Viking Expert Breaks Down Famous Viking Movies & TV Shows

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  • Опубликовано: 22 май 2024
  • Archaeologist and leading Viking specialist, Neil Price looks at how Vikings are portrayed in popular films and TV shows. You can get his new book, The Children of Ash and Elm: A History of the Vikings, here: amzn.to/3mj7gGt
    Neil Price takes us inside the Norse mind and spirit-world, and across their borders of identity and gender, to reveal startlingly different Vikings to the barbarian marauders of stereotype. He cuts through centuries of received wisdom to try to see the Vikings as they saw themselves - descendants of the first human couple, the Children of Ash and Elm. He also reminds us of the simultaneous familiarity and strangeness of the past, of how much we cannot know, alongside the discoveries that change the landscape of our understanding. This is an eye-opening and surprisingly moving book.
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Комментарии • 609

  • @Liutgard
    @Liutgard 3 года назад +678

    I actually know people who were 'consulted' by the producers of the 'Vikings' tv show. They put together a substantial work on the clothing and material culture, and then EVERYTHING they suggested was ignored. Apparently someone in the higher-ups thought that a post-modern, grungy leather layered with grime look would be more effective. Heads were hitting tables all over. And the thing is, real Viking Age clothes and kit would have been easier to produce and likely at less cost- especially now that there are so many skilled artisans doing replica work.
    And God help me, but a good wash would have been appropriate! The Vikings were known to be clean and well-groomed, and actually a bit vain. The filth we see on the screen is nothing like.

    • @SchmokinJoe
      @SchmokinJoe 3 года назад +35

      Gotta love the higher-ups who think they know-it-all!

    • @Caladras
      @Caladras 3 года назад +39

      The sad thing is, the higher-ups were proven right by the popularity of the show. Hence the trope of post-modern grungy leather-clad Vikings continues: The Last Kingdom, now Assassin's Creed Valhalla... let's hope that Robert Eggers' The Northman can do better than this!

    • @Liutgard
      @Liutgard 3 года назад +76

      @@Caladras Thing is, because it wasn't done, we can't know that the authentic costumes wouldn't have been just as popular! The 'Viking bling' with strands of beads and embroidery and stuff for women, and those fabulous wrap coats (kaftan/klappenrock) for the men... my current field is 8th c Frankish, but I can see the appeal of the viking age culture.

    • @XortiXz
      @XortiXz 3 года назад +13

      I liked the show up to a point but i just cringe at the outfits and the fight scenes sometimes

    • @SchmokinJoe
      @SchmokinJoe 3 года назад +21

      @@Caladras But they only tried it the wrong way. I doubt the show's popularity came from the inaccurate costumes.
      And maybe it would've been more popular with authentic, period-accurate costumes. I have yet to watch _Vikings_ because the characters looked so silly.

  • @davidesguario2151
    @davidesguario2151 3 года назад +448

    I like his approach. He is able to recognize that a film like the Thirteenth Warrior can get costumes, weapons and war tactics wrong and at the same time nail some pivotal aspects of Norse culture.

    • @bjoardar
      @bjoardar 2 года назад +12

      In fairness, the movie was based on a romanticezed book of the time, but there are sooo many easter eggs in it that reveal true archaelogical and historical facts, that this movie is criminally underrated imo.
      Also, the "vikings prayer", while made up, is totally badass xD

    • @davidesguario2151
      @davidesguario2151 2 года назад +6

      @@bjoardar I recently read Crichton's novel and I found it very enjoyable and clever in the way it draws from actual anthropological and historical evidence in order to create a fantasy story. And yes, the movie is underrated, although it is gaining a cult following, something which I am glad of. And the prayer is epica af, I actually wonder whether it is actually made up or loosely inspired by some source

    • @helentee9863
      @helentee9863 2 года назад

      @The_Jaguar_ Knight they are not empires,they are world's, and world's based on Norse mythology, mythology being the key word.
      You, know, as in myths/storys past down by word of mouth over generations, not history.
      Don't really understand why Thor was included in this video compilation.

    • @user-ir2fu4cx6p
      @user-ir2fu4cx6p 2 года назад

      It was the most accurate Viking movies so far.

    • @tobbcittobbcit8899
      @tobbcittobbcit8899 Год назад

      @@user-ir2fu4cx6p not really. It couldn't even get the nationality of its actors right

  • @thebatonmaster
    @thebatonmaster 3 года назад +245

    Really nice breakdown. I love his final statement. I think it applies to almost every group of people, including our own ancestors:
    "They were not heroes at all. But certainly people that should not be forgotten."

    • @JB-cx2vk
      @JB-cx2vk 3 года назад +5

      I enjoyed that the most out of this whole video. It was a pleasure listening to him as well.

    • @whyjnot420
      @whyjnot420 2 года назад +4

      Sure the actual vikingr who went out to raid and pillage were not people to emulate or stand up on a pedestal. However there are many from the time and places of the vikings that should be. One example, Snorri Sturluson. This one comes a little after the pagan heyday of the vikings, but he is the author (at least of a large portion) of the Prose Edda. He is essentially to vikings what Homer was to the Greeks, with the added benefit of knowing that he was a real single person who actually existed.
      In general I think we truly can admire the skalds of Iceland. Their storytelling, their complete mastery of it, their proliferation through Europe, since anyone who was anyone wanted them in their courts composing poems about their accomplishments. Is still something that resonates with everyone alive today who enjoys a well told story. And are still influential on modern culture in a way that some possibly mythical sea king like Ragnar Lodbrok could never be.

