You have the same name of my old comrade his name was Gustav dragovich he was good man I think your would get along well he was like you he liked more traditional ways of making stuff he was a blacksmith
It certainly roped me in. I'm a frayed knot to miss what Lindy comes up with next! I hope he gets some rest first though as he was looking Visby tired. Sorry that last pun was stretching it...
I love this channel. I stumbled upon it a couple days ago with the video about berserkers, and I have been absolutely hooked on it for the last couple days.
In 1956, this farmyard rope-walk method was still being used in Northern Italy, making rope from Locally grown Hemp ( Canapa) also used for textile making. I was 7 at the time, and saw it on a cousin's farm whilst visiting from Australia.
Wow 1956! In the Netherlands, this technique was still used in the 19th century. 20th century I'm not certain. Wouldn't be suprised if locally people still (in the 20th century) did stuff (in the Netherlands or Italy) this way.
Before this, I would have thought that rope was made solely by hand, by some dirty guy in a pile of mud. I am definitely glad that people of the past are constantly surprising me by their ingenuity.
+DaaaahWhoosh Oh, you need to visit Visby then, a lot of the medieval buildings are intact and some are open to visitors during the summer. Visby was probably the cleanest medieval city in northern Europe to beeot thanks to it's cobbled streets, stone buildings and underground sewage system. The city is built in a steep incline over lime stone cliffs from the sea up towards marshier ground some way outside the city walls inland (now long since drained and urbanised) Those wetlands provided a never ending stream of water coursing through the layered lime stone of the city and was early on channelled into an underground sewer system beneath the streets and houses and out into the Baltic sea by way of the harbour and many other outlets.
Those uneducated, superstitious, ignoramus' were smarter than we give them credit for aren't they? While I wouldn't want to live in the Medieval era, I do believe that a lot of their technology is superior to what we use today. The sustainability of their products, tools and other stuff might be over-engineered by academic standards today, but the labor costs of a structure that lasts for several hundred years I believe is far superior to our modern ones.
@@IvanSN Do tell? Our houses today won't stand for 30 years (if that) before they start falling down. How many buildings today do you think will still be standing 2000 years from now (like the Romans)? Modern products contain weak plastics that are deliberately designed to break rendering the product useless in less than a decade. You practically have to manufacture it yourself if you want something to last... While there are many things that are superior about our lives today, our wasteful economic practices are not one of them. So, do tell... 😉
@@tyree9055 To steelman what would probably be a very poor argument - building standards and construction practices are advancing much more rapidly today than they were 500 years prior. If you're going to tear down a house in 40 years hence because it'll be declared unfit for habitation due to previously unknown health hazards or the like anyway, then there's no point in constructing something built to last for a hundred years. You're also suffering from survivorship bias here - we only see the buildings that lasted, not the ones that did collapse, no matter how many times they were rebuilt.
wow, why didn't people in the old days just not do the extra twist for every 4 cranks of the handle and enjoy the boiled spaghetti it made? i bet less people would have gone hungry then.
+MMQuck Don't tell anyone, it's a long and well kept secret, but that's how we Italians make spaghetti, indeed! We don't do the backwards twist and instead of a rope we have boiled spaghetti. Then we process them through the un-boiling machine (also known as the unboiler) and they're ready for packaging!
This video was interesting to me because a few years ago i did some online research into my family history and got as far back as the late 1700s. I couldn't go farther back without actually taveling to Europe. One of my Welsh ancestors on my fathers side worked in a rope factory in Cardigan, Wales. So I can see what sort of thing he would have been doing. Thanks for the upload.
Great video,rope making is one of the most important skills man invented...in my opinion any way...ranks up there with the wheel,the gear and the pulley.
I have been working in Jute Spinning and Jute Goods Exporting sector since last 24 years !! I was very fortunate to get trained by best jute technical persons of The Netherlands, Belgium, Japan , Northern Ireland Still feels amazed by these videos.
