History Summarized: Wales
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- Опубликовано: 17 май 2024
- Wale, Wale, Wale(s), what have we here? I'll tell you! A look at the oft-forgotten history of Britain's secret third country Wales, where the population is about 50% bards just by sheer cultural osmosis.
SOURCES & Further Reading: "A Concise History of Wales" by Jenkins, "A History of Wales" by Davies
This video was edited by Sophia Ricciardi AKA "Indigo". www.sophiakricci.com/
Our content is intended for teenage audiences and up.
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Fun fact: the author of the Witcher series used random Welsh words for magic things, so Welsh speakers were surprised to hear Yennefer mention sewers for no reason
Stares back while holding several volumes of the Pendragon Cycle
Okay, this may be the biggest motivation I've had to learn Welsh from all my years living there.
No no, not magic things but the Elder Tongue, the language of the Elves, the whole theme of the elves is fantasy celtic after all.
Lots of fantasy does this. A huge part of Sarah J Maas predictions used to be entering character names into the Welsh to English on Google translate
The name Geralt is also a common Welsh name, normally spelled Gerallt.
“And I know better than to disrespect the dragon lords.”
This man gets it.
HEAR HEAR
he does indeed, doesn't he?
Your god damn right
Right!
Wales is so badass they got a RED DRAGON on there flag! How many places have a dragon on there flag!
"Welsh is of this soil, this island, the senior language of the men of Britain; and Welsh is beautiful." - J.R.R. Tolkien
Wales Englands biggest county 😂😂😂
Falch i fod yn gymraeg 🤘
And Cornish ❤️🏴
@@Dungiom me when Brythonic languages 💚
@@elliwowen5121 a fina 'fyd
i’m a welsh gal, and it’s so good to see wales finally being talked about in an educational manner without being made fun of for once!
CORRECT. 👍👍👍🏴🏴🏴
Why do you say that wales is being made fun? Its way more nice, far more intresting that anything england could offer.
@@shelbyvillemusica Unfortunately most people don't understand the charm and beauty with Wales. They see the harshness of England and assume we are all the same. All the Celtic regions have amazing people (Cornwall, Wales, the north, Scotland [Lowlands] and N.Ireland) Not saying all the other places but the South of England tend to be the worst yet the most covered
As my British friend would say, the one thing the Welsh; Irish and Scots all agree on: Hating the British is pretty far up the list, even if only in a friendly rivalry sense..
🐑
Oh no he's found out we exist, Damn I kinda liked being the stealth nation 😂😂
God same. Lmao
Lol
Every time I tell an American I'm from Wales they ask if it's near london. I think we're still the stealth nation.
@@mememaster695 I mean considering the relative size of the US, Wales technically IS fairly close to London
@@mememaster695
Geography was never thier strong suit lol. One time I mentioned being from Wales I got asked what Australia was like..... It's "New" South Wales for a reason 🤦♂️
On Wales feeling older:
"Welsh is of this soil, this island, the senior language of the men of Britain; and Welsh is beautiful." - J. R. R. Tolkien.
🏴
Seriously Tolkien said that?!
yeah british briton (welsh/cornish) and irish irish (irish gaelic) both feel as old as time, but being indo-european they had to have arrived there at some point from somewhere else. even if proto-celtic was some kind of pidgin or trade tongue
@@DragonKnight90001 He didn’t just say it he based Sindarin on it.
@@blacksage2375 oh ok XD
I live in Wales and they also have Welsh speaking schools. My son is 4 and he can speak both Welsh and English fluently. The Welsh language is wales is going from strength to strength.
Welsh language schools have existed in the valleys since the 50s and STILL you can walk around my local Tesco's (Pontypridd) and the chances of hearing it are approximately, er, sorry to be so blunt ... nil.
As so social experiments go It's been an epic fail.
I'm fluent btw, but never speak it outside the house because nobody would understand me.
No it ain't
Welsh language schools you will find a lot in North Wales but mostly in Gwynedd, as I say the Welsh capital of Wales
@@tombartram7384 Go to the western point of the valleys like the Amman valley and the upper Swansea valley and you will hear people speaking Welsh.
@@Jake-pm3pz really? That area has suffered a shocking decline in Welsh speakers over the last twenty years, the main problem the very low rate of transmission. The village of Crynant dropped from 46% Welsh speaking in 2001 to 25% in 2011. My mate's from Capel Hendre, moved to Cardiff to uni in 1990 and got a job here. He HATES going back home and seeing how anglicised its gone😔😔
Honestly I’ve always been disappointed that the Union Jack flag never incorporated the Welsh dragon into its design. As well as actually representing Wales on the flag as part of the UK, it would have just been baller to see. The world could always use more dragon flags.
hi! sorry to come onto your comment so late but the reason wales doesn't have representation on the union jack is because at the time of the flag's creation wales did not exist. legally it was considered part of england. hope this answers your question!
As a English Brit, I have always been disappointed at the lack of dragon too!
Although I'm only now realising that I never thought about when that flag was created and if it was even possible for it to have been an influence... But childhood me still feels like any chance to have a dragon flag (without genocide or further harm, etc), is one we should take! Adult me agrees. It'd be a better flag with a dragon on it.
Note: I'm saying I'd do a fascism/war crime for a dragon flag, not suggesting England didn't do plenty of genociding. I think there's only about 20-30 nations that we haven't invaded at some point in our checkered and very bloody past (... Yet?) I'm anti-empire and not trying to diminish the harm done to Wales or any other colonies.
