Less dangerous than previous generations” certainly does not mean “harmless” when it comes to pigs.

  • @ross6753
    @ross6753 Год назад +5

    Listening to this information, it becomes easier to believe that the story behind the movie "The hour of the pig" is based on true facts. Colin Firth fans who see all his movies usually seem to think "The hour of the pig" is something absurd; A pig accused of having killed a child is taken to court, gets itself a lawyer who finds the real killer, but the pig is finally acquitted because its identity can't be established... Many people can't imagine such things could ever happen for real. They should all subscribe to your videos.

  • @mac8697
    @mac8697 Год назад +2

    When I was little I visited a town where feral pigs would come by the local restaurant every night to be fed scraps. It was wild and I loved it.

  • @hartmutwrith3134
    @hartmutwrith3134 Год назад

    Very well researched mate. Good work. I love to listen to your stories. Educating. We must meet at an event (battle or joust).

  • @Indubidably0
    @Indubidably0 Год назад +3

    My ancestor, Alberic De Vere had the nickname "le sanglier" which means "the wild boar" He was pals with William the Conqueror and you can imagine with a nickname like that what sort of ferocious warrior he was.

  • @sweepsp8468
    @sweepsp8468 Год назад +2

    Very interesting, was not going to watch this but glad I did. Another thing that eats waste and tastes good is chickens, some years ago my veg garden got out of control as I was not at home a lot and someone said get chickens, I did and two chickens cleared my garden in weeks! Plus you get eggs as well.

    • @S3l3ct1ve
      @S3l3ct1ve Год назад

      Chicken was a holy bird back then :D it was expensive to kill a chicken since it would mean you lose the eggs. So the chicken probably was quite more expensive meat available in rare occasions for the peasants.

    • @sweepsp8468
      @sweepsp8468 Год назад

      @@S3l3ct1ve Yes I agree, you don't kill something that gives you food but even todays chickens only lay for 3 to 4 years then they just eat for no return so why not eat them ?

    • @tpower1912
      @tpower1912 Год назад

      @@S3l3ct1ve Not really true. Chickens stop laying eggs eventually and there were also all the excess male chickens. Plus you can only feed so many chickens so the herd would have to be culled regularly.

  • @austin6ish
    @austin6ish Год назад +2

    Anecdotal evidence here: my grandfather grew up in a very rural, very poor are in the United States. They were subsitance farmers that had to raise livestock to eat through the winter.
    A cheap and simple way to identify your pigs is to take a sharp knife and notch their ear when they are piglets. Every family had a specific notch or cut taken out of a specific location on the ear. At a glance you could ide tofu your pigs from your neighbors if they somehow got mixed together.

  • @mikeynth7919
    @mikeynth7919 Год назад +1

    IIRC, an article in Michigan History told of a town in 19th century upper Michigan where the town had an officer that was to round up stray livestock (because people liked having their livestock forage rather than feed those animals) and impound the animals and release them after the fine had been paid. It seems there was a bit of friction between those who wanted their animals to forage and those who did not want their gardens to be consumed by their neighbor's cow.

  • @ThePartitoObliquo
    @ThePartitoObliquo Год назад +3

    As an archeologist i worked in a excavation site in italy dating to the neotlithic/early bronze age and there are quite a few remainings of domestic/feral pigs, the line between a wild and domestic pig is basically none, the modern pig is very recent, most of the pigs that we farmed in human history was not much different from a boar

    • @maximilianmustermann5763
      @maximilianmustermann5763 Год назад

      They can also revert back rather quickly. In some parts of the USA, domesticated pigs that escaped into the wild turned into feral hogs in a couple of generations, and they are hardly different from "real" wild boar. Tusks and black hair and everything.

  • @chrispe82
    @chrispe82 Год назад +4

    So are you preparing us for the video where you have a couple of Tamworths or similar?
    Knepp estate has a few interesting stories from when they reintroduced pigs 😂

    • @ModernKnight
      @ModernKnight  Год назад +3

      One day I'd love to have some pigs.