I've been taking kids to the annual Civil War Reenactment in Fresno, Calif. for the last 25+ years, learning a bit of history firsthand is more fun and goes deeper. Usually 1200-1600+ reenactors, Northern, Southern, civilian and Sutler encampments, many vendors, displays of weaving, broommaking,, boatbuilding, cooking, medical, telegraph, whole lot more. Not every year, but sometimes there would be a wandering Rope Maker. He would get a curious group, pick out 3 young kids for an impromptu Ropewalk, and teach / explain the process and history - always a great hit, and the kids would split up a 10 to 15 ft. 1/2 " sisal rope as souveniers. This was excellent seeing another example, and very well done!
I must say - - - this is one of the best Non-Chainmaille videos I have ever seen from you!!! Well done!! I am so glad I found the Lindybeige Channel. Please keep posting.
This is why I love this channel, as well as getting stuff about historical warfare we also get the "mundane" everyday things that contributed to society back then, i.e. some average joe's job and how they did it. These videos always capture my attention more to be honest, but then again, all of Lindy's content is good.
MoonUnit IV The joke starts with Lindy's title then, as this rope-making setup is not more medieval than the _cheap_ film props used to represent medieval wheels. We are short people discussing pots and kettles.
That was extremely educational I watched one video of these guys in Australia and they couldn't make a rope to save their soul they kept getting it all bunched up and twisted nodded but this guy obviously knows what he's doing thank you for the video I enjoyed it extremely....👍👍
I loved that rhyme at the end. A good bit of rope, can help a man cope, and offer him hope on a slippery slope. But a length of a string is no sort of thing for a climber to cling, nor for Tarzan to swing.
At the ropery at Chatham historic dockyards, after making some rope, they demonstrate than the length can stand straight up in your hand to demonstrate its awesomeness. Also interestingly major suppliers of rope to the royal navy inserted a coloured strand into the rope to identify the manufacturer. If your rope was later found to be defective, your ropery would be fined. Very interesting, I'm glad they showed me the ropes. :)
I was just pining to myself this morning: "I think I can make the rope I use myself". And then I watched this video. Now, I don't want to. (Thank you for the video, it was very educational).
Wow, small world. I have made rope in Chatham :D Obviously not a thousand feet long... more like fifteen but it was a fun project to use up an hour between events ^^ EDIT: This was a very clear documentation and presentation of the process, thanks for bringing this to us Lloyd ^^
In addition to cutting rope, in movies with sailing ships it drives me nuts when someone sticks a knife into a sail and slides down it. WTF?!? Do you realize how expensive a piece of fabric that large is? And how much time sailors spend repairing even *small* tears? Not to mention the tactical damage you've just done to the ship, in case you'd need to sail it quickly.
@@connormclernon26 Even if it is an enemy ship, if you take it intact, you'll still need sails to take it back to be re-flagged and added to your own navy.
The other problem is that it won't actually work. The sails aren't that strong; you'll zip down rapidly and go splat on the deck and then be captured by the immensely unhappy sailors who will now have to fix that sail. :-) That said, damaging a sail is absolutely something that might happen during a real naval battle in the Age of Sail. While they would indeed like to capture the enemy ships, their first priority is defeating them, and ships can still sail with less than their full set of sails. And if all else fails, you can tow the prize ship.
I have made raw hide ropes like this but made out of a single cow hide that has been cut into a single strand by starting at the centre of a fresh, cleaned and salted hide and cutting a single strip about 6mm wide. The cut is varied depending on the thickness of the hide. Once twisted the rope is stretched and allowed to dry out. These ropes are very good for handling stock as you don’t get friction burns
I really should make one of those. I have all the materials I need to make that, and I have plenty of wild grasses that would work as a rope material. Making your own rope is useful, even if you can get it cheap at any store right now.
There is a vary common little stick that is found in places with other remains or hunters and gatherers. It has three holes in a line with on one side the beginning of screw thread, and it is very possible all of those were used to make rope with the same idea. On one side there are three people holding one string of fibers while adding and turning it. On the other side there is one person pulling and turning the new rope in the other side. And I honestly think this way of rope making is almost as important as farming or mastering fire.
when you said you made your own rope i thought howd he do that then watching you make it was like watching a history book come to life lol thanks for showing this was really interesting.
