Why You Can't Find Vikings In London: The London History Show

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2025

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @gamaltk
    @gamaltk Год назад +746

    Crazy you aren't more popular, your storytelling and the variety of topics you cover within one video are top notch!

    • @alexwatts9515
      @alexwatts9515 Год назад +17

      I just randomly discovered her. Love the channel. 266k subs is quite impressive!

    • @loosabway3400
      @loosabway3400 Год назад +10

      289k subscribers for a History channel - pretty decent!

    • @eddiearniwhatever
      @eddiearniwhatever Год назад +6

      I love English history and the algorithm just sent this channel my way, and I'm watching literally every video. I think it's a matter of RUclips connecting creators with people who might like their work. She's pushing 300k subs and healthy view counts, I think the channel is a total success.

    • @phlarrdboi
      @phlarrdboi Год назад

      yes

    • @Dimera09
      @Dimera09 Год назад +4

      She'll get there! I've only known of her videos for 1 month

  • @rolfs2165
    @rolfs2165 Год назад +323

    Another thing to point out: the Angles (who we get the word "Anglo" and subsequently "England" from) were another Germanic tribe living in what's now Schleswig-Holstein and Southern Denmark, who migrated South and then came over with the Saxons. So even before the Vikings decided to give up pillaging and settled instead, there were technically already Danes in Britain.

    • @lizroberts1569
      @lizroberts1569 Год назад +15

      There wasn’t much land to farm in Norway so it made sense for them to migrate.

    • @Bobby-wn5yr
      @Bobby-wn5yr Год назад +50

      Bloody foreigners coming over here, being my ancestor.

    • @Theduckwebcomics
      @Theduckwebcomics Год назад +18

      And don't forget the Jutes who're from Denmark as well. They settled there massively as well.
      It's funny that most of the media and stories show the Vikings as alien invaders but really they were the same people as thoae they were attacking... even the religion was the same. Maybe the shared culture was why they attacked?

    • @Schralenberger
      @Schralenberger Год назад +7

      Saxons and Frisians in the south.Essex, and Wessex. Jutes in the east , Kent etc., Angles up in Mercia, North umbria, and (of all things , fancy that)Anglia. Three/four dialects of Old English. Essex, Kentish, Anglian, and Mercian. There is a large debate though amongst Scholars though. Some insist Anglian, and Mercian are one dialect. They refer to this as Northumbrian.

    • @AlunParsons
      @AlunParsons Год назад +6

      Except there weren't, because Danes refers to an ethnic group, they were Danes because that's what they called themselves, that's how they identified, and neither the Saxons nor the Angles identified as Danes, they were not part of the Danish ethnic group. It is possible that Danish ethnogenesis post-dated the Anglo--Saxon migration to eastern Britain by some time, because the first mention of Danes in Denmark is a tenth century rune stone, according to Wikipedia.

  • @hullhistorynerd
    @hullhistorynerd 3 года назад +647

    Very interesting. Up here we're surrounded by Viking place names, and speak with accents that are an ancient echo of the Old Norse, it's easy to forget that down south things were very different!

    • @nuru666
      @nuru666 Год назад +63

      This is what I find fascinating about England and the medieval world in general, travel 100 or so miles back then and the people have a completely different accent, the dialect is different but you can understand it, the culture stays relatively uniform or just changes abruptly or subtly.

    • @elsecaller-jacob8346
      @elsecaller-jacob8346 Год назад +41

      Yeah I’m from York and we’ve got quite abit of Viking stuff to see there including the Jorvik centre I used to go there all the time with my brother and nan as a kid lol

    • @benjamintaylor3934
      @benjamintaylor3934 Год назад +16

      Same here in Newcastle.

    • @crabmansteve6844
      @crabmansteve6844 Год назад +26

      @@nuru666 Hell, not even 100 miles, go just 20-30 miles and you'll hear different accents, especially in rural areas.

    • @geocachingwomble
      @geocachingwomble Год назад +6

      Sutton how is actually in Sussex not London

  • @ralfklonowski3740
    @ralfklonowski3740 Год назад +246

    I totally adore your storytelling. Seemingly without effort, there is a rhythm and pace, driving me along roads and storylines I didn't knew existed just a few moments ago but now have no other choice but to follow. Thank you for the time, work and passion you put into these videos! Subscribed.

    • @eddiearniwhatever
      @eddiearniwhatever Год назад +8

      I find her presentation almost hypnotic... I think it is because she speaks very clearly and patiently, so the facts really sink in, as opposed to a lot of other channels where the presenters talk super fast , as if to capture our shrinking attention spans.

    • @sylvanaire
      @sylvanaire 9 месяцев назад +1

      I enjoy her presentations also. Kind of like my favorite authors, I can consume her content much faster than she can create it & still I want more, more, more! 😂

  • @PhoebeFayRuthLouise
    @PhoebeFayRuthLouise 4 года назад +199

    This is incredibly educational and wonderfully entertaining at the same time! Bravo!

  • @ninapavlovic4454
    @ninapavlovic4454 4 года назад +92

    Thank you ! I really enjoyed the pace, volume of information and the details. The piece about the broach was awesome

  • @arizwebfoot
    @arizwebfoot Год назад +47

    I know this was two years ago, but as a history buff, I found this to be most interesting and enlightening. Thank you, you were clear and lovely in your presentation.

  • @stephengrimmer35
    @stephengrimmer35 Год назад +119

    They were called Anglo-saxons because they were Angles (from Denmark), Saxons (actually Friesians from LOWER Saxony), oh, and Jutes (from Jutland). They settled mostly in an area called Anglia after them (the eastern part still known today as East Anglia).

