The Black Dinner - Scottish History - Extra History

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  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2024

Комментарии • 393

  • @extrahistory
    @extrahistory  Год назад +114

    Is looking for a healthy dinner killing you? Then why not try our sponsor Factor!? Just use code EXTRACREDITS50 at bit.ly/3kHfe03 to get 50% off your first box. Not only will you be supporting the show but your tummy will thank you too!
    Thanks for Watching!

  • @dripduck9393
    @dripduck9393 Год назад +3571

    Dying because you ordered a passageway to be blocked off because you kept losing tennis balls is one of those things that we don't give a second thought to in history but would be called unrealistic in a work of fiction.

    • @tugatomskanimation6370
      @tugatomskanimation6370 Год назад +300

      Reality is indeed stranger than fiction.

    • @coolmikeknight9933
      @coolmikeknight9933 Год назад +61

      True i know one thing id hate to go down like that

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +118

      It’d be called a perfect Chekhov’s gun.

    • @ineednochannelyoutube2651
      @ineednochannelyoutube2651 Год назад +74

      @@ferretyluv It could also work as karmic justice if the king was corruptly cutting off necessary functions of state for personal reasons.

    • @michaelthomas5433
      @michaelthomas5433 Год назад +48

      You always get overthrown when you lose your balls.

  • @scottanos9981
    @scottanos9981 Год назад +1238

    What a brave and selfless lady who was willing to have her arm snapped in two just to protect her king.

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Год назад +38

      That was one badass queen

    • @nikolozgilles
      @nikolozgilles Год назад +9

      What happened to her

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Год назад +136

      @@ecurewitz They drew the queen, but they said it was a servant who did it ^^'

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Год назад +10

      @@krankarvolund7771 my bad

    • @crazydawn22
      @crazydawn22 Год назад +31

      extreme hodor

  • @David-lu3dv
    @David-lu3dv Год назад +850

    That servant who put her arm in lock is a real one.

    • @alexinfinite7142
      @alexinfinite7142 Год назад +42

      Beat me to it. What a bad ass

    • @Darkgun231
      @Darkgun231 Год назад +31

      That wasn't a servant, that was his wife.

    • @RedWizrobe
      @RedWizrobe Год назад +49

      @@Darkgun231 On closer inspection, you seem to be right, though their faces/hair don't took the same and are wearing different clothes. Either that's a completely different person with the initials JB, or the animator for this episode made two different illustrations for Joan of Beaufort. Either way, someone on the EC team don goofed.

    • @MrTmac9k
      @MrTmac9k Год назад +10

      That's the origin of the phrase "Katy bar the door."

    • @Rert
      @Rert Год назад +41

      ​@RedWizzrobe The initals are incorrect. The woman that barred the door was Catherine Douglas, one of the Queens ladies in waiting.

  • @Amadeus451
    @Amadeus451 Год назад +246

    Tennis has a surprising history of being adjacent to deaths of royalty. Anne Boleyn was watching a tennis match when she received the summons to a council meeting that informed her of her forthcoming execution, for example.
    Edit: typo fix

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Год назад +30

      There's also a french king who died because, while going to watch a tennis match, hit his head so hard against the frame of a door, he died a few hours later ^^

    • @Amadeus451
      @Amadeus451 Год назад +17

      @@krankarvolund7771 or the one who played tennis all day then started chugging cold wine ave keeled over within a few minutes. He was a Louis, but I don't remember which one.

    • @thomasrinschler6783
      @thomasrinschler6783 Год назад +16

      @@Amadeus451 Louis X. His early death and his posthumous son's death only a few days after birth started the first steps towards the Hundred Years War.

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Год назад +10

      We should either ban this sport or aggressively advocate making it mote popular, depending on one's opinion of the royalty.

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Год назад +5

      @@Amadeus451 Louis X le Hutin ^^

  • @mrartdeco
    @mrartdeco Год назад +139

    Blocking sewers to stop losing tennis balls but losing his life instead. Wow...

    • @BeastWarsFan
      @BeastWarsFan Год назад +1

      Hindsight, am I right?
      BWF

    • @vgalis
      @vgalis Год назад +4

      I suppose dying is a guaranteed way to never lose another another tennis ball.

