Torcs, Prehistoric Society and Chocolate. INTERVIEW: Tess Machling |

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025

Комментарии • 41

  • @elizaonthemountain3464
    @elizaonthemountain3464 Год назад +1

    I'm a recent subscriber who is so thrilled your videos were suggested in my feed. I am going through your list of videos and I had to comment that this woman is an absolute inspiration and gem. ❤

  • @dianespears6057
    @dianespears6057 4 года назад +6

    It is great to see a person who is both a scholarly researcher and a teacher. Very interesting work about torcs and raised a lot of thoughts about what they were and represented. The observations on workmanship and technique were great insights for the lay person. Keep it up, Tess (and Roland).

  • @treering8228
    @treering8228 4 года назад +5

    This is delightful! Thank you two for a lovely interview!

  • @ChristophersMum
    @ChristophersMum 4 года назад +5

    What an interesting person Tess is...quite a varied life including... chocolate!...One thing that amazed me was how the torques felt when you went to put them on...I envisioned something quite solid, not springy...amazing... thank you for your time in bringing her to us.

  • @aliciapeacock4662
    @aliciapeacock4662 4 года назад +4

    Gosh you guys pick the most interesting people to interview. You make it all seem so easy to chat on such varying topics that show us the tremendous energy, enthusiasm and excellence in your guests. Well done!

  • @jennijennifer5129
    @jennijennifer5129 4 года назад +3

    Wonderfully interesting Tess, Michael and Rupert. Thank you.

  • @larrycarroll7371
    @larrycarroll7371 4 года назад +3

    Delightful and informative.
    You made my evening very special.
    Thank you all.

  • @janbarryh1856
    @janbarryh1856 4 месяца назад

    Wonderful guest, kudos to all! I completely enjoyed you !

  • @martinkavanagh196
    @martinkavanagh196 4 года назад +3

    Great work Tess & Guys - really enjoyed that.

  • @sherrileerothwell5516
    @sherrileerothwell5516 4 года назад +6

    What a inspiring woman and an inspiring interview. Thank you!

  • @janetmackinnon3411
    @janetmackinnon3411 3 года назад +1

    A treat indeed!

  • @victoriawhite3662
    @victoriawhite3662 4 года назад +2

    So interesting! Dying to have one! Thanks guys!

  • @carolegarland8050
    @carolegarland8050 4 года назад +6

    Delightful! should have been twice the length.

  • @robertgross1655
    @robertgross1655 4 года назад +2

    Hi. As someone who has worn a silver neck torc for 30 years (6oz ish) they are wonderful. I also wondered that in battle that they would be very good neck protection from cuts. Also have a copy of the great torc. You wouldn’t wear that for long without serious neck and head problems. But a silver one keeps you warm in winter and cool in summer. And as your guest said they break if you take them on and off. So once on, it’s on. Yes the wire ones are springy. The cast ones are not. Hence the silver one stays on. It was cast.

    • @victoriawhite3662
      @victoriawhite3662 4 года назад +1

      Interesting insight, thanks! I really want one!

    • @robertgross1655
      @robertgross1655 4 года назад

      Hey I got a reply. A first. Yes I know who does torc’s if you want one then you will find your own. Each is special.

    • @thebigbookoftorcs1623
      @thebigbookoftorcs1623 4 года назад +1

      Hiya. Not quite the whole story... They don't actually break very often at all. If you have a look at the Grotesque torc blog on our website, you'll see.
      Also, having worn a torc not far off the weight of the Great torc, they're not actually that heavy and you very quickly get used to them.
      There's no evidence for them ever having been used in battle - you don't find any damage caused by any kind of weapon or missile. Hope this helps, Tess

    • @robertgross1655
      @robertgross1655 4 года назад

      The twisted wire torcs defiantly don’t break. I showed my brother the great torc I have, and he straightened it, thinking that’s how you put them on. Oouch . Cast ones do break. I have a broken silver torc. Bad casting. But that only broke after 20 years of wear. Oh my great torc is 1.2kg think heavier than the original. But mine dosent hollow terminals. I have heard reports that some of the best ones found came from the same workshop?