@@unholyimpacts7246 Wales existed long before England
Like my profile pic you mean
Speaking as a Welshman, plenty of us are very happy not to have our dragon incorporated into that bloodstained rag.
As a Welsh person, this video makes my heart sing. No sheep jokes, great attempts at pronunciation, a real respect for the people and culture. We are so used to being shat on. Diolch yn fawr iawn!
Except for the English culture.
The last Englishman to tangle with a Welsh prince was Offa.
The clowns that invaded you spoke Latin and French - more fool them.
Ne n¯ænig pro nese weorðan
@@AndyJarman no the last Englishman to tangle with a Welsh Prince was Joe Marler.
@@darthmong7196 this comment needs more appreciation! Haha
ymdrech gadarn iawn ganddo, chwarae teg.
@@osmdude101 Mae gennym ein draig ein hunain yma yn Lloegr, does dim angen diolch mwy!
2:15
England: "WHY CAN'T YOU BE NORMAL!?"
Wales: *Eldritch Screeching*
Don't let this distract you from the fact that I am the ugliest RUclipsr worldwide. I also smell like 100 de*d orangutans and have two hot hot hot girlfriends as you can see on my highly stimulating channel. Greetings, dear lerit
To be honest it’s kind of what the welsh language sounds like
Kind of what it looks like too
@@Alfred_Leonhart as a welsh person I can confirm
@@Alfred_Leonhart *clears throat* mae hen wlad fy nhadau yn amwyl i mi, gwald beirdd a chantorion, enwogion o fri; ei gwirol ryfelwyr, gwladgarwyr tra mad, tros ryddid collasant eu gwaed.
I took a trip to Northern Wales a few years back and it was absolutely amazing! Everyone there seemed pretty shocked to see a family of American tourists lol. But I had been researching Wales for years and its history just fascinates me so much. We were all also so surprised at how much Welsh we heard being spoken. I’m so glad that the language has had such a resurgence because it is such a beautiful language!
Which specific places did you go?
Something to remind Americans is that the history of the Welsh is in some ways very similar to that of the Native Americans, in that they were pushed westwards by invading forces.
George Washington monument has "Wales forever" on it. And 4of the first 5 Presidents were of Welsh decent.
@@Maharan169 yes but not their main ancestral line as the vast majority of the founding fathers considered themselves englishmen
@@mrkitcatt2119 many Welsh wrote down English when immigrating to anywhere. Discrimination and the common knowledge at that time that welshmen were only filthy pirates Black Bart, Capt Morgan, Howell Davis being some of the most famous and successful (Welsh speaking) pirates in the world. It couldn't have been easy surviving next to the most powerful country (language) in the world. The Welsh even created that themselves by winning the English crown that eventually united the British island and started the Golden age. The world would have been speaking Spanish, French maybe. It's horrible what's happened to England in the past 30 years though. English language and it's people has gone in many parts
I fully understand what you mean about Wales feeling ancient. Living in Wales my whole life, there's just something about it that feels like it's straight out of a fairy tale
The description he gave, first thing that came to mind was Fairy tale 😉
Have only been to the touristy parts then
The same thing that the romans thought, they saw the isles as such a strange place compared to the rest of Europe.
i was going to like your comment but when things end in two i cry, so horarary like.
"A red cross on white, for St. George!"
"A white saltire on blue, for St. Andrew!"
"A red saltire on white, for St. Patrick!"
"DRAGON!!!"
"Dammit Wales we said no dragons"
"A rose!"
"A thistle!"
"A shamrock!"
"LEEK!!!"
"*Dammit* Wales..."
Wales flower is the daffodil
The red dragon is the country's flag... St. David's flag is a yellow cross on a black background
@@welch_inc6532 only recently while the leek is up to 1000 years old.
I'd been wondering what these UK symbols meant. This result is a little disappointing though.
And a leek
Blue: “I know better than to disrespect the dragon lords” credits roll. And the suggested video that pops up above the credits is Reds Trope Talk on dragons.
Blue is no fool!
The dragon lords want us to learn more. I’m not complaining
I got History RE-Summarised: The Roman Republic.
Spike Spiegel it’s honestly probably cause I watched the dragons trope talk on my computer so my phone thinks I haven’t seen it. But also..... it could be the dragon overlords
Meanwhile in Australia:
Dragons have feelings too people! WE CANNOT FORGET THE DRAGONS!
CYMRU AM BYTH
Vegans in Wales represent 🌱 🏴🙋🏻♀️
Wales is beautiful. I have lived there and it is the land.of my father.
@@colettedavies1741 god is your father and he blessed England with the empire 😉
As a cornish person, whilst I feel some companionship with the Welsh I cannot help but feel like our people are overlooked generally. Often you see people talking about Wales as the most overlooked celtic nation, or just ignore us completely. I would love to see a video done on the history of the Cornish in a similar style.
I was about to comment this because I feel the exact same way- I'd love to see OSP cover Cornwall, they're amazing at these historical recaps and Cornwall often gets overlooked !!
Aye. Cornwall gets overlooked more than Wales. Probably about on par with the Manx.... and we shouldn't forget our old cousins, the Picts, whose culture was sadly wiped out centuries ago (though their use of woad still represents Celts in the public eye to this day).
Cornwealas(Cornwall) in the saxon tongue means horn of wales (the foreigner) which lets face it is at least ironic, before we even approach Dumnonia which is an amalgamation of Kernow and Dyfneint (Devon) collectively or even for that matter Avon which comes from the Welsh Afon the county of Bristol and Bath, like wise i the north west we have Cumbria which is literally a latinised version of Combrogi fellow countryman where the word Cymru originates.
