Should time travel ever become possible, I would like to go back to stone age Finland, find the first few people who looked at this place and said, "yes, I choose to live here" during their first summer. Then hang out with them as winter sets in. Then as *second* winter sets in. I would ask them, "are you really fucking sure about this?" After I dug the dude's ax out of my ribs, I would then go home.
If you break the lightspeed or get gravity huge enough, why not. But that would destroy ofc your physical form as we know it. Interesting that ppl living in tents have had "diplomats" (shamans) who did the job of "foreign relations" :) When you cant go very far physically, they did travalling mentally. But which came first. The idea of connecting to outerworld, or eating "wrong" mushrooms. (Amanita Muscaria pretty much in mentioned possible shamanism.)
I lived in Finland for a short while, having travelled there in my van from England. Great country and culture, I enjoyed every moment. I was lucky enough to experience ice fishing, ice swimming and many sauna's. I visited Elias Lönnrot house and then bought the Kalevala. Also visited Emil Wikström house in Visavuori. I thank you so much for these videos, they are very much appreciated.
Our narrator's low-key, nearly monotone delivery and dry sense of humor remind me very much of my Finnish second cousins. My father, although born in the UP, grew up back in his mother's birthplace, Nivala, and only returned to the UP at age nine. As he grew old, he spoke English with increasing difficulty. My friends even detect remnants of a Finnish accent in my speach. Descendants of my Finnish grandparents' siblings are scattered over Michigan and Minnesota.
The UP is the Upper Peninsula, a part of Michigan in the US. (I have met people in the US who didn't know that abbreviation so in case someone wonders.) How cool that you grew up with a dad who spoke the language.
I’m an American, but my great grandparents on my dads side are Finnish immigrants, and I suppose I’m roughly 25 percent…I resonate so much with the culture. My grandparents lived in the state Michigan, specifically the upper peninsula, which is also known for its numerous lakes. Apparantly Finns feel at home there, and sometimes I do too, but I don’t know if thats just me being sentimental or something. I love history and Finnish culture, and your art is really cool too, there is so much to look at. Thank you for these beautiful and informative videos from America
Thanks so much for your awesome comment! Yes a lot of Finnish immigrants settled in the Michigan upper peninsula, and since I started doing these videos I've had the pleasure to learn more about the Fenno-American culture and tradition.
25% Finn here as well, although originally from Washington St! The Pacific Northwest is another "enclave" Finnish immigrants. Now living in Tasmania, Australia and since moving to Australia, have come across a handful of Finns... "Oh, your surname ends in 'nen', are you Finnish?"
Same, but on my side of my family my Finnish great grandpa on my mom's side migrated from Finland to mainland China when it was still a democracy and married my Chinese great grandma, then they migrated to the Philippines and had a family, then my mom and grandma came to the U.S. during the cold-war. I am a first generation Asian-American with roughly ~25% Finnish, Spaniard, and Chinese descent with me and my siblings being majority Filipino but I really resonate with Finnish sentiments, values, and way of thinking
Just subbed! My grandma recently loaned me her copy of the Kalevala and now I'm trying to learn more about Finnish history and mythology. So happy I found your channel!!!
I just moved to Finland recently and am so happy I found your channel! ♥︎ I have been discovering slowly that much of what I learned from others online and in books about Finland who were not Finnish themselves are not the most accurate, and how the nations that have used Finland for its resources have had a lot of influence in diminishing many amazing qualities about Finnish history. Very much appreciate the time and work you put into this channel to talk about Finland with accompanying art 🇫🇮
@@erinleilanik thank you and welcome to Finland! I'm really glad to hear that. The lack of such videos is why I make them in the first place and it's awesome to hear they resonate with people.
@ Kiitos niin paljon 🇫🇮 The fact your work resonates with others means you are doing a good thing and the praise you receive is well deserved ♥︎ P.S. I wanted to emphasize that I live in the heart of Turku not too far away from Turun linna (Turku Castle) so it feels good to learn more about my new home.
@ Yes I have and it was great!!! I thought the exhibits of the jail cells and dungeon were very well done. Leaving the barred windows open like how they were in the past gives you a dark impression of how miserable being a prisoner would have been especially in winter.
Tosi mielenkiintoista! It's very hard to find any detailed information on early Finnish history (or prehistory), at least in English. I'm learning the language, but I'm not quite at the level of reading academic literature. But I can list my favourite foods, so that's something.
Really nice. - I’m in Finland right now, staying for a month, and am very curious about the history and oldest known traditions. Thanks so much, well done, and the animations are very helpful.
I absolutely love this series. Both the artwork, animation and depth of detail in the historical content. As a Finnish-American (3rd Gen), I had no idea about our prehistoric culture and similarities to the Native American belief system.
Thank you! Also when Finnish immigrants settled in the woods, the Natives noticed how similar they were. They knew how to live in the woods, and liked to bathe in the sauna.
Hi! There are quite a few of us 3rd gen Finnish-Americans in the comments on this channel!!! Isn't he great?? I love his content so much! My husband *is* Native American,so our kids are "Finndian" 😁
@@nisaba5752 haha awesome, thank you! Since I started making these, I have learned more about the Fenno-American people and culture which has been great.
Finns share a lot in common with native Americans. I suspect perhaps maybe because Finns themselves may be from the same group of people in east Asia that decided to go over the land bridge while the Finns went the other way. But I think the history goes farther back then that. I think there was a great civilization long ago approximately 12,000 years ago that had a profound love and respect for nature and used it’s resonance and natural harmony to achieve great things. I think this love and respect for nature continued even as they were wiped out shortly after the younger dryas and native Americans and Finns are the descendants of that previous civilization or at least coexisted with them. But more plausibly it’s probably they were both the same group of people at one time before the ice age split where some went to America while the rest went to modern day Finland I say that because the natives of east Asia specifically in regions like Siberia and the other eastern Russian republics all also have similarities with native Americans particularly the usage of similar tents and sweat lodges . Also a bit anedoctal here but Finnish mythology was animistic, from what I understand so too are many Native American mythology’s and beliefs. The Japanese still hVe a animistic belief called Shinto where everything has a spirit in it similar to some Native American beliefs. Both the Japanese faith Shinto and ancient Finnish belief had votive offerings. The Japanese offer these to their kami for blessings and such. I suspect the finns did too. And such offering bowls have been found in Finland and I think North America as well. Also the looped square or the Käpälikkö has been found in the Mississippian culture from around the 8th century. Just something to note Also adding to everything, the contact between finns and the ojibwe were so profound both groups were banned from liquor places and bars since the people saw them as one lol
There is an anthropologist who has found archaeological evidence and genetic evidence that says Algonquian people came across the ice from Scandinavia & Finland, from a common extremely ancient ancestry, to Greenland then Maritimes & the NE of the States then spread from there. Woodland Indigenous in N America & a few Plains tribes including the Blackfoot are Algonquian language group & have diverse cultures now & had or have related roots of language but very different dialects. They went west from the far north of Europe & though they look very different, bc it's been from 20,000 to 26,000 years ago, have a marker that's in common with Finnic &, I think, Sámi. I think it's the same marker shared there too. That's a long time ago so they've diverged, intermixed with other groups, etc. What's sacred traditionally is in accord, the animist beliefs, the same values, the concept of everything natural (& items we make even, to some people), having spirit.
This video reminded me of the game "unreal world", even though that game takes place in iron age Finland iirc. It's been ages since I've played the game, but from what I remember, it does nail the "feeling" of ironage Finland pretty well. That game might even be something to mention in the future Ironage video.
Amazing channel!! There has been so much need for this. Warms my heart that somebody doing these videos! Awesome! Cheers form a fellow history lover from Raasepori!