    • @aleisterlavey9716
      @aleisterlavey9716 Год назад

      So... if they decided to call it saxland instead, England would be known as Sexland today, if the A was exchanged for an E too?

    • @michaelreid322
      @michaelreid322 Год назад +12

      Saxons take their name from a type of axe called a "seax", and I've read some historians think that "Saxon" may have been a descriptor rather than an ethnic synonym, i.e. a "Saxon" was "a warrior who used a seax". Similar to the way a "Viking" was "a Norse sea-raider".

    • @donaldhysa4836
      @donaldhysa4836 Год назад +9

      Anglia is what we call England in Albania :D

    • @curtisss
      @curtisss Год назад +4

      ​@@donaldhysa4836there is actually a place called Anglia in england

    • @rebeccaorman1823
      @rebeccaorman1823 Год назад +1

      ​@@michaelreid322this is a highly unlikely theory of the origin of the name Saxon. Everyone in Europe at the time used the Seax (spelling?) So why apply it to the Saxons as a name.

  • @mattcartwright8272
    @mattcartwright8272 Год назад +12

    Every day is a school day....Last summer I found myself walking passed St Olavs as the rather grim mantle above the entrance gate caught my eye, and then the plaque about it being Pepys' church. What I didn't know was its Viking origins. So thanks for making me slightly less ignorant today!

  • @brucekaraus7330
    @brucekaraus7330 Год назад +91

    You're not simply well versed, you are clearly deeply interested in your subjects. You have a lovely, melodic speaking voice with an easy and persistent flow. I don't wish to seem forward, but you are quite lovely as well. All in all, not a bad combination for presenting videos on RUclips. Thank you so much for creating these. It is appreciated.

  • @D.M.S.
    @D.M.S. Год назад +7

    Smart, funny, well read and charismatic. Also not overwhelming flashy in her presentation. I love it :)

  • @urquizabr
    @urquizabr Год назад +1

    I came for history, stayed 'cos you speak so clearly, even without closed captions I can understand all you say, even being a non-native English speaker. I love u'r storytelling.

  • @Troest87
    @Troest87 Год назад +19

    Great video. Absolutely adore your accent. As a Dane it's always interesting to hear about one's own country's from other sources and even learn about how it have affected them. I have to find that Jellinge sten replica, next time I'm in London.

  • @MrAbaration
    @MrAbaration Год назад +20

    This was my first of your video's. You're so passionate, it's amazing, and full of entertaining and well presented information. Time to binge watch the other 32 videos. Keep up the good work.

  • @teresaellis7062
    @teresaellis7062 Год назад +6

    Even if I can't afford to visit your fair country and go on your tour, I can enjoy your amazing delivery of history. I am glad I found your channel. 😊

  • @jorklind
    @jorklind Год назад +11

    When I had a day in London, I met a friend for a brief walk during his break and ended up near the Tower. I was torn between going into All Hallows by the Tower or the Tower itself. I decided on the Tower, but I keep kicking myself for now checking out All Hallows - I bet that would have been quite the memorable experience.

  • @neurospicypisces
    @neurospicypisces Год назад +11

    I really enjoyed this video. Your way of story telling is very nice to listen to! I love this subject matter as well.

  • @peterclancy3653
    @peterclancy3653 Год назад +3

    My English history classes, I am Australian , I remember as hot days with blowflies buzzing in the windows and trying to stay awake. Your presentations are an absolute delight and so enlightening, thank you

  • @carstenjensen3123
    @carstenjensen3123 Год назад +27

    You are brilliant at storytelling. Thanks.

  • @mateobravo9212
    @mateobravo9212 Год назад +4

    Outstanding content. There is no end to London's history and when I return it will be to admire the past. Greetings from Spain.

  • @JC-zw9vs
    @JC-zw9vs Год назад +5

    Love your stuff JD. Your presentation is clear, expressive and engaging, please post more long form stuff.

  • @lynnica5219
    @lynnica5219 Год назад +14

    Love that part about Aethelred! That's hilarious 😆 🤣
    And I thought about "St. Olaf" to "Tooley" and just wondered, maybe if he was nicknamed "Olly"? "St. Olly" is much closer to "Tooley" in my mind. But I'm no historian, it's just a guess

  • @goofyfish
    @goofyfish Год назад +1

    I know I am late to the party but I love these. This is one of the few channels I watch where the first thing I do is thumbs up, and I am never disappointed. I will likely never get to travel and see these things or here these stories otherwise, so I truly appreciate your time. Thanks from across the pond!

  • @TonyHightower
    @TonyHightower Год назад +10

    This is fascinating. (And fwiw, I think what you do works better here than on TT. There's enough detail, & your enthusiasm for history still goes over just fine.)

  • @TrollQuest
    @TrollQuest Год назад +2

    You're really fantastic and bring immense joy, at least to me. I hope this humble offering pleases the algorithm and subsequent RUclips gods.

  • @tomcrowell6697
    @tomcrowell6697 Год назад +95

    Another thing I've always heard is that ancient people never called themselves vikings but rather Norse or Dane. They would say 'they were going a viking'. Which basically meant raiding to pillage and loot not actually pirating.

