The Evolution Of British Society Over The Centuries | History Of Britain | All Out History

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @debbielb2325
    @debbielb2325 Год назад +261

    Loved this. My 3x great grandfather was a London area pub owner in the Victorian era. Much to my delight I found a newspaper notice that he was fined for not pouring a full measure of alcohol!

    • @kellysouter4381
      @kellysouter4381 Год назад +26

      It's dark in some of those old pubs

    • @dianelove8147
      @dianelove8147 Год назад +10

      Great story 😂

    • @Ditka-89
      @Ditka-89 Год назад +5

      My gpa almost got court marshaled for doing that while he was in the army! Major violation!

    • @mastrofnone8025
      @mastrofnone8025 Год назад +3

      lol. Bottoms up.

    • @WolfyTheIn-between
      @WolfyTheIn-between Год назад +2

      ​@@Ditka-89lol was he serving an officer or something? I don't know the rules ^^

  • @Lyshie7
    @Lyshie7 Год назад +733

    Tony Robinson is a national treasure. I'm pretty sure we all love him to bits.

    • @ImNotaRussianBot
      @ImNotaRussianBot Год назад +77

      As an American, can we just say that we global anglophiles love him?

    • @rubenruiz4091
      @rubenruiz4091 Год назад

      It makes me sad to see him grow so old

    • @gaylegoodman9097
      @gaylegoodman9097 Год назад +19

      I agree. He is wonderful 😊!

    • @Fretless99
      @Fretless99 Год назад +31

      I am a Canadian citizen, and I love them too... I think he is really quite wonderful

    • @Lunis85
      @Lunis85 Год назад +51

      I'm german and watch everything he's in. International love for Tony!

  • @tonismith6335
    @tonismith6335 Год назад +114

    As an American I am fascinated by the history presented by Tony. He is a treasure for sure.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 Год назад

      @tonismith: I bet he was a great Artful Dodger.

    • @myswanktrendz
      @myswanktrendz Год назад +1

      I love European history because I come from a relatively young country. I want to hear 500+ year old histories

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 Год назад +2

      @tonismith: Yep, he can repeat a script or read cue cards with the best of them. His bouts of spontaneous and hysteric excitement do wear thin over the course of a show, though.

    • @cruisepaige
      @cruisepaige Год назад

      I love him but sometimes his enthusiasm is a bit nerve wracking

  • @yary83
    @yary83 Год назад +138

    One of the things I love about the UK is how they study, preserve and promote their history. I’ve seen so many English documentaries that I think I know more of their history than my own. I love how there are experts in every aspect of life for every time period. I even saw one about wall paper, of course with a wall paper expert. Much love to the UK from Puerto Rico. 🇵🇷

    • @kerrysmithmartonlife
      @kerrysmithmartonlife Год назад +2

      Isn't that what most educated societies do ??
      Not just England

    • @reneastle8447
      @reneastle8447 Год назад +4

      If America followed the UK's footsteps, that would be swell too.

    • @mick7even
      @mick7even Год назад

      @@kerrysmithmartonlifeno. Americans want to erase and/or whitewash their history

    • @mick7even
      @mick7even Год назад +3

      @@kerrysmithmartonlifeone would hope

    • @wewenang5167
      @wewenang5167 Год назад +10

      not all are doing it in minute details like the Brits. I'm a historian and my Professor said the one thing that the Brits are great and expert about since the beginning of history is record keeping and writings...they wrote about almost everything and even the bad things that they did, that is why the Brits got loads of resources to study on their history, other civilization that is on par with the Brits on record keeping and writings are the Chinese, but other civilizations do wrote stuff but not as details as these 2 nations. Most civilization didn't wrote anything about mundane stuff like how people shit, what method they did to wash their bum or any simple stuff.@@kerrysmithmartonlife

  • @always_b_natural703
    @always_b_natural703 Год назад +19

    My MIL met Queen Elizabeth early in her reign. She said that Queen Elizabeth was very beautiful, and that photos really didn't do her justice.

  • @kellysouter4381
    @kellysouter4381 Год назад +20

    I do love that old stonework. There's something about old stone houses

  • @pdruiz2005
    @pdruiz2005 Год назад +25

    At 1:16:42. The countryside wasn't getting crowded. Throughout the 1700s British landlords were enclosing huge tracts of land owned communally by villages and towns. Then they pushed peasants off this land. Once rural folk lost access to communal resources like forests and grazing fields, their impoverished lot got even worse. So they were FORCED to go to the cities for employment due to these Enclosure Acts passed by Parliament, legalizing this enormous theft of communal lands by the powerful landlords.

