Could A 13th Century Castle Be Built Today? | Secrets Of The Castle | Absolute History

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024

Комментарии • 3,8 тыс.

  • @AbsoluteHistory
    @AbsoluteHistory  4 года назад +315

    If you've enjoyed this episode, check out part 2 here - ruclips.net/video/u6v-3Ai88oM/видео.html 🏰

    • @ragingrobot8870
      @ragingrobot8870 4 года назад +12

      Absolute History I can’t watch it as it’s not in England

    • @jeffarmstrong1308
      @jeffarmstrong1308 4 года назад +8

      We first saw this when it was first broadcast and loved it.
      Last year we finally got to go to France ( along trip from Australia) and, of course(!), Guédelon was on our list. It was even better than it was when the team visited because another ten years had passed and the completion of the main build is now in sight.
      Watching the films again allowed us to compare what had changed since they were there but work progresses.
      Tiling the chapel roof was completed within a month of our visit.
      Your films were THE reason we even knew about it.

    • @ninjagodmanMikeBush
      @ninjagodmanMikeBush 4 года назад +6

      not available in the UK?

    • @QueernMental
      @QueernMental 4 года назад +7

      Why is the rest of the series blocked in uk?

    • @cdenver
      @cdenver 4 года назад +6

      Why is the second part of this fantastic series BLOCKED in the UK and Ireland? If the second part is blocked, why is the first part not blocked too? Now I feel completely cheated :(

  • @randomshyte9989
    @randomshyte9989 4 года назад +8809

    This is going to be a headache for future historians if this gets lost in time.

    •  4 года назад +775

      We can put all sorts of crazy stuff inside to confuse them even more!

    • @DBT1007
      @DBT1007 4 года назад +169

      internet is a thing.
      they can watch this video if this video still on internet for thousands of years later

    • @regenbogentraumerin
      @regenbogentraumerin 4 года назад +484

      @@DBT1007 Pretty sure the internet will get lost over the next thousand years as technology develops and changes, just like a lot of inventions, technologies and methods got lost over the last thousand years. They might know there was something like the internet during our time and have an idea about what it was and maybe even partly how it worked (though even that is pretty unlikely), but the actual data won't survive.

    • @sulev111
      @sulev111 4 года назад +407

      "After Macron and the great collapse of early 21st century, people were thrown back into the dark age..." - text books in the 23rd century.

    • @Fallenangel_85
      @Fallenangel_85 4 года назад +134

      It's digital data, there is no reason for this to getting lost.
      Unless civilization as a whole collapses, but then people have other problems.

  • @The_Gallowglass
    @The_Gallowglass 4 года назад +2529

    Imagine being a mason working there. Put on your resumé "I've built a castle." You'd never be out of work.

    • @bruceluiz
      @bruceluiz 4 года назад +60

      Yeah but then again a Mason worker was very expendable. One too many would die from "accidents"

    • @MrFiddleedee
      @MrFiddleedee 4 года назад +44

      @@bruceluiz he means in RL work

    • @Kareszkoma
      @Kareszkoma 4 года назад +40

      @@bruceluiz Imagine a bigger builder rolling on your feet, or stepping inbetween stones. legs crushed, finger crushed, and you are out of work for the rest of your life. Humans surpisingly heal quite well and strongly. But if it's the wrong part crushed.. well it's not a lucky thing.

    • @cH4iN123
      @cH4iN123 4 года назад +20

      @@Kareszkoma Pretty sure they didnt give two fks back in the day if they lost a finger, leg is a different story tho

    • @rachdarastrix5251
      @rachdarastrix5251 4 года назад +24

      @@Kareszkoma In my opinion humans don't heal well enough without 3 health potions a day for 4 weeks. Otherwise instead of weeks its months.

  • @AAAAAAAAAAAAAa644
    @AAAAAAAAAAAAAa644 4 года назад +819

    The literally explained how they do EVERY. SINGLE. THING. I'm so impressed

    • @THE3FATGUYS
      @THE3FATGUYS 4 года назад +27

      You should check out their Victorian Farm and Victorian Christmas series they did for the BBC. It’s usually on BBC iPlayer around Christmas time if you live in the UK. I’m sure you can find it elsewhere. They’re both very fascinating as well.

    • @evan5935
      @evan5935 3 года назад +12

      Also check out the edwardian farms, hidden dangers, wartime farm, and the pharmacy/medicine ones for victorian and edwardian times 🤷‍♂️😎

    • @erikkarlsson9192
      @erikkarlsson9192 3 года назад +8

      I haven't watched this yet, but this is things we *really* should be teaching/learning at this stage... But people seem to arrogantly think we'll keep going and our civilization will never fall.
      I mean, building castles might not be *the* top priority, but it's a very powerful knowledge, and if you know how to build a castle you should also be able to build smaller stuff too. ^^ And having castles can be very useful in case of invasions and stuff, not only there being a powerful ruler collecting taxes and stuff.

    • @erikkarlsson9192
      @erikkarlsson9192 3 года назад +6

      @@evan5935 Damn, that's really impressive, that they've actually produced that stuff. It feels like society today is actively trying to make people NOT prepared for a potential collapse. These kinds of stuff is things most everyone should be learning imho.

    • @riverdeep399
      @riverdeep399 3 года назад

      Not how they got the pegs into the wood.

  • @yolkst3r484
    @yolkst3r484 4 года назад +2125

    I wish we had documentaries like this that air in the US.
    We usually get stuff like:
    WAS ADOLF HITLER IN CONTACT WITH EXTRA TERRESTRIALS

    • @googiegress
      @googiegress 4 года назад +202

      IS THIS ICE ROAD HAUNTED BY TREASURE GHOSTS (watch until end)

    • @robertallen6710
      @robertallen6710 4 года назад +77

      @@googiegress The REAL reason Kim and Kanye have been separated for over a year! Man, I can't live w/o that one...

    • @MaeV808
      @MaeV808 4 года назад +19

      Thank goodness there is internet. Ancient Aliens is a hoot but quite shite in integrity/facts

    • @jacobdegeling
      @jacobdegeling 4 года назад +6

      This comment caused me great mirth!

    • @ruusteriv
      @ruusteriv 4 года назад +38

      As a sad history lover in America I can confirm this is absolutely true.

  • @Grib73
    @Grib73 4 года назад +634

    I am French and this is without a doubt the best documentary I have ever seen about the Château de Guédelon. The passion for history ignores borders.

    • @naturespecialist1489
      @naturespecialist1489 3 года назад +3

      indeed

    • @jackobey2815
      @jackobey2815 2 года назад +5

      hundreds of british and french together and they're NOT killing each other for a chaange haha

    • @MrYougotcaught
      @MrYougotcaught Год назад +1

      That's why history is extremely important to never forget, especially for the Native Americans of North, Central, and South America

    • @randybobandy9828
      @randybobandy9828 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@MrYougotcaughtwhy is it important especially for native Americans exactly?

    • @ChristopherPayneMUA
      @ChristopherPayneMUA 6 месяцев назад +2

      I hope to visit in the next few years before construction is complete. Maybe even help a bit if I can.

  • @osibeejohnson7678
    @osibeejohnson7678 2 года назад +93

    I love how Ruth explores the daily lives and task of average people. It is so refreshing to see the REAL history in real time. Respect for those who lived without inherited extravagance. I really hope, after what they've done with the other series (Tudor farming, Victorian farm and pharmacy, Edwardian farming, railway system, etc.) what period and aspect of history they explore next.

    • @leahvaris769
      @leahvaris769 2 года назад +2

      Any other recommendations for this type of realistic history?