    • @pokeballs3
      @pokeballs3 Год назад +17

      It was more "going to viking" but yeah we never did call ourselves vikings but we did not all go by norse or dane. Norse is the ethnic grouping basically we would mostly identify as being from whatever country we were from as we were(and still are) quite culturally different

    • @h3nder
      @h3nder Год назад +12

      @@pokeballs3 I assume that before Sweden, Norway, Iceland and Denmark fully formed/united people would either identify with their tribe/region or just their village/town?

    • @pokeballs3
      @pokeballs3 Год назад +6

      @@h3nder yeah pretty much

    • @JBond-zf4dj
      @JBond-zf4dj Год назад

      My understanding is viking is like a time period. Like the iron age / bronze age period.

    • @Sajxi
      @Sajxi Год назад +13

      @@JBond-zf4dj The viking age is a time period, but the crucial things foreigners usually miss is that viking was an occupation. A viking is basically a seafarer or pirate, and only 1-3% of the Norse population were vikings.

  • @hglundahl
    @hglundahl Год назад +25

    4:32 I don't think Vikings called themselves Vikings.
    They referred to Viking expeditions as "fara i Viking" but I don't think they used the word as a term for the guys who did that, usually younger sons of people who stayed in Denmark or Norway.
    Viking as a term is more about what others called them, back then.

    • @signespencer6887
      @signespencer6887 Год назад +7

      This is true- ‘Viking’ was, in norse, a verb or a task, not an identity. See Jackson Crawford’s videos for more details on old Norse language.

    • @hglundahl
      @hglundahl Год назад +1

      @@signespencer6887 Yes, he's pretty knowledgeable.
      I knew it from translations of Icelandic sagas into Swedish.

    • @terranovarubacha5473
      @terranovarubacha5473 Год назад +1

      Good catch, although they probably called themselves something and that's the term they'd move away from

    • @hglundahl
      @hglundahl Год назад +6

      @@terranovarubacha5473 They'd call themselves things according to names or nobility ranks or ethnic origin.
      In relation to English they would call themselves Danes.

    • @terranovarubacha5473
      @terranovarubacha5473 Год назад

      @@hglundahl Are you saying they had no collective name for themselves back then?

  • @davidponseigo8811
    @davidponseigo8811 Год назад +4

    I met and hung out with Paul McCartney in New Orleans at O'Flatory's Irish Pub and sang Irish Folk songs with him. It was so cool. This was about 24 years ago.

    • @Kenzalina_
      @Kenzalina_ Год назад

      I can’t believe no one has commented on this yet. That’s amazing!!

    • @susanwhite7474
      @susanwhite7474 8 месяцев назад

      Sorry, what does this have to do with this video? I love both NOLA and McCartney, FWIW. Also this is a great video!

  • @BlackDNA1492
    @BlackDNA1492 Год назад +1

    Excellent video. I was born and raised in Yorkshire and you're right about all the Scandinavian street and place names.

  • @phillipallen3259
    @phillipallen3259 Год назад +89

    Astounding! I've always been a bit of an amateur historian and for the United States. In the past few years I've begun to find the Norse and the Anglo-Saxons absolutely fascinating. Last year, I found out that British isles are the majority of my heritage with a smattering of Danish and a pinch of Continental European. Thank you for a wonderful peek into this part of London's history.

    • @michaelcaffery5038
      @michaelcaffery5038 Год назад +8

      Everyone in Britain, except for those from more recent immigrations, has Scandinavian ancestry (9% average) and also, unsurprisingly, West European ancestry. I don't know the percentage of that. So that mixture could be straight from Britain rather than a mixture in the USA after your ancestors migrated there. I took from your comment that you are American. Sorry if I misunderstood.

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 Год назад +6

      @@michaelcaffery5038 Certainly true, but having a background that's straight from only one location is actually fairly uncommon in the US and a lot of people will tend to have a mixture of various backgrounds due to immigration patterns.

    • @michaelcaffery5038
      @michaelcaffery5038 Год назад +4

      @@wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 good point. I suppose in the early decades of colonisation towns and settlements could have been populated mainly by people from one country or region but be well mixed in the last 2 centuries. The mixture he described is typical to British people though. Very much like my own (English).

    • @tomriley5790
      @tomriley5790 Год назад +2

      The Danish and continental european were probably in Britain too lots of

    • @lspthrattan
      @lspthrattan Год назад +1

      ​@@wilhelmseleorningcniht9410true. My own ancestors (most of them) arrived in America starting in the early 17th century, and they all married within their own immigrant group (Scottish) and continued to do so for a very long time. Most Americans have a more diverse family tree, though, I think.

  • @eksagantara5667
    @eksagantara5667 2 года назад +31

    Please make more of vikings and anglo-saxon contents, I enjoy your videos 😃

  • @indigotulip11
    @indigotulip11 Год назад +5

    Simply, thank you for your videos! Especially this one of personal interest. I hope to connect with you before my next (not yet planned) trip to London. I love your presentation style! Filled with facts and info yet also a wonderful interest-provoking and sustaining manner filled with a delightful levity. Hurrah for your greatness.

  • @ThreeTorties
    @ThreeTorties Год назад +30

    I’m so glad to have found your channel, it’s fascinating and you are an excellent storyteller. Thank you!

  • @BeerElf66
    @BeerElf66 Год назад +22

    I just found this, thank you! I'm from a town in the midlands that was once under the Danelaw. There are echoes in some of our street names, and slang words still. I accidently found out, that places that were under the Danelaw tend to pronounce "Scone" to rhyme with "Stone". I don't know if its a linguistic thing or a coincidence. It's just interesting.