    • @galadrielwoods2332
      @galadrielwoods2332 4 месяца назад

      Today the evil ones are desiring and plotting to do that again. They call itb"rewilding" and want to make it illegal for people to go into the wilderness.

  • @GraemePayne1967Marine
    @GraemePayne1967Marine Год назад +17

    WW-II ... my mother lived and worked in London all through the war. Her formal schooling ended when her school was bombed one night. So she then worked as a machinist fot the duration. Of course, that ended when the MEN came home and wanted their jobs back!
    Her father served in the Royal Artillery in the First war. One of her brothers lived on Guernsey; his family house was a one end on the runway built ny the Luftwaffe. She got married in 1948, I arrived in 1949, followed in due course by my two brothers and my sister.

    • @lisalking2476
      @lisalking2476 8 месяцев назад +1

      Interesting family history so glad you were told and shared with all of us here. Thanking your father for his service to your country and the sacrifices your family made. Thanks again for the share 😊

    • @WWH_develoments
      @WWH_develoments 7 месяцев назад

      Was it the Sandhurst Road School? Or I am I thinking too much about all the buildings bombed in the blitz. I could be thinking of the Upper North Street School, but that was bombed in 1917

  • @mathdesm9306
    @mathdesm9306 Год назад +15

    I don't mind watching this series for the 20th time, Tony Robinson is such a legend.

  • @inkadinkadoodle
    @inkadinkadoodle Год назад +32

    This is like one big Worst Jobs in History episode! I love it!
    Tony Robinson is just terrific!

  • @MeadowDay
    @MeadowDay Год назад +29

    What a first class documentary on British History. What brave resilient people they were to build such a country and achieve so much on sweat and tears. Hopefully their history traditions and amazing buildings will forever be preserved and protected, most of all never forgotten .

    • @jackpotbear4559
      @jackpotbear4559 Год назад +1

      I'm sure the blacks and the Asians who inherited the land, will cherish the history and culture.

  • @janinemeier7201
    @janinemeier7201 8 месяцев назад +3

    I adore this lovely narrator. How I enjoy being educated about history by Mr. Robinson ! He keeps me smiling with his turn of phrases.

  • @FabulousSquidward
    @FabulousSquidward Год назад +54

    Humans are so funny lol. He sees like hundreds of human skeletons and is like making jokes and shit and then theres a dog skeleton and he's like "lets move on before I get all teary 😢"

    • @kathrynkildow3743
      @kathrynkildow3743 9 месяцев назад +4

      Well, I understand, and I bet most dog owners do.

    • @pdruiz2005
      @pdruiz2005 8 месяцев назад +2

      He’s British. Lots of them have more feelings for dogs and pets than for people. It’s been that case since at least Queen Victoria. 😉

  • @MsLinda165
    @MsLinda165 Год назад +33

    When people long for the 'good old days', imagining 'simpler times' they really don't know what they're talking about. Life was complicated and dangerous.

  • @flashcar60
    @flashcar60 Год назад +6

    Referring to Eleanor the Brewer: the phrase "mind your Ps and Qs" warns the pub-keeper to pour honest Pints and Quarts.

    • @michellemorgan3667
      @michellemorgan3667 5 месяцев назад

      Thought it was to charge correctly though suppose that's one and the same

  • @marigeobrien
    @marigeobrien Год назад +184

    I've always wondered what life was like for the average person throughout all history. Ruth Goodman is a social historian who did a BBC TV series of fascinating and very illuminating programs in which she and fellow historians actually lived as if they were in various periods of English history-- for a YEAR at a time! I found the series here, on RUclips, though I am not sure it is still available. The first year was called "Tales From The Green Valley," which is set in 1620. During this first season, they cannot live on the farm, but in subsequent years they do. While it does focus on country life rather than in the cities, it demonstrates and explains much of how people lived. I sometimes wish they would have done a comparable series about city life, too.

    • @nostromo7928
      @nostromo7928 Год назад +12

      Have you ever read any of the historical books by Ian Mortimer? He's written several about English life in different eras. Where the term "Shit's Creek" came from is colorfully told in "The Time Traveler's Guide to Medieval England." Great stuff. 🙂

    • @lillianliber1798
      @lillianliber1798 Год назад +15

      There's a great British series floating about on RUclips called 1940's House where a family live just as they would have back then. Another one has a group moving from era to era working at an in, being kept in the workhouse etc. called 24 Hours In The Past. There is a documentary called Secrets from the Workhouse where british celebrities explore their ancestors past workhouse experiences. I found it touching as my family records show that my great grandfather was in the workhouse as a little boy in Suffolk England with his whole family.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 Год назад +5