I live about 20 min drive from the castle, but in the deep countryside. Theres actually quite a bit of interesting Medieval history here, all over, where I live. Some of not so well known. Im really a medieval history afficionado my self. If I wouldnt have become a musician, I would have become a historian maybe. Cheers! @@Anttimation
I do my self more of an outdoor channel. But have started to do Some videos related to Finnish history also. Two of my great passions. Maybe should start to do some research and videos of the medieval history of my village.
4:56-5:05 ancient era arcologies like these fascinate me. Did Finland have good trade and migration? It makes me wonder how they would have had the time to build all these!
@@Anttimation man its a huge rabbit hole, if people in the east baltic region read/had positive opinion about the 'Hamlet's Mill' book back then u absolutely have to become the pioneers of next lvl submarine archaeology, because only there does wealth : intellectual/cultural stimuli demand coincide with fairly calm seas and something relevant submerged in them (that book starts its digging into global starlore with Kalevala), and lately theres so much that keeps coming into that totally lost prehistoric aeon picture (thats becoming clearer to be well more than just a poor prelude to the fall into the history by bronze age dominance-based societies, not to mention the 1-1 massive dieoff horizons in europe both in neolithic and bronze age, with reasons still barely explained), like e.g. most minoan amber finds lately turning out to clearly originate from the baltic, not to mention the Talos/Talon=Töll the Great myth (respectively from Crete and Saaremaa, of which the latter btw i noticed forms the upper right corner of a fully cardinally oriented right angles rectangle with 3 other major neolithic sites namely Tiszapolgár-Csőszhalom in fungary, meridian mirroring the Orkney-Bretagne pair in the west...)
Tbh I haven't read much about it. Some Finnish words and place names have Sami origins. What is generally misunderstood due to the indigenous status of the Sami is that our ancestors have been here equally long.
Finnish and Sami are two totally different languages. I have watched news in Finland that are in sami language and I have no idea what they are saying. The base of the languages might be the same Uralic, but thousands of years later the languages are different.
@@Mayhem-pv9cc right, it's familiar but not mutually intelligible. I can identify with some effort between the two. I also can't speak either, my Finnish is non existent, only can remember a few words at a time, then forget.
Finland does not have Sami ppl very many. Most of them occur in Norway. Sweden is next. Finland is the third. Sami ppl are different ppl with a completely different culture. Sami's have a very wonderful and unique culturally of their own.
@@Anttimation I'll notice that, thats why hunt native channals X'D, And i know how you feel, because i have seen alot og big channals completely butcher indian mythos, who knows what wiki pedia entries they have been reading from 🤣🤣🤣
@@Anttimation well there are few but half of them took the political turn 💀, they totaly ignore the philosophal sides of mythos we had one guy named devdutt patnaik who writes about world legends it on his site
I really enjoy your channel. I have loved Finnish culture for some years now, bot historic and modern, and have dreamed of living in Finland, so thank you for this channel. I'm now a member, can you tell me how to acquire and use the custom emoji described in the members' perks?
It says: Your emoji will appear in the emoji picker. Your members can also use emoji in comments and live chat by typing : immediately before and after the emoji name. For example, if the emoji name is wow, members can type :wow: to make it appear. Is the emoji picker the thing you press to access all the emojis? Not sure 😅 The name is hannu (hannunvaakuna was too long), so by typing it should appear. If it works, I could make more of those!
Kiitos videosta. Nyt viimeaikoina runsaammin perehtyneenä mesoliittiseen aikaan ja juurikin tuonne vanhimpiin löydöksiin (kuten antrean verkko) ja asutuksiin itäsuomessa oli ollut mukava kuulla tuosta aikakaudesta vielä lisää, sekä kampa ja -nuorakeraamisesta yms. Toki myös aika jolloin kantaurali tuli suomeen olisi kiva saada kokonaan omalle videolleen! Kiitoksia vielä
Kiitos! Kiinnostavia aiheita ehdottomasti. En vaan tiedä niistä ihan kauheasti, niin pitäisi tutkia ensin tarkemmin... Ellei sitten joku muu ehdi tekaista videota ensin 😁
olen todella kiitollinen että löysin kanavasi! perheeni muutti Suomesta Amerikkaan kun olin tosi nuori (noin 7v), joten en päässyt Suomen historian tunneilla kovin pitkälle. nyt ylioppilaana päätin käydä pulpetin ääreen oppimaan mistä hemmetistä tämä kaikki alkoi. lapsena historia ei kiinnostanut lainkaan, mutta vanhuus on vissiin iskeny kun tekee mieli muistella vanhoja....ja tottakai haluan myös osata vastaamaan Amerkkalisten kysymyksiin Suomen historiaan liittyen. anyways, SUURET KIITOKSET SINULLE! jatka samaan malliin!!
Very intressting, so I am from Hungary, our history says, there were two brothers in somewhere in Mongolia, and then they split, one traveled to the north, and became the Sami, the other traveled to Hungary. When the first time a met a Sami, I felt so connected, even I dudnt know, he was a Sami. Because of the colours of the clothes, and the open way we spoke.
Aivan ihana video ja täydellinen ajoitus, kun tästä ihan tässä hiljattain etsin tietoa. Varsinkin tuo Suomen shamanismi kiehtoo ja uskon 100% niiden olleen osa Suomen historiaa. Onhan meillä joulupukki ja noitarumpu todisteena. 😂 Oli tosin vähän hankala keskittyä, kun tuo taustamusiikki oli niin nostalginen lapsuudesta! Mutta tosi sopiva teemaan.
As a Finn all I learned about Finland I learned from my grandmother as nothing was written about Finland. I was told the shaman in Finland where mostly woman and that they lived in tipis and they came from the Ural mtns near the valley of giants. I still have family in Finland and a niece. I wish I had gone to visit.
Thanks! It's also sad just how little history is taught in general. For someone not interested in the subject, all they might remember is some homo species started walking upright, then there was ancient Greece and Rome, then some world wars and Finland was a part of Sweden/Russia before.
@@AnttimationFinland was directly a part of Sweden almost 600 years and later an autonomous grand duchy of Russia's Empire of tsar 100 years with a lot of privileges. During the revolution 1917 in Russia Finland declared its independence and has been independent ever since.
@@butterflies655 Finland was partly called Kvenland before Swedes and was not part of Sweden for 600 years, that is the old biased story. There were also Danish and Polish rule at 1500, also Sweden ruled only small part of western point Finland starting slowly with help of roman catholic help at 1300's with their crusaders, at those times also part of that is now northern Sweden, was also finnish speaking and saami people, only after 1600 Sweden got to rule the other parts and even then Finland was autonomous, There were no Swedish military at Finland. Sweden only robbed Finns and used them for their wars, they never managed to change the language. That is the reason why finnish and swedish bibles were first published to the finns and swedes at same time
Interesting - But where did the people come from? Wikipedia shows the Finno -Ugric languages, other than Hungary seem to be East of Finland. Some Finnish people have epicanthic folds which is also suggestive of an origin further to the East. If Asiatic people did settle the land, it's kind of obvious they bred with those of the South. What do I know? I live in the land of the Ojibwe and Ottawa and have never been even close to the lands of my ancestors. Good Art! Have a good one.
The old (nationalist) theory puts the primordial home of the proto-Finns in the "curve of the river Volga" but that's no longer supported. I can't say more specifically than from the east, and later from the west too. Many related Uralic peoples dwell in Siberia/Russia and their surviving folklore has been crucial to the studying of Finnish myths too.
@@Anttimation Yeh - I didn't mention the genetic thing. Native Americans share traits with the folks who live in North Asia giving strong credibility to them crossing an old land bridge across Alaska thousands of years ago. I think it may be found that there are similar genetic markers for you Finn folk also pointing East. Whatever it is - It is what it is. Keep drawing.
Finns have not got epicanthic folds more than other countries. Actually they are very very rare. Finns in general have blond hair, blue eyes, white complexion and they are tall. Watch the video "Which country has the most blondies?" The answer is Finland.
