The Galloglass: Ireland's Most Sought-After Mercenaries

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  • Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @SandRhomanHistory
    @SandRhomanHistory  Год назад +41

    Get 50% off Blinkist premium and start your 7-day free trial by clicking here: blinkist.com/sandrhomanhistory. This offer is valid only until May 29th.

    • @brokenbridge6316
      @brokenbridge6316 Год назад +2

      I had heard of the Galloglass before but didn't know too much about their history. Thanks a bunch for bringing them to life in front of us.

    • @chubbyninja89
      @chubbyninja89 Год назад

      You should make more of these mercenary units videos.
      Maybe you could do one on the Varangian Guard as well.

    • @WalesTheTrueBritons
      @WalesTheTrueBritons Год назад +2

      Ah, Welsh longbows have entered the chat. They were the most prized mercenary in Europe.

    • @haliaeetus8221
      @haliaeetus8221 4 месяца назад

      12:25 So the kings used pawns (Galloglass) against pawns in their games of thrones and had those bloody games be financed and taken even directly out of the peasants livelihoods and lives. So the Galloglass lives were like a huge culture of dogs eat dogs (and peasants being chihuauas) while royals and lords were safely eating cake.

    • @ALavin-en1kr
      @ALavin-en1kr 15 дней назад

      When it comes to religion that is where it gets dicy. The Anglican Church is one thing, the Presbyterian religion is something else. A depressing, Calvinist religion that brings its ugly world view of Predestination into how it views and lives life. The view that some are created by God to be saved; the equivalent of wheat, while others were created by God to be dammed; the equivalent of chaff to be destroyed or blown away by the wind is a bastard religion and heresy. The Anglican Church in Ireland has not been a problem for Catholics as the Presbyterian religion has been. It is the religion of the Scots in Northern Ireland, it is a bastardization of Christianity and is not a true religion.

  • @Kevc00
    @Kevc00 Год назад +118

    Would love an accompanying video on the Kerns as the gallowglass and kerns often fought on the continent in groups with the two units complimenting each other's fighting style. When the military reforms of O'Neill came in in the late 16th century he reorganised this manipular system, rather than light infantry and heavy infantry, he re-equipped the Gallowglass as pikemen, and the light infantry Kern's as musketeers with calivers.

  • @silverchairsg
    @silverchairsg Год назад +958

    After years of extensive research, historians have finally determined that Gallowglasses have an attack of 16, a charge bonus of 9 and a total defence of 12.

    • @scottanno8861
      @scottanno8861 Год назад +109

      They were too expensive as mercenaries though, and had terrible protection against ranged attacks in M2TW

    • @krystofcisar469
      @krystofcisar469 Год назад +27

      Truth... Still one of my favorite mercenaries. :D

    • @breakerdawn8429
      @breakerdawn8429 Год назад +25

      ​@@scottanno8861You use them as shick troops lol. If it got shot by arrows you're using it wrong

    • @scottanno8861
      @scottanno8861 Год назад +35

      @@breakerdawn8429 Easier said than done bro England is all longbowmen

    • @breakerdawn8429
      @breakerdawn8429 Год назад +6

      @@scottanno8861 Wait you didn't hire them while playing as the English?

  • @_Saracen_
    @_Saracen_ Год назад +27

    I live about 15 minutes away from a town in Donegal, Ireland called Milford. When I was a kid and we were traveling through it my father used to constantly remind us what Milford was in Irish, Baile na nGallóglach, town of the Galloglasses!

  • @imperatorscotorum6334
    @imperatorscotorum6334 Год назад +40

    At the end of the 16th century the Irish earl of Tyrone Hugh O’Neill revolutionised native Irish warfare by being the first gaelic chieftain to raise a standard army from the peasantry, rather than relying on the traditional gallowglass and kerne, and trained this force in contemporary European pike and shot tactics. He managed to raise up to 10,000 men, an unprecedented number for Irish armies at the time, and armed them with so many arquebusiers they actually had more firearms than the English army.
    This was the most serious threat the English had ever faced in Ireland, and they were able to inflict a series of stinging defeats against the forces of the English crown in Ireland before eventually being defeated themselves at Kinsale in 1601.

    • @Doyle_Lorean2105
      @Doyle_Lorean2105 Год назад +1

      If the spanish landed in the right part of ireland, things might have been different. What I want to know is, what did hugh o'neill want to achieve? make ireland a vassal state of Spain, or gain more independence for ireland, or just ulster. Hard to know.