Came down in the comments to echo this sentiment! Cornish and Manx history is utterly unknown outside of Celtic nationalists, and history nerds.
Cornish is a really beautiful language. If you can speak it I hope you help it survive! I'm a native English speaker learning Welsh but I'd also like to visit Cornwall someday.
As a welsh teenager this makes me smile, wales is a beautiful country with alot of history as well as a semi-large mythos.
From Scotland, I can say that if there was anywhere within the British Isles that I would live outside of Scotland, it would by far be Wales hands down. Your country is so beautiful! 🏴 🏴
If you only you didn’t speak goblinoid
N many find themselves back to the old ways! As I, an Irish Celt, have found my way back to my old gods.
Wales needs more attention.
@@TheParadoxGamer1 I found my way back to the old gods of the isles back in late 2015 😄
@Germany can into Empire Same to you!! 🏴🏴
"Welsh sounds like the language dragons would speak" - never thought about that, but actually true.
Using Welsh for my dragons in my d&d campaign from now on
Welsh themselves often claim that welsh is the language of heaven.
Coming from a Cymro I agree
Dwi'n cytuno! Dyna'r union ddreigiau iaith sy'n siarad. Ynganiad ardderchog hefyd
Fun to be able to have it as a second language but it’s no longer a third of us now I believe
I’m American, but my family came here from Wales about 6 generations ago and I know nothing about wales. Finally decided to look up some history about it and always like your videos
I'm Welsh and my bampi (grandad) was a coal miner - love this video! It's taught me so much! We don't even have our own history taught here as it's mainly based on English GCSEs but it's amazing to hear the history and learn new things!
Am Welsh, can confirm that we are run by dragons.
Seriously though having my country not lumped in with England for once is amazing.
Its so rare..*holds head*
I couldn’t agree more. 😁
We've been waiting so long and we've finally got the recognition lads. Dan ni 'di ennill.
Come to think of it... Drakeford... Drake... Dragon... 😨
First Minister with the surname Drakeford. Pretty suspicious.
i love seeing this as a welsh person also it is entirely possible to stumble off the edge of a hiking trail and end up in narnia ive done it
I missed my turn, though I found a power station instead of Narnia.
If you go the wrong way you end up in Port Talbot though.
I'll end up falling into the otherworld
Ending up in Narnia or Middle Earth is taking a RIGHT turn. Taking a wrong turn is ending up in Westeros.
Was it fun?
Being from Wales a buttload of castles is an understatement, feels like you're never more than a mile away from castle ruins where I am. In terms of pronunciation you made a really good job and actually aren't that far off most of them :)
I was born in the states, but my ancestry comes from Wales, Ireland, and Germany. I’ve made it my mission to learn as much as I can and hopefully someday visit these places and experience the culture first hand 💖
Means a lot. Falle dysgu’r iaith?
@@GruntDestroyarChannel Dwi’n moyn myw o bobl dysgu cymraeg hefyd. Dwi dal yn dysgu yr iaith fy hun.
Same here. Born in the states, my ancestors, Jones’, immigrated from Wales.
@@tinfoilbottle5943 Sais dw i, ond dw i'n dysgu Cymraeg. Mae'n iaith didderol a hyfryd.
I know my grandfather was stationed over in Wales just prior to the D-Day invasion and he told me that the people there were very friendly because a lot of them are coal miners and my grandfather and a lot of his friends in his unit came from the West Virginia coal mines. Also my grandfather is Black and they felt solidarity with the Welsh people because they were often times look down upon by the English.
I always love that sorta solidarity
@@alyssinclair8598 Yeah, being put down by people makes the ones put down find some form of friendship and content sympathy.
Getting screwed by the English is a universal bonding experience
@@Goblinoiddoof Or they put the others down. Like the Irish did when they came to the US.
Having lived in that area of Wales for over half my (short) life, basically everyone who talks about how there was solidarity and understanding with the black soldiers they saw as being unfairly treated. Especially in some of the large cultural similarities
“Wales drew the shortest of the imperial sticks.”
**Cries in Cornish and Manx**
Never even heard of Manx.
You'll have your time to shine soon ☀️
Joins in with sad Cornish (Kernewek) sounds
Quick! Everyone demand a Cornish history and Isle of man history!
:( same
As a Welsh man this video makes me happy. We have the single most impressive world flag out there
I thought that until the other day, look at Bhutan’s, they’ve got a pretty sick dragon flag too
The Welsh flag is the best flag ever.
I really appreciate that you made an effort with Welsh pronunciation. You did very well! I'm always pleased when people take notice of our insanely successful language safeguarding process. At one time the language was in danger of dying out, and whilst we still have problems - particularly with massive non-welsh-speaking immigration into rural areas, the language is no longer in danger, and is getting stronger! Diolch o galon am greu'r fideo 'ma, mae mor neis clywed am ein hanes ein hunain o rywun sy ddim yn dod o Gymru!
It's a history full of hunting and slaughter, but in recent times things look better for them.
...no, I'm not confusing Wales with whales. Though that applies to them, too.
In a "who hates England the most" competition, we Welsh are of the only three who constantly compete. Repub of Ire, Scots and the Welsh hate them more than ANYONE
@@Goblinoiddoof Just judging by their names, I'd guess that Ire-land probably comes out ahead.
