Why Did The Viking Age Begin ?

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  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2024

Комментарии • 528

  • @tomurg
    @tomurg 5 лет назад +302

    Denmark: We are going to build a wall and we are going to make the Franks pay for it

    • @goblinslaya7328
      @goblinslaya7328 5 лет назад +5

      dead joke

    • @PunkerTrottzEltern
      @PunkerTrottzEltern 5 лет назад +11

      Yeahhhh problem is, there where no countrys back than, because of the thought of nationalisme is a pretty new thing from the 18 hundrets. Also the first wall is from around the jear 400, whene the Frankish empier was not even a thing. comming from the area and where at the Dannevirke when they found out.
      And jeah im fun at partys.

    • @Maxibon2007
      @Maxibon2007 5 лет назад +9

      Well…the Angles (who were from what is now Denmark) 300 year prior were doing the exact same thing to the Late Romans /Romano British, they then took over Britain, Christianised and the ones who remained “evolved” into the “proper” Vikings and started doing the same thing to them. Meanwhile the Welsh (the descendants of the Romano British) probably sat back muttering “how do YOU like it now!?”

    • @kevcaratacus9428
      @kevcaratacus9428 5 лет назад +8

      @@Maxibon2007 the saxon pirates were attacking Roman merchant ships along the English channel & north sea from the 200 s onwards until end of Roman Britain.
      Costing the empire so much the Romans had a new ships built & deployed to protect the cross channel traders. The 1st navy designated to protect the channel.
      People think the Vikings were something original, but like you said it was happening almost 500 yrs before the Vikings started raiding this island.

    • @kevcaratacus9428
      @kevcaratacus9428 5 лет назад +7

      @@Maxibon2007
      the Welsh were a separate people with their own language already existed long before the Germanic tribes came to Britain.
      The Welsh English border wasn't anything like we have today .
      People from middle & even eastern England didn't all leg it to Wales when the saxons came .
      The Celts remained throughout the Roman ,saxon & Norman invasions,
      The regular people just adopted the new rulers ways & languages.
      Obviously thats a simplified version of a complex time .
      The main changers were at the top, the elite ( ruling ) classes .

  • @rubinhoho3393
    @rubinhoho3393 5 лет назад +86

    Thanks for providing quality content for us all again!

  • @Rovarin
    @Rovarin 5 лет назад +23

    In the Faroes they did a similar study on DNA as the one in Iceland. The results were similar to an extent, with male ancestry being 87% Norse and female ancestry being 84% Scottish/Irish.

  • @princekrazie
    @princekrazie 5 лет назад +36

    We are currently in year 1226 VE, Viking Era, which starts with 793, the raid on lindisfarne.

    • @Skelstoolbox
      @Skelstoolbox 5 лет назад +7

      NICE... Best comment on youtube... I'm gonna use that measurement too from now on.. God wouldn't it have been great to live then? I'd raid in a second for riches and women instead of slaving away for min. wage my whole life.. few job prospects here..

    • @Skelstoolbox
      @Skelstoolbox 5 лет назад +6

      @@modlio745 Me? What edge, the bleak future and lack of social mobility in many western countries is less of an edge and more like a cliff.

    • @SynValorum
      @SynValorum 5 лет назад +2

      @@modlio745 In the Dark Ages you can be King for a day! Traveling poet by night! And dead by highwaymen before sunrise!

    • @modlio745
      @modlio745 5 лет назад +2

      @@SynValorum This sounds like the lyrics for a really good song.. I'm gonna steal this now, thnx
      : )

    • @Elenrai
      @Elenrai 5 лет назад +1

      @@modlio745 "little to desire"
      One. Word.
      Honesty.

  • @Dominator046
    @Dominator046 5 лет назад +93

    "Post down in the comments if you'd like to see a more specific video-"
    YES. ON ALL THINGS.

  • @110gotrek
    @110gotrek 5 лет назад +170

    G E K O L O N I S E E R D

    • @110gotrek
      @110gotrek 5 лет назад +3

      Loved the video by the way c:

    • @robinroos2254
      @robinroos2254 5 лет назад +11

      Z E G M A K K E R

    • @silver_dem0n525
      @silver_dem0n525 5 лет назад

      Classic

    • @possemis
      @possemis 5 лет назад +3

      its not a History with hilbert video without the G E K O L O N I S E E R D meme

    • @Frahamen
      @Frahamen 5 лет назад

      N E E N

  • @MrHedning
    @MrHedning 5 лет назад +61

    I heard another reason and that reason was revenge on the Christians when Charlemagne entered Saxony.
    He waged war against the Germanic Saxons in the northeast, forcing Christianity upon them where around 4,500 Saxons were executed in 782.

  • @Justaguy5678
    @Justaguy5678 5 лет назад +10

    "This has been the worst trade deal in the history of trade deals." - Vikings

  • @jackmarston2141
    @jackmarston2141 3 года назад +1

    This is probably my favorite source of viking history out there. I am a 29 year old with hardcore ADHD, but I love Viking history. Your way of teaching is extremely helpful.

  • @FurryManPeach
    @FurryManPeach 5 лет назад +20

    So to touch upon the hypothesis of trade implications regarding the Frankish, perhaps the raiding of Lindisfarne could be drawn from the fact that both the Saxons and the Frankish were Christian at this stage, and so were drawn together through that religion, as opposed to the pagan religion, and also were trading together so colluded to freeze the Danes out of trade, at which point the Danes decided to just take what they wanted? Possible?