      Well, I can imagine how rough life in the country was, but at least it was country, hopefully less pestilence and disease, not that it guaranteed safety.
      And at least you didn’t have to slog through human and animal waste and garbage on city streets. So maybe that’s why they demonstrated life in the country. It would be impossible to recreate a typical crowded, filthy city street and I don’t think any academics would live that way for a year. It would also include their living quarters; one room, one bed, maybe a table, for two adults, 6 to 10 children, ranging in age from infants to teens. No indoor running water, no bathroom. We’ve all read descriptions and seen illustrations. I think the difficulties of recreating the city life as well as finding people willing to live that way for longer than a day or two would be insurmountable. I wouldn’t do it. I’m going to look for the country one though. Thanks for telling us about it. ❤

    • @Lena-1977
      @Lena-1977 Год назад +5

      I came across several of her programs about living in a historic era. (Victorian era. Edwardian era, WW2, and they made a 13th or 14th century French castle)
      I learned a lot from seeing it through her prospective

    • @EBSJones4
      @EBSJones4 Год назад +3

      I can definitely recommend Ruth Goodman's books - as well as those of Ian Mortimer. Fascinating

  • @brandonjohnston7746
    @brandonjohnston7746 Год назад +31

    When the day comes when the good lord calls tony home I will be absolutely heartbroken. We love you tony,

    • @Author.Noelle.Alexandria
      @Author.Noelle.Alexandria Год назад +1

      Oh no, he’s going down below where it’ll be a lot more fun. Who wants to sit around strumming luted and praising a ghost daddy instead of having a gay ol’ romp with some beer and codpieces with ye olde devil? That’s where I’m going. :D

  • @eliotreader8220
    @eliotreader8220 Год назад +22

    watching this puts me in mind of what my grandma went through during the war.
    she was just 18 when D Day happened

  • @SaltyMinorcan
    @SaltyMinorcan Год назад +16

    I can't believe Tony is still going and looks so great.

    • @theCosmicQueen
      @theCosmicQueen Год назад +1

      he was so cute with his long dark hair... way back when.

    • @SaltyMinorcan
      @SaltyMinorcan Год назад +1

      @@theCosmicQueen Yes. And still seems excited about his job. haha

  • @robertfarrimond3369
    @robertfarrimond3369 Год назад +28

    Tony! you've been magnificent throughout your career! I hope someone will pass this on to you!

  • @AlexaWilson12
    @AlexaWilson12 Год назад +22

    He's so old, I wish I had even a small chance to shake his hand! I bet if I knew about his past documentaries in school I'd have been much more interested in history!

  • @DavidDowdy877
    @DavidDowdy877 Год назад +72

    I enjoy Tony’s adventures time traveling the history of ENGLAND.He has come to represent Great Britain’s best

    • @deborahbaker4770
      @deborahbaker4770 Год назад +5

      He’s really animated when he’s talking and he’s kinda funny so that help’s ‼️👍🏻

    • @Jestmystuff
      @Jestmystuff Год назад +6

      I'm not even British and I love watching these videos with him.

    • @tammywilks8782
      @tammywilks8782 Год назад

      Agreed!

    • @blueneptune825
      @blueneptune825 Год назад +4

      He really is a very endearing man. I'm sure England is proud of her native son.

    • @animerlon
      @animerlon Год назад +3

      Aside from loving him in Black Adder, he became more endearing following him through seasons of Time Team. I would love to see a collaboration between him & Lucy Worsley. They have a similar cheeky sense of humor & great enthusiasm for the topic they're covering.

  • @rmur4820
    @rmur4820 Год назад +49

    This is a great retelling of history. I appreciate Tony, even if I am American and this was about Britain. I first saw him on TimeTeam and watched every episode. I would watch any show he narrated or presented.

    • @larryzigler6812
      @larryzigler6812 Год назад +3

      As an American I find your comments rather odd .

    • @Author.Noelle.Alexandria
      @Author.Noelle.Alexandria Год назад +5

      The time period he’s talking about is far enough back that, unless you’re indigenous to the US or are African or Asian, then your ancestors were possibly in Britain. Where do you think white people were before the US was colonized? Medieval Britain is our history too.

    • @f_youtubecensorshipf_nazis
      @f_youtubecensorshipf_nazis Год назад

      @@Author.Noelle.Alexandria it's not. Our history is the mesa american natives and the tribes that the english wiped out.
      Sure wish people got that and didn't villainize brown people while claiming english history.

    • @jrmckim
      @jrmckim Год назад +1

      ​@noellealexandria1153 or mainland Europe. Lots of Germans, Scandinavian and French ancestors. Which if you think about the history of Britain, many of their ancestors are German and French as well.