    • @lizroberts1569
      @lizroberts1569 Год назад

      The Scot’s pronounce Scone that way and they had a lot of Viking influence

    • @Celcey24
      @Celcey24 Год назад +2

      That's also how Americans pronounce scone! I wonder if there's a connection there, or if it's just a coincidence.

    • @derekmills5394
      @derekmills5394 Год назад +6

      @@Celcey24 No coincidence. many "Americanisms" are actually older English pronunciation preserved by distance over a few hundered years of linguistic change. The silent 'H' in Herbs is another example.
      When middle class English learned to read in greater numbers they thought it 'proper' to sound the 'H'

  • @splendourofmusic
    @splendourofmusic Год назад +4

    St Magnus the Martyr church at London Bridge/Monument is dedicated to a Norse saint - St Magnus of Orkney (Orkney having later been given as a dowry to Scotland by Norway).

  • @Morhgoz
    @Morhgoz Год назад +5

    I usually prefer to read over listening because hyperacusis and some spectrum stuff etc, but you have nice pace in your talk and no annoying background music or sounds.👍Also subscribed, keep up making good content to us history buffs!

  • @SeanLynchXY
    @SeanLynchXY Год назад

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge of history!

  • @USMarshmallow
    @USMarshmallow Год назад +8

    My alma mater in America is Alfred University. We have a statue of King Alfred on the quad and our sports teams were called the Saxons. I researched him and it only increased my pride in that school, to be at a uni named after such an incredible king.

    • @agin1519
      @agin1519 Год назад +2

      Is the much quoted ‘Only English king to be called the Great.’ known there?

  • @hillt.j.2101
    @hillt.j.2101 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much! I’ve been looking for a clear and concise lesson about this for sometime. Seriously, I’ve been trying to figure out exactly what a Saxon is for decades. No matter how much I’ve read…I ended up more confused. Thank you for explaining this bit of history in a fun and simple way.

  • @cynhanrahan4012
    @cynhanrahan4012 Год назад +7

    Found you recently and I love your well research stories. Plus, that cloak broach rocks. (I make those from copper, electrical wire works great as raw material in certain weights.)

  • @Bigbro28
    @Bigbro28 Год назад

    Listening to your voice has made this channel compulsive viewing. You’re doing an excellent job of keeping us interested an entertained. 🐨🇦🇺

  • @delmarrey9077
    @delmarrey9077 Год назад +5

    I need to visit old England while I still can (I’m getting old). My ancestors from 1630 were born in Mitton, Lancashire. I’m in a city (Seattle, WA) that celebrates Leif Erikson and has a Nordic Museum, which I enjoy. I suspect we have Viking ancestors due to the red and blonde hair in the family along with the light blue/gray eyes. ⚔️

  • @Peter-oh3hc
    @Peter-oh3hc Год назад

    Th amount of time, energy, organization and research that must have been done to create something that looks so effortless amazes me. Thank you

  • @oscarernstell6214
    @oscarernstell6214 Год назад +16

    1st, having recently stumbled upon your bits, I must say I think you are a great orator. Regarding vikings I never looked for them in London but always assumed one could given the history. Having them all around me in Sweden, cairns, stones, place names, I now feel rather spoiled. I can only imagine how it must be for someone over in the states f ex, how it must all be rather academic, abstract even. It's not fairy tales, it's not even that long ago really. But it is at the frontier as far as historic records go and that makes it so intriguing, being in the borderland between myth and reality. An age of legends for sure.

    • @TSIRKLAND
      @TSIRKLAND Год назад +5

      Wow, I love how you put that! "it is at the frontier as far as historic records go and that makes it so intriguing, being in the borderland between myth and reality. An age of legends for sure." Writing was sparse, carved rocks were for special occasions, graffiti could be cheeky. Most history was still told verbally from person to person, and probably exaggerated, at that. Historical records' "frontier" is such an interesting way to describe that! "Between myth and reality." Nicely put!

    • @lizroberts1569
      @lizroberts1569 Год назад +2

      I’m Cumbrian and we have cairns, stones and place names in old Norse our dialect uses words that are not like English, Yorkshire is the same, the Vikings made a big impact on our history and still do to this day.

  • @LillFluffPotato
    @LillFluffPotato Год назад +1

    about tuli st. In Iceland, the name Ólafur is often shortened to Óli (which funny enough is what we call my uncle). Maybe that's the connection for snt. Olaf's street to Tuli street?

  • @catknit7
    @catknit7 4 года назад +7

    Thanks for another awesome video! I watch them and daydream of a time when I’ll be able to travel and see so many of those cool sites and markers 😁

  • @JenInOz
    @JenInOz Год назад

    The name Ethelred always makes me think of the poem i had read to me as a child that begins "Ethelred was only 3 or somewhere thereabouts when he..." I can't remember the rest of it but it's about a boy who thinks he's a car and ends up dying from drinking petrol. Amazing what they used to read to kids in those days!

  • @SigneofHorses
    @SigneofHorses Год назад +6

    What an amazing video! It makes me want to visiti London again. Perhaps revisit the Sutton Hoo stuff in the BM. Definitely visit those churches.. we have a Jelling stone copy in Utrecht if I’m not mistaken. But would love to see the London stones. Gosh.. thank you!!

  • @haynesis
    @haynesis Год назад

    Thanks

  • @chaozheng9505
    @chaozheng9505 3 года назад +26

    I've been a long-time follower of your TikTok but only found this channel today! Incredibly well made and educational! Thank you for the great work and this channel deserves more views!