The weight in the Egyptian drawing with the weight could be used with the handle to heave the rope up and down and get it oscillating thereby winding the rope much easier. I've seen riggers today still using a similar technique to serve rigging on historic ships. Just a thought. While working on historic vessels we've used a very similar rig to the one at the market to demonstrate rope making. Instead of the stick in the middle for keeping the yarns separated we used a round wedge with three grooves for the yarns and a dowel as a handle.
The revered war hero Colonel Johan August Sandels always trained his men to think like soldiers. One time he saw a kitchen man balancing with a cart stocked too full. As the cart tipped over, the man caught a keg of beer while letting everything else spread to the ground. "That is right. Strategy is the skill to choose your battles", said Sandels.
i have a question that has nothing to do with medieval rope-making. On those long marches, how did soldiers carry their shields? Did they just carry them in their hand, or strapped them on their backs? Sorry for grammar, not native English.
in Karlskrona (Sweden) they have one of the longest wooden houses in the world (300 meter) and it was used for making ropes to the navy. started in the 1700, and I think they still making ropes there some times but that more like for showing the turist.
2:46 - Thumbs up for authenticity and realism in this drawn medieval picture. "This is my life. Making rope. That's my singular purpose. Every day. I do nothing all day but make rope. Fuck, I hate this stupid rope stuff!"
Lindybeige do you like sweden it seams you travel alot to sweden. I mean sure any history lover loves Visby but generaly they cant travel thire to often
+Lindybeige Then sooner or later I suspect we might encounter eachother as I plan on moving back to my island as soon as economy allows me and I also love the medieval week. (btw, it was I who emailed you about some roman re-enactment gear about a year and a half ago)
My scout troop made rope this way once using plastic twine. It was so labor intensive that to this day I describe my aversion to cutting a rope as "religious". Just stow the ends off and spare the line.
Can someone please explain what keeps the rope from untwisting? It seems unlikely that there's some type of glue involved, and I have a hard time figuring out how friction force alone keeps the rope a rope and not fall into seperate strings when its in use.
EattinThurs61 But how does that explain why the rope stays together once the tension from the spools is gone? Why doesn't it unravel when you throw it on the ground afterwards. Bindin the ends together won't stop the middle from untwisting. And it can't be plastic deformation as far as I know. I want to know the actual mechanics that hold rope as a rope, that stop it from becoming seperate strings. Different directions of twisting shouldn't stop the largest sub-strings from unraveling from the main rope and after that the strings making up that substring etc.
+NiekGAE It actually IS that simple. The three strands are twisted one way and the whole rope is twisted the other way, the important thing is to keep them twisted evenly so they can counter each other. I've made a couple of bowstrings myself and if the strands are sufficiently twisted the whole thing keeps its shape.
Kuba Dutkowski I believe you, I've made rope myself when I was younger. I know it happens because rope is a thing. But what I meant is what is the physics behind it? Why does twisting the other way counter eachother? What is the force that keeps the strings together, is it friction, torque, internal pressure from sections wanting to unravel so they get tangled, what? I really can't figure out the mechanics behind rope, how the forces work. The only thing I can think of why the outside strands don't untangle is because most of the length is on the inside of the rope, surrounded by other strings of rope keeping it in place through friction. And that fixed position doesn't allow for movement in the exposed strings that behave as if its fixed between two clips. But I don't know if thats true nor do I know why releasing the pulling tension keeps the middle from untangling. Seems to me that that should happen for the 3 main strings.
+NiekGAE the thing is that groups of strands push against each other, that is one wants to unravel clockwise, while the other wants to uravel counterclockwise.
Hi this is Gustav, we met at Visby. Thanks for the lovely conversation and i hope to see you next year.
Hello Gustav! Welcome to Lindybeige's channel. We, his fans, love his history videos and were glad to see what you could teach us.
Some of us also love your name. ;)
You have the same name of my old comrade his name was Gustav dragovich he was good man I think your would get along well he was like you he liked more traditional ways of making stuff he was a blacksmith
No I’m Gustav
@@dominique.gonzalez622 lies and deseat ye online goblin
What a twist!