    • @brianl3424
      @brianl3424 2 года назад +1

      @@whyjnot420 Yeah Snorri Sturluson should be remembered for his writing, but he's not worthy of emulation. The guy's most famous poem is about his mother's reaction to his first murder.

    • @InvisibleJiuJitsu
      @InvisibleJiuJitsu 2 года назад +2

      @@whyjnot420 agree, his final statement is just some woke bullshit. If we cant admire any vikings at all then we can't admire anyone

    • @whyjnot420
      @whyjnot420 2 года назад +2

      @@InvisibleJiuJitsu One thing that I have always admired about the Viking-Norse culture, is the custom they had of always opening their door to a stranger in need of food and shelter for the night, especially in the harsher months. That is an admirable thing right there. One a lot of us today could learn a lesson from.

  • @nolanolivier6791
    @nolanolivier6791 3 года назад +194

    Quite interesting how he chooses to focus on the positive aspects...

    • @totallynotzokix11_mc21
      @totallynotzokix11_mc21 3 года назад +7

      Because most viking fiction focuses on the positive aspects.

    • @davethebarbarian4419
      @davethebarbarian4419 3 года назад +13

      @@totallynotzokix11_mc21 I think he means that the video focuses on the positive aspects of each movie/show when it comes to depicting Vikings authentically. The History Channel's Vikings for example, while it can overall be considered an authentic depiction of Vikings, does have, for example, bands of women warriors fighting alonside men, when we have no written sources that attest to that.

    • @aboveworld8209
      @aboveworld8209 3 года назад +4

      I think probably because it’s kinda assumed that the rest is kinda shitty

    • @3rdreichball525
      @3rdreichball525 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, but i don't think the marvel comics thor should count. They arent norse gods. They are comic book aliens based off of the norse gods. Shouldn't really count

    • @marcopolo2418
      @marcopolo2418 2 года назад +1

      @@davethebarbarian4419 The show Vikings kinda becomes too much for me after the 3rd season. I watched up until Ragnar's death then I could not handle anymore lol Still not as bad as some movies or shows.

  • @stepheng9607
    @stepheng9607 3 года назад +184

    I could listen to Professor Price all day. Looking forward to reading his new book

    • @tilemacro
      @tilemacro 3 года назад +1

      i like how he is tap dancing around the elephant in the room, conserning the Vikings TV series.

  • @rohansrinivasan4153
    @rohansrinivasan4153 2 года назад +67

    He should have reacted to how to train your dragon as well.

  • @nm-cp4ck
    @nm-cp4ck 3 года назад +29

    Is nobody gonna mention those AWESOME Lego ships in the background? That display is worth at least 300 dollars

    • @peartree8338
      @peartree8338 2 года назад

      Nope. He's in Sweden, more like 3.000 dollars. LEGO is crazy expensive here.

  • @tylerlynch2849
    @tylerlynch2849 2 года назад +14

    Nothing more interesting and refreshing to hear a genuine academic or expert speak about their passion

  • @ouatedephoque2961
    @ouatedephoque2961 2 года назад +21

    When I saw Valhalla Rising I immediately had the impression that One-Eye was in Newfoundland (l'Anse-aux-Meadows) and was meeting the Beothuk, a now extinct Native tribe.
    Great break down Neil.

  • @SG-1-GRC
    @SG-1-GRC 3 года назад +113

    I am a bit surprised he is so positive about Vikings the TV series a lot of arms and armour historians really knock it for its inaccuracies. But I do appreciate him pointing out the positives in the programmes/films he assesses

    • @Rockstroem
      @Rockstroem 3 года назад +19

      Vikings has a lot of practical issues with anachronistic things and behaviors, but in my mind, as a Swede, it captures a lot of the spirit of Nordic culture, and that goes a long way.

    • @Temujin1206
      @Temujin1206 3 года назад +12

      Yes Vikings is abysmal at portraying the material culture of the vikings and the other peoples they encounter (the clothes, weapons etc.) and they skew the timelines around like nobody's business but especially in the earlier seasons they really drew on historical sources for many instances and occurances which happen in the series, as well as the general culture and attitudes. It's not perfect and there are some truly phenomenal issues but it's actually a lot better than people tend to think.

    • @grisflyt
      @grisflyt 3 года назад +5

      I believe historians are more annoyed by the depiction of the Viking society as authoritarian, when it in reality was basically democratic. The Vikings did not have divine/absolute kings, like in Christianized Europe, and later Scandinavia as well.

    • @Temujin1206
      @Temujin1206 3 года назад +5

      @@grisflyt Viking age Icelandic (and Greenlandic) society was essentially democratic, but that's not really true anywhere else. Throughout mainland Scandinavia, Britain, Ireland and the Kievan Rus lands of Eastern Europe there were many Viking kings who, while not given the divine connotations of kings in Christian Europe, were absolutely authoritative. Iceland and related settlements were very much outliers, likely because they were founded by Norwegians fleeing the persecution of the King, but the rest of Viking age Scandinavia and associated areas was very similar to much of the rest of Europe, a feudal society with monarchs and rulers who generally wielded pretty solid power within their areas. Also, of course, in the later Viking age Christianisation was in full force and the kingdoms of Norway, Denmark and Sweden had more or less coalesced so there was very much an absolute, authoritiative monarchy with the same divine connotations seen in Christian Europe.

    • @grisflyt
      @grisflyt 3 года назад +1

      ​@@Temujin1206 The thing met at regular intervals, legislated, elected chieftains and kings, and judged according to the law, which was memorized and recited by the "lawspeaker" (the judge).
      Towards the end of the Viking age, royal power became centralized and the kings began to consolidate power and control over the assemblies. As a result, things lost most of their political role and began to function largely as courts in the later Middle Ages.[5]
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thing_(assembly)
      While I do agree with Iceland as something of a promised land, it is a bit more complicated. On the one hand, women (at least widows) could own land. On the other, women were banned from the thing.
      Women, to this day, are always one step away from losing their rights. They are wholly dependent on our grace.