@@timothymclean nah... the irish showed resisted through car bombs and bullets. The way you are supposed to. Sticking to killing the soldiers. The way that is respectful. The welsh resisted by burning down the homes of the english retirees that tried to settle down. Completely disrespectful of any rules. It shows more hatred.
@@sethbennett617 I sure hope the "car bombs and bullets", as well as "Sticking to killing the soldiers" comment was sarcastic
@@ApeX-pj4mq partly. I was referring to the small independence war that occured after ww1, and then the casual terrorism that happened in the 70s. Ya know, not a war persay, but still an embodiment of the attitude. The sticking to killing soldier was is reference to the low number civilian deaths caused by the irish freedom fighters. Mostly just british soldiers. What is considered by the geneva convention as the respectful way of waging war. I was comparing this to the welsh method of resistance which was fire and shovels. Im not saying that every irishman hates the english. Im saying that the events that have occurred give you a general idea of the attitude. The welsh using methods that are not direct war but cause more issues.
Love the fact you actually put effort into pronouncing the welsh words right when 90% of British media don’t bother
I can’t count the amount of times I’ve lost my mind when my own relatives can’t even say llandudno to the point where I just say “honestly don’t bother just call it the city of the church of St Tudno” because I just did not have it in me to teach them how to say it for the fifty eighth time
When I try to pronounce something I try to get it as close to their dialect as I can. I may not be perfect but I'll try.
He is from the melting pot of the world the united states of america.(that is a fancy way of saying that he is american)
The worst thing is when you hear the pronounciation of Llanelli whilst on a train or on a GPS. It annoys me everytime.
I try to. I hate that Welsh people hear me talk and because of the bloody fools in England are...well...bloody fools, they think I'm a bloody fool.
I recently learned how to pronounce that Welsh "double-L" sound, and have not been happier in a while, can't stop doing it and I'm going to see if I can learn anything else about Wales (or Cymry)!
Its Cymry if you’re talking about the welsh people, however if you are talking about the country itself it is Cymru
Honestly o tried teaching my English friends how to say and I was like a cat Hissing and they were like yeah love we don’t know how to do that. They also said they loved my accent- and asked me how to swear
Try the forensic historians Wilson and blackett and get your mind blown wide open
@@elig6791 what? Teach me both please. I wanna know Welsh. Languages are awesome
I don't mean to be rude but I genuinely don't know how people find the LL sound so hard. I think because I've done it all my life but it's genuinely like a cat hissing and I'm like ????? What do you mean you can't do a cat hiss 😂
As a welsh teenager, this makes me smile, thanks so much for making our country feel noticed.
As a Welsh person my favorite Welsh history fact is that time when French soldiers surrendered to some Welsh women thinking they were the English because they wore red
Yes I think that was in 1797, last invasion of the British Isles. On reflection I forgot about the Krauts in the Channel Islands in 1940. Also a small French invasion force actually landed in Co. Mayo in support of Irish rebels in 1798 but they got their asses kicked.
Hello My darling daughter :) Imagine finding you here.
A bunch of elderly Welsh women, might I add.
@@ardentjunglist thats a strange way to approach women but I wont judge.
@@glitchyjoe64 My actual daughter...
Ay Welsh the forgotten ones that everybody knows but no one talks about
The language with too many silent "L's"
The ones who shall not be named. They shudder as grandma opens the curtains on a cold wet autumn morning....
@@jessicajayes8326 They aren't silent. Ll makes a specific sound which is hard to convey in text. As does dd.
@@mesothelimoa341 To say welsh names needs a basic grasp of welsh sometimes. Llanelli, llanfoist, Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch...
@@mesothelimoa341 It's known as the, "lateral voiceless fricative." Voiceless fricatives you know how to say include, "f", "the", "s", and "sh". "ll" is kinda the converse of "sh": air flows over the sides of the tongue with the front of the tongue blocking the air flow instead of the other way around.
It is fascinating, and a huge tribute to the Welsh, that their methods of language instruction and minority-language resurgence are being used as the model for many other countries whose native minority languages have been lost, supressed, or are endangered. And, for such a small country, she has had a HUGE influence on world culture, arts, literature, and music - not to mention the fact that a disproportionately large number of extremely influential industrialists, bankers, and entrepreneurs have been Welsh or of Welsh lineage (we're looking at you J.P. Morgan and Griffith J. Griffith). The Welsh are a fascinating people who are known both for their innate sense of humility, and for their ferocious national pride. Their History is truly as brilliant, and engaging as they are, themselves. Cymru am Byth!
even in modern life, we have a very visible celtic culture. Our hospitals have a Celtic cross instead of a Red cross, and the language is growing. Cultural traditions are still commonly practiced (especially in the west, where welsh is the majority language) and some old practices are coming back. We also get valentine's day twice in a year.
I got oddly...emotional watching this video. Honestly it's so nice for someone to actually talk about Wales as if it's it's own country and not just lumped in with England.
Yma o hyd!
Now you know how alphabet people feel
That's how it feels to remove the historical weight of colonialism, even for just an instant.
Freeing, isn't it? Every people deserves to feel like this.
@@johnedington6083 I mean, my neighbor isn't my enemy either, I like him a lot but that doesn't mean It'd be a good idea to move into his appartment with him as a roommate though.
Yeah…. Half the world feels the same thing
I speak Welsh. I can confirm that it sounds like some sort of ancient magic language. Our national anthem is an older version of welsh and we don’t know any direct translations. We also have a dragon flag.
Suck it other countries.
@That nonbinary bee Neis gweld mwy o siaradwyr Cymraeg ar y wê!
