The First Viking Kingdom in Frisia? | History of the Netherlands 826 - 852 AD

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  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2020
  • The Vikings are famous for their colonies in Britain and Ireland, like the Danelaw around York and of course the now capital of Ireland Dublin, not to mention Normandy in Northern France that still bears their name after its foundation by Rollo or Hrolf De Gange. But somewhere that doesn't get a lot of attention in the Viking Age is the Netherlands, known as Frisia during this time, even though they have a fascinating Viking Age History of their own from Holland to Friesland. In this video I'll be talking about the start of a Viking kingdom in Frisia with the very first benefice of the Danish King Harald Klak around Rüstringen in East Frisia, and the implications of this for how we view the identity of those living in the Netherlands of over a thousand years ago.
    This video is being made in connection with the Leeuwarden Cultural Capital 2028 Project and is part of a series on the Viking Age in the Netherlands that will be hosted here on my channel History With Hilbert.
    Music Kindly Provided By:
    Baldrs Draumar:
    www.baldrsdraumar.com/
    Danheim:
    danheimmusic.com/
    Mentioned Videos:
    The Start of the Viking Age in the Netherlands:
    • How Did the Viking Age...
    Were the Normans Viking or French?
    • How did the Vikings Be...
    Related Videos of Mine:
    Why Did the Viking Age Begin?
    • Why Did The Viking Age...
    Why Didn't The Vikings Colonise North America?
    • Why Didn't the Vikings...
    The Netherlands, Holland & The Low Countries:
    • The Netherlands, Holla...
    How to Tell Apart Dutch, Afrikaans & Frisian:
    • How to tell apart Dutc...
    What is the Frisian Heart Sumbol?
    • What is this Symbol? -...
    The History of the Vikings in England:
    • The History of the Vik...
    The Frisians in Beowulf:
    • The Frisians in Beowul...
    Why Did the Frisians Conquer Rome?
    • Why Did the Frisians C...
    Viking Age Helmets:
    • Why Do We Know So Litt...
    Further Reading:
    Online:
    Central Because Liminal: Frisia in a Viking Age North Sea World - Nelleke IJssennagger:
    www.rug.nl/research/portal/en...
    Books:
    Luit van der Tuuk - De Friezen
    Luit van der Tuuk - Noormannen in de Lage Landen
    Nelleke IJssennagger & John Hines - Frisians and their North Sea Neighbours
    Articles:
    Simon Coupland - Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: Hoards in Ninth Century Frisia
    Simon Coupland - From Poachers To Gamekeepers: Scandinavian Warlords and Carolingian Kings
    Primary Sources:
    Annals of St Bertin
    Annals of Xanten
    Annals of Fulda
    Frankish Annals
    Beowulf
    Life of St Boniface
    Go Fund My Windmills (Patreon):
    / historywithhilbert
    Dive into Discord:
    discordapp.com/invite/UMzHMtA...
    Join in the Banter on Twitter:
    / historywhilbert
    Enter the Fray on Facebook:
    / historywhilbert
    Indulge in some Instagram..?(the alliteration needs to stop):
    / historywithhilbert
    Music Used:
    Baldrs Draumar - Ferbline, Ferballe
    Baldrs Draumar - Fan Fryslans Ferline
    Baldrs Draumar - Slag By Warns
    Danheim - Heljarfor
    Danheim - War of the North
    Danheim - Folkvangr
    Other music by Mozart, Kevin MacLeod and myself.
    Send me an email if you'd be interested in doing a collaboration! historywithhilbert@gmail.com
    #Nederland #Viking #Denmark

Комментарии • 323

  • @Weda01
    @Weda01 3 года назад +53

    For the ones who are interested, here are the translations of the Dutch texts (with time stamps):
    2:12 "Many plundered riches were transported to Scandinavia, but eventually returned to the south through trade. This mainly benefited the "afflicted" Dorestad, because most of the trade between the Frankish Empire and the North ran ironically through this trading center. Northern trading places, such as Hedeby and Birka, also benefited greatly from overseas Viking activities. Even in times of great tension between Denmark and the Frankish Empire, the Frisian trade with Scandinavia continued as usual. This was not only in the interest of the Frisian merchants, but also of both the Frankish and the Danish rulers. Dorestad went down because of political decisions and not because of Viking attacks."
    10:26 "The Frisians besieged the building and discussed what should be done to them. Different people had already said different things, when a Norman who had become a Christian and lived a long time among these Frisians and was the leader of their attack, spoke to the others as follows..."

    • @abcjuniormilton
      @abcjuniormilton 3 года назад +2

      Thanks alot man, there were no subtitles to translate the Dutch

    • @NYorksElcapitan
      @NYorksElcapitan 3 года назад

      99999090000019100000000000100001110110010000010⁰00⁰00⁰1001001011000100000000000000000000000000000000200¹1020

    • @jita6866
      @jita6866 3 года назад +2

      Ey du hast ja die interfriesische Flagge als Profilbild :D

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад +1

      @@jita6866 Wenn es nur die offizielle interfriesische Flagge wäre. Dies ist zehnmal besser als die Flagge, die der Interfriesische Rat jetzt hat. (entschuldigen Sie mein schlechtes Deutsch). :)

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад +1

      @@abcjuniormilton No problem :)

  • @HistoryTime
    @HistoryTime 3 года назад +43

    Looking forward to the definitive book on early medieval Frisia you will inevitably write one day

  • @bapo224
    @bapo224 3 года назад +70

    Hey Hilbert,
    I was wondering if you'd ever consider making a video about the decline of the Frisian language.
    I find that descriptions of this phenomenon are generally pretty vague.
    The first counts of Holland/Kennemerland were Frisian, but when did this change?
    Did the Frisians living here start speaking Low-Franconian (when?) or were they fully replaced by ethnic Franks?
    What about the people of Gelre and Oversticht?
    Sorry for the long message, but thanks for reading :)

    • @theobolt250
      @theobolt250 3 года назад +3

      Good idea!