    • @jrmckim
      @jrmckim Год назад +5

      ​@@larryzigler6812I'm American and don't find anything odd about it.

  • @Kimmy-pw8tm
    @Kimmy-pw8tm Год назад +11

    Tony on trains, digging up hidden secrets, painting a wall in white paint, he is always the man behind how the show stands out.

  • @ToxicAvengerCleanYourMind
    @ToxicAvengerCleanYourMind Год назад +14

    Let's face it ... The majority of our lives are nihilistic, monotonous, and grim... I wake up to pretty much work to eat and look forward to sleep and regret having to wake up just to repeat the process... I feel like I'm living that Groundhogs movie sometimes

  • @scottmeredith3359
    @scottmeredith3359 Год назад +5

    Pretty shocked this great documentary completely skipped over WW1 entirely

  • @elizabethhansen6984
    @elizabethhansen6984 Год назад +8

    This was amazing. Im from the US, never heard of the Mary Rose. Thanks for a great trip back in time!!!!

  • @netizencapet
    @netizencapet Год назад +22

    The point about current witch iconography - cauldron, cat, and broomstick - and the link to the common alewife (by way of malingering) was fascinating. Yet again, we see the truth: identity is a function of class position, rather than the other way round.

  • @b.r2715
    @b.r2715 Год назад +11

    We all love Sir Tony Robinson

  • @CloneShockTrooper
    @CloneShockTrooper Год назад +4

    Tony Robins is definitly is a treasure.

  • @Bongwater33
    @Bongwater33 Год назад +138

    Next time people start whittering on about wishing they could live in the "good old days" they should watch this! Great show about the common people's lives in history!

    • @dorianphilotheates3769
      @dorianphilotheates3769 Год назад +6

      The “good old days” were lovely.

    • @inisipisTV
      @inisipisTV Год назад +9

      Don't know about you. My disappointment with the present world makes me more wanting to live during the Boubonic plague.😂

    • @shalevedna
      @shalevedna Год назад +5

      I love studying history and the old times but because I do study it I am glad I do not live then!!!

    • @dorianphilotheates3769
      @dorianphilotheates3769 Год назад +4

      @@shalevedna - Me, too! My favourite historical characters are Oprah and Kim Kardashian.

    • @Vivienwestphal
      @Vivienwestphal Год назад +2

      I believe there are quite a few people who would rather collect dead rats on the street than work in an office 😅 as long as it paid for the living expenses

  • @Midnight-jp3bb
    @Midnight-jp3bb Год назад +12

    Tony and the crew are absolute legends.

  • @guarddog318
    @guarddog318 Год назад +47

    If the stories in this video don't make you realize just how easy you've got it... then your brain just doesn't work at all.

    • @RPcropland
      @RPcropland 7 месяцев назад

      Actually we work more die more hedious deaths from car accidents and occupational hazards. We inhale toxic chemicals on a daily basis, and our water may or may not have toxic levels of industrial polutants that makes us weak and feel like waking up is dificult! Mental issues and birth defects are prevelant today! Also medeaval despotism and war is childsplay compaired to everything that transpired in recent history. We can nitpick particular examples of brutal punishments through the totality of medival history(and in total they seem like it happened frequently), but the modern times are relatively new and so far the horrors suffered in recent history completely dwarf those instances!The holocaust, modern proson, black sites, world war 1&2, and countless conflicts fought with weapons that would make you rather be boiled alive than face their distruction. Only difference between then and now is modern medicine. Even then people are were not guaranteed to get sick they lived more natural physically and mentally balanced lives in untainted nature, unless they loved smelling pigs and living in shit(which I highly doubt) they were probably fine. Also everyone in the family was inherently valued and useful whether child or woman contrary to feminist propaganda because of devision of labor.

  • @lizzy66125
    @lizzy66125 Год назад +52

    love Tony with his sense of humor and storytelling is a class apart.😂❤

  • @frankj.artino2203
    @frankj.artino2203 Год назад +13

    Anthony is a MASTER STORYTELLER.

  • @1toshi32
    @1toshi32 Год назад +8

    I'm really loving this video and particularly enchanted with the paintings and illustrations of the way it would have been. It gives you a visual of the real nitty gritty of the times. Tony, you are still a marvel.

  • @miss.southerngrace2269
    @miss.southerngrace2269 Год назад +77

    I'm an American fascinated with English history, including the monarchy. Everyday life for a local must have been incredibly difficult & completely undesirable. These poor people went through hell on a daily basis just to feed themselves and their babies. It is great to see they were the backbone in which England was built. Oh, LOVE this guy too. Definitely a national treasure ya'll have there!!!!

    • @kathymullins6358
      @kathymullins6358 Год назад +3

      Same here .