  • @kevinnorwood8782
    @kevinnorwood8782 Год назад +4

    I recently got this guy’s book, “The Children Of Ash And Elm”. Would DEFINITELY recommend it to anyone who is interested in the Viking Age. It’s one of the most thoroughly researched and well-written books on the subject that I’ve ever read.

  • @archivesofarda986
    @archivesofarda986 3 года назад +13

    Thank you!! Vallhalla Rising is vastly underapreciated and misunderstood movie

  • @AtomMyren
    @AtomMyren 3 года назад +38

    And then read “Valhalla” comics made by Peter Madsen! Every kid in the 80`s and 90`# from Denmark have read it, and its a fantastic way to learn something about the Norse mythologi.

    • @runulfrraui6602
      @runulfrraui6602 3 года назад +7

      i bought the full box set when it came out in Norway. even got the animated dvd with Quark in it.

    • @sirseigan
      @sirseigan 3 года назад +5

      "Valhalla" is f*ng amazing!! I read them as a kid at the school library but bought the whole set as a adult, just as good now as it was back then. Very very very well researched and every diviation from the most common storyline (Snorres Edda) is carefully thought through and many times the diviations are very good compromises between different versions of the myths. I was happily surpriced when I realized just how well it was researched. I mran knew it was good, but not that good.
      The comic "Röde Orm", Red Snake, (based on the novel with the same name by Frans G Bengtsson) is also very good in many aspects. I personally love the way it depicts their view of religion.

    • @AtomMyren
      @AtomMyren 3 года назад

      They are amazing! But they may be hard to find outside of Denmark. But you can find some short clips from the movie on RUclips (with Eng subs). Its also drawn by Peter Madsen🤘

    • @AtomMyren
      @AtomMyren 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/5jSs4pwokCg/видео.html

    • @FrostInFreezer
      @FrostInFreezer 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, it was awesome. As a kid I even had bed sheets with it. Elskede det!

  • @char391
    @char391 2 года назад +5

    I see that Neil was also a historical consultant for the new 'The Northman' movie!

  • @BlackMetalVikingCustoms
    @BlackMetalVikingCustoms 3 года назад +34

    Outlander is the Viking movie you never knew you needed until you see it. So weird, but so good too!

  • @Eirik_Bloodaxe
    @Eirik_Bloodaxe 3 года назад +20

    Everyone’s like “he was too nice to the Vikings TV series”. And I’m like “he talked about it for like 2 seconds.”

  • @torfinnzempel6123
    @torfinnzempel6123 3 года назад +60

    Would have been interesti g to see him talk about Norsemen and Ragnarok.

    • @dawnmacdonald7334
      @dawnmacdonald7334 2 года назад +2

      Yes! I was hoping someone would mention these tv shows. I can’t wait for the new season of Ragnarok.

    • @le13579
      @le13579 Год назад +1

      Norsemen is very funny - black humour. "Do we have to jump off the cliff?"

  • @leeworsham5706
    @leeworsham5706 3 года назад +101

    Norse nobility and rich warriors would be donning chainmail or scalemail haubreks but you see 0 of that at all in the Vikings TV show. Just all costume heavy metal leather.

    • @kahn04
      @kahn04 3 года назад +14

      Absolutely right about chainmail (maille) however scalemail is something we see in antiquity and the late Middle Ages into the renaissance, but no evidence in the early medieval period (or Viking Age), there is some controversy over a few lamellar plates (2 or 3 if I remember correctly) found at the settlement of Birka in Sweden, at this point most scholars agree that it was likely owned by a foreign mercenary living in the town rather than a native Swede. The difference between scale and lamellar is that with scale the tops of each plate are connected to a shirt of maille for a double layer of protection, where as lamellar each plate is laced to the four surrounding it to create a separate garment.

    • @gravitatemortuus1080
      @gravitatemortuus1080 3 года назад +10

      But over all drives me crazy the Vikings went into battle with no helmet and armor in the Viking TV show. . They would of been murdered in real life, but they do it to try to show this unrealistic prowess in battle. What do we expect even from the history channel.

    • @kahn04
      @kahn04 3 года назад +4

      @@gravitatemortuus1080 there is a lack of archaeological evidence for armour in period, so it’s understandable that they would take that interpretation, as you say to show heightened prowess, after all it does increase the appeal to the masses. It would have been great to see even one character kitted out in proper war gear, to address just how rare it’s believed to be, especially since one of the two (to the best of my knowledge) identifiable helmets comes from Norway along with the most complete maille shirt. Maybe the costume design team will surprise us with Valhalla when it airs.

    • @aaronb1977
      @aaronb1977 3 года назад +6

      Big difference between 8th century "vikings" and vikings in England in the 12th century

    • @totallynotzokix11_mc21
      @totallynotzokix11_mc21 3 года назад +13

      The Vikings TV show is more historical fiction and drama rather than being realistic.

  • @suzannehartmann946
    @suzannehartmann946 3 года назад +20

    What I have heard about the Vikings is that one of their most important long term impacts on culture was the trading routes they established and defended.

    • @yes_head
      @yes_head 2 года назад +4

      I'd say it was that they were the people who settled norther France and became the Normans, who then went on to conquer England and spread French culture into the Anglo-Saxon world.

    • @cortexavery1324
      @cortexavery1324 Год назад

      @@yes_head that's hard to put that on the vikings... or the part of responsability that vikings or viking culture had on this specific event is marginal.
      It has to do with the feudal system and the treaties and family links between the different monarchic political entities in france and england at the time.