    • @skeletonbuyingpealts7134
      @skeletonbuyingpealts7134 Год назад +1

      @@leahvaris769 ruclips.net/video/t__RhUyZMDM/видео.html this I guess

  • @KevinFrost
    @KevinFrost 4 года назад +1922

    700 years from now: "This is called a fiber line, and we've capped it to a 1000mbps download speed to simulate what the internet would have been like in the 21st century. It's crazy how these people lived with such slow speeds, it would have taken over 150 years at these speeds to download yourself to another planet."

    • @thatemoidiot5516
      @thatemoidiot5516 4 года назад +48

      LMAO dude thx for the laugh

    • @thatemoidiot5516
      @thatemoidiot5516 4 года назад +7

      tbh time travel would probably be a thing already

    • @rotzloffel
      @rotzloffel 4 года назад +4

      cries in 2nd to the last slowest internet speed in SEA

    • @cdoublejj
      @cdoublejj 4 года назад +14

      lol you put an extra zero behind "100", welcome to the U.S lol just kidding most places can't faster than 6 or 16mbps

    • @anwardaud
      @anwardaud 4 года назад

      Lmao

  • @jocerv43
    @jocerv43 4 года назад +2215

    Alternate title: The biggest roleplayers in the world

  • @kevdadd1976
    @kevdadd1976 3 года назад +48

    Being a brick layer/ stone mason myself i love working on the old buildings and admire all the brilliant knowledge it took with limited resources

    • @user-jr8rg1ue6i
      @user-jr8rg1ue6i Год назад +1

      Boy ain't that the truth , right on , 👍

  • @jackalakkin
    @jackalakkin 4 года назад +530

    It's wild that you can tell all these people spend all day every day doing these things. They're SO GOOD at their jobs

    • @anonthehousemouse
      @anonthehousemouse 4 года назад +24

      while the other two replys are indeed correct, the Master Masons and Carpenters invest their entire lives in their craft, something very few people can claim of their jobs today. There's a reason medieval castles still stand today.

    • @FruitingPlanet
      @FruitingPlanet 4 года назад +9

      Its true, the masters of their craft are much more skilled, then almost all of todays workers in their field, not with theoretical knowlege, but with experience and precise perfection of every move they do, something machines do nowadays for us, but you absolutly have to be with those simple tools.
      I worked at Guédelon for two weeks with the masons in 2012 and it gave me a lot of respect for their skills, the master knows so precisely from the sound a stone makes, how it is build internally and how it will split, today even with special sonar equipments and sophisticated algorithms, this level of prediction is hard to achive.
      It is also very hard work, within two days of doing this work for 8h a day, you will be completely exausted after each shift and your joints will start to hurt badly.

  • @crazymad4323
    @crazymad4323 4 года назад +666

    Imagine trying to make stone bricks with medieval tools and absolutely no electricity around you and some guy pointing a high res camera at you.

    • @wuuduu609
      @wuuduu609 4 года назад +145

      its wooden camera, and recorded to wax rolls

    • @mickys8065
      @mickys8065 4 года назад +139

      @@wuuduu609 no no, it's just a team of people painting each frame very very quickly

    • @jeybeyon6643
      @jeybeyon6643 4 года назад +42

      @@mickys8065 and some guy writing the dialogue with a quill and a scroll, repeatedly asking " what did he said? "

    • @rebelgaming1.5.14
      @rebelgaming1.5.14 4 года назад +4

      @thecasualtrollingpuma "SILENCE THOMAS, I CAN DO WHAT I WANT"

    • @cyqry
      @cyqry 4 года назад +9

      That's why they are training with crossbows as well.
      Remember that clip a few years back from a reenactment show, where a guy managed to spear a camera-drone out of the sky?
      Yup, the medieval folk are learning!

  • @lauracrawford8723
    @lauracrawford8723 3 года назад +632

    historians 500 years from now : “ wow this castle is in really good condition!”
    “yeah it was actually built in the 21th century by people who like castles”

    • @Exayevie
      @Exayevie 3 года назад +25

      *21st

    • @elbentos7803
      @elbentos7803 3 года назад +18

      The project began in the 90's

    • @aaronmacy9134
      @aaronmacy9134 3 года назад +39

      “Late 2nd Elizabethan”

    • @lucastheemperor4443
      @lucastheemperor4443 3 года назад +5

      I mean..i saw a lot of castles and most of them are in pretty good shape, i get that not everything could be preserved but after 800yrs..thats pretty good job

    • @manictiger
      @manictiger 3 года назад +10

      The nuclear fallout will ruin carbon-dating techniques, so they'll think we blasted ourselves back to the medieval age.
      Sci 1: "But if that's true, why is this the only castle in this good of condition?"
      Sci 2: "I don't know. Maybe it was a presidential palace?"
      Sci 1: "Bit small for that, isn't it?"
      Sci 2: "Maybe they couldn't source more radiation-free stones."
      Sci 1: "Alright, I'll add that to the textbook."

  • @stauffap
    @stauffap 4 года назад +898

    I can't even put in words how much i enjoyed this video.

  • @theconqueringram5295
    @theconqueringram5295 4 года назад +547

    This is a fantastic project! People who lived in the middle ages were more sophisticated than we give them credit for.

    • @kingjames4886
      @kingjames4886 4 года назад +18

      people who lived before religion wiped out all the knowledge that went against god knew more.

    • @tracehorrocks2473
      @tracehorrocks2473 4 года назад +46

      You do know that both Romans and Renaissance Europeans believed in the same god right.

    • @fus132
      @fus132 4 года назад +52

      @@kingjames4886 And the great barbarian migration had nothing to do with the fall of Rome, sure, sure.

    • @mickD87
      @mickD87 4 года назад +29

      @@kingjames4886 lol who told you this lie?

    • @notnotagoodguy9600
      @notnotagoodguy9600 4 года назад +52

      I think people forget that they were human too, they were every bit as smart as modern people just with less science

  • @Tater4200
    @Tater4200 3 года назад +40

    im honestly so so glad people are STILL doing this. i hope these beautiful arts NEVER die. we must always remember how hard out ancestors had to work

  • @eytan0127
    @eytan0127 4 года назад +296

    Imagine archeologists in the future, when they’ll find/review this and think “what the hell is this, built 500-1000 years later than other castles yet the same way”

    • @Zillzbillz
      @Zillzbillz 4 года назад +13

      That’s kind of the point of the project, to build this with methods we know were used as well as the ones we think were and write them down. So that we and people later have a solid reference and a well written record for the ways we think things happened.

    • @MerkhVision
      @MerkhVision 4 года назад +24

      Zills Bills his point was that without context (that could be lost with time), this would seem like an anachronistic anomaly lol

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 4 года назад +7

      @@MerkhVision But if it was built with authentic methods and materials, would they be able to tell the difference after a few centuries?

    • @leppyleppy6210
      @leppyleppy6210 4 года назад +21

      D Carbs yes, because of the layers of earth it was built on they can see that it was build well after the other castles. But I guess they will leave some kind of inscription in the castle to make sure people know what happened there.

    • @jm8080ful
      @jm8080ful 4 года назад +13

      @@dcarbs2979 Also to add to what @Leppy Leppy
      said, this is an actual experiment done by actual historians and archaeologists, this isn't just a group of friends that got drunk one night and decided to build a castle using 13th century tools and knowledge. No, they document and write everything they learned and discovered from this experiment, pretty sure academic papers will have dates on them so future generations will know.

