Who Are the Welsh?

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @oldhippiejon
    @oldhippiejon Год назад +254

    Born in England from Welsh stock the country called me far before I understood the politics, one visit to family was all it took, like meeting your true love it grew in my heart, this land were I now live is in my soul and will always be. My grandchildren are all Welsh who speak the old language, soon maybe my remains will be buried under Welsh soil and I will be part of the country again, I will rest easy of that I am sure.

    • @RenataCantore
      @RenataCantore 10 месяцев назад +6

      I Love your beautiful statement. God bless you and your Family ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉

    • @sueh9138
      @sueh9138 9 месяцев назад +4

      How wonderful!

    • @V.T.1989
      @V.T.1989 9 месяцев назад +7

      That was how I felt on my first visit to wales,from America.

    • @KingUsyk
      @KingUsyk 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@V.T.1989of course you did 😂 Americans lol

    • @noelfleming3567
      @noelfleming3567 8 месяцев назад +4

      Well said I'm d same in my little corner good health to you❤

  • @northernlion8738
    @northernlion8738 Год назад +376

    As an Englishman currently studying in Wales, I have mad respect for the Welsh. The fact the language has stood against the test of time to the modern day is remarkable.

    • @BobAlong-l5y
      @BobAlong-l5y Год назад +13

      respect englishman from a south whillian

    • @stigkrakpants3052
      @stigkrakpants3052 Год назад

      do you respect the somalis?@@BobAlong-l5y

    • @ljones396
      @ljones396 Год назад +30

      Thank you, diolch. It's refreshing to read something positive about Cymraeg for once. 😎🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

    • @mikemines2931
      @mikemines2931 Год назад +4

      What's Welsh for television?

    • @ljones396
      @ljones396 Год назад

      @@mikemines2931 teledu

  • @jaywatanabe4706
    @jaywatanabe4706 Год назад +586

    As a Welsh descendent in Canada I’ve always wanted to know more about our roots as it was made clear by my Grandpa that we were “Welsh” folk. I have a great admiration for our forefathers tenacity, endurance and preservation of our culture against great odds - As was noted they withstood the Germanic tribes while Rome itself fell to them. And the bards, singers and great epics! Culture is a beautiful thing that is indeed worth preserving and protecting. Thanks for helping keep it alive for us far-flung Cymru 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 One day I look forward to seeing it with my own eyes

    • @rhiAction.
      @rhiAction. Год назад +8

      Croeso Jay

    • @TwpsynMawr
      @TwpsynMawr Год назад +26

      Cymru am Byth! You would love it here mate.. most beautiful country on earth. God's country! 💙

    • @jaywatanabe4706
      @jaywatanabe4706 Год назад +6

      @@rhiAction.diolch i chi berthnasau!

    • @jaywatanabe4706
      @jaywatanabe4706 Год назад +10

      @@TwpsynMawr cymru am byth! It does look like God's country from what I've seen in pictures and videos of those beautiful mountains and valleys and rugged coastlines. I have no doubt they don't do the real thing any justice!

    • @Cariad247
      @Cariad247 Год назад +16

      You can move away but you will always be part of us ....

  • @meilir.ap.emrys420
    @meilir.ap.emrys420 Год назад +133

    Centuries ago my ancestors were forced to renounce their traditional Welsh names and adopt the name ‘Roberts’ as a more formal, more proper English surname. That all ended on October 12th, 2003. The day I was born, Christened as Meilir Ap Emrys, son of Emrys Roberts. There is nothing in this world I will ever be more thankful for than my name, no matter how hard people may find it to pronounce, because it represents the tenacity and endurance of my people, and how we have overcome everything thrown at us. Thank you for sharing the history of my cyndeidiau so eloquently and with so many people. Our history is one that has inspired countless world-famous works of fiction, and the truth is worth telling and sharing. Diolch yn fawr, fawr iawn, gyfaill. Cymru am byth.