    • @mumfydonut1980
      @mumfydonut1980 Год назад +2

      well, dead people are notorious for their inability to lose tennis balls so I'd say he won in the end

  • @stevejakab274
    @stevejakab274 Год назад +66

    The Saint Bartholomew's Day massacre is closer to the Red Wedding. Because, you know, it was a wedding.

    • @Kenzalina_
      @Kenzalina_ 7 месяцев назад +8

      I know you wrote this a year ago but I completely agree!

  • @Borito120
    @Borito120 Год назад +327

    I was way exited when I saw this. Because when my uncle traced our family line a couple years back. William Crichton was the earliest forefathers he could find. Thank you for bringing this lesser known story to life.

    • @destruct0503
      @destruct0503 Год назад +45

      TRAITORSS

    • @Kumimono
      @Kumimono Год назад +25

      One wonders, in which spot of the revenge cycle you are in, hiring assassins, or being vary of ones. :D

    • @theuglywolf2536
      @theuglywolf2536 Год назад +16

      Highly doubt there's any relation to the actual Crighton family. A common mistake made among amateur familial historians is to think having the same surname means being a part of the same family. In truth, your family was likely under the servitude of the Crichton lordship, as in Scottish tradition your family name was that of your masters.

    • @Frznwhrlpll
      @Frznwhrlpll Год назад +4

      ​@@theuglywolf2536 personally that wouldn't change a single feeling I had but I'm not concerned about my direct family lineage just the time periods and where certain people may have been

    • @skylarelizabeth4092
      @skylarelizabeth4092 Год назад

      And mine was Alexander Livingston!

  • @louthegiantcookie
    @louthegiantcookie Год назад +563

    Looking forward to this one! Scotland has such an amazing, complex history.

    • @scottanos9981
      @scottanos9981 Год назад +18

      A lot of honor killings and clan factionalism that transferred to the Hatfield-McCoy feud of the Appalachian United States!

    • @anttibjorklund1869
      @anttibjorklund1869 Год назад +6

      I think this was a one-off

    • @17Watman
      @17Watman Год назад +3

      George RR Martin thought the same.

  • @DieNibelungenliad
    @DieNibelungenliad Год назад +26

    The thing I love about the Middle Ages is that it can be as a silly as a Disney movie and as a deadly as a John Wick movie

  • @johnpangarakis396
    @johnpangarakis396 Год назад +220

    I had no idea the Red Wedding was inspired by a real event

    • @jerinmathew4726
      @jerinmathew4726 Год назад +76

      The whole series is loosely based on many historic events

    • @HenningGu
      @HenningGu Год назад +39

      I'd actually be surprised if inviting your enemy only to kill them didn't happen at some point in real life.

    • @charles2703
      @charles2703 Год назад +17

      Oh yeah, George loves (loved?) putting in stuff like that. Cersei and Jamie are clearly inspired by Artemisia II and Mausolus.

    • @izzad777
      @izzad777 Год назад +26

      Spoiler alert. Most of the horrific events that happened in ASOIAF is inspired from real events. Humans are very capable of inflicting unthinkable level of cruelty on one another and had been doing so far longer than we are able to write records about it or create tales inspired by it. The only reason humans survive as a species is because the combination of our resilience and the acts of brave, good people to ensure that humans don't effed themselves to death. The scariest thing about this is that these events will continue to happen, and we have to continue to be resilient and brave to act against it. If somehow we stopped doing it, there is no future to humanity.

    • @emmettturner9452
      @emmettturner9452 Год назад +7

      Pretty sure EC already did a series on War of the Roses.

  • @Zveebo
    @Zveebo Год назад +130

    Love this - would be great to see you do some more Scottish history. Mary Queen of Scots is crying out for a multi-part series - one of the most crazy lives of anyone in late medieval history: queen of two countries, and mother of the king of another.

  • @VelkanKiador
    @VelkanKiador Год назад +62

    You know, being stabbed to death in the sewers because you ordered it to be clogged just got to be up there with one of the more humiliating ways to go out xP

    • @kingpiye7060
      @kingpiye7060 Год назад

      Not really?How do you even make that conclusion its just unforeseen and unexpected really.

  • @LudicrousPlatypus
    @LudicrousPlatypus Год назад +53

    I love that you are covering Scottish history. I would love to see more series about Scotland!

  • @RobertJW
    @RobertJW Год назад +20

    The legendary patrons have been legends for so long! I appreciate their contributions immensely.