  • @gemino4910
    @gemino4910 5 лет назад +129

    So you're telling me the viking age was the incel uprising?

  • @JamesAce
    @JamesAce 5 лет назад +9

    loving it. just came back from being 1/2 months in north norway.. gotta love your timing

  • @mexicanshawarma5971
    @mexicanshawarma5971 5 лет назад +79

    the viking age ended in the battle of Stamford bridge not the battle of Hastings

    • @frederikfoss4594
      @frederikfoss4594 5 лет назад +1

      Yep!

    • @donfelipe7510
      @donfelipe7510 5 лет назад +19

      You could argue that the Normans were the culmination of the viking age. Christian, literate but still war like and expansionist. Really the viking age lasted until the end of Norman royal dynasties around Europe.The battle of Stamford Bridge may have broken Danish and Norwegian power however Hastings was not the end of anything but the beginning of a viking golden age.

    • @Buildbeautiful
      @Buildbeautiful 5 лет назад +3

      Of course the viking era did not end after the battle of stamford bridge what made you think that

    • @donfelipe7510
      @donfelipe7510 5 лет назад +13

      ​@@Buildbeautiful
      I suppose it depends of what constitutes the "Viking Age." By 1066 raiding in longships, viking in the strictest sense, was more or less a thing of the past in Northern Europe. Towns and cities were more heavily fortified and armies much better organised and able to repel raiders. Also by this time Scandinavia had largely become Christian so attacks on monasteries and churches which were the hallmarks of the early "Viking Age" had ended.
      However that said the Normans raised not only men for small scale raids but whole armies, England wasn't raided in 1066 it was invaded and conquered. The "Viking Age" for me ends with the assimilation of various ethnic groups like Danes, Norse and Normans into the country and instead of seeing such people as foreign invaders with a strange religion and language they were just people to be ruled.

    • @sleepinggiant1484
      @sleepinggiant1484 5 лет назад +2

      @Tony Trojak Norman's may have been decendants of Vikings but they adopted frankish or French customs, religion etc. They were fierce nights and not Viking raiders that pillaged ans plundered. Not quite the same.
      1066 and the end of the Anglo saxons rule. The Norman's influence is undeniable in both England and France.

  • @hglundahl
    @hglundahl 5 лет назад +7

    7:06 Obviously Icelandic names Njáll and Brján are Irish Niall and Brian, with somewhat shifted syllable structure.

  • @Roikat
    @Roikat 5 лет назад +10

    Charlemagne supposedly made the landlubber mistake of destroying the Frisian fleet of 3000 ships around 780 after defeating the Frisians on land, which one can assume would have left a North Sea naval and merchant marine power vacuum.

  • @iainb1577
    @iainb1577 5 лет назад +1

    Glad to see you back.

  • @regular-joe
    @regular-joe 4 года назад +2

    I'm like the guy who commented on another of your videos - I'm starting to sing loudly (and imaginatively - don't know the words!) every time you play the Dutch anthem. Good fun.

  • @NolanJohnson423
    @NolanJohnson423 3 года назад +1

    Thank you History with Hilbert for the awesome content these videos are so exciting

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 5 лет назад +47

    What if the Virgin Islands remained Danish

    • @historywithhilbert
      @historywithhilbert  5 лет назад +54

      They wouldn't be virgin for much longer?

    • @caolanfeely4317
      @caolanfeely4317 5 лет назад +2

      History With Hilbert what if whilhelmus never existed

    • @boze77wolf
      @boze77wolf 5 лет назад +1

      @@caolanfeely4317 The anthem or the prince?

    • @caolanfeely4317
      @caolanfeely4317 5 лет назад

      Sinnermatic well I guess both

    • @boze77wolf
      @boze77wolf 5 лет назад +6

      @@caolanfeely4317 He was the figurehead of the revolt against the Spanish. Without the break away from Spanish control the Dutch golden age wouldn't have happend. The Netherlands wouldn't become the savehaven for Portugese jews who run from Spanish inquisition and held the seamaps to the east. The VOC would never existed. The Dutch colonies never seized. The more than 200 years that the Netherlands was the only western country who was allowed to trade with Japan would have never taken place.

  • @Woeschhuesli
    @Woeschhuesli 5 лет назад +1

    I have wondered about this for ages, thankyou. It‘s difficult to find out about pre-Viking Scandinavian history in a coherent manner, I find.

    • @lordcommander3224
      @lordcommander3224 4 года назад

      Romans basically said, "There exists lazy Germans way up north".

  • @donfelipe7510
    @donfelipe7510 5 лет назад +21

    I think like most aspects of history the beginning of the "viking age" has many causes. Overpopulation, gender imbalance, technological shift in ship building and sense of religious persecution by a united Christendom against pagans are all valid points. I would suggest also that climate change had guiding hand in these events.
    Around the mid to late 9th century there were long periods of drought around the world. in Egypt the crops failed for ten years (c. 850AD) and essentially ended Egypt's previous role as the agricultural powerhouse of the Eastern Mediterranean. Also around this time the same climatic event forced Turkic steppe nomads from east of the Caspian sea to seek better pastures and brought them into conflict with the Armenians, Byzantines and the Arab Caliphates.
    I believe a general warming climate while destabilizing and disastrous for the areas further south may have had the opposite effect further north like in what is now France, England and Scandinavia, keeping the ice and snows away for more of the year and allowing better and more diverse harvests. It has been documented that grapes for wine production were able to be grown in Sweden while Western Europe generally began to surpasse the Eastern Mediterranean as the most wealthy and influential lands in Christendom. A more stable prosperous economy would also allow for expansion such as the Frankish conquest of the Saxons which may have sparked Danish aggression. The consequences of climate change on migration and the fortunes of nations are far reaching indeed.
    I'm aware that my dates for the drought in Egypt don't correspond to the beginning of Viking raiding however I think climate change takes time and may have been in the process of changing for decades or even centuries before. I would welcome peoples thoughts, I'm not well read on these things although I am aware these theories are out there. The RUclips channel History Time has some interesting in depth videos on these subjects.