  • @anikabjork4365
    @anikabjork4365 8 месяцев назад +2

    I am native Dane and I’ve used bersærk in my day to day language my whole life. I’ve never thought about its origin 😂 just verified it with the danish dictionary and you’re absolutely right. I mean, I’ve used it correctly, but I’ve never thought about it. You usually just used it when someone go crazy, they go bersærkergang.
    Sorry, I just found this really funny and eye opening. Thank you 🙏

  • @renastone9355
    @renastone9355 Год назад +3

    So, not to be totally random, but in 2022/23 I read Samuel Pepys' diary, 16 volumes (not counting the indexes) published in the 1890's. And when you came to St. Olave's Church, I said, "Sam's church!" and was very happy to see it, happy I recognized it and happy when you confirmed that I wasn't wrong. That totally sparked joy. It's the small things, right?

  • @farabor7382
    @farabor7382 Год назад

    As a beginner-amateur of "British" history, I find this video very rich in information and memorable anecdotes. Awesome!

  • @funkyk5086
    @funkyk5086 Год назад +3

    I’m so glad the Museum of London is still around. I visited it decades ago (as recommended by my trusty Lonely Planet Guide to London) and it was hard to find and empty of tourists. But I loved it and spent most of my day there - albeit a lot of that was getting to and from it and hunting for the building as not many people knew where it was who worked in the area.

    • @johncarroll772
      @johncarroll772 Год назад

      Think it's closed 😕 heard its moving to Smith field

  • @tellmeaboutyourgame314
    @tellmeaboutyourgame314 Год назад

    I love the way you talk about history. Your voice has such reverence and love for the subject.

  • @honeywhereismysupersuit6800
    @honeywhereismysupersuit6800 Год назад +4

    I'm 21. I never found history engaging in School, it was a subject I never did well on. But your channel is hugely insightful, I absolutely love it so far and I have only watched about six of your videos. Hope you gain a bigger following!

    • @susanwhite7474
      @susanwhite7474 8 месяцев назад

      History is often taught to kids in a very boring way, unfortunately

  • @seamus_rainheart
    @seamus_rainheart Год назад

    Absolutely superb. Through her explorations of British history, Ms. Draper offers fascinating insights into the rich and varied nature of human existence. All this is done with rich humanity, humor, intelligence, sincerity, and wonder. She's a remarkable talent. What a gift.

  • @morganpony2
    @morganpony2 4 года назад +24

    Thank you! I recently had to plan a lesson on the Vikings in Britain, and I can't begin to tell you how useful this would have been then.

  • @therealdeal3672
    @therealdeal3672 Год назад +37

    I'm an American interested in all the places my forebears came from. I recently learned that my great-grandfather's first and second names were Harold Rollo, two very classic Viking names and I've become much more curious about whatever I can learn about Vikings. Was raised being taught that I was Anglo-Saxon, German and Dutch. I've come to realize that probably includes a fair amount of Viking heritage. Love your videos!

  • @hastonestanhope
    @hastonestanhope Год назад +3

    Very interresting! As a Dane I've learned broad things from our invasions/settling of england, but it's always a delight learning about the finer details :D

  • @paulascott7330
    @paulascott7330 Год назад

    Bravo! Such great variety, brilliantly presented. Love the long form videos.

  • @joannesinton9623
    @joannesinton9623 2 года назад +8

    Well, now I guess I know where the term "going beserk" comes from!! Your channel is really so good, I've watched a couple and feel I've learnt loads 😁

    • @mr22guy
      @mr22guy Год назад +1

      berserk :P

    • @placeholdername0000
      @placeholdername0000 Год назад

      Go watch lindybeiges video on the topic.

    • @agin1519
      @agin1519 Год назад +1

      I too grew up reading Henry Treece and Geoffrey Trease, and Rosemary Suttcliff. But I had an inkling that there has been doubt cast apon the berserker stories, in part because the most highly reported ones are much like those horned helmets- much after the fact. I’ll try to find the source, but I think it comes from having so little source material that it isn’t clear if they were more religious and less involved in battle than later epic tellers imagined. Though she did mention one of the sagas…I did two lots of study on this, but almost twenty years ago now!

  • @rufuslynks8175
    @rufuslynks8175 11 месяцев назад

    Just an awesome presentation. No doubt I will revisit it since I know I've missed a bunch even with periodic rewinds.
    Thank you!

  • @the_greater_good2
    @the_greater_good2 Год назад +24

    I live in London nowadays so I’ll definitely keep an eye out for these little echoes of Viking history!
    I’m originally from South Wales and I think most of our Viking links come from the Norwegians, loads of the islands in the Bristol Channel and further along the Welsh coast have names like Skomer, and Flatholm or Steepholm 😁

    • @Cheeseatingjunglista
      @Cheeseatingjunglista Год назад +4

      Dublin was just accross the water, and St Patrick seems to have been kyfedidnapped to Ireland form Wales by them - some ties also to the Kings of Dyfed who carriede Irish and possible Viking ancestry

    • @luringen947
      @luringen947 Год назад

      this is just a video to get English but to look at the demogafisque exchange of English people in a better way. a lot of what she says is just bullshit. London is already soon not English. this is just sad to see! you have no reason to accept this! but it's probably too late if you don't get your balls back

    • @IQzminus2
      @IQzminus2 Год назад +3

      holm is a name for a bigger island, and atleast in Sweden (but I would assume the other Norse languages) is still a commonly used word, so as a swede I would assume just from their names that flatholm and steepholm either were or are bigger islands.
      Edit: I just looked it up on Google maps and Flatholm and Steepholm very much are islands, and the size if islands that I would call a holm. That’s pretty fun

  • @JesseLES84
    @JesseLES84 Год назад

    Happened to stumble here by accident, and after watching 15 videos this is now my favorite you tube channel lol Love it

  • @sadmimikyu8807
    @sadmimikyu8807 Год назад +4

    I am so grateful for your excellent work. I admit I found this interesting because I played Assassin's Creed Valhalla and always wondered how it really was with the Vikingr coming over. Turns out the game is quite accurate. Now I know about these place names. So cool! Thank you! Oh and love the costumes and the funny sketch! 😂

  • @davfew
    @davfew Год назад

    I love following you, you bring history together in such interesting ways - and speak so clearly.