  • @GideonF64.9
    @GideonF64.9 Год назад +40

    If you want another real life Red Wedding story you should make a video about the Bloodbath of Stockholm. King Christian II invites the Swedish nobility to a great feast. They party for about three days, then Christian has the guests arrested, and summarily beheaded. Around 90 people in total were executed, and it set the stage for the secession of Sweden from the Kalmar Union when Gustav Vasa, whose parents had been executed, led a revolt and took the throne as Gustav I.

  • @jeremy1860
    @jeremy1860 Год назад +75

    Who needs fiction when history can give us all the drama we could ever ask for? 😅

    • @francisman60
      @francisman60 Год назад +6

      Reality is sometimes stranger than fiction

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Год назад +1

      Exactly!

    • @khameronsmith108
      @khameronsmith108 8 месяцев назад

      Just don't let Ridley Scott make it into a movie. He'll make the most fantastic historical story the most boring watch imaginable

  • @notme7728
    @notme7728 Год назад +3

    8:36 That pie of facts with the pinch on fiction to the smell of tales, that has to be one of the best analogies for how to describe how history is turned into the media we consume now.
    Absolutely amazing, love it!

  • @NothingIsKnown00
    @NothingIsKnown00 Год назад +130

    You should really do an episode on the Stockholm Blood Bath. It’s a real Game of Thrones-worthy story of battle, determination, betrayal and death.

    • @MPbmfm
      @MPbmfm Год назад +2

      Yes the Stockholm Bloodbath was way more bloody, about 100 were executed in 3 days

    • @hotdogboxd
      @hotdogboxd Год назад +5

      and in Vasa's desire to avenge his father, he freed sweden from the danish yoke!

  • @Hannibalian
    @Hannibalian Год назад +39

    thank you for uploading this, i remember watching a documentary which included this event (it was on edinburgh castle) yet i completely forgot the name of such occurrence but now i do!

  • @iansavard4489
    @iansavard4489 Год назад +15

    God I love this channel so much! Cheers to the entire team for keeping me constantly educated and entertained for nearly 7 years now!

  • @samrizzardi2213
    @samrizzardi2213 Год назад +16

    One interesting bit of Scottish lore you could cover, simply because there are so many conflicting accounts, regards the extinction of wolves in Great Britain. We know the last one was killed in Scotland, but the time and place is murky and subject to folklore.

  • @johnstanczyk4030
    @johnstanczyk4030 Год назад +11

    Oh man, you guys make me want a series on the Interregna from Margaret the Maid to Robert the Bruce so bad.

  • @torylva
    @torylva Год назад +14

    Another of these were the Swedish 14th century "Håtuna Games" between the three brothers Birger, Erik, and Valdemar
    Birger was crowned king and due to political games forced out his brothers from court and forbad them to rejoin unless he invited them, also forbidding them from doing their own foreign affairs except through the king.
    This culimated in a civil war that went nowhere and sputtered out in 1306. Still, Erik and Valdemar plotted revenge for their treatment and on 26th of september when Birger held his wedding feast in Håtuna, the two brothers armed themselves and their men in secret, taking their brother captive and planning to kill his infant son that a loyal knight (Actually a swedish equivalent of a courtier, but that is not important) had whisked away with to denmark.
    Agreeing to share the power with his brothers, Birger was kept prisoner even after the promise.
    Erik now controlled Sweden by having the largest realm, but that only lasted until the Danish king who had taken in Birger's son attacked and plundered around in Erik's realm. This lead to the retaliation of Erik and Valdemar against Scania, plundering it in turn with mercenaries from germany. Calling for aid, the danish king called the norwegian king who arrived and helped defeat the two brothers, who as a condition of the peace, let Birger go and become king again.
    This lead to an uneasy peace between the three brothers that lasted for ten years, until 1317, Birger once again called for a feast and invited his two brothers in what is now called "Nyköping's Feast" where he showed that he had forgiven civil war that had caused such strife between them. As the night went on, he finally declared "I have forgiven the war, but I never forgot the Håtuna Games!" and the guards stormed the hall to arrest the two brothers.
    He kept them locked up in the dungeon, gloating over his final victory. There they died on his orders, but in retaliation, the loyal knights of Erik and Valdemar stormed the keep and forced Birger to flee Sweden, but his son was taken captive. In exile, he died 1321, just after the news came that his son had been executed. And so, Magnus VII, son of Erik, took the throne.
    And so ended the Håtuna Games.
    Hope you ended this overly long post about a fascinating event that is often overlooked!