    • @emsnewssupkis6453
      @emsnewssupkis6453 5 лет назад +1

      Yes, it was warming up rapidly to the Medieval Warm Age. Made travel easy.

    • @rogermarlin3758
      @rogermarlin3758 5 лет назад

      Yes climate change and over population is what mainly did it.

    • @magnusorn7313
      @magnusorn7313 5 лет назад

      the medieval warm period was regional to the Atlantic just as the roman warm period was which enabled the roman empire to flourish, im sure it may have affected other places as well to a degree and completely different things could have been taking affect as well but globally temperatures would have changed slightly if at all

    • @emsnewssupkis6453
      @emsnewssupkis6453 5 лет назад

      @@magnusorn7313 HAHAHA. Right. Yup. HAHAHA. Any and all excuses to pretend we have no global climate...wait! Ahem.

    • @emsnewssupkis6453
      @emsnewssupkis6453 5 лет назад

      Oh oh, the reply was parked in the wrong place, Magnus Orn. Sorry about this. Sometimes happens on You Tube comments.

  • @jgr7487
    @jgr7487 5 лет назад +7

    I was wondering how long it would take for Hilbert to make a reference to the Netherlands or the VOC. it took 8:51

  • @spacecat5517
    @spacecat5517 5 лет назад +42

    I'd be interested if you did a video on the scandalous topic!

  • @joshuag4624
    @joshuag4624 5 лет назад +6

    Great video. What should have also been mentioned is the Indo European long standing tradition of the Mannerbund, in which young men are cast out to raid. In that sense the Viking age was merely a continuation of an ancient practice. Also, there’s no consensus on whether the earlie Anglo-Saxon invaders had sails on their boats, with no archeological evidence for it. Any sailer would know that having a sail isn’t the same as sailing. Just as the Roman, rowing there ships would have been standard practice with the Roman only using their sail to help them when the wind is favourable as a supplement to rowing. It could have well been the case that adding a sail onto the traditional north Western European Clinker boat added trading, which as you say was prevelant between the North Sea peoples, and now more frequent long distant raids to the ability for Danes and Norsemen to act out the tribal tradition of the Mannerbund

    • @zackflora6165
      @zackflora6165 3 года назад

      That would make sense as the VA started as an Eastern push toward Novgorod and became known as "rowers"

  • @franklinarchambault5397
    @franklinarchambault5397 5 лет назад +3

    the way I heard it lack of land so the outcast and outlaws went a Viking and if not it sound like the best one to me

  • @mattaffenit9898
    @mattaffenit9898 5 лет назад +4

    The reason I believe more strongly - look south. The Franks and Norse did _not_ get along. At all.

  • @SuperFunkmachine
    @SuperFunkmachine 5 лет назад +19

    The ship question is bit false as earlier ships could sail around the coast of germany, even the bronze aged Dover Bronze Age Boat could of done that with ease.

    • @jamesharris6893
      @jamesharris6893 5 лет назад +1

      Even early Celtic coracles got around pretty well, even cross channel, etc.

    • @mpgnz73
      @mpgnz73 4 года назад +1

      Agreed. It's been stated that the Jutes likely sailed along the Frisian islands which they used as a launching pad into Kent and the Isle of Wight. There's no reason the Vikings couldn't do the same. The emergence of a ship capable of sailing directly to England is a red herring.

  • @Giamesh
    @Giamesh 5 лет назад

    The Walrus Ivory trade was very important. As the Umayyad caliphate took control over Spain in the early 700s, the traditional sources and trade routes for ivory was blocked for the Europeans. Scandinavians had access to walrus ivory and traveled further and further to the North and West to hunt the walrus. And discovered new land. Then they traveled South and East to sell it. Along the same routes the raiding also started.

  • @paladin_83
    @paladin_83 5 лет назад

    Love this period in history. Please, keep it going!

  • @berserkerstrommortsgreb3131
    @berserkerstrommortsgreb3131 5 лет назад +4

    Massacre of Verden. Retribution.

  • @jbussa
    @jbussa 5 лет назад +1

    When you send your guests home so you can settle in for a History with Hilbert video. lol

  • @carolusrex5305
    @carolusrex5305 5 лет назад +4

    Yes please do one on the mass shooting hypothesis. It sounds very interesting. 👍🏻

  • @thelucas1146
    @thelucas1146 5 лет назад +3

    I love that in nearly every video you play my national anthem 🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱

    • @NashTheGreat
      @NashTheGreat 5 лет назад

      Not your's, but your people's.

  • @ewweg
    @ewweg 5 лет назад

    A norwegian king visited north jutland and heard of the teutons success in the south, do to uniting the 3 tribes in north jutland.
    And so he stated uniting all the tribes in scandinavia to stop all the infighting for resources and instead fight people far away for resources.
    He started by uniting everyone under the danes (~500 AD) since warry little was left of the teutons and svir after fighting the roman empire, and norway was too split.
    Only the remains of the svirs refused uniting under the danes, and wanted to go their own way, but agreed to stop the infighting.
    This is where they started implementing detachable sails for extremely far seatravels.
    People seems to forget or doesn't know that Denmark was the trading centerpoint between north/east and west europe since 40.000 BC,
    and had a lot of tradingrouts to the middle east since 2000 BC.
    Even the germanic tribes originated in scandinavia around 500 BC, and that migration-age was the predecessor of the viking age, vikings just used better boats and was closer related/connected.