    • @thebigbookoftorcs1623
      @thebigbookoftorcs1623 4 года назад

      In prehistory, they really don't break very often through use - we've looked. Faulty casting may affect it, yes, but we haven't seen that. If you read the Grotesque paper on our website, you'll find the evidence for this.

  • @crazykansan3026
    @crazykansan3026 4 года назад +2

    Dr Tess Machling is wonderful. Torcs are my favorite artifacts.

  • @TheJodie6789
    @TheJodie6789 4 года назад +1

    Loved your talk

  • @jeb-zf4un
    @jeb-zf4un 4 года назад +1

    Fascinating

  • @Tipi_Dan
    @Tipi_Dan 21 день назад

    Torcs are very popular today among Celtic reconstructionists, revivalists, and reenactors. I was very surprised to hear there are really so few of them in Britain. To understand them better, I think we need to take a look at their presence and use outside Britain. What about Irish torcs? I understand there is a society of The Golden Torc among the McCarthys that is of some antiquity. Also, what of torcs discovered in Continental Europe? I know they were used by the Norse, whose torcs were simpler and not of the amazing quality of those used in Iron Age Britain. Also, the Scythians wore torcs, and I believe some Persians did too. This might indicate a common origin in Indo-European culture. But then, I believe the Etruscans were also known to wear torcs. Celtic meanings for the use of torcs may be mysterious, but were not some torcs purported to be bestowed as symbols indicting bonds of fealty or loyalty such like as simple rings were later in history, or even today? Or is this supposition?

  • @elainerichards6406
    @elainerichards6406 4 года назад +2

    This was fascinating! Who would have thought of making chocolate torques! Very well made replicas, would be a shame to eat them!

  • @greentorm5467
    @greentorm5467 4 года назад

    I've just found your channel a couple of weeks ago; have you ever covered iron age settlements on the Merseyside coast? I know the Mesolithic area of Lunt Meadows is currently being excavated.

  • @szifty
    @szifty 4 года назад +2

    Cracking stuff!

  • @juliepoppy1021
    @juliepoppy1021 4 года назад +4

    I so want a tork

    • @book3100
      @book3100 4 года назад +1

      There are bronze ones available online.

    • @travisnapoleansmith
      @travisnapoleansmith 3 года назад

      There are bronze and sterling silver torcs available. I have a number of them both bracelets and necklaces. I wear the bracelet versions of them very often. The neck versions are more difficult to deal with.
      They are very springy. I get mine from the Crafty Celts. It takes them somewhere between 4 to 6 weeks to make as they are made to order. The prices are quite reasonable and very well made.

  • @deormanrobey892
    @deormanrobey892 4 года назад +2

    👀 👍

  • @kevinreillydenmylne
    @kevinreillydenmylne 4 года назад +2

    do we know where the gold was mined?

    • @thebigbookoftorcs1623
      @thebigbookoftorcs1623 4 года назад +3

      Hello! It's likely that, by the Iron Age, the gold was being recycled from other objects with some also collected from alluvial gold sources. It may also be that they were mining, but most Iron Age gold is alloyed with silver and copper so it's less obvious that they were. More work does need to be done on the precise metal compositions before anyone can say for sure though.

    • @kevinreillydenmylne
      @kevinreillydenmylne 4 года назад +4

      @@thebigbookoftorcs1623 tx tess, one point i thought would interest you, talking with a friend of mine, a re enactor wearing a plaid and a torc, it started to rain so he pulled the plaid over his head, he then spin the torc around his neck gathering the fabric underneath, turning it into a form of hood, keeping it in place

  •  4 года назад +1

    U really need to change your opening music....SERIOUSLY