  • @johnporterfield7523
    @johnporterfield7523 2 года назад

    I very much enjoyed some of your research and lectures today.... I've enjoyed all those movies and series too. Your knowledge is awsome

  • @MosBaked
    @MosBaked 3 года назад +3

    Good video, hope you continue to do these kinds of videos.

  • @codybritton3659
    @codybritton3659 3 года назад +1

    Just started your book!! I can't wait to see what I learn about my favorite group of ancient civilization

  • @thecomicboss7039
    @thecomicboss7039 2 года назад +1

    One of the best, most fair, most nuanced expert break downs I've ever seen. Keep THIS up

  • @capswingsisles
    @capswingsisles 3 года назад +8

    This guy just sold me on his book I love the way he chooses to analyze the films 🤘🏼

  • @melissamybubbles6139
    @melissamybubbles6139 2 года назад +1

    That's so cool. My library has Price's audiobook. I hope I enjoy it as much as this video.

  • @neilwilson5785
    @neilwilson5785 2 года назад

    Nicely done. There is a lot to learn here.

  • @patricegarnierlobo25111967
    @patricegarnierlobo25111967 3 года назад +1

    very good analyse!

  • @ducomaritiem7160
    @ducomaritiem7160 2 года назад +1

    More!, More! Very good approach, sir.
    As a ( nowadays) part-time armourer , also giving lectures about ancient armour, its so astonishing to hear people assuming things like Viking horned helmets and stuff time and time again...so your attempts are much appreciated.

  • @oak4026
    @oak4026 3 года назад +23

    He was very kind to the Vikings television series its riddled with historical inaccuracies.

    • @2Ten1Ryu
      @2Ten1Ryu 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, his feedback focussed a lot on what was done well, but I would have been more interested in what is wrong. I mean, it's nice he's not bashing anything, but... I myself wasn't able to finish even season 1 of Vikings, there was too much that bothered me and disrupted the immersion I had hoped to find there....

    • @Bluebelle51
      @Bluebelle51 3 года назад +2

      I love the show, I also know that it's a well written fantasy using names plucked from the sagas and history. It was never meant to be a documentary, in fact it was never supposed to be a series, just a mini series that was expanded to 6 seasons because of it's popularity. When asked about a well known historical inaccuracy, (Rollo being Ragnar's brother) the writer said, "I wanted to tell these stories, I knew I had one season to do it, so I made them brothers"
      The costuming is wrong, (Conquistador helmets for the Saxon army? Seriously?)
      Yet it's all forgivable if all you want is a well written, well acted, and cinematically beautiful show.

    • @jakestrand7693
      @jakestrand7693 3 года назад +3

      @@Bluebelle51 I think the show is worth watching for Travis Fimmel’s performance as Ragnar alone. He really carried the show imo

    • @Bluebelle51
      @Bluebelle51 3 года назад +3

      @@jakestrand7693 I loved Fimmel as Ragnar, I haven't seen the last half of season 6 yet, I have no idea why they staggered the release, but there are other characters that I enjoyed as much as Fimmel's Ragnar, Linus Roache as Ecbert was stupendous, and seriously under used, and Skaarsgard's Floki, was always a favorite of mine, (again, seriously under used in the last 2 seasons) .

    • @jakestrand7693
      @jakestrand7693 3 года назад

      @@Bluebelle51 Lol im still on season four no spoilers please

  • @lothbroke
    @lothbroke 3 года назад +47

    I wish you'd shown the opening sequence of Thor because, believe it or not, it's the best depiction of an apron dress I've seen in a viking movie.

    • @dallesamllhals9161
      @dallesamllhals9161 2 года назад

      MARVEL IS THE BEST of the best of the bets of the best. SIR! Men er stadig ikke FAN. Undskyld :-(

    • @KennethMoreland
      @KennethMoreland 2 года назад

      @@dallesamllhals9161 Boy Captain America over here.

    • @dallesamllhals9161
      @dallesamllhals9161 2 года назад

      @@KennethMoreland Men in Black = the bets of the best of the beast!

  • @Darkestdarkify
    @Darkestdarkify 3 года назад +10

    I just bought his book yesterday...funny to see this recommended lol

    • @hhoi8225
      @hhoi8225 3 года назад +1

      Yep, that's no coincidence.

  • @NolanFriedline
    @NolanFriedline 3 года назад +2

    I love these movies, great choices!

  • @peterh5165
    @peterh5165 2 года назад

    Good video!

  • @Demothones
    @Demothones 2 года назад

    I am about half way through the Children of Ash and Elm and it is absolutely amazing.

  • @FreeLancerLondon
    @FreeLancerLondon 2 года назад

    Very enjoyable video. I really enjoyed the Vikings TV series and the Last Kingdom. As the professor says it gives us a real feel for life in those times, while not historically totally accurate. The early Mediaeval period was brutal and hard for the vast majority of people. 👍

  • @ortezac.5339
    @ortezac.5339 2 года назад +4

    Now I'd like to see him react to Vinland Saga.

  • @northwestheathen8021
    @northwestheathen8021 3 года назад

    thank you sir, good video. Skol!

  • @davididiart5934
    @davididiart5934 3 года назад +2

    I remember watching the VIKINGS with Kirk Douglas alongside my father, and we kept busting up laughing at that giant horn, since it would start with a slow bellow... and then almost turn into a jazz number. That's way too complicated a tune for something that huge! XD

  • @HankyPanky44
    @HankyPanky44 2 года назад +1

    Gave this video a like just because of the Lego ships in the background, the rest was just gravy!