  • @jonaseliasson5502
    @jonaseliasson5502 5 лет назад

    Dear Hilbert, you are right about almost everything but missing one thing. You are right about the better sails for the ships, but there was also the keel. A far more important feature. The deeper and stiffer keels of the eighth century not only make the ships stronger, but meant better navigation possibilities in adverse winds. That is the prevailing west wind in the North Sea. The problem was to get to England. Go back was OK.

  • @Vektordeformacio
    @Vektordeformacio 5 лет назад +1

    Nice PowerPoint, Hilbert

  • @Brembelia
    @Brembelia 5 лет назад +1

    Do both videos: the over population, and any parallels between the Viking Age and today's male crisis. More videos is always the better idea. Thanks!

  • @Leffe123
    @Leffe123 5 лет назад

    Great video

  • @hypercomms2001
    @hypercomms2001 5 лет назад +3

    I thought the Viking Age started was because of Kirk Douglas... !!

  • @blacktemplar9499
    @blacktemplar9499 5 лет назад +1

    It begun when I went on a holiday to England

  • @hglundahl
    @hglundahl 5 лет назад +1

    11:43 So, Franks made a probable trade sanction against Danes, and then a near Apocalypse of Vikings started for Frankland and England?

  • @marinagutierrez3487
    @marinagutierrez3487 5 лет назад +25

    Your voice is very relaxing, you could make ASMR videos

  • @lmclm1755
    @lmclm1755 2 года назад +1

    What about the earlier raids in Paignton in Devon and in Dorset c.780 or thereabouts?

  • @ThaliaVitalis
    @ThaliaVitalis 5 лет назад +1

    Super interesting to hear the different theories and what you think of them! Pls more about the Vikings, so fascinating!
    WILHELMUS....... 🇳🇱

    • @jamesharris6893
      @jamesharris6893 5 лет назад

      curious-- you talked a lot about the emergence of the vikings ships. but in many ways, the Angles, Saxons and Juts seem to be "very early vikings,' granted that except for the Juts, these peoples came from north Germania or what became the Netherlands and Friesland,for the most part. but these people also crossed the north sea or the channel to get to Britain. some literature on Saxon boats suggests a construction not very different from viking craft.
      I'd appreciate some more learned commentary on this. what was the significant difference, if any between viking and Saxon watercraft??

    • @Ghost-vi8qm
      @Ghost-vi8qm 5 лет назад

      Thalia are you Dutch?

  • @katienewell7350
    @katienewell7350 3 года назад

    Hi Hilbert! I was wondering if you could point me in the direction of that Max Adams quote - you said it was from a talk he gave, do you know which one? It sounds like it'd be super useful for my dissertation!

  • @adamroodog1718
    @adamroodog1718 5 лет назад +14

    Anglo-Saxons complaining about the danish. Hahaha

    • @fastertove
      @fastertove 5 лет назад +1

      A major problem with the EU is the presence of 4 different velfare models within it's borders: Continental (Bismarckian), Anglo-Saxon, Nordic and Mediterranean... But the close trading relationsship is great

    • @fastertove
      @fastertove 5 лет назад +3

      @peace leader Sure, but countries in Europe have a very different history. What economy and welfare model to choose? - how to choose the politicians? - what language?... What culture do you think should rule them all? :-) ... IMO, what we probably need more than central European government is a new and more modern version of UN.

    • @Randi-k6m
      @Randi-k6m 5 лет назад

      @peace leader Your vision is definitely not my vision, I find it totally repulsive. I want my near democracy. Do YOU allow your next door neighbour to rule over your household.

    • @JohnMacbeth
      @JohnMacbeth 5 лет назад +1

      @peace leader No fucking thank you.

  • @RestlessRebel
    @RestlessRebel 5 лет назад +2

    I am having flashbacks of Orkney

  • @jimmielindstrand9773
    @jimmielindstrand9773 5 лет назад +2

    Could you maybe do a video on the Vendel period?

  • @NefariousKoel
    @NefariousKoel 5 лет назад +2

    Dowries had a deeper basis than just being a payment to the husband by the father/family. There was a more basic human nature which caused it.
    Historically, men were expected to take care of women in nearly all ways. The father at first. Then her husband once that duty was passed to him.
    Obviously male children were more physically fit for the hard labor, hunting, and other such productive activities so heavily relied upon at the time. The males were expected to leave the household, after entering adulthood, and do so to support themselves. Whereas females would often stay at home, expected to be taken care of by the father indefinitely - until they found, or were arranged, a husband. It's no wonder the dowry became a custom in so many cultures as their parents often wanted to transfer that caretaking burden on someone else (a husband) ASAP.

    • @grubbybum3614
      @grubbybum3614 5 лет назад +1

      I see someone's read 'The Human Zoo'...

    • @NefariousKoel
      @NefariousKoel 5 лет назад +1

      @@grubbybum3614 - Actually, I haven't read 'The Human Zoo'. Just realized, for awhile, that women were naturally given extra protection & care by the men. Ingrained in human nature. Dowries were obviously just one evolved societal facet of that. One of many.
      Unfortunately, those natural tendencies have been used, in modern society, to vilify men as wicked oppressors in some circles. When their natural instinct was usually to protect.