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146  3 года назад +16

      I'll look into this at some point - the answer is rather complex and not uniform in all places but it's very interesting!

    • @hansfaber8959
      @hansfaber8959 3 года назад +1

      In this post I made an effort to explain why the counts of (west) Frisia 'rebranded' themselves as Counts of Hol(d)land: www.frisiacoasttrail.com/post/2019/05/12/the-united-frisian-emirates-and-black-peat

    • @draphotube4315
      @draphotube4315 2 года назад +1

      @@hansfaber8959 Nice, read it through, wished the Netherlands (Frisia) still held on to Ostfriesland and Nordfriesland

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 3 года назад +55

    I keep learning more about Dutch history, you’re such a great educator

    • @Veriox22
      @Veriox22 3 года назад +6

      Yes lord kim he is a good teacher and you are an even better ruler

    • @nvwest
      @nvwest 3 года назад

      Better mic than Joost van Oort

    • @szlonkobusjbusj3819
      @szlonkobusjbusj3819 3 года назад

      Rüstringen and East Frisia are in Germany

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146  3 года назад +4

      Thank you very much! Glad you've been enjoying it!

    • @MindfulMilitant
      @MindfulMilitant 3 года назад +4

      How's your sister ?

  • @mrFriisman
    @mrFriisman 3 года назад +54

    I’m a Norwegian and my last name is Friis. I’ve read that it means "a person from Frisia". Got to check out my family tree!

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад +11

      I have searched a little bit for you and used your last name and narrowed it down to the Netherlands, it just happens to be that your last name isn't that common in the Netherlands so it was pretty easy to filter out. If you narrow it down to Friesland (Frisia) you will end up with 12 results from around the 15th and 16th century, and most of those 12 results are about the same family. And it happens to be that 3 of those 12 results show that they (at least these 3 people) moved to Bergen and Holmegard in Norway, so i would advice you to begin your search there and see if your ancestral lineage matches.
      Here are the links to the 3 persons i talked about:
      gw.geneanet.org/moemunthe?n=didrichsen+friis&oc=1&p=ulfart
      gw.geneanet.org/moemunthe?n=giertse+friis+14&oc=&p=didrich+ulfartson
      gw.geneanet.org/moemunthe?n=friis&oc=&p=nn+ulfartsdatter
      P.S: If you want to research more on this site i would advice you to make an account because this site will only show you limited data without an account, to make an account is completely free so that wouldn't be much of an issue.

    • @TheBarser
      @TheBarser 3 года назад +9

      Friis is very common in Denmark aswel. Dont know if it has anything to do with frisia

    • @TheBarser
      @TheBarser 3 года назад +3

      Now I had to google it: *Friis is a name of Danish origin, meaning Frisian person*. So yeah that is what it means

    • @BernardBakker
      @BernardBakker 3 года назад +11

      Weda Aesir Friis is indeed a very uncommon last name in the Netherlands. However, the Dutch surname ‘de Vries’ meaning, ‘Frisian’ is the third most common surname in the country.... BTW Friis and Vries are pronounced the same...

    • @moodyboobsjanna
      @moodyboobsjanna 3 года назад +3

      @@Weda01 that is amazing! You seem very versed in this type of research. I have just started my ancestry journey as well and I have been able to trace my grandmother's family back to the 1500s on many branches and they're all from Friesland. My grandfather is very dutch but they are from the Rotterdam area, also very far back. The genes are strong on my mothers side!

  • @larson0014
    @larson0014 3 года назад +95

    Always flexing his language skills

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146  3 года назад +15

      You know me 😜

    • @aidanb9671
      @aidanb9671 3 года назад +4

      @@historywithhilbert146 are you from Friesland

    • @monakeulen5622
      @monakeulen5622 Год назад

      I envie him so much for it! It all sounds so beautiful! I wish I was that connected to my Frisian roots as he is.

    • @Seven71987
      @Seven71987 Год назад

      @@historywithhilbert146 DÁ DÜTCH NÖRSEMEN CAMETH FRÖM FRIESLAND!

    • @ludouvandermeulen7033
      @ludouvandermeulen7033 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@monakeulen5622i speak frisian since its my mother language and im firisna and live here but to me it sounds so weirddr

  • @TdeSaint
    @TdeSaint 3 года назад +4

    I have to say, as a long time follower of your channel I cannot stress enough the amount of joy I feel for you finally discussing this topic at length in your videos. The announcement at the end, for a separate video about Rorik almost made me "HOERA!" out loud.
    Hartelijk dank!

  • @RaimoKangasniemi
    @RaimoKangasniemi 3 года назад +22

    Could we get a look at the very obscure period of Viking rule over Brittany for a few decades, until around 935, at some point in the future?

  • @johan8969
    @johan8969 3 года назад +12

    Your hypothesis surrounding the Frisian element in the Danish invasion of England is very interesting and has only cropped up a very few times, but is one I am almost certain occurred. Not only would it help explain the size of the force mustered, but given how close the danish benefices still were to the danish kings, it is very unlikely that they wouldnt be invited to take part in such an invasion. And as other people have mentioned, the seaways were much quicker back then so for a danish king operating in Ribe or Lejre, communication with Frisia would have been easier than say, communication with the Svea in Uppland who were more often than not their rivals. Maybe it wasnt more than 20 longships, but it help to show that by the time of the English invasion, the scandinavian kingdoms had already begun their expansion (same with Norway who had established themselves on Orkney).
    PS you forgot to add subtitles. The auto generated subs talk about car watermelons.