  • @RegebroRepairs
    @RegebroRepairs Год назад +9

    Even Harold Godwinson had a danish, and hence arguably viking, mother. So the difference between viking and saxon kings was pretty much gone by the 11th century.

  • @thisperson5294
    @thisperson5294 3 года назад +3

    I am from a place near Liverpool called Huyton-with-Roby so it looks like a bit of a mishmash... They found a Viking longship when they were digging out the Liverpool to Manchester railway in the 19th century.

    • @susanwhite7474
      @susanwhite7474 8 месяцев назад

      Hate to ask, but what happened to it?

  • @SteveAttwood
    @SteveAttwood Год назад +1

    Brilliant! I love your vids! So informative and your delivery and presentation are so entertaining! You need your own show on the 'Big' TV!

  • @ivanboston8582
    @ivanboston8582 Год назад +50

    The biggest part of why Sweyn went SOOO hard at England after the St. Brices day massacre is his sister and brother in law the Jarl of Devon were killed in it just outside of Oxford

    • @derekmills5394
      @derekmills5394 Год назад +5

      Totally understandable then

    • @mortisCZ
      @mortisCZ Год назад +7

      If it's both profitable and a good vengeance, I can see why Sweyn kept the pressure up for years.

    • @joso7228
      @joso7228 Год назад +3

      Sweyn's Eye = Swansea. Nothing to do with Swans.

    • @ivanboston8582
      @ivanboston8582 Год назад +4

      @@mortisCZ I share some segments of DNA with several of the recovered bodies from the Oxford dig. A large number of them appear to be from a sizable kinship group: They were all some flavor of cousin sharing identifiable and significant DNA segments across multiple chromosomes. A couple of them were related to the Princes of Novgorod as well... he had quite a pool of pissed off Norseman to draw on!

    • @refindoazhar1507
      @refindoazhar1507 Год назад +1

      ​@@ivanboston8582that made his name even more ironic

  • @david8j796
    @david8j796 Год назад +3

    I don’t know about your description of the great migration, but the video was informative all the same

  • @AthyDuGard
    @AthyDuGard Год назад

    Thanks for a great video. I enjoy your relaxed & natural speaking voice and general cadence. In 1993 on our trip to the UK we were up in York & I clearly recall visiting the JORVIK Viking Centre. I still have the postcards I bought from there 🤓

  • @JonBroun
    @JonBroun Год назад +7

    You are mistaken about angles. Angles where the Germanic tribes from southern Denmark south of the Jutes north of the Saxons. It is true England did get the name From Angeland meaning land of the Angels. But the Saxon and Angles where both going to England and that is why it is Angle Saxon because it was combining both tribes. If you don't believe its a simple Google search.

  • @Hide.the.Salami
    @Hide.the.Salami Год назад +1

    Even including the bits that are truly not clear today, you are an outstanding storyteller of history. Thank you!

  • @KnittedSister
    @KnittedSister Год назад +19

    Actual modern day Dane here. 💁
    I live 15 minutes from the Jelling stones and have seen them often. That whole area is filled with history from that time. It is truly magical to go for a walk there. There are great burial monunds right beside the old church, and a big palisade wall used to surround the city. Some of it has been recreated, and the rest of it has been marked by stone landmarks, so you can go for a walk around the old wall of the city.
    Fun fact, the Vikings didn't call themselves Vikings. That's just what we call them today. Viking was actually their name for the raids they went on. To "fare i viking" meant to "go on a raid".

    • @jujutrini8412
      @jujutrini8412 Год назад +2

      That was the first thing our history teacher taught us about the Vikings - that it’s not what they were called, it’s a verb! And we were so disappointed that the Berserkers didn’t go around like total nutters the whole time.😂

    • @tommcconville677
      @tommcconville677 Год назад +2

      Vikings were known historically and ethnicially correct as Norsemen.

    • @tommcconville677
      @tommcconville677 Год назад

      My grandmother Grace's maiden name was Johnson, which I might believe would have Norse roots.Her father's parents emigrated from London.

    • @tommcconville677
      @tommcconville677 Год назад +1

      @@jujutrini8412 Ah, berserk, derived from berserker, a genuine Viking word!

    • @KnittedSister
      @KnittedSister Год назад +4

      @@tommcconville677 what Vikings were called depended on where they came from, and when. The Vikings from modern day Denmark were called Danes, and so was people from some parts of Norway. The Vikings from Sweden were called Svear, and the Norwegians who wasn't ruled by the Danes were called Nordmand.
      The rest of Europe collectively called us Normans. (As in the Norman dynasty)

  • @garfstiglz3981
    @garfstiglz3981 7 месяцев назад

    I absolutely enjoyed this video. It raised quite a few historic facts that I wasn't aware of.