  • @TXCryptic
    @TXCryptic 4 года назад +431

    No joke, I would 100% spend all 25 years doing this

    • @seanfyffe1419
      @seanfyffe1419 4 года назад +33

      It seems rewarding, honestly, and fulfilling - you don’t get that very much these days

    • @f24816
      @f24816 4 года назад +17

      @MichaelKingsfordGray Money

    • @sebastianbecher8927
      @sebastianbecher8927 4 года назад +13

      Not sure if they are finished by now, but they actually use volunteers every year. All you need is your own transport and sort your accommodation /camping etc... you can find all the details online.

    • @fridgeways2300
      @fridgeways2300 4 года назад +1

      Learn French and u can

    • @laytonoliver1426
      @laytonoliver1426 4 года назад

      @@sebastianbecher8927 how would one go about doing this, on a voluntary basis

  • @gonun69
    @gonun69 4 года назад +104

    I've been there twice a bit over a year apart, it's amazing to see all the progress they are making. If you're ever in France, Guédelon is definitely worth a visit.

    • @veervirk6950
      @veervirk6950 3 года назад +1

      You have to wear medieval clothes when you go there right?

    • @gonun69
      @gonun69 3 года назад +7

      @@veervirk6950 As a visitor, no. I'd probably be a lot more fun, but it's not required at all. If you decide to work there for a while then yes. But it didn't seem like the dress code was super strict. Pretty much everyone had modern shoes (probably for safety, it's a construction site after all) and I've seen some jeans or other modern clothes peeking out under their costumes.

    • @veervirk6950
      @veervirk6950 3 года назад +3

      @@gonun69 yeah it would be so cool to feel what it was like to wear those ancient clothes and behave like that too.

    • @ianpodmore9666
      @ianpodmore9666 3 года назад +1

      France is quite a large country.

    • @er2206
      @er2206 3 года назад +2

      I would love to visit it 🙂

  • @pebblesthecat3625
    @pebblesthecat3625 4 года назад +127

    I am so glad I watched this - I make models and had always had problems with my circular stairways. As soon as I saw how he drew out the template board I knew what I had been doing wrong. Whoever says we should learn from the past was a genius.

    • @bubbaguy4411
      @bubbaguy4411 4 года назад +4

      As a user of Blender, I feel your pain.

    • @LDrosophila
      @LDrosophila 4 года назад

      Did you get your staircase built?

  • @fabianmckenna8197
    @fabianmckenna8197 4 года назад +143

    Please note that Ruth Goodman, Alex Langlands and Peter Ginn did several year long series on Victorian Farm, Edwardian Farm, Tudor Farm etc as well as The Castle Build.
    For those complaining about some minor (safety) use of modern materials, the castle is a 25 year quest to build from scratch using authentic techniques and is in it's 17th year.
    If they just wanted to build a castle, I'm sure they could have done it in a year using modern machinery!

    • @Strokwor
      @Strokwor 4 года назад +3

      Who funds it? Who's idea was it? Do you know?

    • @hameley12
      @hameley12 4 года назад

      @Natalie 1234 Thanks! I will look it up. I was looking for this type of comment because I was wondering the same thing.

    • @ebenezer576
      @ebenezer576 3 года назад +2

      @@Strokwor castle guedelon.
      Financed by visitors you can visit and do touring (went there as a child they must have went a long way since then)

    • @garyp3472
      @garyp3472 2 года назад

      Welcome to the internet. I had heard rumors of people who complain about anything, but I just dismiss them as people who were not raised right. No sense complaining about a bunch of assholes with too much time on their hands.

    • @jackobey2815
      @jackobey2815 2 года назад +2

      in another video they actually said that legally they had to adhere to certain modern health and safety measures. they said they wanted to recreate making a medieval castle not the medieval injury rate lmao.

  • @Legion563
    @Legion563 3 года назад +48

    So glad I stumbled upon this series, ended up binge watching them all in 1 day. Then a few days ago I found Edwardian farm and then Victorian Pharmacy and I'm now rewatching these...top tier content!!

    • @Bouzoukiellas
      @Bouzoukiellas Год назад

      The Brits are phenomenal at TV.

    • @rockshot100
      @rockshot100 Год назад +1

      Yes, the Brits would understand why I stopped watching my TV 25 years ago. We have nothing like this in the US. After a few of these you will feel like you know Ruth and Peter like friends.

    • @ShortStuffMegs21
      @ShortStuffMegs21 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@rockshot100I wish we had programs like this for the US. Or Time Team. Feels like we have lost so much of the previous skills while the UK are actually trying to hold on to them.

    • @rockshot100
      @rockshot100 10 месяцев назад

      @@ShortStuffMegs21 I so much agree with you, I am American as well. This would appeal to both the young and old, and an excellent way of teaching not only history but also how to build things, etc. Geometry would not be as boring, or you could even learn team work and management. SO many things. The benefits would be endless.
      But for one thing, we would certainly have groups screaming, "racist". Or whatever. Might even try to burn it down, who knows.

  • @mastermanio2
    @mastermanio2 4 года назад +1017

    I love how all of these people legitimately look like they're from the middle ages too

    • @kingjames4886
      @kingjames4886 4 года назад +131

      cmon, ruth isn't that old...

    • @TransItAuthority
      @TransItAuthority 4 года назад +62

      Part of the process of building a castle is the working conditions, and working conditions includes what you wear! it's wouldn't be a very good experiment without the period attire.

    • @mrsdsease
      @mrsdsease 4 года назад +4

      how do you know? time traveler?

    • @trorisk
      @trorisk 4 года назад +25

      In fact the site is open to the public and lives with the entrances. The workers have a "medieval" outfit to be recognized

    • @7dayspking
      @7dayspking 4 года назад +11

      They legitimately don't. Only the specific garments directly cited potentially 'resemble' anything medieval. The rest is likely made up nonsense like the vests, leather and other crap everyone else is wearing.

  • @RonaldReaganRocks1
    @RonaldReaganRocks1 4 года назад +636

    You gotta get one of the Frenchies up there on the wall to say "Go away, or I will taunt you a second time!"

    • @TheRaiden316
      @TheRaiden316 4 года назад +17

      Maybe after the project is complete.

    • @cendicate9132
      @cendicate9132 4 года назад +21

      Lmaoo. I could imagine that frenchie from Monty Python 😂

    • @swapode
      @swapode 4 года назад +54

      Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!

    • @noikristjansson6038
      @noikristjansson6038 4 года назад +18

      I spit in your general direction!

    • @elbentos7803
      @elbentos7803 4 года назад +17

      - We're english ! Were do you think we got this outrageous accent ?
      - What are you doing in France ?
      - None of your business !

  • @Healitnow
    @Healitnow 3 года назад +12

    As a kid on the farm in the 1950's I learned with all hand tools. I then took history in college and spent 35 years on housing construction. I love your channel and the building techniques. One thing, if ever there is a loss of modern knowledge people like you will be one of the most important resources on the planet.

  • @Epic501
    @Epic501 4 года назад +331

    This was so thoroughly enjoyable.
    I think it connects to a deep-rooted longing for a sense of simple purpose and community we are all lacking these days.

    • @dietrevich
      @dietrevich 3 года назад +20

      It was very insightful and extremely interesting but if anything made me appreciate what we have right now, not long for the hard and very sad times those people lived in. We idealize the past thinking it simple, peaceful, enjoyable, and connected with nature. It was none of those things. People struggle constantly, went hungry consistently, died prematurely, and had hardly any restful time for themselves.

    • @danielromero001
      @danielromero001 3 года назад +1

      back then the world was a shithole

    • @davidderricott3968
      @davidderricott3968 3 года назад +6

      While it's impossible to know how happy a person would actually be who was born in the 13th century and lived their whole life in the aforementioned shithole, I praise this documentary for giving the closest look possible of life then and there, a "view from the ground" so to speak. I'm also glad that I live in a world capable of taking interest in such a thing.