    • @hansfaber8959
      @hansfaber8959 3 года назад

      Joahn, here a bit more on as to why 'the Frisian element' ended up in England: www.frisiacoasttrail.com/post/2018/12/25/untitled

    • @-RXB-
      @-RXB- Год назад

      Car watermelons lol

    • @KootFloris
      @KootFloris 27 дней назад

      I heard the Dutch have most overlap in DNA with the Danes and English, and not, as I thought, the Germans. This story strengthens that new information.

  • @markncl100
    @markncl100 3 года назад +6

    History with the hottie!
    I so enjoy your videos Hilbert. They are always so well researched and professionally presented.

  • @BellumCarroll
    @BellumCarroll 3 года назад +46

    We always mispronounce that viking guys name in Australia. He gets referred to every other sentence.

    • @bapo224
      @bapo224 3 года назад +17

      Yeah pretty strange how Knut is so popular down there.

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146  3 года назад +13

      Amazing 😂😂

  • @lyninthelowlands
    @lyninthelowlands 3 года назад

    Great video as always!

  • @Kyasurin
    @Kyasurin Год назад +4

    Thanks for uploading these videos as I never new much about this history before. When I did my 23andMe I found out that I largely have Dutch background which isn’t surprising especially as my dad was born there but I have about 14% Scandinavian. My surname is Jagt which is found more in The Netherlands but it’s the Danish spelling for the word “hunt”.

    • @Luukupuuk
      @Luukupuuk Год назад

      in dutch, the verb "jagen" means "to hunt" wheras the english "the hunt" translates into dutch as "de jacht". (jagt & jacht are pronounced the same).

  • @brendtarons5796
    @brendtarons5796 3 года назад +9

    Heel interessant! Ik ben Nederlands maar woon in Zweden en me grootvader is fries, ik ben ook in en Viking reenactment groep dus ik vind het heel interessant dat mijn interesse en geschiedenis zo samen komen! (Mijn Nederlands is niet de beste, ik heb het nooit in school gehad...)

    • @marcobreur.
      @marcobreur. 3 года назад

      Heel goed ( maar "op" school, nooit op school gehad)

    • @brendtarons5796
      @brendtarons5796 3 года назад +1

      @@marcobreur. bedankt voor je hulp, ik twijfelde al en beetje daar over.

    • @giulianomeyer3119
      @giulianomeyer3119 11 месяцев назад

      Zelf beheersen nederlanders hun eigen taal slecht en leren ze het buitenlanders verkeerd aan. 😂 Over heel de wereld is het grammaticaal " in school" en "op de schoolbanken". Omdat het voorzetsel anders zou verwijzen dat de kinderen letterlijk op het dak van een schoolgebouw zitten en leerlingen vastgenageld zouden zijn tussen de houtplanken van een schoolbank. Dus ergens op een gegeven moment zou in(niet op) een onderwijs instelling een rancuneuze docent(e) hebben besloten dat iemand vandaag geen 10 zou krijgen voor zijn examen bijvoorbeeld. Zo typisch nederlands , kan nederlands zijn 😂. Beter een Fries dan een Hollander .... ik kan het weten, ben zelf Hollander.

  • @ladyliberty417
    @ladyliberty417 3 года назад +3

    Thank you Hilbert, love learning new things about Viking age history always!
    Look forward to more✌🏼🥰

  • @maximilianolimamoreira5002
    @maximilianolimamoreira5002 3 года назад +22

    did someone say:the Netherlands?hit the Willhelmus player🇳🇱

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146  3 года назад +4

      I feel like this would be a long series if I did each time

    • @maximilianolimamoreira5002
      @maximilianolimamoreira5002 3 года назад +1

      @@historywithhilbert146 yeah,right,keep your good work,Hilbert,I'm happy to see such a youtuber worth his salt,like you,you honor the community.

    • @GundamReviver
      @GundamReviver 3 года назад +1

      Honestly, our national anthem is shit, we need a new one.

  • @AbsSolut
    @AbsSolut 3 года назад

    Hi from Denmark,, love this stuff you make, keep'm up

  • @banaan123ful
    @banaan123ful 3 года назад +1

    More of this please !!!

  • @ManiacMVK
    @ManiacMVK 3 года назад

    Realy interesting Channel!

  • @MIGFSF
    @MIGFSF 3 года назад

    Hello. Would it be possible for you to provide a link to your dissertation? I would like very much to read it as bibliography for the writing of my own dissertation.

  • @Dallascowboy666
    @Dallascowboy666 3 года назад

    Fantastic as ever 👍🏼

  • @theobolt250
    @theobolt250 3 года назад +11

    The second wife of Heinrich der Finkler, more or less the first German king who broke off of the Frankish empire, was of Frysian-Danish nobility! The marriage was also a political move to gain local support.

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146  3 года назад

      I did not know that but I'll look into it!

    • @theobolt250
      @theobolt250 3 года назад

      @@historywithhilbert146 The church annex monastery in Quedlinburgh was build by Henry for her. She is from mother's side of danish-fridian decend. You csn look it up on wikipedia no less! Mabey worth delving into. Msrriages were always (at least for a greater part) political. A wife with such roots was someone who was locally important. He chose her over some or other rich princess from Francia, Wessex or "Italy". That says a thing or two over Henry's political playing field. Anyway, he appeased the danish nobility? Like, that Henry guy doesn't get in our hair? I'm very curious if this can be a worthwhile venue of historical interest.

  • @patrickaalfs9584
    @patrickaalfs9584 3 года назад

    @HistoryWithHilbert. Just wondering. During one of your videos, I thought I detected a Dialect other than the Queen's English. To the ear of a UK resident, do you speak with a detectable European dialect? My philistine midwestern US ear doesn't provide me with the most reliable metric for distinguishing the difference.