    • @vatsal7640
      @vatsal7640 Год назад +1

      The thing is ,anglo norman lords also used gallowglass mercenaries.
      So the English would probably have regiments of them in thier armies as well

    • @waynenash6008
      @waynenash6008 4 месяца назад

      @@vatsal7640 your correct,, Elizabeth 1st, recruited clansman from the western Highlands, especially,, Maclean's,,

  • @imperatorscotorum6334
    @imperatorscotorum6334 Год назад +31

    In the Battle of Curlew Pass in 1599, a detachment of Gallowglass on foot their swords and axes counter-charged a charge of the English cavalry, and won. Fierce warriors indeed

  • @imperatorscotorum6334
    @imperatorscotorum6334 Год назад +28

    Gallowglasses also have the distinction of being mentioned in Shakespeare’s Macbeth, with the line “of kerns and gallowglasses is supplied”, which speaks to the impression they made on contemporary English minds. Ireland in the 16th century was England’s Afghanistan of the time, and the gallowglass, although becoming obsolete, were still feared enemies.

    • @backtonovember5306
      @backtonovember5306 Год назад +1

      So like the gallowglass were suicide bombers of their era

    • @cacamilis8477
      @cacamilis8477 Год назад +2

      ​@@backtonovember5306 No? Why would you think that?

    • @backtonovember5306
      @backtonovember5306 Год назад

      @@cacamilis8477 It's the only logical conclusion yknow. 1/1 = 1, 2+2 = 4, every action has a reaction, allat n shit

    • @cacamilis8477
      @cacamilis8477 Год назад

      @@backtonovember5306 Then explain your logic. This isn't hard.

    • @imperatorscotorum6334
      @imperatorscotorum6334 Год назад +6

      I used the comparison of Ireland being the Afghanistan of Shakespeare’s day, because it was a prolonged, costly occupation of a very foreign land fighting against natives fond of ambushes and other non-conventional tactics. The galloglass-suicide bomber comparison doesn’t exactly fit though,

  • @colmmcg100
    @colmmcg100 Год назад +15

    YES!!!!!! more irish topics please 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪

  • @ViktoriousDead
    @ViktoriousDead Год назад +32

    Inviting Normans into your country to help fight your enemies is like letting a pack of wolves into your house to get rid the mice

    • @generalmarkmilleyisbenedic8895
      @generalmarkmilleyisbenedic8895 Год назад +4

      Lmao indeed

    • @denizergun6325
      @denizergun6325 Год назад

      Though it worked in Scotland.

    • @krystofcisar469
      @krystofcisar469 Год назад

      It was centuries after William the bastard/conqueror invited himself so it wasnt those normans anymore :D

    • @Nozylatten
      @Nozylatten Год назад

      @@denizergun6325 yes

    • @thinkinghmmmm
      @thinkinghmmmm Год назад

      Although it worked out for me. My family became very powerful and still to this day hold public officer and military positions, have spread to Canada, USA and many other places. We Mortons come from Robert the bastards half brother Robert curthose. Now you can find the name in many places. Quite fascinating.

  • @bppmurphy
    @bppmurphy Год назад +18

    Now we're on an Irish history tangent, Sandrhoman has to do an analysis on the Battle of the Boyne. Only man up to the job

    • @imperatorscotorum6334
      @imperatorscotorum6334 Год назад

      The Battle of Aughrim was even bloodier and more significant from a historical point of view, it was the bloodiest battle ever fought in Ireland or in Britain and involved soldiers from Ireland, Englandc France, the Netherlands and Denmark

    • @bppmurphy
      @bppmurphy Год назад

      @@imperatorscotorum6334 Indeed that is true. I suppose a whole series on the Williamite War which would include both battles would be cool?

  • @badgeractual8881
    @badgeractual8881 Год назад +8

    Thanks for this, good content like this is hard to find on Irish history!

  • @AGS363
    @AGS363 Год назад +14

    The standards of martial culture are quite diverse:
    13th century - train live long to become an acceptable warrior
    16th century- fight or starve

    • @krystofcisar469
      @krystofcisar469 Год назад

      5-6century was probably one of the toughest medieval period imo :D

  • @lostShadowLord
    @lostShadowLord Год назад +15

    I read somewhere that Hugh O'neill's Musketeers, where originally Galloglass, as they were the only ones he could trust with firearms

    • @GallowglassAxe
      @GallowglassAxe Год назад +1

      Yes and no. The kerns used matchlocks but were only using them for hit and run tactics. The Gallowglass' discipline of never turning back worked well in holding rank and keep shooting without screwing up and blowing yourself up.