Ia da i glywed ond buaswn i'n dweud fod rhan fwya o'r anthem genedlaethol yn ddealltadwy i mi.
Nid yw'r Cymraeg wedi newid hanner gymaint a llawer o ieithoedd eraill.
Yn yr ysgol mi wnaethom astudio barddoniaeth gan yr hen feirdd a mi oeddant yn gallu dallt yn y rhan fwyaf beth yr oeddent yn dweud.
Mae'n eitha tebyg i Gymraeg y gogledd.
Agreed that Cymraeg sounds like an ancient magic language (because it is!). Just pointing out that the anthem is 100% directly translatable, all of the words from the anthem are still used in Welsh. Some of them aren't common words, but they're still there!
@@jace8603 Oh. I didn’t realise. This is just something I was told a few years ago in my primary school. Should’ve known it was a bunch of shite.
can anyone teach welsh language online?
My wife is Welsh, the language is beautiful and the people are so friendly! Cymru am Byth!
You obviously haven’t been to Ceredigion!!!!!
@@THEBOYDALEK friendly if they know you
@@chesterdonnelly1212 What the hell is that supposed to mean?. If they don’t know you they are unfriendly?
I'm glad you had the exact same first reaction I had when learning about Wales.
"I'm sorry... a DRAGON FLAG?!"
and the following
"Wait... so that celtic-ass language... STILL EXISTS?!"
Hoo boy does Wales have a ton of castles. I once visited Wales with some friends and we got separated. What proceeded was one of the funniest phone conversations I've ever had.
"Where are you?"
"Near the castle?"
"Which castle??"
"Uh..."
"This isn't an issue we have in America."
This made me laugh my head off. In Wales saying "I'm near a castle" is the equivalent of saying "I'm somewhere in Wales"
What do they use all the castles for nowadays? Are they all museums?
@@theperfectmix2 I think some are museums, but I'm assuming that most are just... there, possibly under cultural protection laws
@@theperfectmix2 a lot of them were basically museums. They decorate the castles to look as they did during certain time periods
@@theperfectmix2 Most are some form of a museum - nothing fancy, you can just go inside and take a look at the building.
The Welsh had longbows? That must’ve been quite the discovery for the Normans...
Lord:”don’t worry, on this hill they can’t reach us with their - Whatthefuckisicomingoutofthesky?!?”
@Rhosyn Mintys If I'm remembering this right wasn't it was welsh longbowmen fighting for England that gave rise to proper military uniforms and key welsh symbol. I remember reading something about how a unit of Welsh bowmen would keep getting drunk and were a nightmare to find and organise before a battle so their leader started dressing them in green shirts with white legs. Hence the leek becoming a prominent welsh symbol. Now this may be one of those totally untrue history stories you sometimes pick up but Ive know it for so long I'm pretty sure it came from a credible source.
@Rhosyn Mintys Well I suppose even in more modern periods we haven't done a bad job giving an account of ourselves. You only have to briefly look into what happened at mametz wood in ww1 to get a feeling for how awful the entire western front was. Also if anyone hasn't been the memorial there is one of the most powerful ww1 memorials I've been to. The statue of the dragon gripping barbed wire with its head ever so slightly turned away from the treeline almost as if it cant even bare to look at where the battle was. Maybe its just because I'm welsh but I found that so moving its been seared into my memory.
@Rhosyn Mintys Gwlad "inhales" GWLAAAAAAAAAAD!!!!
Pleidiol wyf i'm gwlad,
Tra môr yn fur i'r bur hoff bau
O bydded i'r hen iaaaaaaith "inhales again" BAAAAARHAAAAU!!!
The Normans also had archers, though I don't know what kind of bows they used. William used archers in the Battle of Hastings.
@@Fordmister Well the story i know for the leek, is that durning a battle with the saxons both sides had similar armour , so saint david told them to put a leek in their hat so they could identify allies more easily in the battlefeild, this then morphed into the green and white uniform.
Would’ve liked to hear Owain Glyndwr mentioned but apart from that, as a whistle stop tour of the last 2,000 years it was pretty good. I applaud the effort on the pronunciation too - most don’t don’t even bother, including the people we have a so-called union with. 🙄
As someone with welsh heritage currently living in wales for uni… this country is severely underrated
“How could anyone gloss over the country with the dragon flag?”
*sad Bhutan noises*
Blue said "our first indication Wales has Big Eldritch Energy" but the never listed what other indications there are. I demand a video all about Wales' Big Eldritch Energy.
They have a ridiculous number of castles (prime haunting locations for ghosts), a language that sounds like something Cthulhu would speak and lots of mountain trails. Need more?
@@calebwheeler8143 maybe not, but I want it
just type 'mari lwyd' into google images
@@calebwheeler8143 yes I do need more and I need a video of Blue narrating it all to me with Red's animations.
Look at a few welsh mythology. There are some creepy things in there.
I'm Irish and I will always be biased for my own country but I gotta love our friends across the sea, love ya wales
The irish used to raid wales
We love ya also Irish folk! I'm a Welsh Gal with an Irish Grandfather.. Best of both xx
I'm Welsh and Irish lol
I'm a Welsh girl, I couldn't stop smiling at this. Thank you :D And yes, our castles, poetry, landscapes and dragons are awesome.
Not forgetting your singing and your rugby.
PS the dragons let you ride them.
As a Welsh gal, I can confirm that you are correct: never disrespect the dragon lords.
As someone from just beyond the big pond to your west. I like the idea of dragons ruling along side Wales.
