Neolithic Orkney: the First Farmers [4K]

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2021
  • Neolithic Orkney: the First Farmers
    and an exploration into Neolithic Britain
    (Callanish stone circle is covered in detail here- • Callanish Stone Circle... )
    featuring the Neolithic monuments of The Stones of Stenness, The Ring of Brodgar, Maeshowe and the neolithic village of Skara Brae.. as well as dolmens of Cornwall, Pembrokeshire and Anglesea
    Music CO.AG. do support this wonderful contributor by visiting his channel and subscribing.
    / @co.agmusic
    #scarabrae #stonesofstenness #ringofbrodgar #neolithicbritian #orkney

Комментарии • 80

  • @julesdingle
    @julesdingle  Год назад +6

    Hi Everyone, thanks for watching and please.. hit the subscribe button, I'm current in Iberia exploring and filming Neolithic sites and will be bring them to this change soon.. so don't miss out. best xJ

  • @TheJoan48
    @TheJoan48 2 месяца назад +2

    I want to learn as much as possible about the history of Ireland because it's in my DNA. Have you heard people say they're fascinated on a gut level by the ancient stones? I sure am.

  • @hoxtonspanishtutor9499
    @hoxtonspanishtutor9499 2 года назад +9

    What a beautiful piece of art. I can only prize the photography as well as the research made into an exquisite audiovisual narrative. Thank you. Looking forward to watch more of your work.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  2 года назад

      very glad you enjoyed it...certainly more videos in the pipeline..currently hunkered down in a very wet and windy December, and thank you.

  • @WendyInCollingwood
    @WendyInCollingwood 5 месяцев назад +3

    👋🇨🇦 I ❤ ❤ ❤ your brilliant drone videography, comprehensive historic timeline research, and your interestingly informative narrative 😍🌟🥰 Thank You, Very Much, From Georgian Bay, Ontario, Canada. 🇨🇦 🦌🍁

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  5 месяцев назад

      thank you

    • @TheJoan48
      @TheJoan48 2 месяца назад

      @@julesdingle The music is also somehow familiar.

  • @anthonyodonnell6105
    @anthonyodonnell6105 3 месяца назад +1

    I can't remember when I last heard such intelligent commentary.

  • @christinakaur8766
    @christinakaur8766 Год назад +3

    This was very informative and produced well. I believe that we have been farming and raising livestock for much longer than 12 000 years.

  • @GreatCityAttractions
    @GreatCityAttractions 3 месяца назад +1

    Super footage - well done.

  • @tinab3364
    @tinab3364 2 года назад +1

    Your research of history is amazing

  • @TheGreenmangrove
    @TheGreenmangrove 29 дней назад

    a most coherent exposition

  • @balmey
    @balmey Год назад +1

    Very informative and interesting

  • @timflatus
    @timflatus 2 года назад +1

    Can't wait for the next episode!

  • @wotireckon
    @wotireckon Год назад +1

    Stunning and fascinating.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад

      thanks.. I'm off to Brittany and Spain this winter so will have more on these incredible ancient builders.

  • @naradaian
    @naradaian Год назад +1

    Wow - beautifully made and fullsome

    • @rachelhenderson2688
      @rachelhenderson2688 8 месяцев назад

      I fell in love with Orkney the first time I went there! I'm not able to go there any more, but I can watch programmes like this, what a treat!

  • @TheGreenmangrove
    @TheGreenmangrove 29 дней назад

    good document

  • @Andy_Babb
    @Andy_Babb 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for not using AI to narrate. I really enjoy these kind of videos and especially this period of time in this region (UK & Northern Europe in general) so thanks for sharing your knowledge!

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  10 месяцев назад +3

      I'm very glad you enjoyed the video, and yes it would be tempting to use a bot to narrate as its a skill I sometimes struggle with.. especially keeping it understandable and not mumbled!

    • @carolfranklin758
      @carolfranklin758 4 месяца назад +2

      So glad you didn’t use a bot. They mispronounce names have a strange unsatisfactory cadence and are generally without affect. Ugh! But this was a fine film with wonderful drone shots and good script!

    • @Andy_Babb
      @Andy_Babb 4 месяца назад

      @@julesdingle please keep up the great work my friend. Great video!!

  • @snodrog5
    @snodrog5 2 года назад

    Thank you.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  2 года назад

      thank you, it makes the late nights of editing worth it

  • @baldmetal
    @baldmetal 2 года назад +1

    Some dolmens are almost exactly to one I saw in Vasque Country (Spain). Is the first time I see them in other place. Thank you for this great document!

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад +1

      Hi, I actually got to Spain this winter and have some videos on the way, and yes it's all fascinating ..haven't quite worked it all out but a video will emerge this year.