    • @joeerickson516
      @joeerickson516 Год назад +1

      "By the way, would the Gallowglass Norwegian,🇳🇴 Scottish,🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Irish,🇮🇪 mercenaries payed,🪙 💵 by the King,👑 Charles the fifth of Granada, Habsburg Spain,🇪🇸 to explore and conquer primitive stone,🪨 age ancient Aztec Mexico,🇲🇽 San Salvador,🇦🇷 and Panama,🇵🇦 with Hernan Cortez, Pedro de Alvarado, Cristobal de Olid and Bernal Diaz, in the year of fifteen hundred nineteen to the year of fifteen hundred twenty-one during the exploration,🔭 christianization,💒☦ colonization, and conquest of the primitive stone,🪨 age ancient aztec empire of primitive stone,🪨 age ancient Mexico,🇲🇽 San Salvador, 🇦🇷 and Panama,🇵🇦 in the year of fifteen hundred nineteen to the year of fifteen hundred twenty-one, during the age of exploration,🔭 of the new world,🗺 in the year fifteen hundred nineteen to fifteen hundred fifty-three?"

    • @joeerickson516
      @joeerickson516 Год назад +1

      "By the way, would Hugh O'Neil 's Norwegian,🇳🇴 Scottish,🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Irish,🇮🇪 Gallowglass musketeer mercenaries on horseback,🏇 of an English,🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 standard thoroughbred horses,🐴 wearing Southern German,🇩🇪 plate,🍽 armor and chainmail,🔗⛓ for protection, get payed, 🪙 💵 by King,👑 Charles the fifth of Granada, Habsburg Spain,🇪🇸 to explore,🗺 colonize, christianize,💒☦ and conquer with Hernan Cortez, Pedro de Alvarado, Cristobal de Olid, and Bernal Diaz, alongside their primitive stone,🪨 age indigenous native american auxiliaries such as the Tlaxcala and the Tarascans, and the West african,🌍 Nigerian,🇳🇬 slaves, against the hostile primitive stone,🪨 age ancient aztec jaguar,🐆 and eagle,🦅 warriors alongside the coyote, 🐺 warrior priests of primitive stone,🪨 age ancient Mexico,🇲🇽 San Salvador, 🇦🇷 and Panama,🇵🇦 led by Emperor Montezuma's successor's lieutenants in the battle,💥 of Otumba, in the year fifteen hundred nineteen to the year of fifteen hundred twenty-one, during the siege,💥 of the primitive stone,🪨 age ancient Mexican,🇲🇽 city,🏙 of Tenochtitlan, in the year of fifteen hundred nineteen to fifteen hundred twenty-one, during the age of exploration,🔭 of the new world,🗺 of the primitive stone,🪨 age ancient mesoamerica, 🇲🇽 🇦🇷 🇵🇦 in the year of fifteen hundred twenty-one to the year of fifteen hundred fifty-three?"

  • @normtrooper4392
    @normtrooper4392 Год назад +6

    What a fascinating history. There is something to be said about a warrior kindred. Youths learning from their more experienced uncles and fathers.
    What a different time it was. And they too fell before the advent of modernity and the large professional army.

  • @gordonmcinnes8328
    @gordonmcinnes8328 Год назад +14

    Given the style of weapons used (2 handed axes) it likely they were a Celtic progression of Housecarls/Huscarls with a mercenary bent. It's the further progression of the Norse influence on Ireland and possibly some Saxon too. At the Battle of Hastings there are accounts of Huscarls felling mounted knights too.

  • @GallowglassAxe
    @GallowglassAxe Год назад +4

    This is phenomenal! You're research is spot on and the artwork is amazing!

  • @CommissarCasper
    @CommissarCasper Год назад +16

    I’m Irish and this is awesome, I’m from clan Osullivan we fought alongside the Spanish against the English to defend our home castle.

  • @noahkidd3359
    @noahkidd3359 Год назад +6

    The art style has improved so much!! Congrats

    • @Al-ou3so
      @Al-ou3so 4 месяца назад

      11:40 an Irish family depicted as olive skinned. More lies and revisionism.

  • @thcdreams654
    @thcdreams654 Год назад +4

    Great work as usual man. Thanks for the insight to more esoteric historical subjects. Your content is always top quality.

  • @RealityOrganized
    @RealityOrganized Год назад +11

    This is good. How about a similar video on Irish armies overall, in the 8th to 13th centuries?