+Stu Saville A very well-rounded video, I must say.
+Stu Saville It really tied my attention.
It certainly roped me in.
I'm a frayed knot to miss what Lindy comes up with next!
I hope he gets some rest first though as he was looking Visby tired.
Sorry that last pun was stretching it...
Stu Saville
I guess that's all right. 'Tis always good to tie up loose ends.
Hey guys, what's going on in this thread?
"I am the best ropemaker here."
Well, that's rather arrogant/confident of you.
"I am the only one."
Oh.
+TheBeastWithin Maybe you didn't hear the next sentence he said? "I am also the only rope maker here, hehe" Implying he was making a joke.
Sonny Knutson I know, I was trying to make a joke, as well. 😉
+TheBeastWithin Sorry I did not see the lines below. All I saw was:
"I am the best ropemaker here.
Well, that's rather arrogant/confident of you."
:p
"Not to sound arrogant or anything, but I am the _greatest_ botanist on this planet."
I've worked with a rope maker, they all think that they're the best.
I love this channel. I stumbled upon it a couple days ago with the video about berserkers, and I have been absolutely hooked on it for the last couple days.
+eeyuup BERSERKERS!
+Danny Eisenga Bezerk errs ?
+Danny Eisenga of the VIKINGS!
+eeyuup Yeah, that's how it starts out for everyone. I came here because of the Romans and other weaponry goodies.
+Cri354 And I for the Vikings^^
His confidence in his rope is a sure sign of a good rope maker!
That was genuinely cool.
In 1956, this farmyard rope-walk method was still being used in Northern Italy, making rope from Locally grown Hemp ( Canapa) also used for textile making.
I was 7 at the time, and saw it on a cousin's farm whilst visiting from Australia.
Wow 1956! In the Netherlands, this technique was still used in the 19th century. 20th century I'm not certain. Wouldn't be suprised if locally people still (in the 20th century) did stuff (in the Netherlands or Italy) this way.
The beginning with the little kids riding in the baskets!
😄
SO CUTE!!!!!!
Before this, I would have thought that rope was made solely by hand, by some dirty guy in a pile of mud. I am definitely glad that people of the past are constantly surprising me by their ingenuity.
+DaaaahWhoosh Oh, you need to visit Visby then, a lot of the medieval buildings are intact and some are open to visitors during the summer.
Visby was probably the cleanest medieval city in northern Europe to beeot thanks to it's cobbled streets, stone buildings and underground sewage system. The city is built in a steep incline over lime stone cliffs from the sea up towards marshier ground some way outside the city walls inland (now long since drained and urbanised) Those wetlands provided a never ending stream of water coursing through the layered lime stone of the city and was early on channelled into an underground sewer system beneath the streets and houses and out into the Baltic sea by way of the harbour and many other outlets.
Those uneducated, superstitious, ignoramus' were smarter than we give them credit for aren't they?
While I wouldn't want to live in the Medieval era, I do believe that a lot of their technology is superior to what we use today. The sustainability of their products, tools and other stuff might be over-engineered by academic standards today, but the labor costs of a structure that lasts for several hundred years I believe is far superior to our modern ones.
@@tyree9055
What a stupid thing to say
@@IvanSN Do tell?
Our houses today won't stand for 30 years (if that) before they start falling down. How many buildings today do you think will still be standing 2000 years from now (like the Romans)?
Modern products contain weak plastics that are deliberately designed to break rendering the product useless in less than a decade. You practically have to manufacture it yourself if you want something to last...
While there are many things that are superior about our lives today, our wasteful economic practices are not one of them.
So, do tell... 😉
@@tyree9055 To steelman what would probably be a very poor argument - building standards and construction practices are advancing much more rapidly today than they were 500 years prior. If you're going to tear down a house in 40 years hence because it'll be declared unfit for habitation due to previously unknown health hazards or the like anyway, then there's no point in constructing something built to last for a hundred years.