  • @somtimesieat2411
    @somtimesieat2411 5 лет назад

    0:00 when the Vikings sailed across the sea, comets crossed the skies that night, must have known something wasn't right

  • @fredklier
    @fredklier 5 лет назад +1

    Do the video of the current Era end the parallels with the viking age I really like your take on the subject.

  • @hazzmati
    @hazzmati 5 лет назад +3

    It's funny cuz in the show Vikings they are talking as if there is nothing to the west of Scandinavia but myths. It makes no sense for the scandinavians not to know Britain they probably started trading with them long before the viking raids

    • @_robustus_
      @_robustus_ 5 лет назад +1

      Maybe their ships really sucked before Floki.

    • @grubbybum3614
      @grubbybum3614 5 лет назад

      Hey Hazz, I see you in Tyrannicon videos. He he he, huh...

    • @hazzmati
      @hazzmati 5 лет назад

      Grubby bum hey man that’s cool. Haven’t watched or commented in a good while though. Tyr’s cool but I don’t like how he has put half his content behind a paywall. And he doesn’t do the throthgae voice like before anymore.

    • @grubbybum3614
      @grubbybum3614 5 лет назад

      @@hazzmati yeah, he should put more focus on doing the old voice. He has a video everyday now though, including darksouos. I think the stuff behind pauwall was just extra content that wouldn't have been uploaded to RUclips anyway, so I got no problem with that.

    • @Randi-k6m
      @Randi-k6m 5 лет назад

      "they probably started trading with them long before the viking raids". Well more than that. The Jutes and the Angles that settled in England hundreds of years before were Danes, and the Saxons shared borders with the Danes. It really amazes me that it seems historians think that the Scandinavians had forgot how to sail to England.

  • @8bitgubben
    @8bitgubben 5 лет назад

    please make the video about the parallels between the viking age and today, would be very interesting

  • @styrbjornulfhamr9404
    @styrbjornulfhamr9404 5 лет назад +1

    The sail wasn’t a reason - Angles & Jutes came from modern Denmark on ships without sails. The tipping point was the retaliatory strike on English monastaries because the monastaries provided the source of many monks & priests in the expanding ‘crusades’ of Charlemagne against the pagan Saxons and Frisians, who were allies & trading partners with the Danes. The Danes were not strong enough to attack Charlemagne, so they retaliated by attacking the monastaries. This horrified the Carolingians who would sometime pay ransoms for captured monks & priests as well as buy back bibles & relics stolen by the Vikings. This stopped the forced conversion of pagans, but word quickly spread that there was opportunities to be exploited abroad and the raids expanded, eventually transforming into colonization. There were many factors that came together and made the Viking age what it was, but the casus belli that sparked it all was Charlemagne who massacred pagan Saxons who would not convert to Christianity. You can research the Massacre of Verden when 4,500 Saxons were massacred. It is also interesting to note the many writings of English monks who lamented the fury of the Northmen as a punishment from God. These monks understood the retalitory nature of the early raids, and knew about the massacred pagans. Paybacks a bitch.

  • @VoiceInTheCyberness
    @VoiceInTheCyberness 3 года назад +1

    It is hard to believe that the environment could allow a population explosion but the Avars and possibly other tribes from The East were looking for a home, this to me seems more plausible

  • @5amH45lam
    @5amH45lam 5 лет назад +8

    I'd be interested to hear the over-population story, as it's something I wasn't familiar with. Great videos, BTW. Thanks for the upload. 👍

  • @VelMa-opinion
    @VelMa-opinion 4 года назад +2

    So I've developed this fiendish obsession with history, and I've given lots of thought in addition to some serious study of known factual evidence.
    It seems to me, that the "Viking age" was in part started by these two things: a) instead of choosing chieftains by valour in combat (and personal combat) Scandinavians had picked up the idea of inheritance, of both chieftains and land rights; b) because the inheritance fell on the eldest son, younger sons were forced to find their own fortunes.
    There's clear suggestion that the Viking raiders were wealthy to begin with (weapons of iron, boats), and trained, so they thought rather than be subject to their own family, they'd take a risk. Add this to what you suggest, combined with the idea that they didn't hit upon Lindisfarne upon having crossed the North Sea, but were likely sons of people who had much more convenient access to British coast.

  • @Embracehistoria
    @Embracehistoria 5 лет назад +1

    Eric Bloodaxe is my favourite Viking.

  • @christophedel2642
    @christophedel2642 5 лет назад

    So interesting greetings from Normandy

  • @danoization
    @danoization 5 лет назад +5

    Charlemagne killing pagans had nothing to do with it?

  • @erikgranqvist3680
    @erikgranqvist3680 5 лет назад

    Most likley is that the raids started due to a number of reasons that converged into a few important points of decission.

  • @JohnnyLodge2
    @JohnnyLodge2 5 лет назад +4

    If the north germans could sail to england why wouldn't the Danes be able too?

  • @tommy-er6hh
    @tommy-er6hh 5 лет назад +2

    Are you going to do a simlar video about the start of some of the germans from Sweden (goths, vandals, others) Denmark (cimbri, tutones) into the south?
    - oh, yes on the other video, btw.
    Q: btw, what is the address of that reading you mentioned? I don't see it.

  • @chariotrider9716
    @chariotrider9716 5 лет назад +9

    Did he put the meme page in the description? I don't see it.