  • @fiesehexe8133
    @fiesehexe8133 4 года назад +4

    Thank you for the great video! I enjoyed it a lot, it's very well balanced between entertaining and educational and the lengh is just perfect

  • @jacklawrence2212
    @jacklawrence2212 Год назад

    Great video, with a really warm, approachable style. Liked this a lot.

  • @nozrep
    @nozrep Год назад +39

    we have a “Goldthwaite” Texas a very small rural town and I used to work for a Cajun company called Postlethwaite. I have always wondered what language the “thwaite” originally derived from because it is such a weird word or suffix to a word or surname or whatever, even for English. Welp there you have it… Old Norse!😅 haha I always assumed like, French or something because of all the Cajuns and Louisianans I used to work for.

    • @knuthenriksommer4982
      @knuthenriksommer4982 Год назад +11

      «-tveit» (pretty much pronounced as «-thwaite») in modern Norwegian is a small land or field between other features like a forest and a hill. Earlier it meant «small piece of land of some value», especially agricultural value. The word is not known outside place-names in norwegian or old-norse. In Norway there are thousands of places called something with «-tveit» «-tvet» or «-tvedt» or even plainly called «Tvedt» or «Tveit».

    • @twiggygrl84
      @twiggygrl84 Год назад +5

      We've got a Bobcat Goldthwaite too... 😂😂😂

    • @asims1066
      @asims1066 Год назад +3

      I used to drive through Goldthwaite on the way to Brownwood from Austin a lot, and being of part German and Scandinavian decent I immediately recognized the name. I haven’t been able to find out much about its founder other than that he was a railman who was one of the heads of Santa Fe Railroad, but I presume he’s of Danish decent as you can spot some old buildings in town that feature bits of Scandinavian architecture if you know what you’re looking for

    • @dotmurphy7279
      @dotmurphy7279 Год назад

      How about that! There is a Goldthwaite St in Montgomery,Ala. I thought it was named after someone because all the streets in downtown Montgomery are named after someone.

  • @void-creature
    @void-creature Год назад +1

    I really loved *Kanyor North's* song *"Vaikings in London"*

  • @CopenhagenDreaming
    @CopenhagenDreaming Год назад +4

    You got the Angles wrong, though... They were a people from Angel, the narrow lower part of Jutland that's now the border region between Denmark and Germany (though mainly in Germany). So Anglo-Saxon is the mix of Angles and Saxons that arrived in what was to become England.
    Apart from that, I love your videos. Cute, fun. accessible little history lessons - and don't we all need those from time to time?

    • @fastertove
      @fastertove Год назад +1

      Jutes also ventured to "England". Perhaps the people were to similar to the people from Angel to mention?
      Any way, Anglo-Saxon sounds cool enough :)

  • @jacquelyndixon2788
    @jacquelyndixon2788 Год назад

    Truly had not realized how stylistically similar their goods would appear, making identification more difficult. Thank you for your clear, yet very enjoyable, insights👍

  • @tariik.h
    @tariik.h Год назад +7

    Just to clear up a misconception. Viking was a profession, not a people.

  • @michaelcherokee8906
    @michaelcherokee8906 Год назад

    Could watch and listen to you talking about things like this all day.

  • @TherealPolar-B
    @TherealPolar-B Год назад +3

    I wonder how big your team is... You're so talented. I wouldn't be surprised if it was 5 of you behind the camera. If there's anything you need help with, I'm a TFS Alumn and would love to help with any larger projects you may have.

  • @susanwilson9241
    @susanwilson9241 Год назад

    I have never been a history buff or particularly fond of England but I am very much enjoying learning about it from you.

  • @freyamckenzie5583
    @freyamckenzie5583 2 года назад +5

    I'm 'later in life!' but how I wish I went to English schools where History was so much more interesting. Our school here in NSW Australia, touched on Captain Cook, Federation and The World Wars.

  • @WhatHowWhenforWhomWhatpurpose
    @WhatHowWhenforWhomWhatpurpose Год назад +1

    As a Swedish person this is interesting in many ways. I found out new things today, Thank You!

  • @FranzBiscuit
    @FranzBiscuit Год назад +16

    The Angles came first, from Anglia round about the early-400's (when Rome was in the process of "falling"). Within a century or so, the Saxons started moving in from Germany. Hence the expression "Anglo-Saxon", a merger so to speak of two very different cultures.

    • @stefansoder6903
      @stefansoder6903 Год назад +2

      Not "very different"!

    • @FranzBiscuit
      @FranzBiscuit Год назад

      @@stefansoder6903 I guess it depends on who you ask. From what I can tell, Angles tended to be somewhat more spiritual, maybe a bit more genteel, more on the reserved side. Whereas Saxons were generally known to be the kind to be low on patience, prefer war over debate, but also highly intelligent and quite often better-educated than the "average" Angle. Those things aside, there were of course similarities, insofar as having a strong sense of honor and duty, craftsmanship, religious festivals, etc. And of course both groups were overall able to trade and interact with eachother without much warfare between them. Maybe a decent distinction would be that most ancient Angles/Danes/Swedes/Norwegians could be roughly categorized as "Norse" whereas the Saxons would fall more in line with what would later be described as "Germanic".

    • @carpediem5232
      @carpediem5232 Год назад +1

      @@FranzBiscuit "Norse" were also "Germanic" but just the northern subgroup. And Angles were basically bridging the gap between Central Germanic and North Germanic cultures. The Danes come a bit later on the scene when Britain is already being settled the Angles and Saxons. In historical writings the Danes are described as being related to the Suiones/Suetidi (Swedes).