  • @redgrassgirl
    @redgrassgirl 3 года назад +8

    Ahh I remember that viking kingdom, oh the good old days

  • @TheEudaemonicPlague
    @TheEudaemonicPlague 3 года назад +2

    As I understand it, many East Frisians came to Illinois in the nineteenth century, including part of my family. I didn't learn that my grandmother was actually of East Frisian descent until after she'd died, so I never got a chance to ask her about it. I need to dig in, so I can learn a few things about it before I die.

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад +1

      It isn't much, but i thought maybe the following battle would be an interesting read for you that takes place in East Frisia.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Norditi

  • @pauld9542
    @pauld9542 3 года назад +1

    I'm a third generation American with a Friesian surname and great grandparents from Friesland. Ancestry DNA came back as 9% Norwegian 48% Germanic & 43% British. I have no known
    paternal or maternal relatives other than Dutch so I found the DNA analysis very surprising and interesting. Love your history lessons Hibert. Keep up the good work you do for us in the USA who have very little knowledge of European history before WW1!

    • @1RikAtiC1
      @1RikAtiC1 Год назад

      Maybe in the future they will be able to pin down dutch DNA better , but for now , there is no such thing as dutch DNA . Its just to mixed for to long . Im dutch , dutch parents , dutch grand parents etc, , but if you look at my dna , you can find the whole of europe in it. Irish Italianen spanish , french, scandinavian , polish etc

    • @pauld9542
      @pauld9542 7 месяцев назад

      DNA Update: 94% Northern Netherlands, 6% Norwegian

  • @florisdebont3867
    @florisdebont3867 3 года назад +5

    Just a fan of viking stuff and dutch so this video is perfect

  • @TheEve1968
    @TheEve1968 3 года назад +4

    Very interesting. Heel interessant. Ik woon in Utrecht vlakbij wijk bij duurstede. Mijn man is niet fries maar het is grappig te zien dat hij is bijna half scandinavian in zijn DNA. Hij is geboren in Rotterdam. En bij MyTrueAncestry, wij hebben gezien dat hij heeft veel roots in Denmark. Ik ook trouwens onder andere.

  • @jessebosch6732
    @jessebosch6732 3 года назад +2

    Oh ja, ik ben eigenlijk wel geïnteresseerd wat de data van jouw kanaal is. Ik denk dat er vrij veel Nederlanders kijken, maar dat weet ik niet zeker. Misschien is het een video idee om die info te laten zien? Mij lijkt het me best interessant.

  • @jessebosch6732
    @jessebosch6732 3 года назад

    Dit is wat ik nodig had

  • @71kimg
    @71kimg 3 года назад +3

    Nordern Frisia is just next to denmark - i don’t think there was a time without interactions and mutual immigrantions. The amount and size of Viking-fleets going past Frisia - would de-facto demand frisians towns/leaders to have a lot in common with the Vikings (or else to be enslaved/submitted)

  • @vonhummie
    @vonhummie 3 года назад +1

    Cudos on your Dutch!
    I'm Dutch myself and I've never heard a non Dutchie speak it so well :)

  • @stefke5862
    @stefke5862 Год назад +1

    I like to hear about this part of history! I’m Dutch but Never heard about the Frisian and Viking history here in school only of Charlemagne and what ‘good’ he did. I wonder when the larger part of Frisia became the Netherlands or holland?

  • @daviddickey9182
    @daviddickey9182 3 года назад

    Hilbert could you please make an episode or two on the Continental/Old Saxons and their war with Charlemagne and their position afterward during the Viking age?

  • @fard6703
    @fard6703 5 месяцев назад +1

    As a direct descendant of the Frisian dux Ubba, I love these videos!

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 5 месяцев назад

      As far as i know there isn't any historical documentation that Ubba had any children. Which sources did you use to find out that he did?

    • @fard6703
      @fard6703 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Weda01 He had two, they were known for their cruelty and were born in Ireland since he got frisky with an Irish woman while raising his navy to invade York. This was during the 4-year period when he disappeared so only Irish sources corroborate as nobody knew he survived.

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 5 месяцев назад

      @@fard6703 Do you know any good Irish sources so i can read about it? I descent from the house of Munso (the house Björn Jarnsida supposedly started) so i have a particular interest in the documented history of the brothers outside of the Sagas.

    • @xaviervisa571
      @xaviervisa571 4 месяца назад

      ​@@Weda01 Bjorn and Ubba? Are you talking about Ragnar Lodbrok's sons? Sorry, l am from Barcelona, l have interest about the Vikings since youth but without a real kwoledge about them. A few of them were riding in the catalan coast, and there is one name from that period wich comes from those scandinavian riders: Rahola. l know 3 brothers with that name, and two of them they look absolutly scandinavian. So rare. After more than a thousand years It is really strange. Maybe a few Vikings settled down at the north coast of that area.

  • @stepheng9607
    @stepheng9607 3 года назад +6

    Many thanks. By the way there is a Frisian flag flying proudly on Aberystwyth promenade

  • @RuiFeio90
    @RuiFeio90 2 года назад

    When is the episode on Rorik coming? :)

  • @eddys.3524
    @eddys.3524 3 года назад

    I love the parts in Frisian.... great!