You're also suffering from survivorship bias here - we only see the buildings that lasted, not the ones that did collapse, no matter how many times they were rebuilt.
Lloyd's mad-scientist-hair on point, bravo
"A few links of chain
Might cause you some pain
And help you refrain
From stealing again"
wow, why didn't people in the old days just not do the extra twist for every 4 cranks of the handle and enjoy the boiled spaghetti it made? i bet less people would have gone hungry then.
+MMQuck Don't tell anyone, it's a long and well kept secret, but that's how we Italians make spaghetti, indeed! We don't do the backwards twist and instead of a rope we have boiled spaghetti. Then we process them through the un-boiling machine (also known as the unboiler) and they're ready for packaging!
+Federico Spadone explains alot about the taste ^^
They're afraid of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
Mmmm jute spaghetti yummy yummy
really? this is funny for you.
Great video as always. Simpler things like this remind me of the ingenuity, and creativity people have. Thanks, Lindybeige.
This can't be authentic! Where are all the random burning things?
And the filth? There must be lots of filth!
There isn't a single scrap of leather wristbands anywhere!
And I don’t see anyone dying of plague. This is fake af.
And plague, don't forget about plague.
They burnt down
Nic to see such old craftmenship.
3:48 it was a Flemish boy :D "Blijven draaien gij". "You keep turning"
Yupp!!! Now on to guessing which part of Belgium :p
I'm Dutch, didn't even notice until I rewatched. But its pretty quiet.
Wow, I just learned how to make rope from one of the best rope makers in the world.
Thank you for sharing this with us.
I really mean it.
I genuinely thought the spinning child thing had something to do with the rope making
what the..! he cut the rope with a knife in the end !
Yea? Why
It's a joking reference to the video Lindybeige posted the next day, "Rope and Hollywood." Don't cut the rope!
He cut the yarn not the rope
What a twonk!
Which IS actually strange, since there are also methods where you don't have to cut that much material off
This video was interesting to me because a few years ago i did some online research into my family history and got as far back as the late 1700s. I couldn't go farther back without actually taveling to Europe. One of my Welsh ancestors on my fathers side worked in a rope factory in Cardigan, Wales. So I can see what sort of thing he would have been doing. Thanks for the upload.
I love the enthusiasm that all the people at medieval fairs and stuff have. Properly passionate about it and love to show others.
it makes me so happy that he whip-finished the end instead of using electrical tape like so many do.
Great video,rope making is one of the most important skills man invented...in my opinion any way...ranks up there with the wheel,the gear and the pulley.
I have been working in Jute Spinning and Jute Goods Exporting sector since last 24 years !! I was very fortunate to get trained by best jute technical persons of The Netherlands, Belgium, Japan , Northern Ireland Still feels amazed by these videos.
Love it when I get recommended an old but still interesting video. Evergreen content FTW!
Amazing! I'm a huge advocate for all things rope/cord related and this has made my morning, thank you so much for sharing!
I can't explain why but I had to pause when you did the power boost. I laughed so much I had tears in my eyes. So unexpected and randomly brilliant.
I've been taking kids to the annual Civil War Reenactment in Fresno, Calif. for the last 25+ years, learning a bit of history firsthand is more fun and goes deeper. Usually 1200-1600+ reenactors, Northern, Southern, civilian and Sutler encampments, many vendors, displays of weaving, broommaking,, boatbuilding, cooking, medical, telegraph, whole lot more. Not every year, but sometimes there would be a wandering Rope Maker. He would get a curious group, pick out 3 young kids for an impromptu Ropewalk, and teach / explain the process and history - always a great hit, and the kids would split up a 10 to 15 ft. 1/2 " sisal rope as souveniers. This was excellent seeing another example, and very well done!
I must say - - - this is one of the best Non-Chainmaille videos I have ever seen from you!!! Well done!! I am so glad I found the Lindybeige Channel. Please keep posting.
Was that a fan at the end?
+Simply Rover He was one of about fifteen people a day who recognised me.
Impressive
+Lindybeige Why the hell did I decide to not visit the Visby medieval market this year?! I would have made for an awesome cameo in the end
+Simply Rover A fan? No, he was a human.