    • @MerkhVision
      @MerkhVision 7 месяцев назад

      Very interesting, thanks for explaining!

  • @NathanS__
    @NathanS__ Год назад +46

    I've heard George RR Martin doesn't like fan fiction. Which is ironic because he writes historical fan fictions.

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +6

      Not really. He does more “ripped from the headlines.” No more fan fiction than Law and Order.

  • @Beeannie2010
    @Beeannie2010 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

    • @extrahistory
      @extrahistory  Год назад

      Thank you so much Beth! Your support really helps the show!

  • @Princess_Weekes
    @Princess_Weekes Год назад +6

    As a Black Douglas this episode was thrilling xD

  • @wlinden
    @wlinden Год назад +6

    The. There was the “Nykoping Banquet” of 1317, when King Birger of Sweden starved his brothers to death in revenge for the HATUNALEKEN of 1306 (which translates best as “fun and games at Hatuna”).

  • @emilioi.valdez6680
    @emilioi.valdez6680 Год назад +102

    Speaking of Game of Thrones, I hear the Glencoe Massacre also provided inspiration for the Red Wedding.

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +6

      That’s the one I heard about.

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Год назад +7

      Except that in Glencoe, it's the guests who murdered the host ^^

    • @Brandonhayhew
      @Brandonhayhew Год назад +4

      The Rus princess had her quests burned alive in bathhouse

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 Год назад +2

      Goerge RR Martin has already admitted to being influence by this massacre on various televised interviews that can be found on RUclips.

    • @lucaswatson1913
      @lucaswatson1913 Год назад +1

      GRRM said so himself in an interview

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Год назад +20

    Incredible content as always! Keep it up guys!

  • @_AutumnLion
    @_AutumnLion Год назад +20

    wow, I never heard this story before despite living in Scotland all my life. Perhaps someday, I'll spend more time looking into more history of my homeland rather than the more English related history I was taught growing up

    • @GabrielForth
      @GabrielForth Год назад

      Check out @ScotlandHistoryTours, Bruce's videos are well put together, amusing and informative. They also last between 15 - 25 minutes so are bitesize.

    • @edukid1984
      @edukid1984 Год назад +1

      That's the point of your Westminster-sanctioned history lessons in schools. To reinforce the "British" identity (with England being the dominant force obviously) to keep the union intact and weed out separatist ideas from a young age.

    • @jamiesimms7084
      @jamiesimms7084 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@edukid1984I don't think this has anything to do with the Scottish independence party

  • @christophertownsend3820
    @christophertownsend3820 Год назад +9

    SATURDAY EXTRA HISTORY!! Great topic. Thanks EH for another great video.

  • @georgewright3949
    @georgewright3949 10 месяцев назад +2

    St Barthomlews day massacre also has the resemblance of being at an actual wedding

  • @thetruerift
    @thetruerift Год назад +10

    Marvelous stuff, as always!

  • @TheMysteryman615
    @TheMysteryman615 Год назад +20

    Hi, good video, can you please do the Texan revolution?

  • @starguy321
    @starguy321 5 месяцев назад

    Remember hearing from a Scottish friend that she once met a Crichton. All he had to say was that he was ‘one of those Crichtons’ and everyone in the room knew exactly what he meant.

  • @samrevlej9331
    @samrevlej9331 Год назад +6

    Great job, guys! Scottish history is always interesting!

  • @FederationofUrsa
    @FederationofUrsa Год назад +20

    Great Video! The art styles differ by artist. That makes this channel unique. And the stories are chosen by your patreons. Keep the work up!

  • @christiancanty2036
    @christiancanty2036 Год назад +8

    I always felt like the Red Wedding was more based off of the Bloodfeast of Roskilde, from danish history

  • @theodoretekkers
    @theodoretekkers Год назад +7

    This was a really good and interesting story. I loved the animation!

  • @TheSci-fiAnarchist42
    @TheSci-fiAnarchist42 Год назад +13

    *Rains of Castamere intensifies*

  • @sterlingnilssen5812
    @sterlingnilssen5812 Год назад +9

    Yay! Another extra history video😊 you gotta love the enthusiasm of this awesome narrator

  • @ghw7192
    @ghw7192 Год назад +2

    I read that as The Real Bed Wetting and was amused.