    • @historywithhilbert
      @historywithhilbert  5 лет назад +1

      You're right I forgot but updated now. Here it is:
      facebook.com/theblacksteedofWidukind/

  • @BListHistory
    @BListHistory 5 лет назад

    Keep it up man :)

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 5 лет назад +14

    Having more men than women is never a good idea. It causes tension and increases competition

    • @formgrya6927
      @formgrya6927 5 лет назад +1

      IDK man that sounds like a capitalist's wet dream.

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 5 лет назад +2

      @@formgrya6927 haha but no

    • @apropercuppa8612
      @apropercuppa8612 5 лет назад +4

      Micahistory 2 But having more women means more nagging and headaches. We’re fucked either way.

    • @shawnrileywest2826
      @shawnrileywest2826 5 лет назад

      Agreed

    • @isladurrant2015
      @isladurrant2015 5 лет назад

      There are societies that manage ... normally two brothers/one woman in isolated mountainous countries.

  • @yaroon2850
    @yaroon2850 5 лет назад

    Hoi Hilbert,
    At 13:45 in your video you cite Alcuin of York's letter as if he was referring to "Scandinavians", whereas the text on screen just says "pagans". Was the term "Scandinavia" even used in 793? Some historian once said that "Scandinavia" begins in Harlingen (Friesland, NL), at the statue of the stone man (Stenen Man). In that context, Scandinavian / pagan hairstyles may include Frisian hairstyles.
    Being a Frisian yourself, you know very well that the Frisians were the coastal, seafaring cousins of the Jutes, Angles and Saxons. Frisian traders crossed the North Sea (a.k.a. Mare Frisicum) long before the viking age. Probably, Frisian ships were used in the Anglo-Saxon migration, but Frisians didn't settle in Britain in large numbers themselves. (they sailed right back home to heit and mem)
    Frisians were stubbornly pagan, just like the people that later became known as Vikings. Paganism caused conflict with the stubbornly Catholic Franks. Many male pagan Frisians may have fled North, which may be one explanation for the imbalance of the sexes.
    So... If Alcuin was complaining about Scandinavian / pagan hairstyles, he could as well have been referring to the hairstyles of Frisian traders.

  • @MuddieRain
    @MuddieRain 5 лет назад

    Just case you were wondering. 8:52

  • @OpossumSupremacist
    @OpossumSupremacist 5 лет назад +1

    As an American, I'd be intrested in hearing your take on the issues we are having now. I think it would be nice to hear a European opinion that isn't just "just ban all weapons" or just restrict civil rights even more.

    • @SynValorum
      @SynValorum 5 лет назад +1

      Just go to the forest man, it'll all be okay from there.

    • @magnusorn7313
      @magnusorn7313 5 лет назад

      i mean regulations would be a nice start, i mean technically you can still get a gun without a permit in most states and you dont have to carry amo separately, thats a bit fucked

    • @Ozzianman
      @Ozzianman 3 года назад

      2 years late, but still gonna reply.
      Something most Americans do not seem to realize is that they have a illusion of a choice in politics. The Democrats and the Republicans are two sides of the same coin. The parties have for the most part, the same policies with a few exceptions here and there. While other parties do exist, the power and support the two main parties wield is so immense, the independent parties might as well not exist.
      The American political system, to me, seems like it has been constructed to (or manipulated to) split the people. Coalition government? Unheard of. Cooperation between the parties? Blasphemy! The us against them mentality which is permeating the US political environment and seemingly civilian life is depressing to me.
      To be fair, rural and urban US are two very different worlds with different needs, so I understand that they may differ a lot in their point of views, but the hate man... The casual, everyday animosity between democrats and republicans is shocking to me, both parties are just as guilty in encouraging this hate, guilty of this political hooliganism/tribalism/whateverismfitshereism. Little attempt at understanding where someone is coming from with their point of view.
      I wish there were more outsiders who could understand the Norwegian language, thus being able to follow Norwegian politics and share their point of view. Having an foreigners perspective is nice.
      With that, I want to share a bit about Norwegian politics.
      All in all, Norwegian politics is in a healthy state. Political propaganda are nowhere close to being as intense as it is in the US, and politicians across the political spectrum are friendly to each other, or at least polite. Mostly because they may shop in the same places, train at the same gym, share the same route to work etc... Politicians in general, even the career politicians, are normal people.
      Most of us do not care about who voted for what as long as we use our vote. At least in my social circle, not using your vote is looked upon as it mean you do not care about the society you live in. Voting blank is completely fair as it simply means you have deemed no party represents your views well enough, or you forgot about the election, realized it's the last voting day as you notice there is an oddly long queue in the otherwise empty community centre and could not decide what party to vote for (I have previously been in that situation...).
      In the current ongoing election, we have 9 major parties and around 10 minor parties. With this many parties, coalition governments are the norm.

  • @lievenpetersen
    @lievenpetersen 4 года назад

    Might as well call your channel "Comparing history to the Netherlands. With Hilbert"

  • @pew-pew2224
    @pew-pew2224 5 лет назад

    There is something I think that people tend to miss and that is the fact that Scandinavia at this time seems to have a very militarized society from the start. It seems that Scandinavians during the Roman empire and maybe later usually made a lot of money being axillary troops/mercenaries for others. This combining with the "weak kings" argument(that seems to be that Europe was in a period of relative peace so it spent less of defenses then previously) would mean that you had a lot of people getting rich by being mercenaries. This would mean that you had societies with well trained armed men that hold power who no longer could find any income. So raiding would solve this problem and could be another driving force for the viking age.