  • @jbearmcdougall1646
    @jbearmcdougall1646 6 месяцев назад +15

    Norwegian Scottish and Irish… all mixed together gives us a Galloglas warrior

  • @imperatorscotorum6334
    @imperatorscotorum6334 Год назад +7

    Some fantastic artwork in this video

  • @Wow22109
    @Wow22109 Год назад +12

    Pike and shot the demise of many professional hand to hand combat mercenary. The democratization of warfare through well trained drills and cheap and easy to learn weapons really changed europe for a long time, thanks Sandrohman for this enlightening video, hope to see more!

  • @DesignerBerg
    @DesignerBerg Год назад +3

    Such incredible content! Thank you for making this!

  • @The_Gallowglass
    @The_Gallowglass Год назад +8

    I'm glad to finally get some props.

  • @P.O.T.E.
    @P.O.T.E. 5 месяцев назад +8

    Long before the feuding brothers of Liam and Noel, the Gallaghers took their name from a cast of warrior mercenaries, the Galloglass.

  • @wargriffin5
    @wargriffin5 Год назад +5

    @6:45 I'm just imagining the ghost of some Norse/Scottish/Irish mercenary yelling "IT'S AN AXE!" 🤣

  • @huntermccoy7641
    @huntermccoy7641 Год назад +12

    Man people are so ready to pick a team from hundreds of years ago instead of just enjoy history

  • @Vanillagorilla1529
    @Vanillagorilla1529 11 месяцев назад +20

    When John Marston isn't being an outlaw he's a historian on Scottish mercenaries

    • @r.ssumedh7626
      @r.ssumedh7626 10 месяцев назад

      *Jim Milton.

    • @Vanillagorilla1529
      @Vanillagorilla1529 9 месяцев назад

      @@travalerfromthefarwest he's an outlaw In red dead redemption but this man has the same name

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. Год назад +4

    Everything about this video is so cool!

  • @philjohnson1744
    @philjohnson1744 Год назад +3

    The art is so dang good. Thanks for the great vid.

  • @Sealdeam
    @Sealdeam Год назад +9

    Hope you eventually cover the Almogavars too, they were a Medieval force though so maybe they might not be completely within the scope of the channel but their history in Iberia, Sicily and the Eastern Mediterranean is fascinating.

    • @Osvath97
      @Osvath97 Год назад +1

      Almogavars are very interesting. They are one of the few elite shock units in the Middle Ages that did not come from the ancient Indo-European warrior noble background (even the gallowglass were basically just a separate branch on the same tree as knights), instead almogavars came from dispossessed herders who had to infiltrate their old occupied lands to continue their living, which eventually evolved in to a kind of guerilla warfare. All though equipped like light infantry, in open battle almogavars were used as heavy shock infantry, sometimes straight up charging mounted knights.

  • @tarsicio2426
    @tarsicio2426 Год назад +14

    The best merc infantry in medieval 2

  • @richardbradley2335
    @richardbradley2335 Год назад +5

    Beautifuly done as always

  • @woahhbro2906
    @woahhbro2906 День назад +2

    I'm American, but I'm 1/6234.05ths Irish and I'm confident absolutely none of my ancestors were one of these.

  • @afrikasmith1049
    @afrikasmith1049 Год назад +19

    I bet the descendants of the Galloglass must be very proud of their ancestors.

    • @szymonbaranowski8184
      @szymonbaranowski8184 Год назад +1

      i hope their ancestors can be proud of their descendants fertility
      otherwise they have no right to be proud of spoiled non expanded heritage

    • @Lofirainbows
      @Lofirainbows Год назад +2

      That's me

    • @phanties
      @phanties Год назад +1

      @@szymonbaranowski8184 huh?

    • @eddiemccabe4585
      @eddiemccabe4585 Год назад +3

      We are 😊

    • @afrikasmith1049
      @afrikasmith1049 Год назад

      @@phanties What did he say? His comment is blocked for some reason.

  • @Ziddings
    @Ziddings Год назад +1

    I am incredibly excited to see this in my recommended. A really interesting topic in my opinion

  • @seviam
    @seviam 5 месяцев назад +12

    Please note the historical context, time frame Norman invasion of Ireland 1169. There was no Scotland per se..
    The Picts inhabited what is called Scotland and the Irish Gaels had created the kingdom of Dal Raida along the western coast of Scotland. The Roman's called the Irish, Scotti. The Pictish and Irish (Scotti) kingdoms were united under "Kenneth McAlpine" in 843, or approx. Viking invasions throughout the 8th and 9th century claimed the Orkneys and the Hebrides. Viking settlement in Scotland was limited, according to the sagas.. due to the hostile nature of the natives.. Not until after the Norman invasion of England in 1066, and the spead of Norman influence into Scotland for the next 150 years, did the "nation" of Scotland take shape. (The Normans being Viking descendants living in Normandy, France.... long story)
    But they would have not thought of themselves as Scottish by this time, the were Gaels, spoke Gaelic, had Gaelic customs. They called their kingdom Alba. Anyway, I could keep rambling but will stop there. That's why Williie Wallace and the gang shout Alba Go Bragh in Braveheart, gaelic for "Alba forever"