@@squiblebib1353 tbf modern day Wales is still basically Skyrim
Fuck dem dragons
@@galning2768 That’s not a very crescent-fresh attitude, boyo.
We're just out here riding sheep carts and chilling with our pet dragons
I live in Llandaff in cardiff, there are two castles at the end of my street. Opposite three pubs.
What more could a man want ?😂
probably to not live in cardiff
I live in cardiff too and when I took buses for college back in the day I passed so many fields to get into barry
@@alexh6767 was that on the “fast road” through culver house cross? I did my apprenticeship at an engineering fab shop in Barry, many moons ago. Beautiful journey.
😂 each to their own
A brothel
It's so nice to have my country recognised by someone outside of Britain and appreciate its history. We didn't mess about and stuck our ground thats for sure. I'm extremely proud to be cymraeg. Bendigedig!
"Perhaps the most transformative thing the Romans did in Wales was leave" - Pwy sy'n cofio Macsen?
Also, thank you from the bottom of my heart for the lack of offensive stereotypes! It's a rare thing to see an English-speaking historian actually respect us, so this was a welcome breath of fresh air!
Apparently 1,300 years is too long for memory!
"Wales has been tragically side-lined from the historical narrative of the isles. And I will not stand for it." FUCKING THANK YOU BLUE, I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS FOREVER! I can't wait to watch the rest of this.
Edit: Thank you Blue for doing this video. I never thought of dragons using the Welsh language to speak, but when I write my urban fantasy story, I'm going to absolutely make that happen now, thank you so, so much.
I vote for that urban fantasy idea!
@@kouusa Replying so I can get updates on that story - I'm actually writing something similar right now!
"Sire! The Welsh are revolting!"
"Well then build more castles! I already retitled my son after that God forsaken country it is damn well staying conquered!"
Goddamn though we have sometimes got way too many castles. Like I get we were hard to conquer but come on the rest of the world, please stop it with the big blocky ‘we’re here to subjugate you’ monuments.
@@taekinuru2 The Welsh did build a few of them too, but it is a reminder of that.
Honestly, this is an answer I can expect from that old pal of Edward Longshanks.
You would expect them to catch on after the first few hundred.
@Chris George what do you mean? He wasn't exactly a peaceful and quiet man.
"Wales has been sidelined from the historical narrative of the Isles"
Cornwall sitting in the corner: my time will come
Up until the 8th century it used to be part of wales, the name comes from the same word “Wealas”, Anglo Saxon for foreigner that gave wales its name.
And “kern”, Cornish for horn, so “kernwealas” or “Horn wales” in modern English.
Brittany: You guys are getting time?
Welsh dude here, thank you blue you did a great job man
"You can wander off a hiking trail and stumble into Narnia" Well, into Annwfn at the very least.
Caer Dalben?
It's Blue! Heck Yeah!
New Favorite Quote: "I know better than disrespect the dragon lords."
You must be careful when you speak of the Dragon Lords!
Mining is a huge part of our history. I encourage you to have a read about the Senghenydd explosion. I grew up in Abertridwr, another mining village right next to Senghenydd. Almost 450 miners died that day. Absolutely devastating. Many lost multiple family members in the explosion. Brothers, sons and fathers. It's gone down as the worst mining disaster in the history of the UK
While I may not be a welsh person myself I do have family members that are welsh and I’m so glad you mentioned “How Green Was My Valley” it’s a great movie and one that my grand uncle was in! And both me and my sister have welsh names which poses a slight issue on the first day of school but nothing I’m not used to at this point haha
So glad to see a video truly showing off how awesome wales is!
Round of applause to blue for saying the “Ll” correctly
/ɬ/ moment
It's like all the languages of the British Isles are competing with each other to have the worst spelling conventions.
This is why English class is hell
@@talknight2 that's not a british isles thing, it's a "different languages that use different sounds using the same alphabet" thing. There are no two languages that use the roman alphabet the same way. The spelling of sounds - and the pronuncioation of letters - are not universal things.
@@annakilifa331 Unfortunately
It's extremely refreshing and lovely to hear anything about Wales on the internet especially in such a positive manor. Regarding the castle they're everywhere as in I've moved like 5/6 times now and there always been a local castle or two for me to visit. For I final not it's funny to hear Wales being rushed about by someone who house by the name Blue online as that is my actual birthday name and is what's name I go by.
Well done! A good informative video. Missed a couple of key things however: Wales was a unified country with one king for only 7 years from 1057-1063, just before the Normans arrived in Britain, and the 16th century Laws of Wales Acts were very heavily discriminatory against Welsh speakers and Welsh culture. The only representation in parliament for Wales were mostly descendants of Norman earls in the Marches, rather than from the more Welsh-speaking "Pura Wallia" areas in the north and west. This was changed in the mid-1800s due to the increased industrialisation you spoke about.
Really great video tho. And excellent pronunciation!
As a Welshman, this genuinly makes me happy. You did however forget to mention Hywel Dda's 'Welsh Laws', which is an elder and more legitimate version of Henry the 8th's laws for Wales, who has a very questionable Welsh ancestry
My man did NOT just gloss over Glyndwr as "a thwarted independence rising", you're gonna hear "Men of Harlech" outside your house tonight the Cymraeg are coming for you now, boyo
*coming for you now, bach
I once spent a week's holiday staying in Harlech. Been on many holidays in Wales actually.
Dynion Harlech indeed, cymru am byth !