  • @dishevelleddev
    @dishevelleddev Год назад +2

    The dedication you must feel as a servant to let your arm get painfully snapped to defend your master.

  • @lucaswallace7476
    @lucaswallace7476 Год назад +4

    8:20
    *"TWENTY-SIX STAB WOUNDS.
    YOU DIDNT WANT TO GIVE HIM A CHANCE, HUH?!"*

    • @Packless1
      @Packless1 Год назад

      ...it was a tragic accident...when he cleaned his dagger, it unfortunately set off... ☠☠☠
      ...26 times...? ...in his BACK...??? 😮🤔😨
      ...as i said...a very tragic accident...!!! 😉😱😉😱😉😱😉

    • @DamonNomad82
      @DamonNomad82 Год назад

      "It was an alphabet stabbing! I just wanted to make sure every letter from A to Z was represented!"

  • @jdzencelowcz
    @jdzencelowcz Год назад +1

    The " Murder Castle" actually looks rather lovely in the clear daylight, if still a bit imposing.

  • @vimenavenkatesan1286
    @vimenavenkatesan1286 Год назад +3

    Another amazing video from you guys!

  • @HistoryHype1
    @HistoryHype1 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing such a high-quality video. I can tell that you put a lot of thought and care into making it. Keep up the excellent work!

  • @Megaspartan23
    @Megaspartan23 Год назад +21

    The Glencoe massacre was another inspiration for the Red Wedding.

  • @JOGA_Wills
    @JOGA_Wills Год назад +7

    Wow what a heinous act to kill 2 young men like that with such treachery.

  • @allaniadall9686
    @allaniadall9686 Год назад

    "There have been many tales. Tainted by truth. Twisted by time. Some choose to forget, yet it still weaves webs in their minds." Blackmore's Night. The Hanging Tree.

  • @triptothemoon8171
    @triptothemoon8171 2 месяца назад +1

    Never let facts get in the way of a good story

  • @Hrafnskald
    @Hrafnskald Год назад

    3:49 High perched fortress = perfect murder spot, ah I love cat logic :). Great story, thanks for sharing this.

  • @mestre12
    @mestre12 Год назад +5

    I hope you guys, one day, do a series on the War of the Roses

  • @KesselRunner606
    @KesselRunner606 Год назад +5

    Loved this one, but a teeeeny tiny nitpick.
    As an Edunburgher born and bred, it's pronounced Edin-Bu-RUh (as in, rUn or rUg).
    Americans get really weird looks from us when they call it Edinburrow. It'd be like us coming over and saying, "I've always dreamed of coming to Nee Yoorch."

    • @mystecoregames
      @mystecoregames Год назад

      That and calling Glasgow, Glass Cow, even once corrected.

  • @Onlyfacts_10
    @Onlyfacts_10 Год назад +2

    Great videos as usual ❤️

  • @ReaverLordTonus
    @ReaverLordTonus Год назад +5

    The Glencoe Massacre: "what am I, a joke to you?"

  • @ScilentFox1220
    @ScilentFox1220 Год назад +3

    Wow. This also felt like inspiration for the betrayal of Leto Atredes in Dune.

    • @shambhav9534
      @shambhav9534 11 месяцев назад

      Why though? What resemblance do you see?

  • @Bunchovcolors1308
    @Bunchovcolors1308 Год назад +13

    There was actually a very similar event to the red wedding that (supposedly) happened in Danmark. The Blood feast at Roskilde

  • @mesektet5776
    @mesektet5776 Год назад +13

    I am reminded of everything on Gargoyles that wasn't about NY or fairies. Also basically the entire plot of Final Fantasy Tactics, but that's historical back-stabbing for you.

    • @ShardNetwork
      @ShardNetwork Год назад +3

      Oh yeah, plenty of stuff that led to the more fantastic parts stemmed from people being hungry for power or land. And a LOT of betrayal. If the Castle Wyvern clan woke up in an empty castle like Demona wanted, there's a slim chance they wouldn't have started the chain of events leading them to New York.

  • @imperialguardsman8088
    @imperialguardsman8088 Год назад +2

    “And who are you the proud lord said…”

  • @Allahu_Akbar_the_one
    @Allahu_Akbar_the_one Год назад +1

    Al-Mamun’s assassination was also similar a good inspiration for Game Of Throne’s Red Weddding.