    • @MsZoedog66
      @MsZoedog66 3 года назад +2

      Go into any town in the country and you get a bit of a sense of what it was like. You realise that the human need for community is still there, and people are still capable of coming together. It is there in cities too, but because of the volume of people you realise it less. COVID-19 makes one realise that people really are social creatures, myself included! I think we take a lot more for granted now too.

    • @marijn1772
      @marijn1772 3 года назад +1

      @@dietrevich we don't have those problems now perhaps. But we got some shit to deal with that they didn't had to deal with. I don't think we evolved in a good way. I don't know anyone who hasn't a sickness or health problem. We are sick depressed and fat. We haven't a clear purpose and we ruining life on earth with speed unimaginable 500 yeara ago. Yea we are doing great.....

  • @JosiahIronclad
    @JosiahIronclad 4 года назад +177

    Imagine the masons' pain whenever a siege was going on and all the castle walls and structures were being smashed to bits. ;_;

    • @garygalt4146
      @garygalt4146 4 года назад +45

      More work for them to rebuild and feed their family.

    • @matthewerwin4677
      @matthewerwin4677 3 года назад +4

      @DeltroxTv Just like modern day road workers.

    • @steemlenn8797
      @steemlenn8797 3 года назад +15

      @DeltroxTv There were groups of experienced castle builders - and their opposite, experienced castles besiegers - traveling from one castle to the next. Experienced professionals were highly sought after.
      Now that I think about it, they probably wrote each other whenever they finished work :D :D :D

    • @denisl2760
      @denisl2760 3 года назад +31

      @@steemlenn8797 Now that I think about it, during peace time both groups would be out of work... so they might have worked together secretly to start wars, like some kind of a grand mason conspiracy.... wait a sec

    • @RHNGaming
      @RHNGaming 3 года назад

      Snake Plissken lmao

  • @BlinkyB23
    @BlinkyB23 3 года назад +23

    Please more with this trio. Ruth is my homegirl. She is so pumped about history. These guys are like history superheroes and their chemistry/humor is great!

  • @1425363878
    @1425363878 4 года назад +1728

    When 2020 sucks so much you want to go back to 1200-something.

    • @jaquelinemontero7057
      @jaquelinemontero7057 4 года назад +8

      Omg hahahahaha I shouldn't have laughed so hard

    • @KiraX2lol
      @KiraX2lol 4 года назад +64

      Trust me, you wouldn't want to go back to that time.

    • @acolddarkgentlebruh8205
      @acolddarkgentlebruh8205 4 года назад +56

      Yeah, the plague was a bit more exciting than Corona.

    • @seirbhiseach
      @seirbhiseach 4 года назад +21

      That’s why “bardcore” music is becoming a thing: ruclips.net/video/cRIfsFefatg/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/X5d8bnvO2JQ/видео.html

    • @Justaguy5678
      @Justaguy5678 4 года назад

      ME. Lmao

  • @justurboi3806
    @justurboi3806 4 года назад +159

    I had heard about this castle awhile back, but I never actually looked into it. This made me realize how little I really knew about how castles, and other buildings in general, were created in the past. Thank you for the amazing documentary.

  • @lemongrenade6135
    @lemongrenade6135 3 года назад +107

    The ultimate prank: convincing someone they were sent back in time.
    They should put someone who is unconscious in this castle and then wake he/she up and convince the person that they are in medieval times.

    • @GUNNER67akaKelt
      @GUNNER67akaKelt 3 года назад +28

      That'd be hilarious until one of those damn airplanes flew over.

    • @gumpthompson5139
      @gumpthompson5139 3 года назад +6

      Cartman did that to butters in South Park so he could go to Casa Bonita’s

    • @kptz4343
      @kptz4343 3 года назад +4

      That wouldn't work because langagues were different in the middle ages

    • @fatitankeris6327
      @fatitankeris6327 3 года назад +5

      @@kptz4343 And sure there is no way for us to know many of language's nuances at the time, and how to teach people to speak and behave like at those times... Right...

    • @ElfMaidWithInternet
      @ElfMaidWithInternet 3 года назад +2

      @GUNNER67akaKelt The dragon! The dragon hath returned!

  • @t.adamcollins2162
    @t.adamcollins2162 4 года назад +369

    Interesting. I usually just click on the worker and then click on where I want the castle to go.

  • @bgiv2010
    @bgiv2010 4 года назад +265

    "You control them like puppets!!!"
    "Whoa, dude... chill. These are my friends. We're in this together, you sociopath."

    • @joegardiner4220
      @joegardiner4220 4 года назад +20

      BurnestThe4th yeah i thought that was a weird thing to say to a stranger lol

    • @shadowmatrix0101
      @shadowmatrix0101 4 года назад +11

      "Yeah....I guess you could say it that way...ermm.." *awkward laughter*

    • @calebkw2920
      @calebkw2920 4 года назад +21

      That fucker really Pissed me off that guys job is essentially what a contractor is today, people still work like this just with far more advanced methods

    • @entertainme121
      @entertainme121 4 года назад +26

      The orchestra analogy was much nicer. Don't work for, work with.

    • @darrinstanfill6846
      @darrinstanfill6846 4 года назад

      Dude lol. I thought the same

  • @RandomYT05_01
    @RandomYT05_01 3 года назад +155

    Future archeologists would see this as a historical anomaly because there would be a 13th century castle dating to the late 20th early 21st century. There would be arguments on why this exists.

    • @King_Alfred_849
      @King_Alfred_849 3 года назад +9

      Apart from the obvious digital documentation & this programme on the Internet

    • @TheSkizz89
      @TheSkizz89 3 года назад +2

      @@King_Alfred_849 Except when Skynet destroys us all and we had to rebuild.

    • @King_Alfred_849
      @King_Alfred_849 3 года назад +1

      @@timmyotoole7312 We all live a fantastical sci-fi life these days.....sometimes I wish we could just go back to the simple Iron Age life & live within normal family communities at one with nature. 🤣👎🌲🌲🌲🌲

    • @zedantXiang
      @zedantXiang 3 года назад +3

      @@King_Alfred_849 And have half the people you know die.
      No pls.

    • @Pyxis10
      @Pyxis10 3 года назад +1

      @@King_Alfred_849 Yeah, no.

  • @dace48
    @dace48 4 года назад +810

    Dear Hollywood: See all those yellows and reds in their clothes? Not everything needs to be mud brown.

    • @amogus7277
      @amogus7277 4 года назад +22

      tints were very expensive tho

    • @TheInkyAbys
      @TheInkyAbys 4 года назад +112

      @@amogus7277 actually you would be surprised how clothes were died.
      It was a long process yes but if you had access to onions you already have your yellow right there.
      It started getting really expensive when it came to colors like purple.
      But I might be wrong, I'm not a professional and I only learned this from a medieval fair.

    • @jean-noelthomas
      @jean-noelthomas 4 года назад +6

      @@amogus7277 No:they all come from the quarry...

    • @jeffjahns1974
      @jeffjahns1974 4 года назад +39

      @@TheInkyAbys and that is why purple was the color of royalty. The biblical passages of it. Ruth. Mary Magdalene. The purple candles of the advent wreath. Royalty wore it and those that dealt in the production of the cloth were of high regard.

    • @noneofyourbeeswax01
      @noneofyourbeeswax01 4 года назад +25

      @@jeffjahns1974 Indigo dye has been known since antiquity, but has always been very expensive, thus as you say purple was regarded as the colour of royalty and was indeed in some cultures reserved exclusively for their use.
      Blue dye was historically very difficult to make and rare, thus only the wealthy could afford it. Ochre however was and is abundant, so most people could afford the range of yellow and red garments that allowed.