    • @crazychicSHENA
      @crazychicSHENA 5 месяцев назад +1

      Gauls and Picts are both Celtic Group's just a Little Different's in homeland England-Ireland ❤🕊️

  • @thearizonatreasurehunter2313
    @thearizonatreasurehunter2313 Год назад +2

    This is a great documentary of information! Keep these videos coming!

  • @davidlewis8814
    @davidlewis8814 5 месяцев назад +5

    The battle referenced at the very beginning of Shakespeare’s Macbeth is a skirmish between the Scottish Thanes in service to King Duncan against a rebel MacDonwald (soon to be former Thane of Cawdor) and the King of Norway, in which the Gallowglasses (his spelling) are there!

  • @kylebrogmus8847
    @kylebrogmus8847 Год назад +11

    They are pretty tough to kill in the Total War games.

  • @Sabrowsky
    @Sabrowsky 2 месяца назад +7

    there is something darkly comical about the first time in Irish History someone mentions a handgun being an incident of it being used as a club

  • @eastcorkcheeses6448
    @eastcorkcheeses6448 2 месяца назад +4

    Fostering was common in that era - as a way of binding families together, so i'd imagine having your sons or nephews fostered out to a galloglas family was a good way of expanding the ranks of amiable soldiers and training your own close family members ... As well as providing a useful profession for cousins and nephews ,

  • @matacabrones4317
    @matacabrones4317 Год назад +14

    many fought with Spain, and many went on to live in catholic Spain, and continued their military traditions, reaching great power, see Alfredo Kindelan, or Leopoldo O'Donell

  • @Harib_Al-Saq
    @Harib_Al-Saq Год назад +10

    I first learned about the Gallowglass from Rome Total War Barbarian Invasion.

  • @MarktheRude
    @MarktheRude Год назад +13

    11:13 They didn't just pretend to fight like mercenaries in Italy often did when facing their colleagues in the field of battle? That seems bit unmercenary-like.

  • @memofromessex
    @memofromessex Год назад +18

    If you're going to the Gallowglass, you'll have to do the kerns and woodkerns next!
    I dispute this as brave Irishman fighting together against the English - they were just as likely to fight against their fellow Irishmen or with the English.

  • @FmattB222
    @FmattB222 4 месяца назад +3

    Discipline, drill, and numbers. That is a great summary of modern warefare

    • @Al-ou3so
      @Al-ou3so 4 месяца назад

      No it’s not lmao. Drills, discipline, and numbers are tactics of cannon fire, muskets, etc. Napoleonic Wars and prior. Modern warfare (21st century) would be drones, IED, artillery, cyber attacks etc.

    • @FmattB222
      @FmattB222 4 месяца назад

      @@Al-ou3so my phrasing was more within context of the video talking about the decline of the knight style warrior class. If someone walked up to a military unit and said they come from a line of warriors, they purchased their own gear and weapons, and were an expert shot..... they would still get sent to basic training, start at the rank of private/2nd lieutenant, and be issued standard gear+weapon for uniformity

  • @2WARDEN2
    @2WARDEN2 Год назад +2

    Excellent video! I'm a bit biased as my direct ancestors are Gallowglass (Clan MacSithigh) but it's pretty rare to find such a well informed and detailed coverage of their history! One thing worth noting is their reason for settling in Ireland: They typically requested plots of land and livestock as payment, so clans coming over to do merc work would be able to settle afterwards (Or at least, their families could).

  • @GallowglassAxe
    @GallowglassAxe Год назад +7

    One thing I would like to clairfy is about the kerns. The Kerns were professional warriors and had to go through very strict training like spend several month in the wilderness in warbands. The unprofessional soliders or peasant levies were called Bonnaghts. The kerns wore minimum to no armor in order to maximize their speed and stamina. They were design for skirmishing tactics (as you mention) like cattle raiding which was Ireland's main form of warfare. The bonnaghts wore whatever armor they could get their hands on and were used as the front line soldiers and main bulk of large forces. The image at 2:29 is the best representation of a Bonnaght I have ever seen. They were rarely deployed in Ireland as large scale battles were exceptionally rare on the island.