  • @luckes0638
    @luckes0638 Год назад +2

    You guys should do a series about gustavus adolphus I always wanted to know more about him

  • @zachtaylor8222
    @zachtaylor8222 Год назад +5

    this is similar to what the Campbells did to the MacDonalds as well, except that the Campbells were the guests.

  • @foulplayer7812
    @foulplayer7812 Год назад

    Fun Fact: According to legend, right before their execution, Willam Douglas asked the executioner to kill his little brother David first out of mercy so that the younger sibling wouldn't have to endure the horror and despair of watching his older brother die first. And the executioner honored the young lord's last request.

  • @orbemsolis
    @orbemsolis Месяц назад

    The dashed outline of the arm was a good gag.

  • @HailedTooth1175
    @HailedTooth1175 3 месяца назад

    The dude went straight to tearing up the floor rather than just break the floor window

  • @johnstuart1338
    @johnstuart1338 Год назад +5

    Holy cow. I’m RELATED to these Stuarts and had no idea about how incredibly complex it all was.

    • @VanatruFreyr
      @VanatruFreyr Год назад

      Are you really related or are you an American with the same name claiming royal heritage? Because in reality the Stewart family died out with Queen Anne in 1714.

  • @michaelrae9599
    @michaelrae9599 Год назад +4

    Also look into the Glencoe massacre, which was supposedly the inspiration of the Red Wedding in GOT.

  • @arthegor
    @arthegor Год назад +3

    Actually there was a red wedding before this in Greece in the Successor State of the Byzantine Empire called Epirus (from the thumbnail click). Theodore Doukas and ambitious leader poised to restore the Eastern Roman Empire after the 4th Crusade took the throne of Epirus and he lured Peter of Courenay (if i recall he was the Latin Emperor) with offers of Food and Wine as well as support for the 5th crusade. Once the Latins let their guard down they were captured or massacred. He was excommunicated afterwards by the Pope as the Despotate leaders faked their conversion to Roman Catholicism as only a political solution. He faked his apologies to the Pope and started going campaign to restore the Empire by capturing what remains of the now almost dead body of the Crusader State of Thessaloniki which made the Pope angry yet again and excommunicated him again. Fun part he did not cared also he switched back to Orthodox Christanity back again once he thought this charade went far enough.

  • @briankelly1240
    @briankelly1240 Год назад +2

    Now I need a history on tennis balls.

  • @heriyapino7363
    @heriyapino7363 Год назад +1

    2:53 Robert the Bruce playing chess with England.

  • @lordedmundblackadder9321
    @lordedmundblackadder9321 Год назад +1

    “You, my friend, have come to the right place - SCOTLAND”

  • @Didntwanttomakeauser
    @Didntwanttomakeauser Год назад +2

    Did anyone else get confused thinking this was Jimmy 1 of England and 6 of Scotland?

  • @Abraxium
    @Abraxium Год назад

    I suggest you look into The Nyköping Banquet for a similar drama-esque style historical event of intrigue

  • @thecreativecontessa
    @thecreativecontessa Год назад +2

    Scottish history is so wonderfully colorful!😅

  • @userthomash
    @userthomash Год назад +3

    Scottish history is secretly so interesting like skara brae

  • @maninredhelm
    @maninredhelm Год назад

    How absolutely barbaric. Imagine being a king and re-using tennis balls dipped in sewage instead of just writing them off and buying new ones. Are we certain it wasn't his former tennis partners who orchestrated his murder?

  • @alexandersturnn4530
    @alexandersturnn4530 Год назад +5

    Okay, but what happened to the Chancellor? Did he get away with his part in the murders, or did Karma catch up to him?

    • @woodlandcreature8857
      @woodlandcreature8857 Год назад +4

      The Crichtons continued to remain influential in Scotland well into the mid 16th century, when they were outshined by other families like the Hamiltons and Gordons

    • @alexandersturnn4530
      @alexandersturnn4530 Год назад

      @@woodlandcreature8857 I see. Thanks.

  • @vojtechhykys1466
    @vojtechhykys1466 Год назад +2

    'Damn it, I knew I should have listened to my dad and do fencing instead!'