  • @robertthomas7176
    @robertthomas7176 6 месяцев назад

    what a great video

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  6 месяцев назад +1

      hey, thanks glad you enjoyed it

    • @robertthomas7176
      @robertthomas7176 6 месяцев назад

      @@julesdingle I will share your channel with my friends! Excellent content. My wife is reading a book centered in the Orkneys right now. So last night we decided to find some videos that shed some light on the place and yours popped up.
      We both thought that referring to a stone circle as a fertility app was both funny and thought provoking at the same time. Having always though of those places as centers for solemn ceremony it was actually nice to think that maybe it was, at least some of the time, a place to party and connect. Like going to a rock concert as a younger adult it makes their life experience more relatable to what we live now.
      And your narration, your voice, is top shelf.
      Sending wishes from Nova Scotia in this merriest of seasons across the pond, .

  • @DJEastwood24
    @DJEastwood24 2 года назад +1

    A good video with lots of relevant information.. many dubious assumptions too, though.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  2 года назад

      I'm always interested in different opinions.. which assumptions do think are dubious? thanks.

  • @somerfeeild
    @somerfeeild 2 года назад +2

    As good as any other history and archaeological RUclips channel I’ve seen lately. The drone shots and atmospheric tone really work well when it works. The information could be “punchier” but that might ruin it also

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  2 года назад

      I am working on delivery! so perhaps punchier in the future.

  • @MaineMan086
    @MaineMan086 5 месяцев назад

    We will be visiting Orkney in June 2024, and we learned a lot from your excellent video! It always helps to study a place before one visits it. The drone clips were superb! I plan to have my drone along and hope I can create something as fascinating (weather permitting)!

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  5 месяцев назад

      Orkney is very much weather permitting! I hope you will a lovely time either way

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  5 месяцев назад

      Check out my other video on Orkney. Dragon’s Lair it’s about war time Scapa flow

    • @anthonyodonnell6105
      @anthonyodonnell6105 3 месяца назад

      We're planning to be there for the solstice this year (2024). We live in Vancouver, Washington. My parents are from the West of Scotland.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  3 месяца назад

      @@anthonyodonnell6105 you will simply love it. The Stone circles are free to access, it is all very chilled out, the curlew and snipes have a very strange call before dawn. And it is early enough the wee midges are not around to bite.
      If you visit Scara village after 6pm then the staff are gone and there is a gate by the beach allowing you to explore the site alone.

    • @anthonyodonnell6105
      @anthonyodonnell6105 3 месяца назад +1

      @@julesdingle Ah, the midges! We're really looking forward to going. Among other things, I want my sons to experience the long days and gloaming.

  • @Mrcool12684
    @Mrcool12684 2 года назад +1

    more ancient stuff please!

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  2 года назад +1

      no problem.. there will be more over the summer as the weather improves.

  • @Paraglidecrete
    @Paraglidecrete 12 дней назад

    Μία ημέρα στα Νέα Στύρα και τα Δρακόσπιτα της Εύβοιας - Evia island: Nea Styra and the Dragon houses

  • @molecatcher3383
    @molecatcher3383 2 года назад +2

    It took many generations for the farmers to reach Orkney after them leaving the Eastern Mediterranean and they would be interbreeding with the local hunter-gatherers along the way. DNA studies for the whole of europe have shown that the Neolithic Farmer DNA decreases as the distance from their original homeland increases. In Europe, Scotland has some of the lowerst proportions of Neolithic Farmer DNA.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  2 года назад +2

      There is a tiny amount of Mesolithic DNA across the population and so far there appears to be little evidence of inter breeding [although some would have happened] .. and only a small amount of Neolithic DNA as sometime around 2000-1000 BC the Bronze Age N.European DNA dominates. One thing I noticed was despite Vikings colonising the Orkneys there is not much blond DNA.. the locals tend to be shorter, with dark features and hair.. Bronze Age culture had less of an impact on the Orkneys and the N Scotland so perhaps more ancient farmer DNA survives.
      What is curious is the Bronze Age monuments like the Stone Henge we see today came much later after the first stone circles in Orkney and Harris.. and the Beaker people learnt from them.

  • @somerfeeild
    @somerfeeild 2 года назад +2

    The idea of the culture of Orkney being an immigration from the Mediterranean through the sea hasn’t really occurred to me until now. The people in Scotland up to then had been immigrants from Africa post ice age and were Hunter gatherers. Orkney Neolithic archeology has more in common with Greece, Italy, France than it does than it does those people. Is there a date for the first immigrants to arrive in Orkney from the Mediterranean?

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  2 года назад +1

      They travelled up within 2 or 3 generations of the first migrants from Brittany.. so they would have been 'British' for several generations. One thing I noticed is that despite Norse colonisation the Orkadians frequently have dark hair, strong eyebrows, tend to be shorter [and a little rounder] so perhaps their DNA carries traits of the first farmers.
      The first Britons came form Europe that had been inhabited for 20- 40,000 years.. so it was dark skinned Europeans who followed the retreating ice sheets 12,000 years ago.. with some living in the shadow the glaciers in Doggerland.. now the flooded North Sea

    • @somerfeeild
      @somerfeeild 2 года назад

      Sorry only just realised you replied to this!
      My impression was that early post ice age hunter gathering people had lived in Scotland initially, crossing on doggy land, and then “sea people” who could farm had migrated from France, Spain etc. after them and colonised the islands and coasts and eventually the mainland. Maybe outcompeting as they could farm and had a wide trade network across Europe.
      The only people that could live on orkney would have been very god at sea travel I’d imagine.