  • @profeta4177
    @profeta4177 4 года назад +381

    Child 1: "I'm bored: let's build a castle!"
    Child 2: "Cool! I'm getting the legos"
    Child 1: "No, not that kind of bricks"

    • @ProbablyNL
      @ProbablyNL 4 года назад +12

      27 years later we’re done now wanna play video games

    • @army310
      @army310 4 года назад +1

      if I was in the states I would be building one now

    • @raphael6749
      @raphael6749 4 года назад +5

      Thats how england was founded

    • @liamherisson4392
      @liamherisson4392 4 года назад +3

      Spoiler alert : They're called Phineas and Ferb

  • @alexdebouille4190
    @alexdebouille4190 3 года назад +45

    daaaaaamn, 25 years. Now THAT is dedication

  • @893263007
    @893263007 4 года назад +239

    These people all look like they're having a blast and enjoying life.

    • @jlipawen6453
      @jlipawen6453 4 года назад +13

      Until the plague came

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor 4 года назад +47

      Because they can explore medieval life and get the pride of having helped build a real medieval-style castle with the most accurate period-appropriate technology possible within this day and age, all without losing access to their modern day comforts and safeties if they were to ever change their mind. It's like getting all the advantages of a real medieval life but with almost none of the downsides.

    • @anhvunguyen3995
      @anhvunguyen3995 4 года назад +2

      brown dude nooooooooo

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance 4 года назад +10

      And you wouldn’t? Hell I’d join this anytime.

    • @pnpgod7904
      @pnpgod7904 4 года назад +1

      @@theuncalledfor I'd totally live in a medieval tent and stuff. Only thing i have to have is a shower once a week.

  • @HiddenFiles
    @HiddenFiles 4 года назад +515

    Narrator: "The lord wants a new chair... so he sent his loyal servants on a grueling trip to IKEA"

    • @anwardaud
      @anwardaud 4 года назад +33

      And the servant must escape from the labyrinth from dusk to dawn. Or he will be trapped

    • @Okaiako
      @Okaiako 4 года назад +5

      lol not a new throne, a new *chair*

    • @Alsadius
      @Alsadius 4 года назад +4

      @randomguy8196 Most of it would be, yeah. But it probably cost 100x as much.

    • @alexwu358
      @alexwu358 3 года назад +1

      But if the lord wants a smooth chair, he will send his servants to Klarna - Swedish for smoother shopping.

    • @Okaiako
      @Okaiako 3 года назад

      @@Alsadius true giving the fact that it's not made in mass production nor are the materials mass collected/harvested

  • @BugVall
    @BugVall 3 года назад +14

    i love that they call the different hardness of stone the piff, the paff and the puff

  • @PrincessPowerUp
    @PrincessPowerUp 4 года назад +71

    I love hearing their conversations while executing tasks because the average worker that normally carries out the task probably wouldn't say things like "This water supply is crucial" but more like "Screw the manager for making me do this" lol

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar 4 года назад +10

      The difference between beeing an actual medieval labourer and an experimenting 21st century archaeologist.

    • @JESTR_ACTUAL
      @JESTR_ACTUAL 4 года назад +1

      The part of this that no one likes to remember, is that the "laborers" rarely had a choice in that matter.
      But they make it seem like people just chose to build these massive structures for their oppressive rulers.

  • @Fredohavinnn
    @Fredohavinnn 4 года назад +1161

    let's be honest no one searched for this but we all watched this until the end

    • @troublewithweebles
      @troublewithweebles 4 года назад +20

      I watched it because I've been following their project for years now.

    • @deanstackhouse4991
      @deanstackhouse4991 4 года назад +5

      I searched for construction of castles and Sakuna Swona channel does alot of that very well...She referred me here.

    • @semisibrown1835
      @semisibrown1835 4 года назад +5

      Yep

    • @eddyraye5825
      @eddyraye5825 4 года назад +4

      Man, did you ever say a mouthful. But I'm glad I did. These people are amazing.

    • @shipwreck9146
      @shipwreck9146 4 года назад +5

      I saw it in my recommended and thought "no way, really?" And then what felt like 5 minutes had passed, and I was 30 minutes in, so I just decided to finish it hahaha

  • @virunee
    @virunee 4 года назад +47

    Stumbled across this by accident and it is legitimately the best thing I've watched all year. Can't wait to watch the other episodes!

    • @frank6842
      @frank6842 3 года назад

      All of these are great

    • @angeliaparker-savage5401
      @angeliaparker-savage5401 3 года назад +3

      I've never watched an Absolute History video that wasn't absolutely fantastic. And if you like this, you should check out the "24 Hours in the Past" put out by Reel Truth History.

  • @icbmrick6514
    @icbmrick6514 4 года назад +408

    “Wood was split with wooden wedges” i used the wood to destroy the wood

    • @icbmrick6514
      @icbmrick6514 4 года назад +5

      Thank you for all the likes

    • @alister917
      @alister917 4 года назад +1

      Lol ya

    • @cyqry
      @cyqry 4 года назад +7

      "Fighting fire with fire" lmao

    • @theheartoftexas
      @theheartoftexas 4 года назад +4

      Meme man 69 Tree on Tree violence.......sigh

    • @theheartoftexas
      @theheartoftexas 4 года назад +1

      Meme man 69 Tree on Tree violence.......sigh

  • @TomTomTomTom538
    @TomTomTomTom538 4 года назад +231

    So that's where the term 'pot hole' and 'daily grind' come from. I'm going to start saying 'piff, paff, puff' in normal conversation from this day on

    • @fnutarf2085
      @fnutarf2085 4 года назад +1

      Piff and puff, the squirrels

    • @minimistmoehre6400
      @minimistmoehre6400 4 года назад +2

      Germans actually say that sometimes^^

    • @HanushClankbell
      @HanushClankbell 4 года назад +4

      Puff pieces

    • @fritzwilhelm8258
      @fritzwilhelm8258 4 года назад

      Forsooth...

    • @anders_karlsson
      @anders_karlsson 4 года назад +3

      I was kind of disappointed after some digging that this explanation for pot hole looks only to be an urban legend for a term popularized in 1909. But it you think about it, you wouldn't want to use clay in a road bed as you want it to be able to drain away water.

  • @laurarumpe6186
    @laurarumpe6186 4 года назад +51

    Since I work as a tour guide in a 13th century castle(Dundaga castle, Latvia) this documentary answered a lot of questions I had. Thank you

    • @SteelFlesher
      @SteelFlesher 3 года назад +2

      Nice

    • @frank6842
      @frank6842 3 года назад +1

      It's a bit sad you had to come here for information. Share it with your coworkers

  • @-ksokol3369
    @-ksokol3369 4 года назад +85

    Me at 2 AM with hot glue and cardboard: *interesting*

  • @Lennartin
    @Lennartin 4 года назад +810

    The English learning how the French build castles so that they could later exploit their weaknesses.

    • @kevinDMC12
      @kevinDMC12 4 года назад +55

      *SNEAK 100*

    • @myamdane6895
      @myamdane6895 4 года назад +34

      @@kevinDMC12 Literally the worst possible reply you could've come up with

    • @emperorcheese2370
      @emperorcheese2370 4 года назад +30

      @@myamdane6895 SNEAK 100

    • @wakematta
      @wakematta 4 года назад +9

      @@myamdane6895 it's a meme reference.