  • @maki2925
    @maki2925 Год назад

    I would LOVE his opinion on The Northman. What a very interesting video, I could listen to him talk all day.

    • @classicpauldanof4u
      @classicpauldanof4u Год назад

      Well considering he actually worked on The Northman, I think his opinion would be quite positive.

    • @maki2925
      @maki2925 Год назад

      @@classicpauldanof4uOh that makes sense! Now I really want a video of him talking about his work on this movie, I really enjoyed it.

  • @wootle
    @wootle 2 года назад

    Excellent review and at LAST ...at LAST "The 13th Warrior" gets some recognition for getting bits right. Its a legendary movie!
    The Vikings tv show is comedy gold for me, its only fun watching youtube compilations of people getting slaughtered, the VFX in that respect is well done. It looks like a live action version of the abysmal game Assasins Creed Valhalla.

  • @geofff.3343
    @geofff.3343 3 года назад +9

    I think the funeral ship is poetic. True not everyone got the full send off, but many people did get a small boat that was burned and set to float. Living on the river was so important to the Scandinavian people of the time that they often carved their babies' cribs to look like boats.
    So you were born in a boat, you were raised in boat, and then you died in boat. It somehow feels so much more real and integral to the human spirt than I think I can even put into words.

  • @alexstewart839
    @alexstewart839 2 года назад +1

    Gotta respect the work he put into finding something teachable from the 13th Warrior.

    • @ChaosToRule
      @ChaosToRule 2 года назад

      What he forgot to tell us is that 13th Warrior is also loosly based on Beowulf.

  • @kellypedron8388
    @kellypedron8388 8 месяцев назад

    Niel - LOVE your book so far (Children of Ash and Elm); I just found out that I am 92.2% Norwegian, so I am more than a little interested in your history.

  • @paulaguiu4254
    @paulaguiu4254 2 года назад +1

    when he said that they found a thor necklace with a tiny decorated hammer enggraved with the word "hammer" has reminded me of a deer horn that some viking engraved with the runes for "deer horn" at an Irish museum lol. They seem people who didn't want to be mistaken hahaha

  • @ZeroKami86
    @ZeroKami86 3 года назад +13

    I haven't seen much of it, but I wonder how accurate he'd rate Vinland Saga

  • @EnFyr
    @EnFyr 3 года назад +1

    The "edda poems" are out there for anyone to read, or the "snorre sagaes".

  • @LockhartSpain
    @LockhartSpain 2 года назад +1

    I've been in translation situations like that with myself at one end of the chain. It was most struck true.

  • @whyaretherenoneleft
    @whyaretherenoneleft 3 года назад

    Never thought I would be learning Viking history from Eddie the Eagle today.

  • @gdulheflljasduhdzccvm9926
    @gdulheflljasduhdzccvm9926 3 года назад

    Certainly more admirable than most groups of people i can remember

  • @karinlarsen4251
    @karinlarsen4251 Год назад

    I kept finding myself in the middle of an indigenous peoples book. Finally I found your book about my history. So proud to be of Viking heritage. My people were converted to Mormonism by 1860. We crossed the Atlantic from Denmark, found ourselves on the Atlantic coast, made our way to the Mississippi River where we were given a handcart, and told to join the group we are seeking by crossing the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains. Then we were sent to Central Utah To-Face hostile Indians. Here I still am to tell the story. You can't kill a Viking

  • @raphaelperry8159
    @raphaelperry8159 3 года назад +14

    Another really nice touch in Outlander is that the Spaceman's ship's computer speaks to him in Old Norse to make him sound like an alien from another planet while the actual vikings speak English (having them speak Old Norse for the entire film might have been too difficult for the audience to follow).

    • @alisaurus4224
      @alisaurus4224 2 года назад

      That’s something i loved and thought was done well about the Vikings show: most of the time when the Vikings speak to each other, it’s in Norse-accented English. When they start traveling to England, English characters speak in subtitled Old English unless they are the POV characters for a shot, when they speak modern English and the Vikings speak subtitled Norse. Same when they interact with the Normans.
      You get the feel of who can understand whom in a given scene without having to teach the actors all their lines in ancient languages and make the entire show subtitled. It’s also very interesting to me to be able to understand the odd word or even simple sentence in Old English, despite only one semester studying it.

    • @raphaelperry8159
      @raphaelperry8159 2 года назад +1

      It's just a shame that most of them wore far too much black and had partially shaved hairstyles that would be appropriate if they were Mongolians or possibly even the Rus but not for actual vikings. And then they had the Anglo Saxons using the wrong shaped shields. It just goes on and on and on really.

    • @alisaurus4224
      @alisaurus4224 2 года назад

      @@raphaelperry8159 i know there are lots of inaccuracies but i liked how they handled the languages particularly

    • @raphaelperry8159
      @raphaelperry8159 2 года назад +1

      Indeed. The way they handled the languages was a really nice touch.

  • @Generalscorpio
    @Generalscorpio 2 года назад +3

    The thing about Thor is that they're trying to make mythology sci-fi, Thor actually explains it, "Your ancestors called it magic, you call it science, I come from a place where they're one and the same..." - They weren't going for a perfect retelling of the Norse myths.

  • @Groaznic
    @Groaznic 2 года назад +4

    Argh, I really really wish he included the animation Beowulf. It's better than most movies.

  • @gamesgrave9180
    @gamesgrave9180 2 года назад

    That's a lovely shirt this chap is wearing.

  • @peter.t.ljungman
    @peter.t.ljungman 3 года назад +1

    Ash & Emla ( In Skandinavian Ask & Embla ) is the Scandinavian mythologys version of Adam and Eve. So reading his book would be a pure Joy, When he is so knowledgeable and entusiastisk regarding Nordic Sagas.