    • @somerfeeild
      @somerfeeild 2 года назад

      Ah I get you now. So it was a reasonably quick immigration up to Orkney from France. Imagine how an exciting time would of been. Pioneers immigrating to a new land that had never been farmed

    • @somerfeeild
      @somerfeeild 2 года назад +2

      Exciting is maybe the wrong term 🥲

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад +1

    Very interesting video. But perhaps more care about enunciation in the narration would be useful.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад +2

      yes, an ongoing learning curve.. as a one person 'studio' and only doing voice overs in the last few years every video I hope is an improvement

  • @David-mo5jw
    @David-mo5jw 24 дня назад

    I understand that following the introduction of farming there appears to be evidence of starvation and an absence of fish eating.This appears also on the mainland/costal settelments despite there being vast resources.
    I wonder if their law was absolute ?

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  24 дня назад

      is there an article or study on the subject?
      it does sound intriguing

    • @David-mo5jw
      @David-mo5jw 24 дня назад

      I couldn’t say specifically but I know it’s a thing having read of burials found next to the sea severely malnourished.I’ve had Consequently discussions with archaeologists who confirmed that there did appear to have been a prohibition about eating fish .Something to keep an eye out for and you will find it

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  24 дня назад

      @@David-mo5jw will do- a problem with Orkney is the extreme timescale farmers were resident .. with overlaps with Bronze Age burials and changing climate that disrupted the first neolithic farmers

  • @lamontcranston3177
    @lamontcranston3177 Год назад +1

    This doc references the possibility that the stone circles are tied to fertility. (around the 28th minute mark) This seem an obvious theory to me and I can't help feeling we have avoided it due to good clean Christian scholarship.
    I have read about, and spent hours in stone circles in Ireland. I have contemplated their purpose as do all who learn of their existence. It has occurred to me many times that they could well be places for ritual intercourse. This might be in groups or couples.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад

      Hi, I came to my conclusions based on growing up in farming and farmers being particularly concerned about fertility and when prize animals come on heat. Neolithic Britons were primarily farmers so breeding and fertility are a no brainer.
      BUT.. on this issue we can all have our own theories!

    • @lamontcranston3177
      @lamontcranston3177 Год назад +1

      @@julesdingle I thought of the possibility of sexual activity in the circles when I was at Lough Gur in Co. Limerick. Right next to the big stone circle is another small circle. You get the impression that the smaller circle is for something private. Who knows though. It could be for livestock.

  • @eboracum2012
    @eboracum2012 Год назад

    Opening screen looks like the US State of Florida and Key West bridges, sort of!

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад

      yes it does look like a space picture although only 100 metres!

  • @saragott3147
    @saragott3147 Год назад

    The introductory music is piercing! I hope it doesn’t go throughout!

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад +1

      Hi, selecting music is personal, and being a RUclipsr I'm reliant on copyright free music, and choice is always problematic..not everyone is going to appreciate my choices.
      as the years go by I have started to hold back on the volume.
      I will try and be more nuanced in the future. Thanks for the feed back

  • @s.bretts4934
    @s.bretts4934 3 месяца назад

    Largely confusing...

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    We can never learn anything about their beliefs. There are no sources whatever for that.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад

      Yes, it is a hole in academia yet many insist they know better [including a top Orkney archeologist who is very certain]. As I point out anything speculative is purely my opinion.. ancient history is our collective history and with some learning I think its right people do have opinions to help make the past a little more accessible and interesting.

    • @naradaian
      @naradaian Год назад

      Most Jungians would know you are being literal but not wise

    • @danhanqvist4237
      @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

      @@julesdingle Speculation can certainly be interesting, but if it's not testable it doesn't really provide knowledge. Accessibility is good, but should not be accessibility to fiction. What we can't know we don't know.

    • @danhanqvist4237
      @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

      @@naradaian I can't really se how Jung is relevant to anything.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад

      I have a video coming out soon on my visit to the Portuguese stone circles and ancient neolithic culture yet there is so little information.. I will set out more clearly my speculation ..story telling if you like from the facts.
      And it gives me a chance to explore an important topic and give my case for dreaming [in moderation]

  • @viesia8
    @viesia8 10 месяцев назад

    Interesting. Not very Orkney relevant though.

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  10 месяцев назад

      sorry, I hate to disappoint .. but I do cover the main sites, as important Orkney was in neolithic times the number of actual sites to visited is limited to the two stone circles, the tombs and the village of Scara Brae and that pretty well is it. You can do a through visit over a weekend.

  • @gordonthomson303
    @gordonthomson303 Год назад

    You have not heard of vitamin D. I think some of this is a load of bull

    • @julesdingle
      @julesdingle  Год назад

      ??? do explain...vitamin D?.. and yes as I clearly state some of the views are personal, and to make it more interesting than reading the wikipedia entry for ancient locations.