    • @mutantmonkey5791
      @mutantmonkey5791 4 года назад +7

      Mohamed no

  • @UntrainableWizard
    @UntrainableWizard 3 года назад +6

    5:25 - As a software engineer, I'm glad to know that the big boss on these projects has the exact same understanding of how stuff works about 500 years ago, as they do now.
    "I just want to shift all of this across, and make this button do this instead... Simple as this" *draws on pad*
    Me: *internally crying, looking over my work and replanning the next few weeks.

  • @keepitlit1518
    @keepitlit1518 4 года назад +13

    55:50 I believe that the spiral stairs is made in a way that people from the top has always the right side free for their sword because most people are right handed. So the people who would attack from below would be at a disadvantage.

  • @Silver803
    @Silver803 4 года назад +53

    I've visited this castle several times over the years every time i go visit my grandparents. Haven't gone in a couple of years now, i need to go see the progress in person again.

    • @hollanderson
      @hollanderson 4 года назад +3

      Here's the most recent update from their very own RUclips Channel, not in English I'm afraid but subtitles should do well enough:
      ruclips.net/video/DRM22Lvv-3k/видео.html&feature=emb_title
      Highly recommend checking it out!

  • @muizrahim861
    @muizrahim861 4 года назад +34

    This is by far the best thing I've ever seen since Primitive Technology.

    • @dv9239
      @dv9239 3 года назад +2

      He can build this one in a day

  • @nroke1684
    @nroke1684 4 года назад +199

    These are the fittest archeologists I’ve ever seen.

    • @cezza6474
      @cezza6474 4 года назад +15

      Probebly weren’t this fit before they started 😂 I can just imagine 😆

    • @artywolve
      @artywolve 4 года назад +5

      What about Indiana Jones?

    • @nroke1684
      @nroke1684 4 года назад +5

      Arty ya got me there.

    • @clifftonicstudios7469
      @clifftonicstudios7469 4 года назад +10

      @@nroke1684 Lara Croft

    • @MrEmrys24
      @MrEmrys24 4 года назад +11

      I think you should be quite fit if not above average to be an archeologists. Imagine going around remote places far from the modern conveniences with a weak body....

  • @Coeurebene1
    @Coeurebene1 4 года назад +581

    in our age of bullshit jobs and power point presentations, this feels so refreshing

    • @qopiqq3629
      @qopiqq3629 4 года назад +21

      Exactly, back then your work instantly gave you results. You work your arse off for but now the well works again and the wall will be built. These days you work your arse off, because of digital work even when your home you constantly get bombarded by your boss and when you are done you dont see what you contributed. But you have to keep in mind that your powerpoint informs people who now can work, who can get money for this from their client who will spend this money, with every transaction tax is paid which inturn finances entire countries and sometimes continents. So your just a small cog in the wheel these days, and eventhough you dont see it, the bigger picture is amazing with great tech and good healthcare.
      But, so long as you and your family are healthy i would choose medival life everytime. You should check out bushcrafting, its a nice hobby and a small escape :)

    • @ajaxplay8
      @ajaxplay8 4 года назад +29

      While it is true that our modern system has created great wealth, the alienation from labour most people experience nowadays is a really deeply rooted psychologial problem in our collective societal consciousness that will need to be addressed at some point. I think most people just cope with escapism right now.

    • @Floedekage
      @Floedekage 4 года назад +10

      Although, we've gotta realize that this too is a _bullshit_ job.
      We are watching people build a castle that will not be occupied by people and wouldn't stand up to any modern attack by modern people who will go home after a hard days work and change to _normal_ clothes and hear their food on the stove and watch television.
      And that, when people build these structures and invented their technology they were striving to get where we are now and beyond.
      This is still very impressive and a great way of learning and understanding history.

    • @calebkw2920
      @calebkw2920 4 года назад +4

      Ummmm people still work and labor, I see it every day of my life, modern life has made it easier but people still bust ass, how do you think the home you live in was made

    • @calebkw2920
      @calebkw2920 4 года назад +4

      Qopiq q I’m trying really hard to be respectful of your perspective but you must understand there’s still jobs where people build shit and bust ass, For example, Carpenters, Plumbers, Electricians, Mechanics, Brick Layers, Ext.

  • @wowandrss
    @wowandrss 4 года назад +21

    This makes me so proud of the people who lived through our past.

  • @luftboyprod
    @luftboyprod 4 года назад +702

    man, larping has gone crazy now.

    • @AmrothPalantir
      @AmrothPalantir 4 года назад +9

      always a next level... 😉

    • @tubekulose
      @tubekulose 4 года назад +20

      I'd rather say reenactment has gone crazy now.

    • @jamesbrown99991
      @jamesbrown99991 4 года назад +15

      It's gone crazy-awesome

    • @lvd8122
      @lvd8122 4 года назад +6

      Probably more like experimental archeology

    • @cryptonymus
      @cryptonymus 4 года назад +3

      True. It's like you either larp or sit in front of the computer.

  • @jennifermcdonald5432
    @jennifermcdonald5432 4 года назад +30

    I had no idea they were so incredibly precise, and had the ability to be so. They had astonishing skills and talents.

    • @yaemz123
      @yaemz123 4 года назад +3

      extreme mathematical precision has been used in stone construction for thousands of years. There is a reason the masons' guild became so politically powerful in so many places.

    • @annika_panicka
      @annika_panicka 4 года назад +1

      ​@@yaemz123 I was pleased that they brought Professor Hutton in to explain-usually he only comes to parties and rites. But he did really shed some light on the Free Mason situation for me. I no longer think Beyoncé is a member.

    • @elliottwatkins9086
      @elliottwatkins9086 4 года назад

      😂

    • @annika_panicka
      @annika_panicka 4 года назад

      ​@@elliottwatkins9086 If you liked my comment, then you should have put a ring on it.😉

    • @elliottwatkins9086
      @elliottwatkins9086 3 года назад

      @@annika_panicka so do you have a facebook? lol

  • @MikePuorro
    @MikePuorro 3 года назад +3

    That guy splitting wood is a pro. He makes it look easy. Getting boards that way is an art.

  • @perrybb2
    @perrybb2 3 года назад +7

    57:49 "If you're a hungry man... anything is good to eat"
    He low-key just admitted the food was horrible.

  • @joshporter5205
    @joshporter5205 4 года назад +75

    @52:40 Something else that degraded people's teeth was the grit from the grind stone that made it's way into the flour.

    • @PierroCh5
      @PierroCh5 4 года назад +17

      Sand and dust are also a big problem for the people who lives in arid areas for the exact same reason ! Ancient Egyptians, especially those from lower classes, very frequently had overly eroded teeth, because dust would mix with the grain during sandstorms or simply because of the wind.

    • @kacperwoch4368
      @kacperwoch4368 4 года назад +12

      Despite the amount of wear, vast majority of people had straight and healthy teeth, which sadly is not the case today. Humans are ment to eat hard food and have their teeth slowly erode.

    • @kateli1880
      @kateli1880 4 года назад +4

      Kacper Lubiński they didn’t have unnecessary vaccines, fake foods no nutritional contents & plus because some doctors had to pay for their experience sports car, wives mistresses, mansion homes, vacations & vacations homes 😂

    • @zacheryeckard3051
      @zacheryeckard3051 4 года назад +20

      @@kateli1880 "unnecessary vaccines"
      Bruh.

    • @sarahmchugh4169
      @sarahmchugh4169 4 года назад +12

      @@zacheryeckard3051 I had to read that twice. I can't believe that I just found an anti-vaxxer in the wild.

  • @imeprezime9049
    @imeprezime9049 3 года назад +8

    Should have been studying for my exams, but instead I ended up watching this video and other videos similar to this one for 2-3hours straight, even though I had no intentions to do so whatsoever. This was amazing and I don't know why, but it makes me kinda sad...