Hilarious.
This is why I love this channel, as well as getting stuff about historical warfare we also get the "mundane" everyday things that contributed to society back then, i.e. some average joe's job and how they did it. These videos always capture my attention more to be honest, but then again, all of Lindy's content is good.
Always interesting to see how things where done in the ancient world. Even more interesting when the process hasn't changed much in the modern one!
Congrats Lindybeige. Because of you I now know how they made both twine and rope.
That was pretty cool to watch.
Come on! We all saw in the movies that people in the past were so stupid that they could make only solid wheels and here you see wooden gears.
+fizikshizik They used weels? I always thought they just shoved some round logs under whatever they wanted to transport and push it.
+fizikshizik The older versions are without gears, just handles locked together by a frame or otherwise belt driven (over solid pulleys).
+Adamast You must be short, cause that joke was very low, but still went over your head.
MoonUnit IV The joke starts with Lindy's title then, as this rope-making setup is not more medieval than the _cheap_ film props used to represent medieval wheels. We are short people discussing pots and kettles.
Adamast At least my kettle hasn't been filled with salt.
(Was that a clever joke? Or am I just prolonging this 'discussion?')
M. Night Shyamalan sure liked this video.
ArthurAlcantara what a twist
That was extremely educational I watched one video of these guys in Australia and they couldn't make a rope to save their soul they kept getting it all bunched up and twisted nodded but this guy obviously knows what he's doing thank you for the video I enjoyed it extremely....👍👍
Subscribed! I love looking at medieval stuff like this, and the editing, presentation, and pace are really well done.
lovely... the sound of dutch, danish and english coming together :)
LB, you're the best. Thanks for enriching my life.
This is my favourite video on youtube.
I loved that rhyme at the end. A good bit of rope, can help a man cope, and offer him hope on a slippery slope. But a length of a string is no sort of thing for a climber to cling, nor for Tarzan to swing.
"What do we need a rope for?" "Charles Bronson always carries a rope, and they always end up needing it" --- Boondock Saints.
I believe Connor says "Charlie" not Charles, but still, one of the best movie scenes ever.
thanks for this video with it i was able to make rope with my scouts, just replaced all moving parts with scouts and it makes great rope!
He was certainly the best rope maker I've ever seen
My day started with watching primitive tool making, then I got roped into this video!
Eyoo!
Who would've thought rope-making could be this interesting.
At the ropery at Chatham historic dockyards, after making some rope, they demonstrate than the length can stand straight up in your hand to demonstrate its awesomeness. Also interestingly major suppliers of rope to the royal navy inserted a coloured strand into the rope to identify the manufacturer. If your rope was later found to be defective, your ropery would be fined. Very interesting, I'm glad they showed me the ropes. :)
I was just pining to myself this morning: "I think I can make the rope I use myself". And then I watched this video. Now, I don't want to. (Thank you for the video, it was very educational).
He knows his craft, good teacher as well.
Wow, small world. I have made rope in Chatham :D Obviously not a thousand feet long... more like fifteen but it was a fun project to use up an hour between events ^^
EDIT: This was a very clear documentation and presentation of the process, thanks for bringing this to us Lloyd ^^
Great video, love the poem at the end.
In addition to cutting rope, in movies with sailing ships it drives me nuts when someone sticks a knife into a sail and slides down it.
WTF?!? Do you realize how expensive a piece of fabric that large is? And how much time sailors spend repairing even *small* tears? Not to mention the tactical damage you've just done to the ship, in case you'd need to sail it quickly.
gevmage that depends, is it an enemy ship?
@@connormclernon26 Even if it is an enemy ship, if you take it intact, you'll still need sails to take it back to be re-flagged and added to your own navy.
@@MonkeyJedi99 They aren't documentaries yah know...
@@jimvonmoon And that’s all movies are meant to be. Cool. Fuck realism or honesty, cool is their god.