  • @M3rVsT4H
    @M3rVsT4H Год назад +2

    Australia has a massive feral pig problem. And I can confirm, in a matter of hours, they can render a nice flat piece of ground almost impassable. A cratered mess of 1ft deep holes and ruts and mounds that would take a few hours in a small tractor to fix. I can only imagine in medieval times it would have been risky to try to ride a horse fast through a forest off the marked trails.

  • @robins5314
    @robins5314 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video Jason, always interesting stuff.

  • @JaneDoe-ci3gj
    @JaneDoe-ci3gj Год назад +3

    Sounds like wild boars in Sweden, today.
    After going extinct here in 1700, they were reintroduced in the 1970's. They were meant to be in enclosures, but some wild boars escaped and others some were illegally let loose.
    Today we have 300 000 (compared to 460 wolves) wild boars here in Sweden wreaking havoc!

    • @natkojurdana9673
      @natkojurdana9673 Год назад +1

      Funny enough in Croatia wolves are wreaking havoc. They are protected, they multiplied exponentialy since rural Croatia is almost depopulated, they are a growing threat to sheep flocks. The locals are terrified but can't kill them - fines are pretty high. Anyway, it's a bit medieval :)

    • @S3l3ct1ve
      @S3l3ct1ve Год назад +1

      @@natkojurdana9673 Same story in Lithuania. Wolves are mostly loved by those who havent steped in to the forest :) However those who have to tend the cattle know exactly how dangerous wolves can be, they even kill domesticated dogs if they being left outside in the night.
      I heard its the worse when the wolves teaching the new generation how to hunt, they can kill the whole sheep herd just to train their kids...

    • @maximilianmustermann5763
      @maximilianmustermann5763 Год назад

      @@natkojurdana9673 Wolves (and bears) are slowly coming back to Germany, too. We've always had wild boar so nobody ever thought about stopping to hunt them - fortunately. But with wolves and bears, it's all the green party urbanites who think we can live in harmony with all creatures and whatnot. But I suspect the moment we stop hunting wild boar, half of us will be killed in the next decade anyways, so the remaining rest will hopefully come back to their senses.
      Back in the middle ages, people were still aware that most of nature just wants to kill you 24/7. There's no "harmony" unless you can defend yourself.

    • @user-ye6ty9ie8g
      @user-ye6ty9ie8g 2 месяца назад

      @@maximilianmustermann5763 🤡

  • @hemaccabe4292
    @hemaccabe4292 Год назад +3

    Medieval common folk had a real limited access to fat and protein. That pig fat and protein could be hugely important.

    • @maximilianmustermann5763
      @maximilianmustermann5763 Год назад +1

      I'd even say that without pigs, Europe would never have flourished the way it did. Pigs and dairy. We'd still be roaming the woods in small gangs hunting for deer without them.

  • @apropercuppa8612
    @apropercuppa8612 4 месяца назад +1

    My hometown is called Swinton. I wonder what kinds of things pigs got up to there. I had known since being a kid thanks to a teacher that it was a place to rear pigs, but sadly, no stories or tales ever seemed to be passed down or written anywhere.

  • @BlackMasterRoshi
    @BlackMasterRoshi Год назад +1

    i had as much fun watching this video as you seemed to have filming it

  • @kraigcochran9995
    @kraigcochran9995 Год назад +11

    It’s got to be the mother in law creature 🤣

  • @gwcrispi
    @gwcrispi Год назад +2

    If the movie Timeline really happened you gotta figure this guy is going back as the period expert...

  • @wesleyworley8982
    @wesleyworley8982 Год назад +2

    In the early years of Europeans in the Americas, there is frequent mention of swine being marked by notching the ears in a unique pattern (each local family with their own pattern). It is likely that this tradition was brought over from Europe with the pigs.

  • @Rid3thetig3r
    @Rid3thetig3r Год назад +1

    On a related topic, I read a sci-fi novel as a child of about 12, where the hero had a small herd of trained pigs. Bigger than dogs, just as smart, vicious on command. Just can't remember the name of the book....