@@butterflies655 Certainly not more than Japan. However, look into Lapland. Sami people have these characteristics. Not always, but they are there. My father's family is from the Rovaniemi area and this feature pops up in some relatives.
@@daniellarson3068 The Sami ppl are a different race and they have a completely different culture. Finland even has not gotten them very much. Norway has them most. Sweden is the second and Finland the third.
Aattelin tehdä ensin tällaiset yleiskatsaukset 2000-luvulle asti, ja sitten myöhemmin ehkä lisäjaksoja väleihin esim. sodista tai eri aikakausien arjesta ym.
As a Swede I can say that Finland is so different from the other Nordic countries but still like the same / oh yeah sorry that we kinda took you over and then Russia took you over…. But thanks to that Swedish and Finnish history is a little bit same / in school the teachers don’t really talk about how we invaded Finland and they don’t say anything bad about it…. That sus….
No one is responsible for their ancestors' deeds. Still, thanks, I appreciate it :D That's how I see Sweden/other Nordics too, similar but still quite different.
Finns mostly descend from corded ware people and portion of their ancestry is uralic with mixture of narva hunter gatherer ancestry with additional comb ware ancestry that can explain the high level of ancient north eurasian
Well, Uralic people did mix in Baltics about 20-30 000 years ago, from that group first people came to Finland about 10-12 000 years ago which are now known as Finnish people. There were direct Uralic movement too to the North, Sami people but they moved through all Nordics. That was about 3000 years ago. There were small movement of people in Finland even before all this but they were not permanent settlements as the ice kept moving back and forth at the time, or at least nohting else from that era has been found but hunters camps and tools.
It makes more sense than the bible. My opinion is it is the hidden history the vatican stamped out around the world. Most history written about Finland was vatican influenced. If you haven't spent 5 hours listening to one person tell the saga you are missing out Like on yt Michel Merle Hawaii 1987
As far as I remember the recent research shows that the Fennic languages weren't used in the area before the early metal age. Also the time of the introduction of Ukko or any other personifications of the forces of nature is questionable. We also don't know if Ukko was actually the most important of these or if that is a later idea. Also the war axe culture, better known as the corded ware culture, was a thing only in the southwest part of the area nowadays known as Finland. The much bigger inland area had a different culture, and this divide went on through the bronze age as well.
One mistake Indus Valley Civilization is not Southeast Asia but South Asia especially the region of todays northwestern India. Otherwise very nice video.
Is this Egyptian propaganda to try to occult the greatness of the proto holy roman finish khanate? Aside joks, i really like the drawing of the video. Great work!
i do like how you pointed out the uralo-siberian theory. i personally believe in it. sad you didnt mention how the finns came to finland (then inhabited by sami) from modern day northern estonia and how the story of kalevala might originate in the finns going north to finland. the realm of kalevala itself being an analogue to modern area of estonia and pohjola being an analogue to samic finland
Finns really have nothing common with native american or siberian though lets be honest. Very minimal basically nothing. Ancestry from siberia 2-15% yes and language partially and most stories and mythologies of finns are of pagan baltic origin. Sami in other hand very much siberian and well yeah many finnish families are mixed with sami and sure those families may have siberian "vibe"
@@Anttimation les savant, ce sont mentionne, histoire Tourque Touranienne, depuis 2500 d'annes. tout les voyageur, cartographe, géographe, etnographe, archéologue, anthropologue, philologue et historienne etc. leur ouvrağe dans les archive BNF, BNH, BNG etc. par milliers. Ougro Finnios originaire de la familles Tourque Touranienne. et leur civilisation, Akkad ou Khalde, Sümerienne, Mede, et Assour, etc. Ougro Finnios ils sont vecu aussi. Bon Continuation et Salutations.
Finno ugric split from uralic in the early bronze age in western siberia. Before the late bronze age modern finland was inhabited by paleoeuropeans and indoeuropeans who were later replaced by sami and finns
Not replaced but assimilated. Our maternal line carries the DNA of Middle- East while paternal carries the Uralic DNA. Indoeuropeans newer really settled here in any significant numbers which also shows in Finnish DNA.
@@duhni4551 the finnish genome is made up of 3 main components, early iron age estonia (proto baltic finnic tarand graves) Sami and Germanics of coastal Finland, early iron age estonians were mostly baltic and sintashta iranic (indoeuropean) with 3-6% PU ancestry. Sami also had high IE ancestry. And do I even have to explain germanics?
@@LassiM-wx5cv I suggest you read a bit the 2018 DNA study about Finnish DNA. Finland has been inhabited over 10 000 years, the people who inhabited our country came mostly from Baltic Region which was already mixed with Uralic tribes, Sami etc. people came here around 3000 years ago. That also shows in Finnish DNA. Indo-European influence is there but not in any major numbers that would justify anyone to say we are Indo-Europeans even a bit.
@@duhni4551in the early days ppl spoke an indoeuropian language in Finland. The language is not everything. Finns look like any other Nordic ppl. Finland is a Nordic country culturally, politically, economically, religiously and geographically. If you like it or not. Finland was ranked the best country 2019 by World economic Forum conference in Switzerland Davos and the World happiness index report and UN ranked Finland the happiest country seven times in a row. Why? Finland is at the top in almost every category. All the other Nordic countries are among the ten best and happiest countries. This proves how similar Finland is with other Nordic countries.
Finland is composed of people that came from now Russian uralic mountains long before russia had its current slavic population . The Finnic people used to be part of multiple iron age tribes. Thats why some of the people look kinda asian but now look like mix of nordic. They mixed with swedish ( on west ) Finlands Coast. and some on Karelia ( East ) They didnt mix alot thats why the genes show the proof. Lets not get into tribes because it gets confusing because theres multiple.
Oh wow, is that when you are ritualisticly and meticulously born and looped into a dimension that appears normal but it's very much not normal and you track uphill both ways and aquire massive amounts of experience and abilities from hardships, and you're not supposed to know that you were likely born dead but you're being framed for harvest? Because I'm pretty sure I've been there this whole time. The "dead giveaway" being no matter how much work, you never acquire independence or earn self sufficient income. And anyone who joins you in your frame takes a huge hit in status, income, respect, really everything.
What I've been able to piece together is, Finns are what Estonians are, mixed with some Swedish and some Hun. That is, Asiatics who evolved light hair and eyes. Compared to Swedish, German types whose ancestors were Mediteranneans (like Sardinians) who evolved light hair and eyes. And both got intelligence boosts from consuming Amanita mushrooms.
Joo, en ole ääninäyttelijä, kuten tarkkakorvaisimmat saattavat huomata :D Kannattaa katsoa Kalevala-videot Reidar Waseniuksen eeppisellä tulkinnalla: ruclips.net/p/PLnPVbS6-nxFeGiaHSydtjXB-UsKCw774R
they were Sami nykysuomalaisten vanhojen eurooppalaisten goottien ja ugrilaisten heimojen sekoitus Suomi vwas vain suoalue etelään ja Viroon reigndeer-kansat kattoivat koko jääkauden alueen ja muuttivat pohjoiseen tänne ne vaelsivat ja eteläsuomalaiset muuttivat pohjoiseen sekoittuen siksi ei pysyviä paikkoja, koska he käyttivät telttoja
Finland is not on Eurasian continent. Finland is on the Nordic European continent. Finland 🇫🇮 is a Nordic country with Sweden 🇸🇪 Norway 🇸🇯 Denmark 🇩🇰 and Iceland 🇮🇸 politically, economically, religiously, culturally, and geographically.
This 'happiest country in the world' is propaganda. Finns have been trained for hundreds of years not to ever criticize their own country, especially to outsiders.
LoL, we are the largest critics of our own country, there isn't a day when we don't do that in a way or another. Thing is, we could have it lot worse and we know it, understand it and that makes us happy that we have at least what we have. Doesn't mean there wouldn't be room for improvement, thus the criticizing.