    • @LordJagd
      @LordJagd 2 года назад

      There is a curious amount of parallels between the Nordic and Biblical stories. One could say this is a result of christianization, but we also see these same parallels in Indian mythos, which has the same Indo-European root as the Nordic

  • @lorenzodemedici6332
    @lorenzodemedici6332 2 года назад +5

    The 1958 Vikings movie is quiet remarcable in my opinion. It gets a lot of the clothing, and architecture wrong. However you can tell whoever wrote it put a ton off effort in to reading the sagas or any historical accounts that were written back then.

  • @cynthiaerickson3646
    @cynthiaerickson3646 3 года назад +10

    13th warrior rocked,period

    • @Khorney
      @Khorney 3 года назад +2

      Indeed, lovely movie!

  • @Catonius
    @Catonius 3 года назад +1

    Look up Dr Price's Children of Ash lecture series on RUclips.
    You're welcome.

  • @roymarshjiujitsu
    @roymarshjiujitsu 2 года назад +6

    This was a really great breakdown. I do wonder why he felt the need to say we shouldn't view them as admirable or call them heroes. You can certainly make that argument but I don't remember seeing that disclaimer when I watch videos about other historic groups (Persian Empire, Mongol Empire, Greeks, Egyptians, Mayans, etc.)

    • @TheMcgreary
      @TheMcgreary 2 года назад +3

      I mean probably depends on who you talk to, I've definitely heard that said about mongols and mayans

    • @stephenschneider4246
      @stephenschneider4246 2 года назад +3

      Perhaps it’s meant more in the sense of not glorifying them. It may be a personal message from Dr. Price, along the lines of other outros from experts in this series. I imagine it gets frustrating to be so deeply embedded in a people’s history only to see them always vilified and revered onscreen. It solves a lot of problems to remember the good and the bad ahead of time with any historical event or group.

    • @Johnny-Thunder
      @Johnny-Thunder 2 года назад

      I would agree with the statement 'vikings are not heroes' if we go by the definition of a viking as a pirate. However if we talk about the non-viking Norsemen who travelled over the Atlantic to discover and settle in Iceland, Greenland and Vinland, they certainly were heroic and admirable people in my opinion.

    • @stinkybuttrat
      @stinkybuttrat 2 года назад

      @@Johnny-Thunder definitely better than other european explorers, not slaving genocidal freaks at least

    • @SplatterInker
      @SplatterInker 2 года назад +2

      Probably because Viking culture and history is commonly appropriated by neo Nazis, who glorify them and hold them up as the OG Master Race. Emphasising stuff like the raiding and pillaging.
      To be honest I can understand issuing such disclaimers with any community or person who've been put on a pedestal where they have become untouchable, especially when used to justify some hainous crap. Like Churchill. The minute anyone criticises Churchill and points out hey, the guy was complicated and we shouldn't treat him like some saint because he did good as a war leader... and even that depends on your POV I mean you should read the comments on creating firestorms in Germany. If EVER you think any side comes out of a war with their hands clean, then you don't really understand human beings, but equally, why should we sweep that under the rug just because they won or were later proven correct?

  • @stevenwiederholt7000
    @stevenwiederholt7000 2 года назад

    I would place a small wager that the Norse of the viking age would be very pleased that in this time people are still talking about them.

    • @cortexavery1324
      @cortexavery1324 Год назад

      ... seeing how far away most of it is from reality I'm not sure they would.

  • @kamion53
    @kamion53 2 года назад

    @6:24
    in tthe depiction of the shieldwall I miss the Elves jumping over it from behind.
    Maybe a berserker would do that in reality, but I think even that is unlikely.

  • @The1337Duke
    @The1337Duke 3 года назад +3

    Ya'll missed a great opportunity to compare Thor movies! This is more about mythologic accuracy, but in Thor: Ragnarok, Hela reminisces about the Odin of old, and what kind of character he was in the early days of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and it's actually a LOT more on point in regards to the Source material. Hela describes him as selfish, greedy, and War-mongering. Obsessed with seeking knowledge, magic and powerful artifacts. This is more or like what Odin was portrayed in the historically documented myths we have.
    If the creators of this video sees this, I think that a video where an expert in Norse or greek myth compares the portrayal of gods in movies and games to the source material would be very well received. Gods and myths from ancient Pantheons are usually put through the pop-culture meatgrinder when it comes to artistic liberties.

    • @peartree8338
      @peartree8338 2 года назад

      Yeah. I really wished American Gods didn't f up the series as they did, that one is actually REALLY close to the source. Gaiman's book about norse mythology is a receipt of how serious he went about researching the sagas.

    • @LordJagd
      @LordJagd 2 года назад

      But Odin was seen as exemplary for those things, not flawed. Remember, these are a people who didn’t really believe in a heavenly afterlife, or one that you go to if you’re a good person. To them, all things die but fame endures, so those who live to the fullest (like Odin) are heroic.

  • @DavidSzar
    @DavidSzar 2 года назад +1

    The child of ash and elm is an amazing book

  • @DarkShroom
    @DarkShroom 2 года назад +1

    fantastic video.... now i'd like someone like this to talk about people saying the vikings had battles with the native americans
    seems too good to be true, and "alt history" people seem to be doing videos on it

    • @509Gman
      @509Gman 2 года назад +1

      “Battles” is rather embellished, but there were some tense encounters.

  • @aw04tn58
    @aw04tn58 3 года назад +24

    I'm a little annoyed that he didn't go into some of the gross inaccuracies in Vikings. I know it's been covered elsewhere, but I think it should be said over and over because some people tend to think that it is accurate, when we know it's more fantasy than anything else. I appreciate him being kind, but I think the edit needed to include some criticism as well or at at least give examples of what he means by them engaging with recent scholarship.