  • @egbertmodderman
    @egbertmodderman 3 года назад

    Briljant filmpje, thanks ! ( je accent is wel moeilijk te plaatsen, alsof je een Nederlandse Fries bent die de laatste 20 jaar in de uk heeft gewoond )

  • @Utgardaloki76
    @Utgardaloki76 3 года назад +7

    From runestone U 379, Sigtuna - Sweden
    Frísa gildaʀ létu ræisa stæin þennsa æftiʀ Þōr[kel, gild]a sinn. Guð hialpi ǫnd hans. Þōrbiorn risti.
    "The guild-brothers of (the) Frisians had this stone raised in memory of Thorkell, their guild-brother. God help his spirit. Thorbjorn carved (the runes)."

    • @Utgardaloki76
      @Utgardaloki76 3 года назад +1

      @Joakim von Anka Exact year is unknown. The language points to years ca. 950-1050 AD. The stone is from Sigtuna which became an important merchant site during this period. Guilds were all about craftsmen and merchants and organised trade.

  • @digitalbrentable
    @digitalbrentable 3 года назад +11

    ah ha ha, finally learning Dutch has paid off for something

    • @axisboss1654
      @axisboss1654 3 года назад +1

      Knowing German helps a lot as I can understand some of it however not all of it

  • @caseyjones6677
    @caseyjones6677 3 года назад +2

    Yessss finally, redbad would be proud!

  • @chrisbovington9607
    @chrisbovington9607 3 года назад

    Your reliance on RUclips's auto-generated captions is hilariously optimistic.

  • @BMDHB
    @BMDHB 3 года назад +2

    Vikings made new ships from the Oaktrees from the place that is now named: Ekeren, first name-notation was in 1155: Hecerna

  • @blauth
    @blauth 3 года назад

    subtitles weren't working :(

  • @Gaston4760
    @Gaston4760 3 года назад +1

    love to hear about my country's vikings 🇩🇰 😅

  • @elgranlugus7267
    @elgranlugus7267 3 года назад +4

    Frisian boys getting more love!

  • @mariepindstruplinde1671
    @mariepindstruplinde1671 3 года назад +1

    As a Scandinavian I got the gist of the Frisian (?) texts.
    I have always wondered about why it is possible for Scandinavians and the Dutch to understand each other's languages, especially when you are reading.

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад +3

      The texts he read were modern Dutch, not Frisian. I don't think it was to difficult to communicate back in the day because we used more or less a similair runic script at the time, Futhorc for the Frisians and English and Younger Futhark in Scandinavia. Futhorc was pretty much the Elder Futhark with some extra runes while the Younger Futhark was just a shortened version of the Elder Futhark.

    • @syntaxerror8955
      @syntaxerror8955 3 года назад

      All Germanic languages stem from the language of Germanic (having once spread from southern Scandinavia), so I'm personally not sure what there is to wonder about. The kind of local coastal German that I encountered at a place in northern Germany is amazingly close to Swedish (althought the standard "high" German is less so). It's either simply our common Germanic heritage, but perhaps more likely also mixed with people visiting and settling back and forth as well.

    • @HYDROCARBON_XD
      @HYDROCARBON_XD Год назад

      @@syntaxerror8955also northern Germany,the original urheimat was also present in northern Germany and Jutland peninsula

  • @marka7759
    @marka7759 Год назад

    do we have any evidence for how the armor/weapons of the fisians looked like - especially in the viking & early normanic times? In what did they differ?

  • @landrecce
    @landrecce 3 месяца назад

    I know this sounds crazy, but I am Rodulf Haraldsson reincarnated. I didn't even know that the Vikings were in the Netherlands but I did know more about the Vikings than most just from my interest in History. I saw my clothes, my hands, my chest, my face, and I saw the people in my life. I can fill in the blanks in the story, and there is a strong indication that Ubba was me (Rodulf) and not a son of Ragnar as told in the TV series.

  • @joshb5742
    @joshb5742 Год назад

    Goeie dag Hilbert, I was wandering if you know anything about the people of Drenthe? Because I was born in Hoogeveen and grew up in Meppel but we never got taught much about our early history. And online resources seem to have failed me. Would you be able to send me in the right direction?
    All the best from New Zealand,
    Cheers,
    Joshua

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 Год назад

      There isn't much known about the early history of Drenthe because the area has throughout history almost always been very sparsely populated. Supposedly the name comes from the Germanic Thrihanti tribe. The Thrihanti as far as i know is never mentioned in any Roman scripture, but historians believe it existed because the area of Drenthe is first called in literature by the name of Pago Threant in the Charter of Theodgrim that dates back to the year 820.

  • @strontboer2695
    @strontboer2695 3 года назад

    Hey Hilbert heb je ook informatie over andere Germaanse stammen dan de Friesen. Misschien de Franken Saksen of een andere stam waar ik nooit van gehoord heb. dit is alleen leuk als je een Fries bent.

  • @Hispandinavian
    @Hispandinavian 3 года назад +1

    Friesland is a beautiful area, especially Leeuwarden.

  • @0MVR_0
    @0MVR_0 3 года назад +1

    1:54 A few details concerning the image would be appreciated.
    The repeated sacking could be an indication of the subsistent wealth of the low countries well before the ubiquity of the mill.
    The doomsday book records that England had six thousand watermills in ten eighty six. Before the invention of the fix [and later post that swung against the wind] structure, the watermills were the only way to automate an industrial [flour/stone grinding] or domestic [clothes cleaning] process.

  • @dasauge8446
    @dasauge8446 3 года назад +10

    Geweldich ûnderwerp! Mear Fryske skiednis. Myn Ingelsk is net sa goed, mar ik bin der wis fan dat jo dit sille begripe! Ik soe bliid wêze oer in fideo oer de Friezen yn Seelân. ;-)

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146  3 года назад +1

      Tige dank!

    • @jimvandeven9732
      @jimvandeven9732 3 года назад

      Leren jullie normaal Nederlands

    • @vnixned2
      @vnixned2 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@jimvandeven9732Fries is geen Nederlands dialect, het is een eigen taal met wettelijk beschermde status in Nederland. Ik spreek ook geen Fries, maar dat betekend niet dat ik direct ga miepen over mensen die Fries spreken.