Yleensä meikällä on kohtuupaljon korjattavaa Suomen kivikausivideoissa... Tähän lähinnä lisäisin, että pääsyy, miksi suomen varhaishistoriaa on niin vaikea tutkia, on Suomen maaperän happamuus, joka syövyttää luutkin kohtuulyhyessä ajassa... Jätinkirkkojen ajoitus on vaikeaa, joten hyväksyn tämän videon esityksen about todennäköisimmäksi... Eli erinomaista toimintaa @anttimation. Kunnioitan, pahoittelen jaarittelujani ja odotan innolla tulevia videoita :)
Kiitos! Joo, tässä jouduin aika paljon miettimään sanamuotoja, esim. "oletetaan olleen näin" vs. varma tieto. Toki tähänkin varmasti tekisin jotain korjauksia, jos nyt tekisin uusiksi
@@Anttimation Jos uskallan ehdotuksia videoihin antaa, niin olisi kiinnostavaa, jos youtubeen ilmestyisi video suomalais-karjalaisesta mesoliittisen kivikauden "hirvenpääkulttuurista"... eli siitä, joka kohtuulyhyellä aikavälillä noin 6500-5500eaa loi Huittisten hirvenpään, Rovaniemen hirvenpään, Peurasaaren kalmiston ja pallokivinuijat sun muuta... olivat aikansa parhaita kuvanveistäjiä kohtuullisella marginaalilla ja tekivät aikansa suurimman hautausmaan, joka on löytynyt juurikin about siltä ainoalta alueelta, jossa kalkkikivi on poistanut maan happamuuden... eli tod näk tällaisia suurhautoja sun muita oli muuallakin, mutta ne ovat syöpyneet pois... Meikän mielestä täysin aliarvostettu aikakausi, jolloin Suomi saattoi aidosti olla maailman kehityksen huipulla ja paljon pidemmällä kuin naapurinsa.
Should time travel ever become possible, I would like to go back to stone age Finland, find the first few people who looked at this place and said, "yes, I choose to live here" during their first summer. Then hang out with them as winter sets in. Then as *second* winter sets in. I would ask them, "are you really fucking sure about this?" After I dug the dude's ax out of my ribs, I would then go home.
Haha yeah! If you ever manage to do that trip, please share your findings with us.
@@Anttimation I will have made sure to do that last week, if the technology will have happened by then.
If you break the lightspeed or get gravity huge enough, why not. But that would destroy ofc your physical form as we know it. Interesting that ppl living in tents have had "diplomats" (shamans) who did the job of "foreign relations" :) When you cant go very far physically, they did travalling mentally. But which came first. The idea of connecting to outerworld, or eating "wrong" mushrooms. (Amanita Muscaria pretty much in mentioned possible shamanism.)
I am very happy to find that your videos have that trademark Finnish deadpan humor.
Doesn't work for everyone. Glad you like it 😁
I lived in Finland for a short while, having travelled there in my van from England. Great country and culture, I enjoyed every moment. I was lucky enough to experience ice fishing, ice swimming and many sauna's. I visited Elias Lönnrot house and then bought the Kalevala. Also visited Emil Wikström house in Visavuori. I thank you so much for these videos, they are very much appreciated.
Glad you enjoyed both the country and the videos :)
Our narrator's low-key, nearly monotone delivery and dry sense of humor remind me very much of my Finnish second cousins. My father, although born in the UP, grew up back in his mother's birthplace, Nivala, and only returned to the UP at age nine. As he grew old, he spoke English with increasing difficulty. My friends even detect remnants of a Finnish accent in my speach. Descendants of my Finnish grandparents' siblings are scattered over Michigan and Minnesota.
The UP is the Upper Peninsula, a part of Michigan in the US. (I have met people in the US who didn't know that abbreviation so in case someone wonders.) How cool that you grew up with a dad who spoke the language.
I’m an American, but my great grandparents on my dads side are Finnish immigrants, and I suppose I’m roughly 25 percent…I resonate so much with the culture. My grandparents lived in the state Michigan, specifically the upper peninsula, which is also known for its numerous lakes. Apparantly Finns feel at home there, and sometimes I do too, but I don’t know if thats just me being sentimental or something. I love history and Finnish culture, and your art is really cool too, there is so much to look at. Thank you for these beautiful and informative videos from America
Thanks so much for your awesome comment!
Yes a lot of Finnish immigrants settled in the Michigan upper peninsula, and since I started doing these videos I've had the pleasure to learn more about the Fenno-American culture and tradition.
I'm 25% from my dad (half Finnish) who's from Minnesota ... What are the odds our ancestors were on the same boat ? Lol
25% Finn here as well, although originally from Washington St! The Pacific Northwest is another "enclave" Finnish immigrants. Now living in Tasmania, Australia and since moving to Australia, have come across a handful of Finns... "Oh, your surname ends in 'nen', are you Finnish?"
Same, but on my side of my family my Finnish great grandpa on my mom's side migrated from Finland to mainland China when it was still a democracy and married my Chinese great grandma, then they migrated to the Philippines and had a family, then my mom and grandma came to the U.S. during the cold-war. I am a first generation Asian-American with roughly ~25% Finnish, Spaniard, and Chinese descent with me and my siblings being majority Filipino but I really resonate with Finnish sentiments, values, and way of thinking
@@nolandickhausen7450
I'm 1/8 finn from my dad's side too. From Minnesota. Wonder how many families are interconnected a few generations back?
Great video, I didn’t know most of the prehistoric history of Finland. Keep it up!
Thanks! More prehistory to come, as Finland's historical period only starts from the (European) high middle ages.
Finland before Sweden was Kvenland.
Just subbed! My grandma recently loaned me her copy of the Kalevala and now I'm trying to learn more about Finnish history and mythology. So happy I found your channel!!!
Thank you! That's why I make these 💪
I just moved to Finland recently and am so happy I found your channel! ♥︎ I have been discovering slowly that much of what I learned from others online and in books about Finland who were not Finnish themselves are not the most accurate, and how the nations that have used Finland for its resources have had a lot of influence in diminishing many amazing qualities about Finnish history. Very much appreciate the time and work you put into this channel to talk about Finland with accompanying art 🇫🇮
@@erinleilanik thank you and welcome to Finland! I'm really glad to hear that. The lack of such videos is why I make them in the first place and it's awesome to hear they resonate with people.
@ Kiitos niin paljon 🇫🇮 The fact your work resonates with others means you are doing a good thing and the praise you receive is well deserved ♥︎ P.S. I wanted to emphasize that I live in the heart of Turku not too far away from Turun linna (Turku Castle) so it feels good to learn more about my new home.
@erinleilanik nice! Have you visited it yet? The museum is very good, I think.
@ Yes I have and it was great!!! I thought the exhibits of the jail cells and dungeon were very well done. Leaving the barred windows open like how they were in the past gives you a dark impression of how miserable being a prisoner would have been especially in winter.
Tosi mielenkiintoista! It's very hard to find any detailed information on early Finnish history (or prehistory), at least in English. I'm learning the language, but I'm not quite at the level of reading academic literature. But I can list my favourite foods, so that's something.
Haha nice! What are your favourite foods?
@@Anttimation legends say he still doesnt know
@@sethhenty6128 still keeps me awake at night...
Really nice. - I’m in Finland right now, staying for a month, and am very curious about the history and oldest known traditions. Thanks so much, well done, and the animations are very helpful.
Thanks! Glad to hear you've found this useful. Have a great time in Finland!
Really looking forward to more. Finland's history fascinates me.
Thank you! More is coming.
I really love this style of storytelling! And it is so awesome that our history gets the love it deserves!!
@@OnlineHistorian14 thank you! Very glad to hear!
I have been excited for this series since you announced it. Love the art, love the topic, can't wait to move there! Kiitos!
