Italian Reacts To Northern Germany: Meet the Germans Road Trip

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
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    Link to original video : ( • Northern Germany: Meet... )
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Комментарии • 21

  • @WinterwolfFFM
    @WinterwolfFFM 28 дней назад +20

    she makes the best Germany videos 👍☺ btw the building in Lübeck is not a castle. It´s a gate house - called the "Holstentor"

    • @GerMauro
      @GerMauro  28 дней назад +3

      Oh, it kinda looked like a castle, cool stuff!

    • @unscjohns1172
      @unscjohns1172 22 дня назад

      ​​@@GerMauro
      Moin moin.
      Lübeck had a lot of city gates and side gates.
      the main gates:
      in the east the 4 Holsten gates.
      the inner gate, the first preserved outer gate, the Holsten gate, there was another gate directly in front of the Holsten gate.
      a little way in front of it was the 4th gate built into the ramparts.
      there.
      in the north were the castle gates.
      the inner castle gate still exists today, the middle and outer gates unfortunately no longer exist.
      in the east were the Hüx gates with the Hüx dam that went into the wide river Wakenitz.
      there were at least 2 gates there.
      the southern gates are the mill gates.
      these also consisted of 3 gates.
      but there is only one tower as a bunker replica of the outer mill gate.
      Hüx gates and mill gates no longer exist.
      Then there is the third existing gate, a side gate, the so-called Kaisertor, which is located in the ramparts.
      from north to east to south, Lübeck was protected by the wide river Wakenitz.
      from north to west to south, 13 large bastions were built and several small ones.
      plus a large wall in the inner city island, ramparts and moats/rivers Trave and Wakenitz around it.
      with the Elbe-Lübeck canal, the course of the Wakenitz river was completely changed.
      Google translator, sorry

  • @philippbamberger5864
    @philippbamberger5864 27 дней назад +8

    I'd love to watch your reactions to the whole series. It is the best series to get an impression of the diversity about german regions. If you think about a specific area in germany, it often is helpful to look on a map to check out who are the next neighbours. So for northern germany there are the netherlands, Denmark, northern poland. And historically there are sometimes a lot more connections to Scandinavia or even England or the Baltics, as to southern germany i.e. I really like your reactions , greetings from germany

  • @maggierhee3146
    @maggierhee3146 10 дней назад

    The Video started in my "Hometown"!😍
    And yes, we Germans are not only drinking beer....

  • @SvenGadgetKlemmbausteine
    @SvenGadgetKlemmbausteine 18 дней назад +2

    I was born in Hamburg, I live in Hamburg and I'm a Hamburger through and through. But I don't like fish or seafood. You can get everything here, not just fish.

  • @winterlinde5395
    @winterlinde5395 22 дня назад +5

    … or maybe 91 likes are enough for you to react to the other parts? But on the other hand, this was the most important part anyways… 👋 from northern Germany 😊

    • @GerMauro
      @GerMauro  22 дня назад +2

      Hey, i just did :) I'm only missing one more video to complete the series!

    • @winterlinde5395
      @winterlinde5395 22 дня назад

      @@GerMauro yay!!!🥳😃

  • @MellonVegan
    @MellonVegan 22 дня назад +3

    4:50 Some of it, yeah, but some words sound completely foreign and others I only understand bc I also know English and it's kind of in between. I guess it's similar to an Italian hearing Spanish in terms of intelligibility. Depends on the dialect of Low German though. The language is also spoken in the Netherlands and all of that sounds like gibberish to me. It's actually easier (for me) to understand (some) Dutch than their Low German dialects. Also depends on where you're from yourself. Someone from the South would probably struggle more.

  • @DJone4one
    @DJone4one 20 дней назад +1

    Moin from the Northsea coast. 6:17 😂 that isn't a Castle. It is a Gate. The Holsten Gate is part of the former city fortifications of Lübeck. It is several centuries old, built at the time of the Hanseatic League and one of several gates that existed at that time.
    7:20 No Hamburg is not only famous for his Fish. Bremerhaven have a big Fish Industry too. We have the biggest Fish Finger Production line in Frozen Fish International. Over 4 billion Fish Fingers per year. Frosta is a big Player for the same and big Player for his high quality of frozen dishes too. Deutsche See is a manufactory for fresh fish and supplies supermarkets. Nordsee is a large restaurant chain for fish dishes, which is also represented in Europe. As is the fact that we are one of the largest harbours in Europe.