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 5 лет назад

    I never realised trade could have been a case for this to start

  • @jesperburns
    @jesperburns 5 лет назад

    I like how you cycle through accents.

  • @ShermerIllinois
    @ShermerIllinois 5 лет назад

    We Vikings Are Happy Vikings

  • @Pierluigi_Di_Lorenzo
    @Pierluigi_Di_Lorenzo 5 лет назад +2

    the Danes raided Friesland long before Lindisfarne. And before that, the Wikings raided eachother.

    • @SynValorum
      @SynValorum 5 лет назад

      That explains the
      DUTCH!!!

  • @historicalminds6812
    @historicalminds6812 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent video Hilbert, do you think you would be interested in doing one about the Indo-European Expansion? Also didn’t climatic factors play a role in the origins of the Viking age, such as the Medieval Warm Period?

    • @raphmaster23
      @raphmaster23 2 года назад

      There's speculation that the Charlemagne Saxon slaughter started the viking age.

  • @masonlemons6389
    @masonlemons6389 5 лет назад

    Great vid, is it old news that this is the metatron?

  • @matthewread7220
    @matthewread7220 5 лет назад

    Please do that video on the gun stuff, love your chanel mate.

  • @age3801
    @age3801 5 лет назад +3

    Didn't the anglo-saxons came from Danemark? Is possible they were still in contact with the relatives tribes from the regions they came form.

    • @user-gj1np9rp4d
      @user-gj1np9rp4d 5 лет назад +3

      Yes, they came from Northern Germany southern Denmark And Frisia. The one who stayed behind became Saxony and then got conquered by Charlemagne.

    • @modlio745
      @modlio745 5 лет назад

      @@user-gj1np9rp4d 'Ludvi[g]'? How the hell are everyone getting these rune usernames?

    • @Randi-k6m
      @Randi-k6m 5 лет назад +1

      According to old writings the brothers Hengist and Horsa from northern Jutland (Denmark) were invited by the English king to help against the threat from the Scots after the fall of the Roman Empire. They led the Angels (from the southern part of Denmark) the Saxons (from today’s northern Germany and most likely also some Frisians from the Netherlands. Hengist is considered to be the first king of Kent. Whether their names quoted in old writings are the real names, is debated. But the Jutes definitely came to England at the same time as the rest of the “gang”, in the 5th century, 250 years before the Viking Age started.

    • @c.i.a8359
      @c.i.a8359 4 года назад

      @@Randi-k6m There was no such thing as English back then. The English were the anglo saxons.

    • @Randi-k6m
      @Randi-k6m 4 года назад

      @@c.i.a8359 You are right.

  • @hglundahl
    @hglundahl 5 лет назад +1

    17:12 I know one of my friends is into shooters being InCels.

    • @hglundahl
      @hglundahl 5 лет назад

      For my part, I think practical school compulsion, both via InCel-dom and otherwise by imposing misery (notably psychiatric such) contributed to shootings.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 5 лет назад +7

    I love the Vikings and Leif Erikson Day, hinga dinga durgen

  • @marksharpe5384
    @marksharpe5384 5 лет назад

    Yes to the idea of that video.

  • @Hfil66
    @Hfil66 3 года назад

    There seem to be a number of studies that indicate more unmarried men lead to higher levels of violence, both inward violence within the community and outward violence (e.g. raiding or warfare).

  • @_robustus_
    @_robustus_ 5 лет назад +1

    Hilbert, whats up with that rune stone you’re using as a subliminal message?

  • @Timbo5000
    @Timbo5000 5 лет назад +11

    It was a counterattack/payback for Christian expansion into pagan lands, if you ask me. Perhaps some other factors intensified it. Pagan tribes were hostile with eachother frequently, but an organised Christian empire actively looking to convert and conquer you is a whole other cup of tea so I imagine they felt seriously threatened at the least.

    • @diegonatan6301
      @diegonatan6301 5 лет назад +4

      This "theory" is based completely on the imagination of its creators, it is pure fiction and has zero base in reality, it is just a neo-pagan invention, so the neo-pagans could play victim (with other certain political groups that like to play victim) against the always opressive Christians.

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall 5 лет назад +2

      @@diegonatan6301 I think you are being too defensive. I'm a Christian, but you must look at history objectively. Everybody was fighting everybody, and conflict begets conflict. The Christian Charlemagne expanded into Pagan territories, just as later on, Crusaders like the Teutonic Order expanded into the Pagan Baltics.

    • @grubbybum3614
      @grubbybum3614 5 лет назад +1

      @@shorewall who were these strong "Christian conqueres" during that time?
      Centralised Europe was so weak, maybe one or two missionaries sailed north, but I can't see how they exerted enough pressure for the Vikings to want "revenge"...

    • @Timbo5000
      @Timbo5000 5 лет назад

      @@grubbybum3614 It's not revenge per se, it's more aggression caused by a hostile empire being right at your doorstep. You can either wait for the more or less inevitable invasion or attempt to distort your enemies. If a group of people feels encroached upon by a hostile force, this is what I would roughly expect them to do.

    • @magnusorn7313
      @magnusorn7313 5 лет назад

      @@grubbybum3614 look into written accounts of how christians conquered saxony
      dont overlook the 4500 sacrificed pagans

  • @anotherelvis
    @anotherelvis 5 лет назад +1

    I wonder if the Norse vikings still remembered the migration age. The probably knew that they were related to the Franks and the Goths who had created empires in Europe.