The other problem is that it won't actually work. The sails aren't that strong; you'll zip down rapidly and go splat on the deck and then be captured by the immensely unhappy sailors who will now have to fix that sail. :-)
That said, damaging a sail is absolutely something that might happen during a real naval battle in the Age of Sail. While they would indeed like to capture the enemy ships, their first priority is defeating them, and ships can still sail with less than their full set of sails. And if all else fails, you can tow the prize ship.
This is pretty neat. Archeosoup also has a thing on rope making.
I have made raw hide ropes like this but made out of a single cow hide that has been cut into a single strand by starting at the centre of a fresh, cleaned and salted hide and cutting a single strip about 6mm wide. The cut is varied depending on the thickness of the hide. Once twisted the rope is stretched and allowed to dry out. These ropes are very good for handling stock as you don’t get friction burns
Wow, I hope you made more videos while at that market. This is great.
Wow, I was literally there a couple days ago for the midsummer's day festival on my vacation, that is so trippy!
Wow, another thing I had never given thought about. Amazing! Thanks for the video.
Who would've thought that that thing I use to choke myself has such an old and cool looking creation process!
i went from science vids, to reaction vids, to action vids to this. im so fascinated xD
Wonderful. Really enjoyed that, cheers fella.
I did not search for this neither have watched anything related to this but here i am
I'll never take rope for granted again. Pretty amazing really.
simply amazing what humans have achieved. thanks for the great video!
Nice to see you in Sweden once more!
Finally something interestring on youtube
That was terrifically interesting. Thanks so much.
I have to say that you sounded a lot like Markus Briggstoke during the rope-making demonstration. Well done video! Very informative.
Hey wow I live in Chatham and never knew it had the largest brick building, that's interesting! love your videos, always learning :-)
I really should make one of those. I have all the materials I need to make that, and I have plenty of wild grasses that would work as a rope material. Making your own rope is useful, even if you can get it cheap at any store right now.
my family is from Visby! I miss gotland so much
There is a vary common little stick that is found in places with other remains or hunters and gatherers. It has three holes in a line with on one side the beginning of screw thread, and it is very possible all of those were used to make rope with the same idea. On one side there are three people holding one string of fibers while adding and turning it. On the other side there is one person pulling and turning the new rope in the other side. And I honestly think this way of rope making is almost as important as farming or mastering fire.
It was a relief that there were no knickers in a twist there.
When I heard medieval Market my stomach growled a little. Love me some 13th century food. :)
Bought my bow att this market. Greetings from Sweden! :D
This was very interesting! Did you get to keep the rope, or perhaps buy it?
+Jonsson Yes, it is mine.
+Lindybeige any plans with it?
like making gallows... :)
+Lindybeige I am jealous :(
Very interesting! I never seen anything like this before! Thank you.
when you said you made your own rope i thought howd he do that then watching you make it was like watching a history book come to life lol thanks for showing this was really interesting.
OMG, it's so funny to hear the little kid's dad speak Belgian Dutch (Flemish) :D what a small world.
3:51 That was Dutch. It made my day
more specifically Flemish, from Belgium
Now I wanna know how they make the yarn.
+Paul J. Morton They either bought it commercially, or they used a distaff and spindle, or maybe a spinning wheel.
+Paul J. Morton Lindy has a video on viking yarn-making.
+Bladsmith I'll look it up
I needed to make some ropehandles for my viking boatchest i made but i made it by hand with the technique from the vid. thanks!
The weight in the Egyptian drawing with the weight could be used with the handle to heave the rope up and down and get it oscillating thereby winding the rope much easier. I've seen riggers today still using a similar technique to serve rigging on historic ships. Just a thought. While working on historic vessels we've used a very similar rig to the one at the market to demonstrate rope making. Instead of the stick in the middle for keeping the yarns separated we used a round wedge with three grooves for the yarns and a dowel as a handle.
Ah, I see they added the top. Same thing. Cool.
The revered war hero Colonel Johan August Sandels always trained his men to think like soldiers. One time he saw a kitchen man balancing with a cart stocked too full. As the cart tipped over, the man caught a keg of beer while letting everything else spread to the ground. "That is right. Strategy is the skill to choose your battles", said Sandels.
i have a question that has nothing to do with medieval rope-making. On those long marches, how did soldiers carry their shields? Did they just carry them in their hand, or strapped them on their backs? Sorry for grammar, not native English.