    • @MrJx4000
      @MrJx4000 Год назад +2

      A national treasure is right. I never get bored listening to Sir Robinson

    • @litsci1877
      @litsci1877 Год назад +3

      What do you think Americans now are doing to get by? Look around you.

    • @tomservo75
      @tomservo75 Год назад +4

      I'd still rather be a poor person today than a rich king 200 years ago.

    • @Manx123
      @Manx123 Год назад +1

      "I'm an American "
      Stopped reading there.

  • @Sean_Coyne
    @Sean_Coyne Год назад +7

    My Londoner mother married a Pole in WWII, while two of her three sisters married GI's, her other sister married a Canadian serviceman. My mother's husband was killed in the war as was her youngest sister's, leaving her with his child. Of the GI's the other was so badly wounded in a strafing of his tank that he spent two years in hospital with part of his chest blown away (he had shouted a warning to the tanks ahead but was hit before he could close the hatch... amazingly they were passing a field hospital at the time, so he was being cared for in minutes). Only one of the four, the Canadian, came back unharmed.

  • @chyhart
    @chyhart Год назад +6

    14 hour shifts all of it on your feet! Sounds like a shift at the Amazon Warehouse. :D

  • @Kunfucious577
    @Kunfucious577 Год назад +12

    I’m trying to figure out whether having an expert on literally everything is good or bad. It’s amazing that they have Georgian poaching and ship cuisine experts.

  • @helenwood1
    @helenwood1 Год назад +97

    There is never a history show that doesn't point out the many ways Henry VIII was a sociopathic serial killer.

    • @kellysouter4381
      @kellysouter4381 Год назад +12

      He was a very bad man

    • @marijeangalloway1560
      @marijeangalloway1560 Год назад +19

      Really, really hard to avoid in any discussion of Henry, as it was pretty much his defining characteristic. Not for nothing was he known in Europe as "the English Nero." A pretty valid comparison; Nero was also notorious for being a paranoid psychopath who killed many people around him----and was, like Henry, a wife-killer. ( Of course, Nero also killed his mother, but as Henry's mother died when he was on,y 11, years before he became king, maybe he shouldn't lose the bonus points for this. After all, he did threaten to kill his own daughter, and doubtless would have done so if she had failed to capitulate to his demands. And, had his mother, an extremely pious woman, still been alive when he separated from Rome and had himself declared Supreme Head of the English Church, she would have certainly have refused to accept this. Her advanced age would have been no deterrrent to him; he had one elderly woman, a near relation----his mother's first cousin----to whom she had been close and he had known all his life, butchered horribly on the scaffold when she was nearly 70 years old. Pretty disgusting stuff, tthen and now. So dear old Mummy's head might well have gone off too. I sure wouldn't rule it out, given that he had decided that his will and God's were one and the same. The ultimate narcissism, justifying any kind and degree of cruelty to virtually anyone!)

    • @julianarodriguex899
      @julianarodriguex899 Год назад

      God is the greatest narcissist in character and the bible sets a sadomasochistic way of life that christianity enforces thru churches with those kinky clergy. A whole dysfunctional social structure is patterned in the feudal absolute power of the mighty(godly in claim of word) and a world in submussion where might (and NOT verifiable knowledge) makes right. A violent attitude for all its masculinity still not overcome

    • @KatzenjammerKid61
      @KatzenjammerKid61 Год назад

      You forgot Mass murder.

    • @theCosmicQueen
      @theCosmicQueen Год назад

      he should be put on trial post mortem.

  • @JennzOrs
    @JennzOrs Год назад +4

    The shipwreck was amazing! Ive just started getting into Tudor era history, and i didnt know they recovered this ship! Love that bit. I love learning about ordinary peoples lives in history

  • @ToniHunterOne
    @ToniHunterOne Год назад +2

    This is just wonderful. I watched the entire thing this afternoon. Thank you, Tony! Who's up for some turnips and Black Adder?

  • @susansteinhaus8533
    @susansteinhaus8533 Год назад +9

    Thank you Tony for the beautifuly told and facinating story of British History.

  • @TheJonathanNewton
    @TheJonathanNewton Год назад +9

    How I love this ”Britain by Baldrick” perspective on history, which is so rarely seen otherwise.

  • @shelbynamels973
    @shelbynamels973 Год назад +8

    Poor Baldric, just no getting away from turnips.

  • @madamezenobia3663
    @madamezenobia3663 Год назад +12

    I have like Tony for years...dang tho...we all got old!!!!

  • @adwalker89
    @adwalker89 Год назад +22

    This had everything, it was dark, educational and hilarious at the same time! Tony you're a national treasure, great doco

  • @chriskirschten203
    @chriskirschten203 Год назад +2

    I enjoyed the ride. And the soundtrack. Thanks for sharing this!