    • @MrSchizoid405
      @MrSchizoid405 5 месяцев назад

      There's a debate if the kerns wore armor, we know they wore a gauntlet on their arm for deflecting blows.

  • @RWNetworkEX
    @RWNetworkEX Год назад +14

    Have you ever done a video on the Russian streltsy? If not would you consider doing one? They seem like an interesting discussion point for a video

  • @zetectic7968
    @zetectic7968 Год назад +5

    Very informative 😀 I only knew about them from Total War.

    • @k.w.2275
      @k.w.2275 Год назад

      Which one, Britannia?

  • @teddygrizz
    @teddygrizz 6 дней назад +1

    It's interesting to see the similarities and differences between elite warrior classes around the world. Cultural similarities to knights and samurai, but also major differences.

  • @Admiralofthedeeps
    @Admiralofthedeeps 5 месяцев назад +5

    The McSweeneys were a Gallowglass family that crop up a fair few times in the annals of the four masters. A document that is well worth a read for anyone interested in this period of Irish history.
    As an Irish person its good fun trying to find your family name and see what they might have been up to 😂

  • @porcupineinapettingzoo
    @porcupineinapettingzoo Год назад +7

    Henry II was not promised the kingship of Ireland, he was asked for assistance and dragged his feet. When one of his lords, who was very much not in Henry's good books, brought an army to Ireland which Henry II opposed at the last minute, this knight became the king of Leinster through marriage and suddenly a possible rival. Henry II landed with an army in Ireland, his knights offered up their gains and with the backing of the English pope and he declared himself king of the island of Ireland but it would be a long time before any English king could accurately claim to in control of a majority never mind the entire island.

  • @Thraim.
    @Thraim. Год назад +8

    I bet the Galloglass had "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" tattooed on their chest.

  • @ryanmccabe1036
    @ryanmccabe1036 Год назад +26

    The Irish side of my family allegedly dates back to galloglass mercenaries hired by Irish kings.

    • @alvaropulido5245
      @alvaropulido5245 5 месяцев назад

      Which one of your great great great great great great grandparents got plowed by a Galloglass merc? Their motto back in those days used to be “ Skirts get merc-ed”. Men used to wear skirts as well so they was plowing even the men.

  • @Macovic
    @Macovic Год назад +8

    Very similar to Varangians (predominantly/orignally nordic) in the Byzantine empire.

  • @douglashoover6473
    @douglashoover6473 Год назад +4

    Thanks - I had been wondering what kerns and galloglasses were since I read the mention of them in Macbeth, long, long ago.

  • @alexwendler5479
    @alexwendler5479 Год назад +3

    Very nice work!

  • @alexdetrojan4534
    @alexdetrojan4534 Год назад +3

    Great video!

  • @arashinoakumyo3535
    @arashinoakumyo3535 Год назад +13

    A friend named Andrew is descended from a Galloglass family (6th son of a minor family)

    • @miklovelva6092
      @miklovelva6092 Год назад +3

      I'm descended from the MacSweeney Galloglaigh(Gallowglass) clan.

    • @arashinoakumyo3535
      @arashinoakumyo3535 Год назад +1

      @@miklovelva6092 I can’t remember what his clan was named and I’m out of contact with him. All I remember it was a small clan that had about 100 fighters.

    • @13thcentury
      @13thcentury 7 месяцев назад

      McSween? The guys that make the haggis?
      ​@@miklovelva6092

  • @robertthebruce-geniusofban647
    @robertthebruce-geniusofban647 5 месяцев назад +1

    I really enjoyed this.
    Thank you and have subscribed!

  • @glenn6583
    @glenn6583 5 месяцев назад +3

    Very interesting! I have never heard of them before!

  • @domstafford1894
    @domstafford1894 Год назад +7

    16th century gallowglass: *has a gun*
    Also 16th century gallowglass: *uses it as a club*

    • @GallowglassAxe
      @GallowglassAxe Год назад +1

      During the English Civil War this was rather common. Bayonets hadn't been invented yet and often times the two forces would get so close that it was easier to just flip your musket around and club them than to draw your sword. Irish pikemen often carry a long dagger known as a scian instead of a sword for that reason.

    • @knoll9812
      @knoll9812 Год назад

      Guns only work if you have industry to make bullets and gunpowder

  • @Scrotus_the_odd
    @Scrotus_the_odd 2 месяца назад +7

    These guys really tried to make bowlcuts look tough

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Год назад +7

    Basically, they were the sort of the Irish's own Normans before the English arrived, and Irish knights without horses.