@@PiousMoltar I hope everyone welcomed you with open arms! Don’t forget to come visit down south if you haven’t already!
I actually had to stop the video and take a moment at that point
I'm not from the UK, but I have always been fascinated by Wales because of this one beautiful book I've read.
Oh? What book?
@@laurenhurley1920 I see, I should've known! Lol
This is genuinely lovely - thank you from a Welsh woman watching some Welsh-related to get pumped up for the rugby. Diolch yn fawr.
Gotta admit, I’m pretty impressed with the welsh pronunciation. Not perfect but still better than I tend to expect especially with the LL In Llewelyn. Glad you actually tried to learn how to say it!
The way he was saying powys kinda had me tbh 😂
I know right, I was impressed too.
Most English can't get close, nice to hear from an American (im assuming).
On the subject of castles: here (in wales) nearly every city and bigger town has a castle in the centre. Like you have all these highstreets and shopping centres then BAM Castle!
There's a castle from the 1200s a 5 minute walk from my house but I don't even notice it anymore, like I'm used to walking around like "Houses, cars, parks, castle, shops, you know, the usual stuff"
Have you been to Chester? English on the Welsh border and the entire city is within a Roman fort. Makes for some interesting road logistics in the city centre. Conwy, of North Wales, has a similar walled city thing going on. We're really lucky to have all this history around us!
My town has a castle in the middle not a big one not much left of it really but they built a hotel/bar/restaurant like on/into and called it well the castle hotel kinda take for granted that I can see literal castle from my house and is 2 minutes away from where I work
@@jakegriffiths2362 Caerphilly?
@@higgsyboi1237 brecon (love how it could be more than 1 place xD)
Thank you for respectfully talking about my peoples history, its refreshing :)
This video made me way more emotional than it should, thank you so much for the recognition
THE AMOUNT OF TIMES THAT OVE TOLD SOMEONE IM FROM WALES AND THEY’VE SAID “oh is that in England” IS INFURIATING THANK YOU FOR MAKING THIS VIDEO
“JuSt A sMaLl ToWn In EnGlAnD” I hate those people
That as well as “you sound Irish” then when you list of people like Gareth bale, AWJ, the actor like evans. Still they have no clue 😂 cmon like land of the dragon ever heard of it 😂 but as soon as you say the part of the UK isle that looks like it has a funny hat they soon understand
Most likely Americans, a lot of them think that Britain or the "UK" is all one country
@@spongemaster most ignorant people I have ever met
I used to get pissed off when Americans would ask if its near London when I said I'm from Wales. But going by the size of the US it actually is right next door to them 🤣 most of their states are bigger than the whole of the UK. I still correct them that it's a completely different country with its own history and language though
Shortest stick was drawn by Wales
Cornwall: *sad Kernewek noises
Uh oh the fish people are making noises again
Balls theDog big eldritch energy
Isle of Man: Nobody notices us... nobody...
cornish represent!
Nobody can hear them, they're too far down a mineshaft.
Stumbled upon this vid in my feed today, loved it, and subscribed! Looking forward to going through the library!
Thanks for the summarized history of Wales, I'm actually going to Wales in September learning about the country was a big help to learn about its culture
I heard Wales and arrived for the dragon on the flag.
Same!
But what about leeks?
@@jenniferschmitzer299 now try daffodils ;)
@@emilyharries1923 bara brith? Welshcakes? No just me ok
Wales: has big eldritch energy.
H.P. Lovecraft has entered the chat, and he is inexplicably scared.
So default Lovecraft?
Lovecraft: wait, your telling me there's a country Americans have barely heard of before? WHAT MIGHT IT BE CAPABLE OF!
@@drowknight7521 Exactly!
@@Flame-rp6yq 😂 Perfect!
Also, Lovecraft wrote "The shadow of innsmouth" because he found out he was partially Welsh. Like Robert found out he was part fish person.
Oof.
OK that's a good one
i recently found out that most of my ancestry is welsh, so im trying to learn more about wales and its history. thank you for this video!
It's so awesome to see you cover Wales! Your pronunciation of some of our Welsh words was surprisingly good
"And England learned about Welsh Longbows the hard way."
England looks at France
*Soon.*
Ah, the "Welsh bowmen" of Braveheart fame that were summoned by Longshanks in the midst of negotiations with William Wallace?
@@tenhirankei I was thinking more of the battles of Crecy and Agincourt during the hundred years war, but that works too 👍
@Joe Public "What a revoltin' development!"
Crug Mawr 1136, Where the Welsh taught the English how to skewer heavily armoured Frenchmen at 600 yards.
IIRC, in Age of Empire II, the Longbowman was the Britons' Unique Unit, and the Woad Warrior was the Celts'.
As a latinamerican kid who didn't know much about Europe as a child, the only thing I knew of Wales was that it had a badass flag so I chose it anytime I played a football videogame with my cousins, thanks for the information about them!
I'm Welsh, it stand for having fire in your heart and mind. It's the dragons strength. Never give in, never surrender, stand strong and tall. Anyone who messes with us, we roast them into ashes. Our country men are strong of soul. It's why were known as the country of song. United we stand🔥🔥🔥🔥
There's a saying here that goes
To be born Welsh is to be born privileged;
not with a silver spoon in your mouth,
but music in your blood and poetry in your soul.
Yeah I fucking love our flag 😂
@@Sam-zu5mr It's nothing to do with that...it's that dragons still live in caves in the Welsh mountains
4min in, and I plan to subscribe to this channel. This video has well-written narration, effective visuals, and a relatable sense of humor that doesn’t seem forced. Ok - on with the show…
Excellent narration. You have a gift. The subject matter was great.