    • @tilldeathcomes6611
      @tilldeathcomes6611 5 лет назад

      The Goths are from Sweden so I'm sure they knew, same with Lombards in north Italy & the Vandals ( extinct ) in north Africa

    • @tilldeathcomes6611
      @tilldeathcomes6611 5 лет назад

      & the Anglo Saxons being from today's Denmark & Northern Germany

    • @swevixeh
      @swevixeh 4 года назад +1

      Sure they did. Look up the Rök runestone in Sweden (geatland) from ca 800 AD which mentions the Goths and Theoderic the great at length. Why would they have been discussed, let alone on a massive, expensive runestone, centuries after their existence unless the locals felt a connection with them?

  • @jasonknox9596
    @jasonknox9596 4 года назад

    Hey! I can't find the link for the publication
    Could somebody help me out? I'm planning to write my dissertation about the Viking age it would be really important
    Many thanks

  • @noahtstapp
    @noahtstapp 5 лет назад

    I like to think the reason was fighting the same people over and over, Knowing that they have no valuables and trying to sail elsewhere

  • @lluvik2450
    @lluvik2450 4 года назад

    Interesting to see how sophisticated their society actually was. I always had this idea that they were scavengers and whatnot. I knew they weren't but that is still the way i pictured them. Turns out they actually had quite an established society

  • @horisontial
    @horisontial 5 лет назад

    Hey Hilbert. I would love to see that video on why the overpopulation theory is problematic in Scandinavia. Many tribes and peoples have to my knowledge lived on the Danish isles and Jutland in the last few millennia and have migrated due to competition from other tribes, such as the Danes. I thought the most supported theory was that the younger sons and bannermen (for a lack of a better word) of the nobility sought west because of lack of new land to expand into and lack of possibility at home.

  • @dieallgemeinheit2247
    @dieallgemeinheit2247 5 лет назад

    Just out of curiosity - I've read that in the Germanic cultures there was the practice of "Muntgelt" - where the husband to be pay a price to free (The current German word "freien" still stems from that) his future wife from the "Vormundschaft" of her father. I know that this practice remained intact for a long time in northern Germany and we learned that this was changed over time after christianization. Could you, maybe, check these practices? Pretty please :)

  • @klyanadkmorr
    @klyanadkmorr 3 года назад

    Alcuin of York "OmG how can you dress like those nasty Vikings!"
    Locals, "They FKING RAWK r METAL!!"

  • @hoegild1
    @hoegild1 5 лет назад +5

    Oh my where to begin... The theory about a shortage of women is just moronic. There was no "one child policy" in the viking age, and women was valued just as high as men- and there had been a extensive slave trade going on since the Roman times, so you could just import some women along the usual traderoutes. Ship building... the Jutes invaded England hundred of years before the viking age! The whole idea of a starting point for the viking age is completely misunderstood! Peoples from scandinavia has invaded mainland Europe since Republican Roman times! Danes made a huge profit as mercenaries in the Roman armies for hundred of years! The viking age did not "begin" with the attack on Lindisfarne, what happened was, that the attacks was intensified, and most important... documented. And, as the raids was succesful, they became better organised, better funded and better led. Succes fuels succes. And when the ships got perfected, they gave the Scandinavians a HUGE tactical advantage, that didnt disappear until the Cog was invented in the 1300 hundreds.

    • @magnusorn7313
      @magnusorn7313 5 лет назад

      "so you could just import some women" not if you are embargoed by all of christian europe, you would 1 have a lack of slaves to buy as there the market is smaller 2 not have enough income coming onto the country to afford it

    • @magnusorn7313
      @magnusorn7313 5 лет назад

      "The viking age did not "begin" with the attack on Lindisfarne" no it did, vikigngs existed before, yes, viking raids existed before, yes
      yest the viking period is characterized by an intense increase in the frequency of these raids
      what people want to know is why it became so frequent

  • @TheDAWinz
    @TheDAWinz 5 лет назад +5

    Scandinavia is relatively barely populated today as well they could fill up all that space if they wanted to talk about over population honestly.

    • @hazzmati
      @hazzmati 5 лет назад +2

      Problem is norway is very mountainous so there was much space for farmland or settlement. That's why norway's population is so low, so when they say overpopulated they mean relative to norway's geography. Denmark also has a small population but the landmass itself is much smaller so denmark is actually pretty densely populated.

  • @666Maeglin
    @666Maeglin 5 лет назад

    @Hilbert, where can I find a little more information about the nordic style frisian flag. As in Fries yn Denemarken sou ik graach wat mear witte wolle oer dy fryske flagge. En is dy flagge ek te keap?

  • @MistressQueenBee
    @MistressQueenBee 5 лет назад +2

    Yes please, regarding consensus count for continuing population theory. Consensus for mass shooting theorizes? I am from the Great State of Texas. We do not need more exposure to the pain of "mass shooting". We are aware of both sides of that fence.I vote No.

  • @tonymultani
    @tonymultani 5 лет назад

    It was Floki who built the long ships for the Vikings

  • @Khasidon
    @Khasidon 5 лет назад +1

    Land, silver and women, is something men have sought in every age, it's not uniquely to the vikings. 5:38

    • @SynValorum
      @SynValorum 5 лет назад

      lol, trivial pursuits.

  • @Kitiwake
    @Kitiwake 5 лет назад

    Interesting.... Latest findings is that the population of Ireland was falling at the start of the norse invasions and that they reversed this trend.

  • @sweetliberteatv
    @sweetliberteatv 5 лет назад +1

    Would love to hear your thoughts on men in the modern day.