  • @zasou571
    @zasou571 22 дня назад +2

    Donna tedesca di 58 anni...
    Questo è (ovviamente) solo un piccolo spaccato dell'"anima tedesca del nord", ma offre un'ottima panoramica :-)
    Noi tedeschi del nord siamo davvero persone di poche parole; ma se diciamo qualcosa, allora viene dal cuore... 😀
    Stranamente, per me è un po' diverso: ho antenati italiani (il mio bisnonno era un conte italiano che dovette fuggire dal paese a causa di un duello proibito e poi finì nella Germania settentrionale). Di conseguenza, ho ereditato il "temperamento meridionale" e il "parlare con le mani" - anche se avrei tanto preferito avere i bellissimi occhi marroni e i capelli scuri... 😂
    I miei amici e conoscenti trovano sempre estremamente divertente questa combinazione di temperamento atipico (per la Germania settentrionale) e di aspetto tipico della Germania settentrionale e si prendono regolarmente gioco di me tentandomi con esplosioni di temperamento... 😆
    In ogni caso, ho un grande amore per l'Italia, ho viaggiato attraverso il Paese decine di volte, ho fatto delle ottime amicizie nel corso degli anni e naturalmente ho anche imparato la lingua (con un accento terribile e una grammatica ancora peggiore, ma comunque... 😂)
    Ottima risposta, grazie per questo - e tanti saluti dal bellissimo nord della Germania!
    // Translation:
    German woman here, 58 years old...
    This is (of course) only a small insight into the "North German soul" - but it gives a very good overview :-)
    We northern Germans are indeed people of few words; but IF we say something, then it comes from the heart... 😀
    Funnily enough, it's a bit different for me personally: I have Italian ancestors (my great-grandfather was an Italian count who had to flee the country because of a forbidden duel and then ended up in northern Germany). As a result, I inherited the "southern temperament" and the "talking with my hands" - although I would sooo much rather have had the beautiful brown eyes and dark hair... 😂
    My friends and acquaintances always find this combination of an atypical temperament (for northern Germany) and the typical northern German look extremely funny and regularly make fun of me by tempting me into outbursts of temper... 😆
    In any case, I have a great love for Italy, have traveled through the country dozens of times, have made some very good friends over the years and of course also learned the language (with a terrible accent and even worse grammar, but at least... 😂)
    Great response, thanks for that - and many greetings from the beautiful north of Germany!

    • @GerMauro
      @GerMauro  22 дня назад +2

      Complimenti per il suo italiano!
      That was a very interesting story, i really hope i can travel to Northern Germany soon and fall in love with the country as you did with mine :)

    • @zasou571
      @zasou571 22 дня назад +1

      Oh, grazie mille! (Spero di non aver "rovinato" troppo la tua bella lingua, hihihi... 😆)
      Se dovessi visitare la Germania settentrionale, ti consiglio di visitare la "Lüneburger Heide" - un paesaggio bellissimo quando l'erica è in fiore e tutto il terreno è una grande esplosione di colore viola. Anche i monti Harz (una piccola catena montuosa della Bassa Sassonia) sono molto belli, con molte cittadine graziose. La notte del 1° maggio, sul "Brocken" si svolge sempre la cosiddetta "Notte di Valpurga": si possono incontrare molte persone vestite da streghe che, secondo l'antica tradizione, scacciano gli spiriti maligni...
      // Translation:
      Oh, thank you so much! (I hope I haven't "messed up" your beautiful language too much, hihihi... 😆)
      If you should actually visit northern Germany, I recommend visiting the "Lüneburger Heide" - a beautiful landscape when the heather is in bloom and the whole ground is one big purple color explosion. The Harz Mountains (a small mountain range in Lower Saxony) are also very beautiful, with lots of pretty little towns. On the night of May 1st, the so-called "Walpurgis Night" always takes place on the "Brocken" - you can actually see lots of people dressed up as witches, who drive away the evil spirits according to old tradition...

    • @helloweener2007
      @helloweener2007 13 дней назад

      @@zasou571
      "In der Nacht zum 1. Mai findet auf dem Brocken immer die sogenannte „Walpurgisnacht“ statt"
      No, this is folklore.
      There might be some event from the HSB but no open public festival like in other places.
      It would be better to go to Thale to the Hexentanzplanz, which is very commercial.
      Or going to the event in some of the smaller towns like Ilsenburg, Wolfshagen, Bad Grund, Altenau and so on.
      If you want to be close to the Brocken, the Schierke would be a choice.

    • @zasou571
      @zasou571 10 дней назад +1

      ​@@helloweener2007Sorry, but I have to disagree... I myself have been on the Brocken EVERY year for 40 years now and celebrate my birthday there!
      Of course, this event is not the biggest and most spectacular of its kind; as you wrote, Thale and Schierke are certainly much further ahead. But the Brocken is and remains the Blockberg 😀 I don't know if it's the oldest event. But for me it's definitely the most beautiful because it's not so commercialized...

  • @Thedane2023
    @Thedane2023 16 дней назад +2

    at 5:03 - Platt is the result of putting Dutch, german and the western most spoken danish dialekt in a blender and mix it for full speed in 30sek - so for a dane its possible to understand 66% of it if the person speaks slowly.

  • @taupegrillon5975
    @taupegrillon5975 20 дней назад

    like your reactions very much

  • @OnetakeHH
    @OnetakeHH 20 дней назад

    Hamburg has the most bridges in the world

  • @AlexanderGoeres
    @AlexanderGoeres 12 дней назад

    finnish and estonian have absolutely nothing to do with german!