  • @myswanktrendz
    @myswanktrendz Год назад +9

    Both my British maternal great grandfathers were in WWI. One GG fought in Boer war and later N Africa, and the other in India. My mother said they refused to speak of what they had experienced, and the Boer fighter suffered from PTSD (which we only recognized in the 90s). I wish i knew their stories.

    • @iamjustsaying4787
      @iamjustsaying4787 Год назад

      @myswanktrendz The men in my family here in the US wouldn’t speak of the wars they fought in either. If a child or a woman asked they would say that they didn’t go through war to protect their women and children to come home and tell them about the horrors of war. Only once a boy reaches his teens would the men tell them about their experiences. My son and husband did tell me a bit of my father’s training and expertise in reconnaissance which included survival training together with hand to hand combat. It explained a lot, like how he could follow all our boyfriends and never be seen or why he at just 5’7” feared no man.

  • @lareinabrown
    @lareinabrown Год назад +1

    Babs is AMAZING. First hand counts like hers are so important and so powerful

  • @CoMorbiditty
    @CoMorbiditty Год назад +3

    l love how the lives of the people Tony talks about translates into the present streets he walks. Just brilliant. l love all these shows. Life was so hard back then, women and kids had it really hard. Makes you feel blessed about today even tho... lm still on the poverty line by todays standards.

  • @updownstate
    @updownstate Год назад +5

    `This is what I needed to know and was never taught in school. I've learned more from your channel in the past few months than I did in 12 years of American education.Subscribed.

  • @fastgunslinger
    @fastgunslinger Год назад +8

    the sandstone is called a holy stone .. it was still being used on the USS little rock clg-4 in 1961-64 when i left..

  • @BenSHammonds
    @BenSHammonds Год назад +1

    I enjoy listening to Tony on such programs.

  • @Kelly_Grey
    @Kelly_Grey Год назад +35

    Talking about the German soldiers that knew about the British underground news network and kept it secret because "They wanted to have the real news". As poignant today as ever.

    • @MeadowDay
      @MeadowDay Год назад +1

      True

    • @pdruiz2005
      @pdruiz2005 8 месяцев назад

      Most Germans weren’t dumb. They knew that they were losing the war by 1942. But the Nazi propaganda was truly all-encompassing. So they were starved of news that told the truth about how Hitler and the Nazi high command was bungling things.

  • @Vampirization
    @Vampirization Год назад +4

    40:36 I'm so frustrated no mention is made about the bollock dagger handle next to the comb!

  • @xochitl9161
    @xochitl9161 Год назад +15

    Excellent. Very well researched and presented. I completely enjoyed this program and learned a great deal. Thank you :)

  • @absurdist5134
    @absurdist5134 Год назад +1

    I love that Tony laughed at the four candles bit.

  • @lisamatthews1638
    @lisamatthews1638 Год назад +7

    I love learning history! My paternal family ancestry was English. It's obvious the Brits know all about blood, sweat, and tears and how to have a good time whether it be war, ordinary, or lean times! 😊
    Keep that stiff upper lip and press onward and upward! 👏
    ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨

  • @marcrodriquez5153
    @marcrodriquez5153 Год назад +1

    Dr. Felton this is the most emotional and enjoyable piece you have ever done that I have seen. You were royally pissed.😂
    Thank you once again for your descriptive, unexpurgated opinion of your visit.

  • @geoffrogers7776
    @geoffrogers7776 Год назад +7

    As always, a excellent doco from Tony. Though, I couldn’t help looking carefully at the turnips in the pottage. Just in case.

  • @robertalpy
    @robertalpy Год назад +2

    I can't reconcile the chivalrous young man with the absolute monster that came later.
    I'm convinced that the fall during the tournament where he lost consciousness for hours, resulted in more than just an open wound in his leg that led to a fistula that never closed. His doctors actually created the fistula by refusing to let the wound heal in fear that the infection would poison the blood. This was actually a legitimate fear, but by never letting the wound heal, they made it certain the infection would persist at the edge of gangrene for years. That he didn't die sooner is amazing...
    And unfortunate for the women and men of the court and many thousands of his lesser subjects in station but greater perhaps in character.

  • @Staffo1972
    @Staffo1972 Год назад +5

    As a Australian, born early 70s and the 80s was nothin but epic brit shows and movies and watchin Mr Robinson for the first time was funny and the show was called Maid Marian and her merry men then Blackadder

  • @AnnaliseHopkins-r4d
    @AnnaliseHopkins-r4d Год назад +1

    Tony and the crew are absolute legends.. Tony and the crew are absolute legends..