  • @patrickbegley5696
    @patrickbegley5696 3 месяца назад +8

    I am descended from Gallowglass from Kilmacrenan

  • @Son-of-Tyr
    @Son-of-Tyr Год назад +1

    Great video, my friend. Very well done and informative. I'll definitely be subscribing.

  • @carterc4307
    @carterc4307 Год назад +4

    Who does the art for your videos? And great video as always

  • @philRminiatures
    @philRminiatures Год назад

    Informative and beautifully done, a great video on a great subject!👍👍

  • @Island-pool
    @Island-pool Год назад +19

    My grandfather was a mccabe , or Mac cabba , gallowglass

    • @miklovelva6092
      @miklovelva6092 Год назад +4

      Cool, I actually descend from the MacSweeney Gallowglass

    • @AnthonyEvelyn
      @AnthonyEvelyn 5 месяцев назад +2

      Like the fighting McNabs and McLeods also.

  • @thecelticwolf8642
    @thecelticwolf8642 Год назад +6

    Please do an episode on the Kern.

  • @dl3472
    @dl3472 4 месяца назад +10

    1:48 galloglass means foreign warriors ...explains why I first thought they looked like Vikings

    • @JozefLucifugeKorzeniowski
      @JozefLucifugeKorzeniowski 4 месяца назад

      we're all from somewhere else unless you currently live in the fertile crescent,

    • @dl3472
      @dl3472 4 месяца назад +4

      @@JozefLucifugeKorzeniowski not true

  • @Steven-dt5nu
    @Steven-dt5nu Год назад +3

    New to your channel, and I enjoyed it.

  • @eoinocnaimhsi2598
    @eoinocnaimhsi2598 5 месяцев назад +5

    Aodh(Hugh) O'Neill reformed what was left of them and integrated them into the light pike formations.

  • @jasonhare8540
    @jasonhare8540 Год назад +10

    Gallowglass ... My secret weapon in Rome Total War 🤣

  • @TaRAAASHBAGS
    @TaRAAASHBAGS Год назад +3

    You should do a video on the condottieri. Basically as prolific as the landsknecht but far less information about them.

  • @charlesd3a
    @charlesd3a 5 месяцев назад +7

    The Gallowglass were in Ireland long before the 12th 13th centuries they're originally Irish natives that lived in Scotland and interacted with the Vikings whom were intised yo reture to Ireland by the king of the kingdoms which consists of Northern part of Ireland and of today's Scotland.

    • @brucecollins641
      @brucecollins641 5 месяцев назад

      @charlesd3a......you need to research a bit deeper....it's gallic in scotland , no the mythical gaelic. the galls/gauls were always at war with the romans in the frankish regions of europe so some fled to england. when the romans invaded england they then fled to and settled in scotland. a few generations later some would cross over to ireland in the 12th century to help fight of the norman invasion of ireland......hence, GALLoglass no gaeloglas. you need to read up on the mythical origins of the gaels....a made up story by medieval irish monks to create an ancient lineage for ireland..

    • @poundlandbandit6124
      @poundlandbandit6124 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@brucecollins641 gall means stranger in Gaelic, gallic is just how it’s pronounced in Scotland.

    • @brucecollins641
      @brucecollins641 5 месяцев назад

      @@poundlandbandit6124 no, gall comes from the frankish regions of europe a term the romans used for the tribe they were always at war with in that area.....the proper term is gallic but in some of the lower parts of scotland...pronounced gaylick. nothing to do with ireland. it most likely crossed over to ireland from scotland ..

    • @MisterMick113
      @MisterMick113 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@brucecollins641no, the term gall used in Gaelic is entirely different from Gaul and the Franks

    • @brucecollins641
      @brucecollins641 5 месяцев назад

      @@MisterMick113 it's written and pronounced gallic in scotland , in some parts gaylick....the scottish clan chattan are believed to descend from a gaulish tribe the catti...the picts are believed to descend from a gaulish tribe the pictones..there's an area in aberdeenshire called gaulcross. it apears the irish scribes in the 1400s changed it to gaelic to suit the irish narrative of it originating from the mythical "goidel glas and his equally mythical wife queen scotia and their equally mythical son niul..

  • @TheTel
    @TheTel Год назад +1

    This was very well done, good job! Cool to see how they operated both in more guerilla warfare contexts, as well as in open battle.

  • @vascoespañol
    @vascoespañol 11 месяцев назад +9

    Excelent soldiers, good allies of Spain.

  • @declanjones8888
    @declanjones8888 Год назад

    A video about my ancestors and its from SandRhoman!
    Well this is certainly appreciated.