    • @bilbo1778
      @bilbo1778 2 года назад +2

      Many of the historians I've seen give it a pass with respect to the lousy costumes and some of the other inaccuracies because it's often "historically authentic" which is to say many of the details aren't right but the portrayal of the attitudes and motivations of the characters are more or less in line with scholarly interpretations of the era. Furthermore many of the historical events depicted are reasonably close to what we know from history or the Ragnar Lothbrok sagas - i.e. the 845 Siege of Paris and the events leading up to & including the invasion of The Great Heathen Army.

    • @sock2828
      @sock2828 Год назад +1

      @@bilbo1778 Exactly. Just because a viking is wearing the right kind of helmet doesn't automatically mean you're learning anything important about Norse history or what the Norse valued and were actually like.

    • @almanacofsleep
      @almanacofsleep Год назад +1

      @@bilbo1778 With all do respect what is "reasonably close" in its depiction of Ragnar Lothbrok participating in the raid on Lindisfarne as a young man then leading the siege of Paris having not aged or Rollo being Ragnar's brother, where talking nearly 100 years difference.

  • @le13579
    @le13579 Год назад

    Great information, thanks.
    Shame the Norwegian comedy Norsemen (Netflix) wasn't covered.

  • @danh7804
    @danh7804 3 года назад +13

    I would love to here your thoughts on Netflix's Norseman..

  • @TheAurgelmir
    @TheAurgelmir 3 года назад +2

    If I recall correctly the "vikings" in 13th warrior went to a Baltic country to learn the language, which is funny since one of the actors is Norwegian... and he still had to go there to get the lessons...

    • @calska140
      @calska140 3 года назад

      The Vikings being portrayed, the one's the Arab chronicled, were a far east, Slav-Norse group. The Norman's were similar viking diaspora and they spoke french. An Arab going far enough northwest to run into Scandinavia proper at this time would be truly crazy.

    • @vergil8833
      @vergil8833 3 года назад

      @@calska140 Not at all, we know the Scandinavians proper sailed down rivers to trade with the east through Steppe hubs as far back as the Bronze Age. That is why Scandinavia itself was such a powerhouse during the Bronze Age, long before they had settled in Russia and France and so on. And especially compared to their neighbors like the Baltic, showing that it was actual Scandinavians sailing so far to trade and not middle-man groups.
      During the Viking Age this was even more common considering Scandinavians and Scandinavian kings often went to Byzantium. Meeting Fadlan in the Steppes would be a normal trip for them.

    • @calska140
      @calska140 3 года назад

      @@vergil8833 I won't refute anything you said as I agree. They did follow the river systems into Islam territory to trade. The only points I was making was that the vikings and Slavic people intermingled to some degree while inhabiting common territory and that ibn fadlan would've met this band on the steppe instead of traveling to the Scandinavian homelands. If you're trying to posit that the vikings didn't blend with the people's around the Baltic....well that sort of runs counterintuitive to previous viking behavior.

  • @waynester71
    @waynester71 2 года назад +3

    “A horn from no animal that ever lived” Surely it was just a mammoth tusk? No idea if it was hollow or could be hollowed out though to be used as a horn..

    • @selonianth
      @selonianth 2 года назад

      And Mammoths would've gone extinct before any piece of that village existed.

  • @HECKproductions
    @HECKproductions 9 месяцев назад +1

    calling thor a viking movie is like calling spongebob a nature documentary

  • @sagebuchanan9725
    @sagebuchanan9725 3 года назад +1

    I like the Lego Pirate ship in the back

  • @ThingsWeSaidToday
    @ThingsWeSaidToday Год назад

    I wish he could have reviewed "The Northman", Robert Eggers newest movie.

  • @kiy5278
    @kiy5278 2 года назад

    Worst thing about this video was that it was only 13 minutes long. I could listen to him all day!

  • @davidcrouch7365
    @davidcrouch7365 2 года назад

    The first time I heard of a Viking funeral was in the early 60s in the 1939 movie Beau Geste. Check it out if you get a chance.

  • @Karstoff
    @Karstoff 3 года назад +1

    I would really like to hear his opinion on Ragnarök. I really like this series and I am waiting for season 2.

    • @dawnmacdonald7334
      @dawnmacdonald7334 2 года назад

      Season 2 was released in May of last year. I love this show.

  • @metalmarcrosser
    @metalmarcrosser 2 года назад +1

    I kind of want to watch the vikings, but just haven’t brought myself to yet. I know I’d have to watch it as a fantasy, much like I watch Star Wars knowing that it’s not accurate to space or rather since thats fiction a better comparison would be when I saw Dragon: The Bruce Lee story as a 11yr old kid & thought it was cool, only to learn as I got older it was glitzed up by Hollywood & holds a lot of inaccuracies, so it’s a true historical account layered with “cool” fiction, much like I hear the Vikings show is.

  • @funtanjan
    @funtanjan Год назад

    Actually the fjord setting was filmed in Croatia, Lim Fjord. Sorry to disappoint.

  • @mriippa
    @mriippa Год назад

    its great Odin All Fader's name spreads again

  • @gravitatemortuus1080
    @gravitatemortuus1080 3 года назад +2

    From what I understand three tiers of shields was roman not Viking age. Its not a shield issue its a tactics issue.

  • @n4m31355h4dow
    @n4m31355h4dow 3 года назад +3

    I want to have his opinion on the anime Vinland Saga

  • @Prospro8
    @Prospro8 Год назад

    Try 'Alfred the Great' by Clive Donner, 1968.