  • @prismonthethehorizon5793
    @prismonthethehorizon5793 Год назад

    7:45 WOW lovely little pieces! I wonder what they sculpted it with? 🤔 8:58 I LOVE CHURCHES really nice that you added them!

  • @toemasmeems
    @toemasmeems 2 года назад +18

    As an American I find this fascinating. Especially the Cvnt part cause yeah I can see the jokes already 😝😂😂😂 also my dads original name before adoption was Oglethorpe so that’s cool to learn too

    • @Slim_Ch4rles
      @Slim_Ch4rles Год назад +2

      Ogie Oglethorpe? Buy ya a soda after the game?

    • @agin1519
      @agin1519 Год назад +1

      I wonder what the word is in Saxon and indeed old Norse- was it possible as a joke at the time? It was certainly in use in English as it was by the time of the Canterbury Tales…

    • @IQzminus2
      @IQzminus2 Год назад +3

      Wasn’t it spelled Cnut? Or maybe I remember it wrong.
      Its the same as the still commonly used name Knut in I believe both atleast both here in Sweden and Norway.
      It means knot, as in the ones you would tie on a rope. Like you tie a knot on your shoe laces so they don’t get undone.
      It’s a old Norse name, in the same family of sort of nature and object themed first names as Sten, meaning Stone in English. Just like you see some surnames end in Stein in some Germanic language speaking regions.
      You also have the old Norse first name Stig, which is just the common name for a trail or walking path.
      Some of the old Norse names were quite illustrative and fun.
      Knut, Sten and Stig, eh not so much.
      Here is my son, his name is, Stone.

  • @taffbanjo
    @taffbanjo Год назад +1

    Superb video - answering a lot of the questions I had...

  • @caliqm2199
    @caliqm2199 Год назад +14

    Wow,I can't believe there are records of all these Vinland Saga characters in museums.
    I'm a bit disappointed to find out I won't meet any Vikings in London,but it seems there are still a few reasons for going there.
    Very informative.

  • @lindamarshall3485
    @lindamarshall3485 10 месяцев назад

    I'm always a little astonished at how much history I learned through childhood reading for fun. "Mist Over Athelney" was a favourite - English children held as hostages by the Danes, who escape to join King Alfred! Exciting stuff, it was.

  • @camfunme
    @camfunme Год назад +3

    1:38 the four main germanic peoples who migrated to Britain were the Frisians, the Saxons, the Angles, and the Jutes. The Anglian kingdoms in Britian, of Northumbria, East Anglia, and Mercia, were conquered by the Danish vikings in the 9th C, but were later freed from the Danelaw by the Saxonic kingdoms of Essex, Sussex, and Wessex in the early 10th C. The Saxon and Anglian kingdoms married in 927, thus proving the name Anglo-Saxon.
    TLDR: the Anglo part of anglo-saxon, comes from the Angles (modern day most northen region of Germany), and is the derivation of the name England.
    P.S. the 1:49 map is way to recent, Westphalia didn't exist until 1815.

  • @marissagonzalez429
    @marissagonzalez429 Год назад

    Excellent lecture! Just finished watching the anime “Vinland” and it was great and then just saw you video. Your pacing as well as knowledge was amazing. Well done!

  • @lindsayheyes925
    @lindsayheyes925 Год назад +4

    Your videos are really interesting. I'm going to ask you to do one (but not in the East End vernacular way)... about Warwick Lane/Paternoster Square. Charles Dickens wrote that he could see the roof of the Mutton Market from the chapel in Newgate Prison. My great great grandfather was the Mutton Market Manager in the former College of Physicians (there was a cutler's there too) on the site of the Cutler's Hall. He lived in Phoenix Court, on the corner of Cheapside. He is rumoured to have had the contract to supply meat to the prison, which is ironic because he had been condemned to death at Warwick for stealing sheep (commuted to Transportation to Bermuda - to build the dockyard for the Africa Squadron to fight the slave trade - he got parole). His wife survived him and the market, living at the Warwick Arms, where she died from bronchitis (a victim of a smog) shortly before it was demolished.
    Few records remain of this market, unlike the Metropolitan Meat Market across the road in Paternoster Square. German bombs destroyed Phoenix Court.
    Anyway, these markets were one reason for the founding of the RSPCA, and cited in Parliamentary debates leading to animal protection legislation. The Mutton Market was a few yards beyond the reach of the Met Meat Market's inspectors, so it might have been particularly gruesome. And as a convict, my g-g-grandfather could never practice as a butcher across the road.
    Anyway, a topic for you to consider.

  • @calvingrondahl1011
    @calvingrondahl1011 Год назад

    JDraper you are so brilliant and fun. My grandmother Hanna immigrated to Minnesota USA from Norway during the Great War. In Norway she worked making provisions for Norway’s South Pole Expedition. Only males could go. The Brits died down there, sorry. My father fought in 3rd Army and received the Silver Star by order of General Patton for the Battle of Metz. We love you Brits.

  • @aw04tn58
    @aw04tn58 3 года назад +5

    I enjoyed this video. One thing didn't sit well: the way it's phrased, it sounds like the Saxons came to England without and conflict with the existing local people. This is not supported by the sources I've come across. I wouldn't mind the skimming over this, except the Vikings are then positioned as a violent invading force when their general settlement behaviour appears to be similar to the Saxons themselves. The perception of the Vikings as only violent raiders and Anglo-Saxons as only farming victims is a narrative that thankfully has been changing as better understanding of trade and settlement within scholarship.