  • @tsupapi2477
    @tsupapi2477 Год назад +3

    Oh traveller, nothing just scrolled down, just window-shopping some mercenaries to hire.

  • @PotatoStickman200
    @PotatoStickman200 Год назад +4

    The Battle of Knockdoe was not the largest battle fought between Irishmen.
    It took place in Knockdoemore. The hill where the battle took place is named Cnoc Tua Mór in irish which means Hill of the Big Axes after the galloglass that fought there.

  • @scumskimmer
    @scumskimmer Год назад +4

    Interesting parallels between them and the Samurai, on another island at the edge of the Eurasian landmass

  • @stephengavin2208
    @stephengavin2208 Год назад +2

    When he got to the part about the hand gun, I was like "A hand gun?!?!"

  • @wismsgre
    @wismsgre Год назад +3

    Perfect video

  • @sarahsidney1988
    @sarahsidney1988 Год назад +2

    Love your videos so much

  • @bastait
    @bastait 5 месяцев назад +10

    dermot mac murrough was widely considered a traitor by the irish from my understanding
    and rightfully so.

    • @paullooney8960
      @paullooney8960 4 месяца назад

      So then Dermot mac Murrough is like the current crop of politicians we have in Ireland all traitors to their country and people .

  • @scrowley0542
    @scrowley0542 Год назад +11

    As an irishman, that loves martial arts, that comes from a family of large athletic men. A little bit of research determined that we were mercenaries that were hired out, not sure if we were gallowglass, but im bot sure that matters lol. t's really interesting to touch up on our family's history.

    • @notallowedtobehonest2539
      @notallowedtobehonest2539 Год назад +1

      When the celts moved into the british isles... they spoke about fighting giants to take the land. Wales, ireland and celtic scots definitely look like they intermixed with giants.

    • @eyzmin
      @eyzmin Год назад

      Gallowglass were almost all from Norse-Gaelic families, so if yours isnt one, then probably not

    • @user-qi5jw2hg1c
      @user-qi5jw2hg1c Год назад +1

      You don't sound very Irish in your youtube videos Shane!

    • @ryancalming884
      @ryancalming884 Год назад +1

      ​@@user-qi5jw2hg1cif that's him in the vids on his channel he's about as Irish as King Charles' balls

    • @billybigballs9208
      @billybigballs9208 Год назад

      I would easily beat you in a fight never mind a war boy

  • @Kitiwake
    @Kitiwake 5 месяцев назад +3

    We need them back

  • @ArchonShon
    @ArchonShon Год назад +7

    Erin go Bragh!

  • @Henryjohn22
    @Henryjohn22 Год назад +6

    Best unit in medieval 2

  • @Alasdair37448
    @Alasdair37448 Год назад +1

    great video love your animations!

  • @ropeburnsrussell
    @ropeburnsrussell Год назад +3

    Some of your men at arms appear in multiple videos.
    It's a sensible thing to do.

  • @TheHuntsman570
    @TheHuntsman570 Год назад +1

    Tribe is an amazing read/listen.

  • @Lofirainbows
    @Lofirainbows Год назад +15

    Ahhhh Celts/Gaels get far too underrepresented

    • @HailWoden18
      @HailWoden18 6 месяцев назад

      Celt and Gael isnt synonymous. All Gaels speak Celtic, but not all Celtic people or languages are Gaelic. Briton is another Insular Celtic people, Brittonic aka P Celtic, such as Welsh, Breton or Cornish.

  • @adammacgreagoir4924
    @adammacgreagoir4924 Год назад +14

    A good analogy for Gaelic Irish society is the Japanese warring states period, the Gallowglass and Kerns operated in near the exact same way as Samurai and Ninjas.

    • @TheRampagingGallowglass75
      @TheRampagingGallowglass75 Год назад

      Yes! And in a sense that Gallowglass & Kerns were the Western European Samurai of the era 1300-1600.

  • @Sturmknecht
    @Sturmknecht Год назад +5

    What is with all the Morion helmets? ;)

    • @GallowglassAxe
      @GallowglassAxe Год назад +1

      The Morion helm was popular all over 16th century Europe and not just Spain. That being said Ireland has had an extensive trade network with Spain for centuries by that time.

  • @geemanamatin8383
    @geemanamatin8383 Месяц назад +2

    gotta admit, these gallowglass seem a lot cooler than typical knights riding horses. Fighting on foot with long two-handed axes in formation is a lot more appealing for my knight fantasies. ;)

    • @sojalemmi1515
      @sojalemmi1515 Месяц назад

      But they dont wear the cool suites of armor, and anyway, knights could dismount to fight.