Excellent! That motivates me to go on with it
I absolutely love this series. Both the artwork, animation and depth of detail in the historical content. As a Finnish-American (3rd Gen), I had no idea about our prehistoric culture and similarities to the Native American belief system.
Thank you!
Also when Finnish immigrants settled in the woods, the Natives noticed how similar they were. They knew how to live in the woods, and liked to bathe in the sauna.
Hi! There are quite a few of us 3rd gen Finnish-Americans in the comments on this channel!!! Isn't he great?? I love his content so much! My husband *is* Native American,so our kids are "Finndian" 😁
@@nisaba5752 haha awesome, thank you! Since I started making these, I have learned more about the Fenno-American people and culture which has been great.
Finns share a lot in common with native Americans. I suspect perhaps maybe because Finns themselves may be from the same group of people in east Asia that decided to go over the land bridge while the Finns went the other way.
But I think the history goes farther back then that. I think there was a great civilization long ago approximately 12,000 years ago that had a profound love and respect for nature and used it’s resonance and natural harmony to achieve great things. I think this love and respect for nature continued even as they were wiped out shortly after the younger dryas and native Americans and Finns are the descendants of that previous civilization or at least coexisted with them.
But more plausibly it’s probably they were both the same group of people at one time before the ice age split where some went to America while the rest went to modern day Finland
I say that because the natives of east Asia specifically in regions like Siberia and the other eastern Russian republics all also have similarities with native Americans particularly the usage of similar tents and sweat lodges .
Also a bit anedoctal here but Finnish mythology was animistic, from what I understand so too are many Native American mythology’s and beliefs. The Japanese still hVe a animistic belief called Shinto where everything has a spirit in it similar to some Native American beliefs.
Both the Japanese faith Shinto and ancient Finnish belief had votive offerings. The Japanese offer these to their kami for blessings and such. I suspect the finns did too. And such offering bowls have been found in Finland and I think North America as well.
Also the looped square or the Käpälikkö has been found in the Mississippian culture from around the 8th century. Just something to note
Also adding to everything, the contact between finns and the ojibwe were so profound both groups were banned from liquor places and bars since the people saw them as one lol
There is an anthropologist who has found archaeological evidence and genetic evidence that says Algonquian people came across the ice from Scandinavia & Finland, from a common extremely ancient ancestry, to Greenland then Maritimes & the NE of the States then spread from there. Woodland Indigenous in N America & a few Plains tribes including the Blackfoot are Algonquian language group & have diverse cultures now & had or have related roots of language but very different dialects. They went west from the far north of Europe & though they look very different, bc it's been from 20,000 to 26,000 years ago, have a marker that's in common with Finnic &, I think, Sámi. I think it's the same marker shared there too. That's a long time ago so they've diverged, intermixed with other groups, etc. What's sacred traditionally is in accord, the animist beliefs, the same values, the concept of everything natural (& items we make even, to some people), having spirit.
Best video ever about this topic! Love the atmosphere!
Thank you! 💪
As a man of Finnish heritage U really enjoyed this!!! Keep up the great work!
Thank you!
Loved this video! The art made it very enjoyable, and it went by quick. This is an excellent way to tell a history, or even a folklore video 😊👌
Thank you! Very happy to hear.
Ihana video!! Thanks for this. I really hope you continue the series to cover all of Finland‘s history, from the Stone Age to Käärijä!
Thank you! Not sure it will go ALL the way to Käärijä... But who knows, maybe!
This video reminded me of the game "unreal world", even though that game takes place in iron age Finland iirc. It's been ages since I've played the game, but from what I remember, it does nail the "feeling" of ironage Finland pretty well. That game might even be something to mention in the future Ironage video.
Interesting! I no longer play games but given the subject I will have to check it out. Thanks for the tip!
Awesome content bro. This kind of knowledge is almost lost. Keep them videos coming!💯
Cheers! 🙌🙌
Amazing channel!! There has been so much need for this. Warms my heart that somebody doing these videos! Awesome! Cheers form a fellow history lover from Raasepori!
Glad to hear, thank you! you have chosen to live close to a medieval castle, well done 😎
I live about 20 min drive from the castle, but in the deep countryside. Theres actually quite a bit of interesting Medieval history here, all over, where I live. Some of not so well known. Im really a medieval history afficionado my self. If I wouldnt have become a musician, I would have become a historian maybe. Cheers! @@Anttimation
I do my self more of an outdoor channel. But have started to do Some videos related to Finnish history also. Two of my great passions. Maybe should start to do some research and videos of the medieval history of my village.
@@OldForestBushcraft go ahead! I went and subscribed.
@@Anttimation thanx man!👍
Finally a proper overview of this subject. 👍
Cheers!!
Kiitos!
Iso kiitos!! 🙌
Im so happy my flatmate recommended me your channel!
Awesome videos, I have genuinely been enjoying them!
Thank you! 🤩
Cheers Ken! 🙌
You created a beautiful piece of art! Thanks a lot 🥰 Can't wait for the next episodes!
Thanks so much for the awesome comment!
Great idea! Educate the masses. I’ll be watching.
Thanks! Nobody will be watching... Is that good?
I have joked about that before and will do again :D
@@Anttimation 7:56 Just for that I won’t be changing my name!
@@N_0968 ...said Nobody
@@WMfin Antti likes it!
Amazingly well made, thank you so much for your work!
Thank you! That's really nice to hear.
It’s really hard for me to find good history videos on yt
But I’m very glad to find you
Thanks so much! They are not easy to make, haha.
Very good video, thank you for doing this! Since I am learning your language, I find this very inspiring...
Thanks! Well this goes well hand in hand then. Not the easiest language you have decided to learn 😅
Indeed 😅
4:56-5:05 ancient era arcologies like these fascinate me. Did Finland have good trade and migration? It makes me wonder how they would have had the time to build all these!
I don't think we know much about the people who built these, which makes it all the more fascinating!
@@Anttimation man its a huge rabbit hole, if people in the east baltic region read/had positive opinion about the 'Hamlet's Mill' book back then u absolutely have to become the pioneers of next lvl submarine archaeology, because only there does wealth : intellectual/cultural stimuli demand coincide with fairly calm seas and something relevant submerged in them (that book starts its digging into global starlore with Kalevala), and lately theres so much that keeps coming into that totally lost prehistoric aeon picture (thats becoming clearer to be well more than just a poor prelude to the fall into the history by bronze age dominance-based societies, not to mention the 1-1 massive dieoff horizons in europe both in neolithic and bronze age, with reasons still barely explained), like e.g. most minoan amber finds lately turning out to clearly originate from the baltic, not to mention the Talos/Talon=Töll the Great myth (respectively from Crete and Saaremaa, of which the latter btw i noticed forms the upper right corner of a fully cardinally oriented right angles rectangle with 3 other major neolithic sites namely Tiszapolgár-Csőszhalom in fungary, meridian mirroring the Orkney-Bretagne pair in the west...)
Very interesting! It is a bummer that more people have not seen this work
Thank you very much! Well, it is constantly getting more views, slowly but surely...
another great video, i love your art and accent , very interesting topic and culture
Thanks! 🤘
A very compact, informative and entertaining piece of the old history ... do schools already use it? It would e great too!
Thank you! I hope if not schools, then at least maybe some more enthusiastic pupils can look it up
Brilliant art and great information. Would love to know more about this Finnic- Sami language branch 🦌🍄
Tbh I haven't read much about it. Some Finnish words and place names have Sami origins. What is generally misunderstood due to the indigenous status of the Sami is that our ancestors have been here equally long.
Finnish and Sami are two totally different languages. I have watched news in Finland that are in sami language and I have no idea what they are saying. The base of the languages might be the same Uralic, but thousands of years later the languages are different.
@@Mayhem-pv9cc right, it's familiar but not mutually intelligible. I can identify with some effort between the two. I also can't speak either, my Finnish is non existent, only can remember a few words at a time, then forget.