  • @slasher1563
    @slasher1563 Год назад +1

    Killing William Douglas was evil, just as evil as the deed it was getting revenge for. It's a shame what an ignorant and vile people we are, despite our good intentions

  • @DieNibelungenliad
    @DieNibelungenliad Год назад +1

    I wonder if there will be an Extra Fantasy History someday in the future that will have a series for different stories such as Game of Thrones, Lord of The Rings, and Wheel of Time

  • @in5linesofcodeorless552
    @in5linesofcodeorless552 Год назад +3

    Could you do about the chartists
    And could you cite your scoured NOT because I need them for alevel history course work
    Totally

  • @TheCreepypro
    @TheCreepypro Год назад

    who needs fiction when the truth is often stranger than fiction and history so much more interesting

  • @AnimeMusic1999
    @AnimeMusic1999 3 месяца назад

    LMAO not me watching this while eating Factor for lunch 😂

  • @jackiec498
    @jackiec498 Год назад +1

    Good name for a new food network show staring Al Roker doing restaurant reviews...

  • @SixWingZombi
    @SixWingZombi Год назад +2

    Hey if we're gonna do astounding Scottish betrayals, why not show off the notorious betrayal of the Campbell Clan at the Massacre of Glencoe.

  • @mxsdrago
    @mxsdrago Год назад

    > named william crichton
    > killed two young boys
    > did so at a party with food
    > the video puts him in purple

  • @aidantheforgeroflegends6348
    @aidantheforgeroflegends6348 Год назад +8

    This is one of the historical stories that inspired the red wedding from game of thrones

    • @buia499
      @buia499 Год назад +12

      He said that in the beginning of the video

  • @that_kai_person
    @that_kai_person Год назад +3

    Could you include a message in these sponsorships that explains in which countries these companies operate? Because to be honest I doubt they operate in Israel as well.

  • @Ysumguy
    @Ysumguy Год назад

    When I saw this episode (red wedding) on Game of Thrones.... I knew I heard of something like this before. LOL.

  • @postapocalypticnewsradio
    @postapocalypticnewsradio Год назад +2

    PANR has tuned in.
    How's everyone holding up?

  • @bensoncheung2801
    @bensoncheung2801 Год назад

    Couldn’t have just used a thin, not so strong wall for those tennis balls, or at least put a shovel next to the pile-up to at least give the king a CHANCE at escape?

  • @oxidosis
    @oxidosis Год назад +3

    Edinburgh is not pronounced edinborough. a borough and a burg are two different things, ones a territory and one is a hill

    • @Zveebo
      @Zveebo Год назад +2

      They’re both the same word. Burgh is just the Scottish form of Borough. Both mean a town with certain royal privileges. It is nothing to do with a hill.
      And Edinburgh is pronounced ‘Edinburra’, ‘Edinbruh’ or ‘Embra’ depending on how much of a local you are.

    • @ezrafriesner8370
      @ezrafriesner8370 Год назад

      @@Zveebo I’ve only ever heard Edinbruh, anything other then that is incorrect no?

    • @umepojke6579
      @umepojke6579 Год назад

      @@ezrafriesner8370 No, all three above are correct. I think it just has to do with where someone grows up in Scotland and how they pronounce it.

    • @ezrafriesner8370
      @ezrafriesner8370 Год назад

      @@umepojke6579 in that some people choose to pronounce Bristol as “bristle”. That is a way people say it, but it’s not how people actually from there want people to call the city they call home.

  • @tauIrrydah
    @tauIrrydah Год назад +1

    Don't forget the bulls head mounted in the Atreides dining hall.

  • @Menno_3
    @Menno_3 Год назад +1

    Good video, could you do the 80 years war?

  • @darranfinlay7818
    @darranfinlay7818 Год назад +4

    Loving the Scottish history, but please as a Scotsman, it's "Edin-bu-ruh" not "Edin-bu-row" 😁

  • @Smilymoney
    @Smilymoney Год назад +1

    Oops, my bad

  • @SnekChrmr
    @SnekChrmr Год назад +1

    Would love to see you guys do a series on Napoleon or on the American revolution

  • @Saint_Sin
    @Saint_Sin Год назад +4

    Ooft. Edinburgh isnt a hard one dude.
    Its Edin-burr-uh not Edin-burrow for future heads up.
    Also deid is not death. Deid = dead. Past tense.
    So its more, once they have been put to death they are then deid. While you have said "They have been put to dead".
    If you need someoe to run this stuff by im happy to help. Am native.