    • @simontenkate9601
      @simontenkate9601 6 месяцев назад

      @@vnixned2 dank je wel. Dankewol!

  • @natekirk18
    @natekirk18 3 года назад

    My mothers side were definitley originally Norman as the name Kirkja, is an old translation of the name as well as geneaological records. My fathers side is anglo saxon had a norman but the first record of Popham (My direct male descendents) was in the town in hampshire. while my maternal grandfathers maternal side Marcum (Originally Markham) Came over from normandy to england in the 1000's. I'm american. All my ancestors came to the U.S. and canada from mainly the british isles. before 1800.

  • @TroyDowVanZandt
    @TroyDowVanZandt 3 года назад

    Hmmm. I came across a paper recently that maintains that medieval Rustringen Frisian was a very "pure" form of the language in that it had few loan words. This contention militates against outside linguistic influence.

  • @ericvandijk6515
    @ericvandijk6515 Год назад

    How does Radbod fits in in this period?

  • @PrinceOfOrange1
    @PrinceOfOrange1 11 месяцев назад

    Goede video

  • @KootFloris
    @KootFloris 27 дней назад

    I heard the Dutch have most overlap in DNA with the Danes and English, and not, as I thought, the Germans. This story strengthens that new information.

  • @chrisnewbury3793
    @chrisnewbury3793 2 года назад

    Well I haven't seen it mentioned in the comments yet, which is amazing, but you need to study "The Oera Linda".

  • @karpi470
    @karpi470 3 года назад

    Thanks to speaking German (and using google translate for some words), I was more or less able to get the dutch part.

  • @veronicaevans8134
    @veronicaevans8134 3 года назад +4

    Has anyone had the chance to watch "The Warlord". 1964 Charlton Heston medeval epic featuring Freisian raiders on Northern France cica 10 century.Fairly Historicaly accurate.

    • @otsoko66
      @otsoko66 3 года назад

      except for the central plot point of droit du seigneur / jus primae noctis , which wasn't a real thing.

  • @olaf6987
    @olaf6987 3 года назад

    What do you think about Thorgrim Titlestads perspective on the Viking Age? (Likely the foremost Viking Age historian in Norway).
    That it was a reaction in the form of defensive assymetrical warfare against Frankish and Christian aggression and expansion.

  • @eriontolaj4173
    @eriontolaj4173 3 года назад

    Im somewhat really interested on medieval ages, i don’t know why but maybe on my past life i lived during these times. Does anyone feel like me?

  • @williamfluit6198
    @williamfluit6198 3 года назад +16

    LEGOS: the reason Dorestad was rebuilt so quickly, in time for next Viking raid.

    • @vanefreja86
      @vanefreja86 3 года назад +1

      Ha! ;) :) :P

    • @digitalbrentable
      @digitalbrentable 3 года назад +3

      The first passage in Dutch seemed to argue that when Vikings did raid Dorestad, the plundered wealth simply made its way back through Dorestad anyway, as it was the central trade hub between Scandinavia and the Franks. So they very well could have been rebounding from these sackings pretty quickly as wealth continued to flow between raids.

    • @npgibson69
      @npgibson69 3 года назад

      Viking raid humbug. They were IKEA delivery raiders.

  • @michaelchen8643
    @michaelchen8643 3 года назад +2

    At 11:30 I see a historical comment document it looks like to be modern Dutch no I don’t have a command of modern touch language nor modern Freesian but I can tell the difference and I’ve actually seen old Frisian
    Has this historical statement been translated into Dodge for the purpose of this is of dramatic presentation on this video

  • @Fenniks-
    @Fenniks- 3 года назад +8

    The viking age truly was the golden age of Denmark

    • @Fenniks-
      @Fenniks- 3 года назад

      @Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicolvocanoconiosis by that logic Spain, Great Britain, France and Portugal never had a golden age either because some of them also left for the colonies. so your point dosent make any sense besides the north sea empire saw Denmark control England, Norway and parts of Sweden quiet a remarkable feat for such a small country.

    • @Fenniks-
      @Fenniks- 3 года назад

      @Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicolvocanoconiosis ahh In that case sorry lol i misunderstood you xD

  • @hudsonhornet6558
    @hudsonhornet6558 Месяц назад

    My grandfather who immigration record wise he’s roughly 3/4 Dutch and 1/4 Swiss but after taking a dna test he was 30 percent Scandinavian mostly Danish

  • @emanovska
    @emanovska 2 года назад

    I'd like to buy a vowel please

  • @mahakalabhairava9950
    @mahakalabhairava9950 3 года назад +13

    The Belgians, the southern neighbour of the Netherlands, have almost no Viking influence whatsoever.

    • @theobolt250
      @theobolt250 3 года назад +5

      Oops, very wrong. Flanders went through a similar development as Frisia. The result was a powerful nearly independant earldom after the Viking period!

    • @mahakalabhairava9950
      @mahakalabhairava9950 3 года назад

      @@theobolt250 Belgians don't show any influence in their DNA because at the time their ancestors didn't live there yet.

    • @mahakalabhairava9950
      @mahakalabhairava9950 3 года назад +3

      @Cathalyne Batavian They do. Dutch speaking Belgians are NOT half Dutch.

    • @mahakalabhairava9950
      @mahakalabhairava9950 3 года назад +1

      @@theobolt250 We are talking about. 800's, not 1800's.

    • @lelgie601
      @lelgie601 3 года назад

      @Cathalyne Batavian seethe

  • @marinusvisser1338
    @marinusvisser1338 3 года назад

    👍 👍

  • @lordDenis16
    @lordDenis16 3 года назад +1

    Dude, your transitions are so bad, but your content is sooo good.