Finland does not have Sami ppl very many. Most of them occur in Norway. Sweden is next. Finland is the third. Sami ppl are different ppl with a completely different culture. Sami's have a very wonderful and unique culturally of their own.
And in Russia also.
As always, top video Antti.
Thanks one again! 🙌
Absolutely awesome. I found out my scot ancestors were Fins. It is amazing to learn more about this culture
Thank you! That's great to hear. More of this series is coming soon ;)
ty!
Where's the episode about the Proto-Finnic Holy Roman Khanganate and the Finno-Korean Hyperwar though?
Coming on April 1st 2024 maybe 😂
Kiitos and Thank You for this Insightful Video.....the history is inspiring me to Create my own Short Stories.
Thank you! That is great to hear.
Its kinda great to see native people covering their history, unlike big channals who just read the wikis 😂
Thank you! Yeah, the popular videos that are full of mistakes inspired me to make this, haha.
@@Anttimation I'll notice that, thats why hunt native channals X'D,
And i know how you feel, because i have seen alot og big channals completely butcher indian mythos, who knows what wiki pedia entries they have been reading from 🤣🤣🤣
@@ichigoapanchal9935 Yeah! Do you have good Indian mythology channels to recommend?
@@Anttimation well there are few but half of them took the political turn 💀, they totaly ignore the philosophal sides of mythos we had one guy named devdutt patnaik who writes about world legends it on his site
I really enjoy your channel. I have loved Finnish culture for some years now, bot historic and modern, and have dreamed of living in Finland, so thank you for this channel. I'm now a member, can you tell me how to acquire and use the custom emoji described in the members' perks?
Many thanks!!
Re: emoji, I'm not sure if it's only for live streams and such, I'll investigate.
It says:
Your emoji will appear in the emoji picker. Your members can also use emoji in comments and live chat by typing : immediately before and after the emoji name. For example, if the emoji name is wow, members can type :wow: to make it appear.
Is the emoji picker the thing you press to access all the emojis? Not sure 😅 The name is hannu (hannunvaakuna was too long), so by typing it should appear. If it works, I could make more of those!
@@Anttimation So I'm assuming the emoji picker is only for the live chat feature, got it!. Kiitos! Btw, taideteos on vittu uskomaton!
Upeeta animointia! Plus hauska tuo "Tuu tuu tupakkarulla"- musiikki taustalla! 😁
Kiitos! 😁
Ihana video, paljon kiitoksia. Kaunis ja viisas, voimakas ja sisukas. Erinomainen huumorintaju.
Kiitos paljon! Näitähän on koko sarja, ja uusia osia vielä tulossa.
I love these. 🙂 Subscribed!
Thank you! A new part is in the making...
Thank you, very nice done 👍 very interesting 👍
Thank you!
Loved it!
Awesome! Thank you.
Here's a little tid bit of info. The hydraulic backhoe was actually invented in my home town by an American Finn named Vaino Holopainen.
Well that's something I didn't know! Thanks for sharing.
Kiitos videosta. Nyt viimeaikoina runsaammin perehtyneenä mesoliittiseen aikaan ja juurikin tuonne vanhimpiin löydöksiin (kuten antrean verkko) ja asutuksiin itäsuomessa oli ollut mukava kuulla tuosta aikakaudesta vielä lisää, sekä kampa ja -nuorakeraamisesta yms. Toki myös aika jolloin kantaurali tuli suomeen olisi kiva saada kokonaan omalle videolleen! Kiitoksia vielä
Kiitos! Kiinnostavia aiheita ehdottomasti. En vaan tiedä niistä ihan kauheasti, niin pitäisi tutkia ensin tarkemmin... Ellei sitten joku muu ehdi tekaista videota ensin 😁
I love your art!
Thank you!
Seal was another animal that was hunted and probably moved people up the coast.
Great stuff!
Martti Haavio has written about Ahti being the patriarch (emuu) of the seal family but it didn't make it to the video I guess
Great vid!
Cheers!
olen todella kiitollinen että löysin kanavasi! perheeni muutti Suomesta Amerikkaan kun olin tosi nuori (noin 7v), joten en päässyt Suomen historian tunneilla kovin pitkälle. nyt ylioppilaana päätin käydä pulpetin ääreen oppimaan mistä hemmetistä tämä kaikki alkoi. lapsena historia ei kiinnostanut lainkaan, mutta vanhuus on vissiin iskeny kun tekee mieli muistella vanhoja....ja tottakai haluan myös osata vastaamaan Amerkkalisten kysymyksiin Suomen historiaan liittyen.
anyways, SUURET KIITOKSET SINULLE! jatka samaan malliin!!
Kiitos paljon! Mahtavaa kuulla :)
Great Video :)
Very intressting, so I am from Hungary, our history says, there were two brothers in somewhere in Mongolia, and then they split, one traveled to the north, and became the Sami, the other traveled to Hungary. When the first time a met a Sami, I felt so connected, even I dudnt know, he was a Sami. Because of the colours of the clothes, and the open way we spoke.
Haven't heard that before! Thanks for sharing.
I've heard a little bit different version. He who traveled to North became a Finn.
Sami ppl are different ppl. They also have a completely different culture.
Aivan ihana video ja täydellinen ajoitus, kun tästä ihan tässä hiljattain etsin tietoa. Varsinkin tuo Suomen shamanismi kiehtoo ja uskon 100% niiden olleen osa Suomen historiaa. Onhan meillä joulupukki ja noitarumpu todisteena. 😂
Oli tosin vähän hankala keskittyä, kun tuo taustamusiikki oli niin nostalginen lapsuudesta! Mutta tosi sopiva teemaan.
Kiitos! Joo, on siitä Kalevalassakin ja SKVR:ssä niin paljon viitteitä että ihme jos ei olisi harrastettu.
@@Anttimation What is SKVR?
@@nisaba5752 a large collection of old poems (in Finnish) at skvr.fi
As a Finn all I learned about Finland I learned from my grandmother as nothing was written about Finland. I was told the shaman in Finland where mostly woman and that they lived in tipis and they came from the Ural mtns near the valley of giants. I still have family in Finland and a niece. I wish I had gone to visit.
Welcome! I hope you find these videos useful.
There is a question l wish to know if Finland people
recognized that 三苗(a group of people in China )
sound exactly like Sami ?
Have no idea about that tbh!
Video was fun and informative. Wish you more subscribers. BTE Finland had only two invaders... Look at Balkans.
Thank you! Yeah the history of humanity is filled with bloodshed, in some places even more than others.
It's really sad that the history we teach in schools is very biased and pro-swedish. This gave a new perspective on Finnish history.
Thanks!
It's also sad just how little history is taught in general. For someone not interested in the subject, all they might remember is some homo species started walking upright, then there was ancient Greece and Rome, then some world wars and Finland was a part of Sweden/Russia before.
@@AnttimationFinland was directly a part of Sweden almost 600 years and later an autonomous grand duchy of Russia's Empire of tsar 100 years with a lot of privileges. During the revolution 1917 in Russia Finland declared its independence and has been independent ever since.
@@butterflies655 Finland was partly called Kvenland before Swedes and was not part of Sweden for 600 years, that is the old biased story. There were also Danish and Polish rule at 1500, also Sweden ruled only small part of western point Finland starting slowly with help of roman catholic help at 1300's with their crusaders, at those times also part of that is now northern Sweden, was also finnish speaking and saami people, only after 1600 Sweden got to rule the other parts and even then Finland was autonomous, There were no Swedish military at Finland. Sweden only robbed Finns and used them for their wars, they never managed to change the language. That is the reason why finnish and swedish bibles were first published to the finns and swedes at same time
Kiitos 🥰🇦🇺🙃
@@Gunnawundai ole hyvä! 😁
Better mention Kvenland and Bjarmia in future episodes.