  • @coreytaylor447
    @coreytaylor447 4 года назад +13

    really gives light to the saying "every age is as advanced as the materials they have access to"

    • @zn4rf
      @zn4rf 4 года назад

      limited by the knowledge of said materials, which makes material science a important field which imho does not get the attention it should.

  • @88Fircar88
    @88Fircar88 4 года назад +9

    I visited this place when I was a little boy; there was nothing but foundations. It's really amazing the amount of work they did ! I can't wait to go back there !

  • @moe5681
    @moe5681 3 года назад +3

    I love, love, love Ruth and Peter. They make history come to life.

  • @recless8667
    @recless8667 4 года назад +25

    We still use plumb lines in construction to this day; it's often a hell of a lot easier to just grab a large bolt or nut and some string that's laying around than walk all the way to the tool storage for a level, and a plumb line is a hell of a lot longer than your standard level.

  • @IdiotF0ol
    @IdiotF0ol 4 года назад +10

    That stone mason looking around and talking as he’s continuing to whack the metal chisel is my hero.

  • @quentonfoulke2888
    @quentonfoulke2888 3 года назад +17

    As a an aspiring blacksmith and stone mason this is an amazing series to me I love the workmanship and dedication they use to pull this project off very inspiring

  • @mandowarrior123
    @mandowarrior123 4 года назад +42

    'There are some things you do need a saw for' [trimming dowels]
    Chisel: 'Am I a joke to you?'

    • @-GyBer-
      @-GyBer- 4 года назад

      knife...

    • @mandowarrior123
      @mandowarrior123 4 года назад +2

      @@-GyBer- for a cross cut? O.o think you might struggle.

    • @-GyBer-
      @-GyBer- 4 года назад +1

      @@mandowarrior123 it really depends on wood, some are pretty easy to cut

    • @mandowarrior123
      @mandowarrior123 4 года назад +1

      @@-GyBer- not usually furniture wood, but carving wood sure. However that also makes using a chisel easier, too. You probably want a dense strong wood for dowels w/o wood glue.

  • @granfury1238
    @granfury1238 4 года назад +24

    Ah, the castle Guédelon, I have seen a German documentation about it and was fascinated by the idea of building a castle with only the methods they had when castles were built. They do a similar thing here in Germany as well, the "Campus Galli", which is also interesting. Would like to visit one of those places sometime in the near future just to have seen it in person.

  • @ayushsangwan3856
    @ayushsangwan3856 3 года назад +18

    That old man with that old beard is really master of all traits

  • @mldnne4725
    @mldnne4725 3 года назад +4

    I'm french and i've gone to Guédelon when I was a kid for a school travel
    This video brought back so much memory

  • @solarnaut
    @solarnaut 4 года назад +15

    At The Beach: "Petey, what are you doing ?"
    "Making a sand castle, Ma "
    50 years later: "Petey?"
    "Almost done, Ma"

  • @kathilisi3019
    @kathilisi3019 4 года назад +6

    If any of you are disappointed that the castle of Guédelon is nearly finished and you'd like to see an earlier stage of a castle build in action, there's a build in Friesach, Austria, which is just starting to look cool. It's going to be a smaller castle, but there's still a lot to see. Best time to visit would probably be 2025-ish.

  • @bobbybooshay8641
    @bobbybooshay8641 4 года назад +99

    They have a lot more done than this old show would have you believe.

    • @EykisCorporation
      @EykisCorporation 4 года назад +2

      Absolutely true!

    • @FruitingPlanet
      @FruitingPlanet 4 года назад +2

      true i worked there in 2012 and this looks like its from 2013

    • @KingBobXVI
      @KingBobXVI 4 года назад +3

      Which is really saying a lot considering the show doesn't at all downplay the work being done.

    • @chaka2allen139
      @chaka2allen139 4 года назад

      @@FruitingPlanet that's cool, what job did you do?

    • @FruitingPlanet
      @FruitingPlanet 4 года назад +7

      @@chaka2allen139 I worked with the stone masons, two of the stones in the backside chimney of the main building(that what looks most like a house), are my work.
      One of them is a bit crooked because i didnt get the angels right, looking closely at the chimney you could spot it.
      I also help with some stones for the walls of the keep and chapel, however i don´t know where they are because i wasen't there when they were set in place.
      Another day i helped in the quarry with breaking the large bolders.

  • @Kareszkoma
    @Kareszkoma 4 года назад +5

    15:40 That carpenter is amazing! Such an amazing work. My breath is taken away! It's really really good.

  • @peter4210
    @peter4210 3 года назад +4

    This was Filmed around 2015. The team behind the building of château de guédelon have been going since 1997 and on Wikipedia it says they should be done in 2023. I know with Covid it might change but you can go and visit the castle, so if you go visit France it is a good place to stop

  • @parlainthtownie85
    @parlainthtownie85 4 года назад +13

    24:43 "My strength, your ballast." lol. Love it.

  • @Aethgeir
    @Aethgeir 4 года назад +11

    I thoroughly enjoyed this!
    When you read history it's very easy to get caught up in powerful figures and great battles but it gets very much harder to get a sense of how ordinary people lived.

  • @NathanRW
    @NathanRW 3 года назад +39

    I wonder how often castles were attacked as they were being built, before getting the defenses finished.

    • @jacobrzeszewski6527
      @jacobrzeszewski6527 3 года назад +17

      Flashbacks to enabling public LAN on Minecraft in middle school.

    • @NKG416
      @NKG416 3 года назад +6

      I think it depends on location and time, if you're setting up after a recent war (like couple months or so, this is super rough estimate) i think it's possible for your enemy to attack but if you start building when the time is appropriate it's safe i guess. The lords of the castle are wealthy as heck, safe to say most of them guarded by either mercenaries or the lord's guard or some sort. With my experience playing RTS, i think it's best to set up defense at first, building guard tower from wood is cheap and later on can be upgraded.

    • @stopmotiongod1790
      @stopmotiongod1790 3 года назад

      @@jacobrzeszewski6527 i feel you dude

    • @dimitrikemitsky
      @dimitrikemitsky 3 года назад +7

      On occasion yes, but it wasn't always fatal and wasn't *too* common. Remember most castles don't take 25 years to build, some castles didn't even take 25 weeks to build. Most castles were small, huge castles were very much the exception.
      This castle is not mini, this is about the size or maybe slightly larger than the average castle. Also, the majority of castles were whitewashed wood, not stone.
      And also, just cause it wasn't finished doesn't mean it's not functional. Castles were usable as soon as the first floor of the keep was finished, many were built on and expanded over the years. So even if one curtain wall wasn't finished, the inner walls could still be defended.
      And even if there was a gaping hole in the wall, you could throw up an earthworks literally overnight. There are tons of stories of castles having one or more walls destroyed and still surviving the siege. A pile of rubble with an earthworks on top is still a barrier.

  • @thegreatskinkpriest8104
    @thegreatskinkpriest8104 4 года назад +83

    Being any part of this, however insignificant, would be my ultimate dream achieved. Also imagine how buff all the moms were from grinding grain lol.

    • @mikkaanderson5939
      @mikkaanderson5939 4 года назад +3

      Elijah Shafer I hear all the time people say “because it symbolised wealth and power” for being overweight and that just makes 13th century women look like gold diggers. Idk but the way you said “had an easy life” just sounded so much better and showed that some wanted more from a marriage than just the money 😂

    • @mandowarrior123
      @mandowarrior123 4 года назад

      @@mikkaanderson5939 they were. Today it is also for a more comfortable life, as well as authority.

    • @aquietwhyme
      @aquietwhyme 4 года назад +2

      @Dominic Scalia Who doesn't?