  • @Kyranio
    @Kyranio 3 года назад +1

    It's cool to learn more about the long history of my province, I wish every Dutch person that sees this province as a lost cause with no reason for its own language, would knew as to why and how long before the Netherlands was even a country, it was all Magna Frisia!
    Honestly, I wish some entertainment producer would pick up these pieces of Frisian history and turn it into something like a television show, I'd definitely watch that!

  • @shaiaheyes2c41
    @shaiaheyes2c41 3 года назад

    In 1940 German soldiers were thought how to interact with Norwegians whom were described as very similar to the Frisian farmers.

  • @suzettehenderson9278
    @suzettehenderson9278 3 года назад

    You left out the Scott-Scandinavian blend.

  • @backinblack1982
    @backinblack1982 3 года назад

    Is anyone familiar with the surname Roorda? I've traced the name back to the 8th Century in Frisia. I wonder if there is a Danish connection since it falls right into this timeline.

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад +2

      As far as we know, the name does not have a Danish connection but is derived from an Old-Frisian name. A Genealogy research that was done back in 1981 said the following about it:
      "There is still something to say about the origin and meaning of the name. Roorda is a patronymic: the genitive form on -a of a first name Roord. So Roorda is the son of Roord. Roord goes back to the first name Roward or Rowerd. Older form one is again Rodward, Hrodward (the o is long). The last word consists of hrod (fame, fame, renown) and true / (protector, keeper). So Hrodward will have meant the famous or renowned protector."
      I can't link you the source since it is a PDF file ( just Google the following if you want to read the PDF file: "Hrodward Oudfries". You can find the text i pasted above on page 48 written in Dutch of that PDF file.)

    • @backinblack1982
      @backinblack1982 3 года назад +1

      @@Weda01 I can't tell you how much I appreciate this information, thank you so much! Being able to learn these things about an ancestor is incredible

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад

      @@backinblack1982 You're welcome :)

  • @KrugerrandFarms
    @KrugerrandFarms 3 года назад +1

    Ja Ik ben vries maar ik ben geen stievkop! I always felt that Fries was the bridge between old English and old German. Wat denk je?

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад

      I doubt it, Old High German was a Old Franconian dialect just like Old-Dutch. Frisian and English originated from the same language branch called Anglo-Frisian.

    • @KrugerrandFarms
      @KrugerrandFarms 3 года назад +1

      @@Weda01 Aha! and this is why the old English makes such sense and sounds familiar

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад

      @@KrugerrandFarms Yep, it is still relatively easy to understand and read Old-English.

    • @KrugerrandFarms
      @KrugerrandFarms 3 года назад

      @@Weda01 Several years ago I did business in Sweden. The Swedes told me I would never learn to speak scandinavian but on the return trip I started to read their tech literature and when I figured out the differences I could figure out what was the same. Lo and behold I could understand enough to get by. My parents spoke vries in the home as a form of code but I studied 't nederland's at Calvin College for three years. Enough to claim a minor in it. My family name is Andela.

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад

      @@KrugerrandFarms I cant speak for Swedish and Norwegian, but i had the same experience with Danish. I have been to Denmark a couple of times and without knowing the language it was surprisingly easy to follow most conversations, there are still many words i don't understand of course but by summarizing sentences it was easy enough to follow most of a conversation which i thought was pretty cool. Just goes to show that after all this time the Germanic languages still have simmilarities.

  • @wilfredrivera6521
    @wilfredrivera6521 2 года назад

    SHOW OFF!!! Speaking such a beautiful language

  • @diegoragot655
    @diegoragot655 3 года назад

    Would you talk about Kvenland??

  • @Harekiet
    @Harekiet 3 года назад +5

    Frysk bloed tsjoch op!

  • @aldosigmann419
    @aldosigmann419 Год назад +1

    Frisian here...DNA sez i'm 34% Scandinavian....

  • @HS-su3cf
    @HS-su3cf 3 года назад +2

    "The freezing ballet sprinkle metal car watermelon"?

    • @IvoTichelaar
      @IvoTichelaar 3 года назад +1

      Person woman man camera TV. OMELET DU FROMAGE!

  • @jesse8737
    @jesse8737 2 года назад +1

    Is it true Zeeland has significant Viking history?

    • @chrisnewbury3793
      @chrisnewbury3793 2 года назад +1

      Zeelanders are mentioned in the Frisian Bible aka "The Oera Linda".

  • @AdriLeemput
    @AdriLeemput 3 года назад

    In Flanders we say "klak" to mean "pet"

  • @Depipro
    @Depipro 3 года назад +1

    "Frisodanes" rather than "Danofrisians" would seem to be correct, as "Diepfriesdenen" sounds a lot better than "Diepdeenfriezen".
    (Note: "Diepfries" could be used as a derogatory term, but I was thinking of a Frisian I met who happily used it on himself.)

    • @GundamReviver
      @GundamReviver 3 года назад

      Judging by a mate of mine that wears short trousers till mid winter, diepfriessen is honestly not that far off some of them.

    • @prankster1590
      @prankster1590 3 года назад

      Diepvries is a frozen meal in dutch. Diepvriesdeen is a frozen dane dish for in the fridge.

    • @Depipro
      @Depipro 3 года назад

      @@prankster1590 Indeed, and "Diepfries" is a pun on "Diepvries", alluding to the stereotype of people from the North of the country (in this case Frisians, but the stereotype exists about Grunnigers too) as being unemotional and lacking empathy. So when a Frisian uses the term himself, it becomes a reappropriation, or "Geuzennaam" as we say in Dutch.