Ok mutta... Homokampela? 😂
Juu, yhen kaverin keksimä nimi jonka sitten päätin vara.. lainata.
Interesting - But where did the people come from? Wikipedia shows the Finno -Ugric languages, other than Hungary seem to be East of Finland. Some Finnish people have epicanthic folds which is also suggestive of an origin further to the East. If Asiatic people did settle the land, it's kind of obvious they bred with those of the South. What do I know? I live in the land of the Ojibwe and Ottawa and have never been even close to the lands of my ancestors. Good Art! Have a good one.
The old (nationalist) theory puts the primordial home of the proto-Finns in the "curve of the river Volga" but that's no longer supported. I can't say more specifically than from the east, and later from the west too. Many related Uralic peoples dwell in Siberia/Russia and their surviving folklore has been crucial to the studying of Finnish myths too.
@@Anttimation Yeh - I didn't mention the genetic thing. Native Americans share traits with the folks who live in North Asia giving strong credibility to them crossing an old land bridge across Alaska thousands of years ago. I think it may be found that there are similar genetic markers for you Finn folk also pointing East. Whatever it is - It is what it is. Keep drawing.
Finns have not got epicanthic folds more than other countries. Actually they are very very rare.
Finns in general have blond hair, blue eyes, white complexion and they are tall. Watch the video "Which country has the most blondies?" The answer is Finland.
@@butterflies655 Certainly not more than Japan. However, look into Lapland. Sami people have these characteristics. Not always, but they are there. My father's family is from the Rovaniemi area and this feature pops up in some relatives.
@@daniellarson3068 The Sami ppl are a different race and they have a completely different culture. Finland even has not gotten them very much. Norway has them most. Sweden is the second and Finland the third.
Odotan mielenkiinnolla kuinka yksityiskohtaiseksi vedät tämän 🤔
Aattelin tehdä ensin tällaiset yleiskatsaukset 2000-luvulle asti, ja sitten myöhemmin ehkä lisäjaksoja väleihin esim. sodista tai eri aikakausien arjesta ym.
@@Anttimation odotan innolla 😄👍
I liked the video.
@@phoenixknight8837 good thing there's more of these then 😁
As a Swede I can say that Finland is so different from the other Nordic countries but still like the same / oh yeah sorry that we kinda took you over and then Russia took you over…. But thanks to that Swedish and Finnish history is a little bit same / in school the teachers don’t really talk about how we invaded Finland and they don’t say anything bad about it…. That sus….
No one is responsible for their ancestors' deeds. Still, thanks, I appreciate it :D
That's how I see Sweden/other Nordics too, similar but still quite different.
Based narration
the pagan age is the most interesting part of finnish history
And least known.
Nice callout on Suibhne
Finns mostly descend from corded ware people and portion of their ancestry is uralic with mixture of narva hunter gatherer ancestry with additional comb ware ancestry that can explain the high level of ancient north eurasian
Well, Uralic people did mix in Baltics about 20-30 000 years ago, from that group first people came to Finland about 10-12 000 years ago which are now known as Finnish people. There were direct Uralic movement too to the North, Sami people but they moved through all Nordics. That was about 3000 years ago. There were small movement of people in Finland even before all this but they were not permanent settlements as the ice kept moving back and forth at the time, or at least nohting else from that era has been found but hunters camps and tools.
Hauska, ei oo kristinusko jumalani. propsit. Kiiros jäbälle.
Upeat piirrokset ja animointi!
Suurkiitos!
THE BOCK SAGA!!!
It will blow you mind...
It's a waste of oxygen :D
How much time have you invested in The Bock Saga?
@@Heathen22 none. A little correction to my previous comment; it's nonsense if taken seriously as some do, but potentially good as mythical fiction.
It makes more sense than the bible. My opinion is it is the hidden history the vatican stamped out around the world. Most history written about Finland was vatican influenced.
If you haven't spent 5 hours listening to one person tell the saga you are missing out
Like on yt
Michel Merle Hawaii 1987
As far as I remember the recent research shows that the Fennic languages weren't used in the area before the early metal age.
Also the time of the introduction of Ukko or any other personifications of the forces of nature is questionable. We also don't know if Ukko was actually the most important of these or if that is a later idea.
Also the war axe culture, better known as the corded ware culture, was a thing only in the southwest part of the area nowadays known as Finland. The much bigger inland area had a different culture, and this divide went on through the bronze age as well.
What was the name of the inland culture?
@@Anttimation Asbestos-ceramic cultures is the general name, but there were many different named regional cultures within the group.
@@lottaraatikainen3942 Ah yes!
Classic Finnish suicidal vibe on the narrator,also pretty sad story ,, Finnish entertainment at its best!
@@101Ezb haha thank you!
One mistake Indus Valley Civilization is not Southeast Asia but South Asia especially the region of todays northwestern India. Otherwise very nice video.
Thanks! I'll try to remember to correct it when I compile all the episodes into one video.
Is this Egyptian propaganda to try to occult the greatness of the proto holy roman finish khanate?
Aside joks, i really like the drawing of the video. Great work!
If it was Egyptian propaganda I'd never admit it... 😉
i do like how you pointed out the uralo-siberian theory. i personally believe in it.
sad you didnt mention how the finns came to finland (then inhabited by sami) from modern day northern estonia and how the story of kalevala might originate in the finns going north to finland. the realm of kalevala itself being an analogue to modern area of estonia and pohjola being an analogue to samic finland
Finns really have nothing common with native american or siberian though lets be honest. Very minimal basically nothing. Ancestry from siberia 2-15% yes and language partially and most stories and mythologies of finns are of pagan baltic origin.
Sami in other hand very much siberian and well yeah many finnish families are mixed with sami and sure those families may have siberian "vibe"
Basically Ukko is a deity of a proto-indo-european culture basically before the finnish.
Yeah
Ougro Finnios, ce sont originaire grand familles Tourque Touranienne. la familles Tourque Touranienne, ce sont amozonienne, nomade, et montagnard. voıla la familles Tourque Touranienne, Scyhtes ou Saca, Saga, Saha, Scala, Sigur, Scout, Scandin, Çoud etc, Tatares, ou Catayi, Karay, Han, Tan, Tam, Khan, Wuang, Katan ou Catan ( YuCatan) etc, la Sibérie, Kamkaçya, Sarmates, Mongol, Mançour, Tounguz, Ainu, Guril, Kore, Ougro Finnios, lapon, Esquimos, Gétes, Scandinave, Thrace, Troy, German, Masagétes, Cimmérienne, Huns, Galat, Khazar, Avar, Alans, Ashkenazi, Celtique, Caucase ou Ibérique, Basque, Bérberes, Kabyle, Indus Valles, Gange, Aborigines, Dravidienne ou Tamil, Bengal, Urdu, Souryas ou Tourcoman, Turqistan, Ases, Hiong Nou, Tomhu, Yanhu, Çenyu, Kaha, Sikkim, Sindh, Radjou, Nagas, Nadam, Nepal, Tibet, Bhutan, Leh, Birman, Siam, laos, Annamit, Mekong, Joung, Khmer, Males, Austronésienne, Polonesienne, Amérindienne, Tolteque, Azteque, Inca, Tupis et Carip etc. la familles Tourque Touranienne, ce sont parenté et mix population. Merci Beaucoup, Bon Continuation.
En aivan ymmärtänyt mutta tattista nyt kumminkin
@@Anttimation les savant, ce sont mentionne, histoire Tourque Touranienne, depuis 2500 d'annes. tout les voyageur, cartographe, géographe, etnographe, archéologue, anthropologue, philologue et historienne etc. leur ouvrağe dans les archive BNF, BNH, BNG etc. par milliers. Ougro Finnios originaire de la familles Tourque Touranienne. et leur civilisation, Akkad ou Khalde, Sümerienne, Mede, et Assour, etc. Ougro Finnios ils sont vecu aussi. Bon Continuation et Salutations.
hirvi perkele!