  • @Historian212
    @Historian212 Год назад +13

    As an American, I LOL’d at the Western movie clip and the cavalry charge. My grandfather was born and raised in England, and emigrated to the US in 1913. So when WWII came, and my father enlisted, I’m sure he wanted to be stationed in the UK. Alas, he was sent to the Pacific theater instead.

    • @jrmckim
      @jrmckim Год назад +1

      Very similar situation with my grandfather. Except he was from Scotland and was sent to Italy. I'm sure he had to gone through the UK at some point to get there.

  • @emmilypalmer9269
    @emmilypalmer9269 Год назад

    I am loving the editor’s choice of B roll music. I’m LOVING IT! 50:57

  • @frankj.artino2203
    @frankj.artino2203 Год назад +12

    "I'm working here in Glasgow! And I've got a decent job! I'm carrying bricks n mortar, and me pay is 15 bob! I get up in the morning, and I rise up with the lark! And when I'm walking down the street, you can hear the girls remark ! "

  • @TXRBL
    @TXRBL Год назад +1

    As a child, my neighbor had an old bill hook. It was truly splendid, and for some reason, it captivated my curiosity. I suppose that fascination still lingers within me.

  • @MortrishaAdams
    @MortrishaAdams Год назад +23

    My grandmother was one of those war brides to an American GI, her brothers served in the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy and her dad was in WWI. I always said I was going to tape her war stories and sadly never did before she passed away 😢so this is awesome to hear about other war stories over there. All of my family is still in England and I should get across the pond to visit 🇬🇧♥️🇺🇸

    • @lexicat6177
      @lexicat6177 Год назад +1

      We take it for granted we have time, gratefully we have memories.

    • @The_Bean
      @The_Bean Год назад

      You might be able to find his actions and experiences by finding their unit#!

  • @staystrong8966
    @staystrong8966 Год назад

    2 and a half hours of episode and I CACKLED at the wee boy licking a window. I LOST it!

  • @boobootheballbreaker2092
    @boobootheballbreaker2092 Год назад +25

    Oh for a time machine🛸Love these stories of regular people. From Australia, so looking forward to visiting Britain again in September. My sister's first visit, I've made note of a few places in this documentary! My favourite era is the Victorian. Love the history, love Tony Robinson's presentation!

    • @fredfarnackle5455
      @fredfarnackle5455 Год назад

      Er, no. Believe me - you don't want a time machine. Life then was hard and brutal. I was born there in 1940 and things hadn't really changed much for centuries in the poorer parts - I still remember lots of things from when I was three years old, if you had money life was great but if you were poor it was crap. People today have no idea.

  • @chrispj7185
    @chrispj7185 Год назад +7

    Found today’s detectors episode extremely interesting and lovely to see Yannis having more input. I’d love to see more of this type of content added to the convent restoration. Well done and thank you.

  • @merrylmarsh9037
    @merrylmarsh9037 Год назад +2

    Tony makes history so very entertaining.
    Just Love Him!!!!!

  • @mysticmoose6123
    @mysticmoose6123 Год назад +3

    I love that the method of desalting the salt pork is to put it in salt water

  • @lauriebradley8295
    @lauriebradley8295 Год назад +4

    Thank you Toni for bringing life the lives of my and my husbands predecessors. I am alive for their drive and love❤️👍🏼

  • @jeff__w
    @jeff__w Год назад +4

    1:41 Tudors
    43:49 Georgians
    1:24:40 Victorians
    2:06:19 Second World War

  • @leahvillanueva5402
    @leahvillanueva5402 6 месяцев назад

    Miss Babs is so precious. Thank you to Tony and the BBC for preserving her story on film for posterity!

  • @sharronlynnwhite4790
    @sharronlynnwhite4790 Год назад +6

    I love and appreciate all your videos....cheers Saint.John's NL CA

  • @erpthompsonqueen9130
    @erpthompsonqueen9130 Год назад +3

    Thank you.
    Watching from Alaska.

  • @samflower31
    @samflower31 Год назад +2

    I love Tony, and this was an excellent video!

  • @EmilyJelassi
    @EmilyJelassi Год назад +58

    This is just fascinating! I love history and learning about how other people and countries made it through their trials and tribulations (& wars) and the way this was done makes it even more interesting 😊

    • @theraven3481
      @theraven3481 Год назад +1

      Well .....if u love history your not getting it about the so called Royals

    • @richardperkins6416
      @richardperkins6416 Год назад

      @@theraven3481 it happened îyp

  • @jasonbennett8455
    @jasonbennett8455 Год назад +1

    I love the content and you always make me laugh or smile much love and respect from Canada eh

  • @EdgeO419
    @EdgeO419 Год назад +47

    If this documentary doesn't beat people over the head about the importance of labor regulations and unions idk what will.