  • @vain9137
    @vain9137 3 года назад +1

    I seriously want him to react to vinland saga

  • @margaretanderson6924
    @margaretanderson6924 3 года назад +1

    Enjoyed this very much. The mythic landscape shown in the last movie scene with the First Nations People/Skraelings appears to be (or approximate) the Canadian Shield (aka Laurentian Plateau) which would have been geographically possible.

    • @fosterapamela
      @fosterapamela 2 года назад

      And of course we know that they briefly settled in what is now Newfoundland, at L'Anse aux Meadows, the only known Viking settlement in North America.

  • @theknave4415
    @theknave4415 3 года назад

    tbf, Outlander was a fun popcorn movie. ;)

  • @PhantasyMugen
    @PhantasyMugen 2 года назад

    I really want to see his opinion of Norsemen(Vikingane)!

  • @LeCharles07
    @LeCharles07 2 года назад

    [Sees LEGO ships on the window sill] This is going to be a good one.

  • @jameswilde6272
    @jameswilde6272 2 года назад

    I would have liked to see more of the Lego ships in the background

  • @stephengolombecki8666
    @stephengolombecki8666 3 года назад

    They had of edited down all of his monologues here heavily.
    Like the Vikings show bit. I already know from several sources how wrong they got it between the least her clothes and thick heavy shields it’s pretty bad lol.
    Unfortunate they did that because I’d love to hear a more lengthy talk on his thoughts on all of the above.

  • @hansele666
    @hansele666 2 года назад

    i really like his take about the Vikings TV show
    he went the other route and you could kinda see how he wanted to get the truth out, but this show is so big and i guess its kinda good to have attention on stuff you care about
    but we all know or some still don´t that this show get nearly every other apsect of this people wrong that it´s nearly a crime
    but i get it its a tv show and needs to be entertaining etc

  • @sandmansevenseven1512
    @sandmansevenseven1512 2 года назад

    I was hoping he would address the shield maiden thing. Does anyone know if this was accurate that there were shield maidens ? My understanding was that you had trade , war , and pillage but most of the time it was farming as the core of Viking culture ?

  • @rizkaarifiandi5670
    @rizkaarifiandi5670 3 года назад

    i like this guy, he had that happy smart geek aura

  • @diekje8728
    @diekje8728 3 года назад +13

    My archaeology professor watches tv series all the time and the one detail from Vikings that really got him angry was when they build a ship in a too short time span and with too little sheep for the sails wool. I mean... he could’ve picked something else

    • @2Ten1Ryu
      @2Ten1Ryu 3 года назад +5

      I thought that, too. So, Floki found a nice tree. Still standing in the forest. Well, cool, he can use it maybe five years from now when the wood has dried... lol

    • @elite_rock_god2292
      @elite_rock_god2292 2 года назад +1

      I hate most is The damn helmets the english wear, specielly the ones from wessex. I mean those helmets are like hundreds of years wrong 😂

  • @e.rudsar1633
    @e.rudsar1633 3 года назад +1

    That's some nice Lego ships he got back there

  • @sherwanburhan8942
    @sherwanburhan8942 3 года назад +3

    Most information there's about vikings are from the books of ibn fazlan who was an arab traveler and explorer

    • @eddiewinehosen6665
      @eddiewinehosen6665 3 года назад

      Written information maybe. I think the archaeological digs conducted everywhere the Vikings lived has given quite an extensive insight into how they lived, what they ate, wore etc.

    • @sherwanburhan8942
      @sherwanburhan8942 3 года назад

      @@eddiewinehosen6665 that's also right but you can't get right information and facts just from graves and stuff the problem with vikings is just like Mongols they didn't write there history didn't care about literature most of the info come from the ones that were there enemies

  • @In_The_80s
    @In_The_80s 3 года назад +2

    For many of us the Nordic Pantheon is not Mythology but truth of the old Gods and their ways of life. Out of all the "Viking" media that has been released, The Last Kingdom is by far one of the best ever made. This was a great video to watch and learn and can't wait to see what else you have to offer us viewers. I would love to see you do a video on how this knowledge of the Gods has spread through other cultures like the Anglo Saxons that adopted their pantheon and worshipped Woden and other similar Nordic gods before the time of Christ. Skàl

    • @eddiewinehosen6665
      @eddiewinehosen6665 3 года назад +1

      All gods are Mythology since it's superstitious fiction with no basis in facts or reality. It's fascinating no less how feeble minded we as humans are that a lot of us still think there are gods when everything in our accumulated knowledge debunks the notion of anything superstitious or supernatural!

    • @MySerpentine
      @MySerpentine 3 года назад

      @@eddiewinehosen6665 What an awful bore you are. Disgustingly dull. Imagination makes us human, and things need not have happened to be true.

    • @FrostInFreezer
      @FrostInFreezer 2 года назад

      Really? I only watched the first season of The Last Kingdom just when it came out, so I might have missed something or forgotten it, but I thought that was one of the worst things Ive seen about vikings.

  • @samuelisliving2952
    @samuelisliving2952 Год назад

    I'd like to know his thoughts on The Northman

  • @phillipkilbride9265
    @phillipkilbride9265 2 года назад

    Are we not going to talk about his impressive LEGO ship collection

  • @michaelminshew6523
    @michaelminshew6523 3 года назад

    Hopefully professor price has seen draug it is the most accurate movie as far as period clothes weapons and such i have ever seen and I have been doing research on these things for over 20 years

  • @user-eb6vq1lv6l
    @user-eb6vq1lv6l 2 года назад

    13:13 when he talks about Thor (the movie in the thumbnail)