Finno ugric split from uralic in the early bronze age in western siberia. Before the late bronze age modern finland was inhabited by paleoeuropeans and indoeuropeans who were later replaced by sami and finns
Not replaced but assimilated. Our maternal line carries the DNA of Middle- East while paternal carries the Uralic DNA. Indoeuropeans newer really settled here in any significant numbers which also shows in Finnish DNA.
@@duhni4551 the finnish genome is made up of 3 main components, early iron age estonia (proto baltic finnic tarand graves) Sami and Germanics of coastal Finland, early iron age estonians were mostly baltic and sintashta iranic (indoeuropean) with 3-6% PU ancestry. Sami also had high IE ancestry. And do I even have to explain germanics?
@@LassiM-wx5cv I suggest you read a bit the 2018 DNA study about Finnish DNA. Finland has been inhabited over 10 000 years, the people who inhabited our country came mostly from Baltic Region which was already mixed with Uralic tribes, Sami etc. people came here around 3000 years ago. That also shows in Finnish DNA. Indo-European influence is there but not in any major numbers that would justify anyone to say we are Indo-Europeans even a bit.
@@duhni4551in the early days ppl spoke an indoeuropian language in Finland. The language is not everything. Finns look like any other Nordic ppl. Finland is a Nordic country culturally, politically, economically, religiously and geographically. If you like it or not.
Finland was ranked the best country 2019 by World economic Forum conference in Switzerland Davos and the World happiness index report and UN ranked Finland the happiest country seven times in a row. Why? Finland is at the top in almost every category. All the other Nordic countries are among the ten best and happiest countries. This proves how similar Finland is with other Nordic countries.
"Urasian continent" thank you!
Well it's the name of the continent... So you're welcome 😁
A comment for the algorithm
@@guckfoogle3930 thanks on behalf of the algorithm! 🙌
Finland is composed of people that came from now Russian uralic mountains long before russia had its current slavic population . The Finnic people used to be part of multiple iron age tribes. Thats why some of the people look kinda asian but now look like mix of nordic. They mixed with swedish ( on west ) Finlands Coast. and some on Karelia ( East ) They didnt mix alot thats why the genes show the proof. Lets not get into tribes because it gets confusing because theres multiple.
🔥🌧🌈🌊⛵
Oh god not slash and burn! Anything but slash and burn!
Kalevala on suomalaisen oma versio saksalaisesta
Saksalaisesta Kalevalasta..?
Oh wow, is that when you are ritualisticly and meticulously born and looped into a dimension that appears normal but it's very much not normal and you track uphill both ways and aquire massive amounts of experience and abilities from hardships, and you're not supposed to know that you were likely born dead but you're being framed for harvest? Because I'm pretty sure I've been there this whole time. The "dead giveaway" being no matter how much work, you never acquire independence or earn self sufficient income. And anyone who joins you in your frame takes a huge hit in status, income, respect, really everything.
banger video mutta pikkasen hiljasemmalle kun laitat musaa ni täydellinen, kiitos 🏴☠
Kiitos! Joo, se losahti tässä videossa turhan kovalle jostain syystä. Seuraavassa osassa jo korjattu 🤓
🤺☦🇷🇺Dear and beloved Finnics, you are the founders of our Rus nation. You are the descendants of Meshech
🟢
🤫🧏🧏
What I've been able to piece together is, Finns are what Estonians are, mixed with some Swedish and some Hun. That is, Asiatics who evolved light hair and eyes. Compared to Swedish, German types whose ancestors were Mediteranneans (like Sardinians) who evolved light hair and eyes. And both got intelligence boosts from consuming Amanita mushrooms.
Wtf🤦♂️🤣🤣🤣
Nope read and learn some more hahaahaha XD Your comment makes no sense. Nothing hun about finns
cuenta en decadencia
Mitä?
Loistavaa animaatiota täytyy sanoa kyl.
Kiitos!
tosi hyvä animaatio mutta tarvii innokaampaa tarinan lukijaa
Joo, en ole ääninäyttelijä, kuten tarkkakorvaisimmat saattavat huomata :D
Kannattaa katsoa Kalevala-videot Reidar Waseniuksen eeppisellä tulkinnalla:
ruclips.net/p/PLnPVbS6-nxFeGiaHSydtjXB-UsKCw774R
they were Sami nykysuomalaisten vanhojen eurooppalaisten goottien ja ugrilaisten heimojen sekoitus Suomi vwas vain suoalue etelään ja Viroon reigndeer-kansat kattoivat koko jääkauden alueen ja muuttivat pohjoiseen tänne ne vaelsivat ja eteläsuomalaiset muuttivat pohjoiseen sekoittuen siksi ei pysyviä paikkoja, koska he käyttivät telttoja
Finland is not on Eurasian continent.
Finland is on the Nordic European continent. Finland 🇫🇮 is a Nordic country with Sweden 🇸🇪 Norway 🇸🇯 Denmark 🇩🇰 and Iceland 🇮🇸 politically, economically, religiously, culturally, and geographically.
Finland is indeed on the Eurasian continent, continent being a continuous landmass separate from the sea.
@@Anttimationdefinitely it is not. In that case Norway is too. Its northern part is more in the east than Finland.
This 'happiest country in the world' is propaganda. Finns have been trained for hundreds of years not to ever criticize their own country, especially to outsiders.
Yeah... Except no 😂
LoL, we are the largest critics of our own country, there isn't a day when we don't do that in a way or another. Thing is, we could have it lot worse and we know it, understand it and that makes us happy that we have at least what we have. Doesn't mean there wouldn't be room for improvement, thus the criticizing.
🤺☦🇷🇺Dear and beloved Finnics, you are the founders of our Rus nation. You are the descendants of Meshech
Yleensä meikällä on kohtuupaljon korjattavaa Suomen kivikausivideoissa... Tähän lähinnä lisäisin, että pääsyy, miksi suomen varhaishistoriaa on niin vaikea tutkia, on Suomen maaperän happamuus, joka syövyttää luutkin kohtuulyhyessä ajassa... Jätinkirkkojen ajoitus on vaikeaa, joten hyväksyn tämän videon esityksen about todennäköisimmäksi... Eli erinomaista toimintaa @anttimation. Kunnioitan, pahoittelen jaarittelujani ja odotan innolla tulevia videoita :)
Kiitos! Joo, tässä jouduin aika paljon miettimään sanamuotoja, esim. "oletetaan olleen näin" vs. varma tieto. Toki tähänkin varmasti tekisin jotain korjauksia, jos nyt tekisin uusiksi
@@Anttimation Jos uskallan ehdotuksia videoihin antaa, niin olisi kiinnostavaa, jos youtubeen ilmestyisi video suomalais-karjalaisesta mesoliittisen kivikauden "hirvenpääkulttuurista"... eli siitä, joka kohtuulyhyellä aikavälillä noin 6500-5500eaa loi Huittisten hirvenpään, Rovaniemen hirvenpään, Peurasaaren kalmiston ja pallokivinuijat sun muuta... olivat aikansa parhaita kuvanveistäjiä kohtuullisella marginaalilla ja tekivät aikansa suurimman hautausmaan, joka on löytynyt juurikin about siltä ainoalta alueelta, jossa kalkkikivi on poistanut maan happamuuden... eli tod näk tällaisia suurhautoja sun muita oli muuallakin, mutta ne ovat syöpyneet pois... Meikän mielestä täysin aliarvostettu aikakausi, jolloin Suomi saattoi aidosti olla maailman kehityksen huipulla ja paljon pidemmällä kuin naapurinsa.
@@informationstream6513 kiitos! Hyvä ehdotus. Täytyisi vaan lukea aiheesta enemmän... Ehkä jossain kohtaa
There is a native saying ’the only ones that walk at night are indians and fins’
Interesting!