  • @Martel33
    @Martel33 3 года назад

    Harald Klak is my great ×33 grand father

  • @Guardias
    @Guardias 3 года назад +1

    Well captions did more harm than good while you spoke English and completely gave up when you stopped.

  • @adolfgaming1761
    @adolfgaming1761 3 года назад

    Frisia Magna!

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 3 года назад +6

    "But for the future of a certain nation"
    *Wilhelmus van Nassouwe ben ik van Duitsen bloed*

    • @dasauge8446
      @dasauge8446 3 года назад

      Ik bin in Fries út it Fryske bloed Nederlân heart histoarysk ta 70% fan de Friezen!

    • @simontenkate9601
      @simontenkate9601 6 месяцев назад

      Ja, Wilhelm(us) was van Duitsen bloed, logisch, hij kwam uit Duitsland.
      Dat betekent niet dat degenen die het Wilhelmus zingen, Duits zijn.

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 3 года назад

    My mother had an uncle that researched the roots of her family (nobility). He came to exactly this conclusion that they came from Birka and settled in Dorestad (probably for a woman??). He came to that conclusion around 1975-1980. I have never asked, because I don't bear her name. The subject was jokingly raised once again when the family found out that the ships bringing possessions of the family founder from Birka to Dorestad, fell vicitim to the Danish king's pirates. The family decided that the worth nowadays would be 6 billion Euro. They send a letter to the Danish king asking him for the money (it was a joke!!). They got a reply that it was now too long ago to have any juridical consequences. Duh... No sense of humor, those Danish civil-servants.

  • @kevinlawler2571
    @kevinlawler2571 2 года назад

    This actually pertains to me genetically I believe.. from my research my fathers mothers people came from this area and (Frisia) and and my dna rest has shown as I suspected I have Danish ancestors..

    • @chrisnewbury3793
      @chrisnewbury3793 2 года назад

      They were the most intrepid people at the time, so most likely we all have a little Frisian in our blood ;)

  • @strontboer2695
    @strontboer2695 3 года назад

    (over de Friese taal ik vindt het een dialect met een woordenboek, het lijkt veel op andere dialecten zoals Limburgs en Nedersaksisch/plattdeutsch in mijn ogen is het een stukje oudnederlands)

  • @arne.munther
    @arne.munther 3 года назад

    The part where you speak Dutch is not translated. You might need to supply your own transcripts.

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад

      He pinned the translation i made in the comment section, so if you are still interested you can read that :)

  • @landrecce
    @landrecce 3 месяца назад

    If the items found there way back south, then it is feasible that they raids were actually funding by Franks using mercenaries. Never underestimate the potential for trickery, especially whenever the Christian Romans are concerned!

  • @StorchUSA1
    @StorchUSA1 3 года назад

    My ancestor was Popo Of Friesland, he was the last King of the Frisians

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад

      But as far as i know of (i could be wrong of course), there are no proven descendants from Popo but only hypothetical ones.

    • @StorchUSA1
      @StorchUSA1 3 года назад

      @@Weda01 I know Redbad is who they cant figure out his descendants, they think Popo was his son as he took the thrown after Redbad passed

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад

      @@StorchUSA1 True, there are only hypotheses of who the descendants of Redbad might be, a popular one being the old counts of Holland and the Bishop Radboud, but there doesn't exist specific proof that can backup the hypotheses. The same story goes for Popo, there are existing hypotheses of who his descendants could be but there is no specific proof that can back it up.

  • @jita6866
    @jita6866 3 года назад

    11:31 does it mean the frisians were christians at this time? I tought they had nordic/germanic gods and later became christians because of the franks? 🧐

    • @Weda01
      @Weda01 3 года назад

      Conversion to Christianity happened over a period of time (it happened in stages) which began in the second half of the 7th century and lasted until the 11th century. Also keep in mind that the Viking age happened later than the Frankish occupation of Frisia.

  • @mikkelcoollinan9285
    @mikkelcoollinan9285 3 года назад

    I'm Danish, when I went to Holland, I was surprised how much dutch people look like danes, much more than germans and britons.

    • @C.A.P.9
      @C.A.P.9 3 года назад

      I have the same when I moved to Sweden. Really similair.

    • @mikkelcoollinan9285
      @mikkelcoollinan9285 3 года назад +1

      @Joakim von Anka The other way around. Skåne is almost Danish.
      But you can keep Malmö, it looks more and more like Aleppo.

    • @C.A.P.9
      @C.A.P.9 3 года назад

      @@mikkelcoollinan9285 Yes Malmö is a shit place. I will never set my foot there 🤣

    • @mikkelcoollinan9285
      @mikkelcoollinan9285 3 года назад +1

      @Joakim von Anka
      Denmark ruled both Sweden, Norway, Iceland and parts of Germany and England.
      So I don't think Denmark is reserve.
      All Scandinavian countries even copied our flag.
      Fjällapa

    • @simontenkate9601
      @simontenkate9601 6 месяцев назад

      @@mikkelcoollinan9285 Maleppo?

  • @veronicalogotheti5416
    @veronicalogotheti5416 3 года назад

    That is why julio cesar is germanico

  • @larsmunch4536
    @larsmunch4536 2 месяца назад

    As I have understood Harald Klak until now, he tried to get the support of the Frankish to take back his kingdom in Denmark. The Frankish wanted him to be a christian, so they had the excuse, that they helped a christian king to take back hos power in a pagan area. As a part of this deal, Harald Klak should allow christian missionaries in Denmark, and that is how Ansgar came to Denmark and later to Sweden. This video doesn't say anything about Harald Klak trying to come back to power in Denmark, only describes him as someone seeming to be content with his role as ruler of a part of Frisia.