  • @WetAdek
    @WetAdek 4 года назад +148

    Literally no one:
    RUclips recommendations: Hey wanna build a castle?

  • @jenniferjaurigue9660
    @jenniferjaurigue9660 2 года назад +1

    I love Ruths energy! I could sit with her and a cup of tea and just hear her talk about history!

  • @softshoes
    @softshoes 4 года назад +52

    That crane is ingenious.

    • @milanstevic8424
      @milanstevic8424 4 года назад +3

      well, let's not try and imagine what happens if the brakes fail.

    • @retrogreene
      @retrogreene 4 года назад

      @@milanstevic8424 fun

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor 4 года назад

      @@milanstevic8424
      What brakes? It's operated by the weight of the humans inside the big wheels. The operators act as "brakes".

    • @milanstevic8424
      @milanstevic8424 4 года назад +1

      @@theuncalledfor I had to rewatch just to show you how ignorant you are.
      What's the guy at @30:24 then? Is he cheering them for doing a great job?
      Can you actually imagine that they are supposed to lift rocks with their leg-friction alone, with items weighing more than two individuals? Meaning that when things fall, they turn wheels hard, unless manually detached, which is a split second decision, and these things didn't have any built-in failsafe technology.
      Without a braking operator to keep things in place, it's a horrible disaster in which a man is basically spun and completely demolished by a rampaging wooden contraption, should a brake or its operator fail in reacting.
      Historically, however ingenius they were for the time, these things would also completely detach and fall off the tower, carrying their occupants to their certain deaths.

    • @FruitingPlanet
      @FruitingPlanet 4 года назад

      @@theuncalledfor There are brakes, those are used so that the people dont have to stay in there when they arent hoisting something up.

  • @malachigruenhagen2453
    @malachigruenhagen2453 4 года назад +29

    Can you imagine what archeologists 1000s of years from now will be saying about this castle. They will wonder why it was built during the early computer age.

    • @BosonCollider
      @BosonCollider 4 года назад +5

      Meh. Wouldnt confuse them more than neoclassicism and greek columns in the 18th century

  • @hippiecowgirl4231
    @hippiecowgirl4231 2 года назад +2

    This is fascinating! My husband is a mason and I can't wait to show this to him when he gets home today from what he considers a hard day of work. I bet he will appreciate his modern tools and equipment !!

  • @Kirmeins
    @Kirmeins 4 года назад +7

    I remember watching a german documentary about Guédelon in my youth - it grew so much! And less trees around! Great job to everyone involved!

  • @arashafshari3854
    @arashafshari3854 3 года назад +5

    I really thank the producer and this team who value the history and produced such a documentary. I loved it.

  • @IconDevco
    @IconDevco 3 года назад +1

    I love how they all just jab at each other all the time like theyre family. Very wholesome

  • @ScarlettKitsune
    @ScarlettKitsune 4 года назад +29

    Man, I wish I'd become an experimental archaeologist. What an amazing occupation!

    • @Oosh21
      @Oosh21 4 года назад +3

      Work like a dog all day. Write papers about it all night.

    • @Lyenati
      @Lyenati 4 года назад +1

      Oosh21 I would take that over an office job

    • @shugo541
      @shugo541 4 года назад

      @@Lyenati agreed. I did Archaeology and history at College. Later did Sound technologies at university. Currently in an office job. Hate it, i'd love to make a living through woodwork or something.

  • @crazymad4323
    @crazymad4323 4 года назад +20

    Imagine if the camera guy pretended to be a time traveler in the video so that historians watching it don’t exactly know what to believe.

  • @son_your_adopted940
    @son_your_adopted940 3 года назад +2

    I wish there was more people doing these types of projects but with different cultures

  • @audrey9561
    @audrey9561 4 года назад +240

    I noticed the house has a lot of open parts of the wall, would they have closed those up in the winter? I’d imagine you’d lose a lot of heat that way

    • @sertu1462
      @sertu1462 4 года назад +130

      I could imagine that construction wouldn't be active during winter. For example, you can't really use mortar during temperatures below freezing point because the water in it would basically freeze before it properly dries and make the mortar unstable.

    • @pozk-tf6ey
      @pozk-tf6ey 4 года назад +63

      they don't build during winter

    • @NorseGraphic
      @NorseGraphic 4 года назад +11

      Natural air-conditioning.

    • @audrey9561
      @audrey9561 4 года назад +4

      sertu good point I realized later in the video they point that out

    • @londonspade5896
      @londonspade5896 4 года назад +37

      @@pozk-tf6ey Yeah, they vacation at their Mediterranean villa during winter

  • @BTMmarineLM
    @BTMmarineLM 4 года назад +4

    Peter Ginn and Ruth Goodman are literally my favorite people on this planet!!!! Miss Alex.

  • @mbrp5107
    @mbrp5107 3 года назад +66

    Ah yes. English men build castle in the French Soil. What could possibly go wrong?

    • @doavkkan
      @doavkkan 3 года назад +6

      @Logibomb - You should do a research

    • @foty8679
      @foty8679 3 года назад +4

      @@doavkkan He is right though. Normandy belonged to England. I am not 100% sure how long, but until around 1200 (looked it up, 1204) it belonged to England. Then from 1345 until 1360 it was occupied by the English, and again 1415 - 1450. "Medieval period" also describes the period from 500 to 1500 so..technically correct (William conquered England 1066, so...they owned it for quite a while.

    • @doavkkan
      @doavkkan 3 года назад +2

      @@foty8679 yeah you're right but that's just one province of northern france

    • @elbentos7803
      @elbentos7803 3 года назад +1

      The Normans dukes then the Plantagenet dynasty were also the feudal lords of large parts of - western - France, those fiefs still legally parts of the kingdom of France, with the independant English king giving hommage as a duke for Aquitaine anf Normandy, as count for Anjou etc. (thus all the feudal madness of the recurrent endless wars between England and France between 1066 and 1453).
      By the way, Aquitaine is definitely in south west France, Anjou in center west...

    • @lareponse4745
      @lareponse4745 3 года назад +2

      ​@@foty8679
      England got an enormous part of France from the wedding of alionor of Aquitaine in mid-12th century and kept it until the 14th (the time for a hundred years war).
      But it's wrong to say that it was part of England because it was still part of the French Kingdom (just owned by the english kings who were vassals of the French King legally speaking).

  • @GatoDeGatito
    @GatoDeGatito 4 года назад +35

    Ruth is one of my absolute favorite people to watch in these series!

  • @janeandersen7460
    @janeandersen7460 2 года назад +4

    A real Medieval castle project would have far more workers, that's why they could finish it in 2-10 years. Back then you also had supporting villages all around the castle. This is the most impressive project i have seen so far.

  • @CopiousJohn
    @CopiousJohn 2 года назад +3

    Watching this, I felt like I was living Ken Follett's "Pillars of the Earth" and its sequel, "World Without End". Granted, that was mostly about building a cathedral, but it's that time period, and seeing the tools they used to shape the stones and build the structures...an absolutely awesome documentary.

  • @Christojyn
    @Christojyn 4 года назад +48

    50 years later
    grandson: so what did you do during quarantine?
    grandfather: we continue making sandstone castle
    grandson: but it was in 2020, is it minecraft?
    grandfather: nope

  • @vintageitems9847
    @vintageitems9847 4 года назад +26

    I've been sitting on the toilet for an hour now

    • @bas8792
      @bas8792 2 года назад

      rip to your butt

  • @kendalllladnek9779
    @kendalllladnek9779 4 года назад +8

    56:53 that 'wtf did she just feed me' look is the whole reason i watched this at 2 AM