As someone with Welsh heritage, I'm so happy to see this video.
As a welsh person I myself am ever happier!!!
Tf u mean Welsh heratage, shit screams Yankee
Me as well!
Hear hear!
Me as well. Good to see that Blue pronunciation is better than Reds. Red's pronunciation of 'Pwyll' still makes me cringe.
I’ve been waiting for the entire history of Wales for this video.
Comedy
So have i bruh
Really really great video!! I loved it!
Footnote: 8:02 As I was taught by my school, although everything you said was correct here, the Welsh language certainly wasn't protected. English became the language of Wales rather than Welsh, and Wales and England became one country. Just wanted to clear that up.
“OSP good, watch OSP and you win life.”
-Sun Tzu, The Art of War.
If fighting is sure to result in victory, then you must fight!
@@jessicajayes8326 Archimedes! No! Its filthy in zere!
no words were ever truer
No, that's Confucio
@@scottish-hero6664 How did you know I was a Medic main?
Wales, the land where the line between fantasy and history is blurred.
Cringe
Bag of Beans exactly, I’m the same. Bit condescending. We have history it isn’t just romantic myths.
@@joebowden4065 what about the red dragon vs white dragon? I am also welsh and I think it’s pretty cool
The man behind morioh’s Slaughter myths are cool and some of them are rooted in history but there is a separate history that is very understudied and not well known or taught in wales itself. I’m probably just sensitive tho because I’m doing early medieval welsh history for my dissertation at uni.
True. A lot of our traditions; the druidic ones are based on academic fan fictions. But we don't care as it's wholesome nationalism.
wales seems like it's the one place where the folklore may well be true, like you might just find dragons or fairies and such if you wander too far into the wilderness.
I really appreciate this video. I'm Welsh and I don't really know anything about Welsh history because it all gets lumped in with England despite being a pretty historically relevant country, for example the first use of railways for public transportation was in Wales which is something I only learnt about 2 months ago.
And yeah, there are castles everywhere. Pretty sure I can walk to at least 3 of them less than an hour's away from my house, never knew we had the most in Europe though.
Diolch yn fawr, Blue! I am so happy that you chose to talk about Wales to today so that more people around the world will know about our history... Ps, we are still waiting on Red to do more of The Mabinogion seeing as she's already done Pywll Prince of Dyfed
I don't want more of The Mabinogion. The pronunciation was too painful!
true but she tried! I've heard worse tbf
I mean Gelert would probably be better for pronunciation
Blue's pronunciation of Welsh princes was good this video maybe he could help red!
I love how I’ve lived in wales all my life ,but hardly understand Welsh.
Went to Wales last year and it was probably the most enchanting time of my life
I've lived in Wales all my life. What a nice video that is very accurate, especially on the cultural aspects. The Welsh language is very widely spoken, I can speak it passingly and most of my family are fluent. There is only one small Motorway so most of the country feels untouched. There are so many castles, like my small town has one in it and nobody thinks it is anything special.
This video makes me so happy!!! As someone from Wales it makes me so happy when someone actually realises that Wales exists because we are always forgotten about. Also I like that you at least TRIED to pronounce our names because 99% of people who talk about us don't even try to pronounce any of our words.
The last time I was this early, Wales was still being sidelined
Edit: wow, thanks for the likes
Still is
...okay, that's fair. More sidelined than it is now.
Wholesome
Give it a minute, we've apparently got some people who want to put us back on the sideline in our own assembly.....
@@hannahh8157 I hate being sidelined
"It's existentially terrifying that a culture can, by itself, take hold of an entire population by basically willing itself into existence"
No one tell Blue about Christianity, or religion in general honestly.
Memes are terrifying creatures.
I'm pretty sure that Christianity taking hold of most of the world was not so much because it was "willed into existence". But moreso due to a lot of bonfires, gunpowder and sharp, pointy sticks.
or wave after wave after wave of missionaries and modernization.
The majority of religions didn't simply come into being. They were a collection of historical events, personal experiences, and cultural norms given time to becomes something unreal. More so newer religions, including Christianity, are often based off of older religions.
Thank you for doing this video, so often we are overlooked but this video is great! Diolch
One of the newer migration theories is that Ireland was more likely to have been populated more broadly by Celts coming up from Galicia in Spain. There's been evidence of trade and settlements, and stronger than expected genetic links. It would also partially explain the "black Irish" traits of some people in Ireland randomly having more Southern European traits like darker hair, eyes, and olive skin
J.R.R Tolkien himself used the welsh language for the elves in lord of the rings. Proud to be welsh lol
I am English and and I am proud as well we are the Brittonic peoples and should be there for each other
@Orwell 1984 men are the Anglo-Saxon kings whereas the elves are based off the Welsh. The Dwarves are Scandinavian and so on.
@Orwell 1984 All of the LOTR is based on British history and mythology, which is a combination of Welsh and Anglo-Saxon lore, get ya facts straight, without the Welsh, the English would just be Germans, and not British (which is a Welsh word).
@@thegreenmage6956 I mean the English were influenced by more than just Germans. Remember that the Normans, Vikings and Romans all influenced the region and language. Also, it would be wrong to say that all of LOTR is based on British mythology, considering Tolkien took HEAVY inspiration from Norse mythology. The names of many of the dwarves in the Hobbit are taking straight of the Edda.
@@mca1881 Elder Scrolls Skyrim too