+kojbo Often shields would surely be loaded on wagons.
+kojbo Adjustable straps that could be removed prior to battle.
+kojbo yea what they said. I'm a smart too.
+kojbo They rode them like skateboards.
+MrDUneven Yes, because LotR is realistic. Right? Right!?
Fascinating, thank you for the incredible video. 😁
in Karlskrona (Sweden) they have one of the longest wooden houses in the world (300 meter) and it was used for making ropes to the navy. started in the 1700, and I think they still making ropes there some times but that more like for showing the turist.
thanks for the videos.. we can be a creative species when we put our minds to it
Awesome video, i never saw this when i lived in Kalmar or visited Gotland :D
Didn't even notice this was Lindy until he made the VERY Lindy joke about being good at the job
2:46 - Thumbs up for authenticity and realism in this drawn medieval picture. "This is my life. Making rope. That's my singular purpose. Every day. I do nothing all day but make rope. Fuck, I hate this stupid rope stuff!"
Lindybeige do you like sweden it seams you travel alot to sweden. I mean sure any history lover loves Visby but generaly they cant travel thire to often
+deadline93 I go there often because of herrang - the camp itself and then the people I meet there.
+Lindybeige Then sooner or later I suspect we might encounter eachother as I plan on moving back to my island as soon as economy allows me and I also love the medieval week. (btw, it was I who emailed you about some roman re-enactment gear about a year and a half ago)
+Lindybeige By that do you mean the Herräng Dance Camp or someplace else?
My scout troop made rope this way once using plastic twine. It was so labor intensive that to this day I describe my aversion to cutting a rope as "religious". Just stow the ends off and spare the line.
The power boost made me laugh out loud!
I was there like a week before you uploaded it!
HE CUT THE ROPE! :O
great story and love the craft. the claim of who is longest must consider the roperia of lisboa (1775) at 1159' (353.3 m)
What?! If I went there I could have seen you? Damnit! I missed out on the event itself and meeting you.
I never heard anyone say anti clockwise till now. Strange, but a new way to say counter clockwise.
Can someone please explain what keeps the rope from untwisting? It seems unlikely that there's some type of glue involved, and I have a hard time figuring out how friction force alone keeps the rope a rope and not fall into seperate strings when its in use.
You twist it in different direction every time you make it thicker.
EattinThurs61 But how does that explain why the rope stays together once the tension from the spools is gone? Why doesn't it unravel when you throw it on the ground afterwards. Bindin the ends together won't stop the middle from untwisting. And it can't be plastic deformation as far as I know.
I want to know the actual mechanics that hold rope as a rope, that stop it from becoming seperate strings. Different directions of twisting shouldn't stop the largest sub-strings from unraveling from the main rope and after that the strings making up that substring etc.
+NiekGAE It actually IS that simple. The three strands are twisted one way and the whole rope is twisted the other way, the important thing is to keep them twisted evenly so they can counter each other. I've made a couple of bowstrings myself and if the strands are sufficiently twisted the whole thing keeps its shape.
Kuba Dutkowski I believe you, I've made rope myself when I was younger. I know it happens because rope is a thing. But what I meant is what is the physics behind it? Why does twisting the other way counter eachother? What is the force that keeps the strings together, is it friction, torque, internal pressure from sections wanting to unravel so they get tangled, what? I really can't figure out the mechanics behind rope, how the forces work.
The only thing I can think of why the outside strands don't untangle is because most of the length is on the inside of the rope, surrounded by other strings of rope keeping it in place through friction. And that fixed position doesn't allow for movement in the exposed strings that behave as if its fixed between two clips. But I don't know if thats true nor do I know why releasing the pulling tension keeps the middle from untangling. Seems to me that that should happen for the 3 main strings.
+NiekGAE the thing is that groups of strands push against each other, that is one wants to unravel clockwise, while the other wants to uravel counterclockwise.
What a nice old man :-)