    • @lisalking2476
      @lisalking2476 8 месяцев назад +4

      Health and safety as well 😊

    • @Ones_Complement
      @Ones_Complement 28 дней назад

      Regulations are what stifle the competition necessary for better opportunity.

  • @DobbysOtherSock
    @DobbysOtherSock Год назад +2

    Honestly, such an incredible documentary great narration, and awesome visuals. Thank you so much. I hope to watch the second episode!!!

  • @ajj9694
    @ajj9694 Год назад +6

    This was so interesting! Love how they brought real people to life.

  • @omanahara
    @omanahara Год назад +7

    Captivating to watch and even to listen to 🔥

  • @momszycat4148
    @momszycat4148 Год назад +5

    I think im glad I live now,thank you

  • @jamesbingham4538
    @jamesbingham4538 Год назад +3

    the farmers workday hours was from "can't see to can't see"

  • @WVgrl59
    @WVgrl59 Год назад +8

    Horses don't eat straw, that is their bedding, horses eat hay.😊❤

  • @juliearch1
    @juliearch1 Год назад +3

    Thanks Sir Tony. Always interesting!!

  • @brittnyy113
    @brittnyy113 Год назад +19

    So enlightening and refreshing to see a Black woman in one if these! Especially in a role/career not many Black woman pursue! I loved seeing her scene in the pub. Kudos to Tony and the makers of this docuseries for her brief but impactful insight 👏🏾 ❤

    • @theCosmicQueen
      @theCosmicQueen Год назад +5

      well that 's because they were very rare in old england !!! usually none. only after the colonies did they get blacks..

    • @michaeleastham3868
      @michaeleastham3868 Год назад

      @@theCosmicQueen blacks have been living in England for over a thousand years..

    • @anastasia10017
      @anastasia10017 Год назад +5

      so it is somebody's fault that black women dont pursue that kind of career and choose to do something else ????

    • @hildacollier2638
      @hildacollier2638 Год назад

      I'm surprised you didn't claim that all the queen's and kings of England were black. Aren't all well know people in history now black (even though they weren't). Just look at all the white people have gone through to get where they are today. So much pain. And you call it white privilege. Such an insult.

    • @ahmyiahlee1502
      @ahmyiahlee1502 Год назад +2

      @@anastasia10017 she never said that 🤦🏾‍♀️

  • @Erikvanglabbeek-s9f
    @Erikvanglabbeek-s9f 17 дней назад

    Tony cheers me up, his lively and joyful approach gives me inspiration!
    Great guy!

  • @mollybrownuptown5849
    @mollybrownuptown5849 Год назад +3

    Thanks Tony for another education in something I never thought about. Recycling at its best. Then along comes a larger wagon, a couple of blokes, picking up your pickings and thus the birth of business competition.

  • @willywatch10
    @willywatch10 Год назад +2

    Another great by Tony Robinson, thank you for Sharing.

  • @seangleason260
    @seangleason260 Год назад +6

    The British women who said she was proud of her plot is an absolute legend and a total warrior

    • @cmaden78
      @cmaden78 8 месяцев назад

      That generation of British women, leaves me just in awe, astounded. They were so smart, so tough, beautiful. And they knew how to make a cocktail 🍹🍸

  • @mommat1306
    @mommat1306 Год назад +7

    Excellent series. It’s interesting how throughout history we note how people did extraordinary things to survive. In fact it wasn’t so extraordinary, people have always done what they had to to survive. It will ever be true that the survivors were the ones who did what they had to do.

  • @thisoldnurse1521
    @thisoldnurse1521 Год назад +5

    Canadian girl here. My ancestors have been traced to Devon and the Torbryan area. I know from my 5X great grandfather’s wedding records that he was a sojourner, which from my my French means a labourer of some sort. Didn’t specify, so I presume day labourer. I would love to know about that area of England and what life was like throughout the years. This fellow does a great job. He used to do some archeological show too.

  • @barbarabrkovich1988
    @barbarabrkovich1988 Год назад +1

    I love hearing Baldricks voice

  • @SteveAubrey1762
    @SteveAubrey1762 Год назад +7

    I am an American. My ancestry is English & Welsh. My 5th great grand father left Wales and landed at Baltimore, in the colony of Maryland.
    I am a single( widowed) father. Its just my son & I.
    Im seeing this from a different perspective. I only make about $65,000/year. We live of about $30,000. Save the rest. I buy houses and rent them out. So unlike people in the past, there is a hope of a future.