    • @suzanneself7037
      @suzanneself7037 Год назад +3

      My ancestors are welsh, from Llandudno area and my last name is Roberts. Does this mean originally we weren't Roberts also. I've never heard if the Welsh having to change names before until I saw this comment. Any information you have I'll be thankful for! X

    • @meilir.ap.emrys420
      @meilir.ap.emrys420 Год назад +18

      @@suzanneself7037 so every Welsh person would’ve had either ‘Ap’ (if they were male) or ‘Ach’ (if they were female) preceding their father’s name as what would today be called a surname. Very similar to Mac/Mc in Scottish and O’ in Irish. The reason that the change for us was so widespread was because at one point in time Wales was considered to be a part of England. We had to adopt surnames to fit in with English culture, but weren’t allowed English surnames as we were deemed to be second class citizens so they made up some new ones for us (how considerate of them). So although both our families are from north Wales (I live on Anglesey, as have both sides of my family for thousands of years) and have the same last name, I would highly doubt that we would be related simply due to the fact that every Welsh person got given the choice of a handful of surnames (Jones, Hughes, Evans, Williams, Roberts and a few others I’m forgetting). I hope that’s been informative!

    • @suzanneself7037
      @suzanneself7037 Год назад +3

      Wow, I had no idea! Makes sense why it's so hard doing your family tree as everyone has these names! So we can't find our original names I'm guessing then? I'd love to read more about the original culture as I'm English I don't know much. Thank you for your reply❤

    • @jeromemartinez5603
      @jeromemartinez5603 Год назад +6

      We can keep alive our ancestors stories, our family name has changes only 3 times in 723 years and goes back 700 years prior in Spain, I see it awesome that you have retained your heritage, traces back to Franks in Spain, wear your name proud.

    • @WellFedProductions
      @WellFedProductions Год назад +2

      @@meilir.ap.emrys420
      Very Interesting. My 4th great grandad was John Evans born in 1807 near Llanerchymedd, Anglesey, Wales. He had several children there and then uprooted the whole family and immigrated to New York in the US in 1839. They settled in Remsen, Oneida which apparently had/has a substantial Welsh population and descendants. I was born in Central America and had no idea about any of this until recently when I did a DNA test and discovered 17% Welsh ancestry. Thank you so much for the insight into the Evans name.

  • @thegreenmage6956
    @thegreenmage6956 Год назад +380

    Good to see you covering this.
    We do like to get a mention, us Welsh.

    • @hughevans4652
      @hughevans4652 Год назад

      Welsh is much older than Roman era. ruclips.net/video/u2DPlfpk2ps/видео.html

    • @keiraaaaaaaaaaaaaa
      @keiraaaaaaaaaaaaaa Год назад +14

      me, a Welsh person who knows a lot about Welsh history about to watch another video on Welsh history due to the fact it's Welsh:

    • @501sqn3
      @501sqn3 Год назад

      @@keiraaaaaaaaaaaaaa yep, you sound like a typical welsh individual

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 Год назад +1

      @@keiraaaaaaaaaaaaaa
      Too cute!
      Irish American here, not Celtic, rather Gaelic, (County Kerry Lineage), we are of Basque origin. Welsh too, I think.
      (Some Irish have Germanic Influence through the invasions)

    • @Ericsaidful
      @Ericsaidful Год назад +2

      I will require you to bow down now. I am, in some way related, to a Prince form the North of Wales. I do not have the name as the family tree is with my grandmother. I hope to return to reclaim what is mine in the near future.

  • @kelseycoyote6576
    @kelseycoyote6576 Год назад +61

    Fantastic oration and content! As a person of Welsh descent I am impressed by how you have arranged the massive amount of content. The Welsh never gave in, never gave up, and were able to preserve language and cultures where others were completely overwhelmed and lost.
    Thank you

    • @simonidastankovic2627
      @simonidastankovic2627 Год назад +2

      I entirely agree with one honus remarc: author has absolutely perfect pronunciation of the Welsh Celtic tongue; one can tell immediately0 that he is deeply involved in linguistics, philology, ethimology.....let alone history and mythology.

  • @brucemacallan6831
    @brucemacallan6831 Год назад +304

    Everyone needs to read up on Wilson & Blackett's research. Wales is an incredible place, and has the most amazing history. The true history of the Welsh is a problem for the British Establishment.

    • @mysticalmaid
      @mysticalmaid Год назад

      They fear us still so our history in school stays away from English v Wales conflicts. First I heard of it was in books as a young adult.

    • @WalesTheTrueBritons
      @WalesTheTrueBritons Год назад +38

      In reality the English establishment. Wales and the Welsh need to reclaim their Britishness.

    • @OneEpicEric
      @OneEpicEric Год назад +24

      @@WalesTheTrueBritons In reality the Hanoverian establishment.

    • @efydd
      @efydd Год назад

      Tribes of Israel bullshit

    • @raven-wf9so
      @raven-wf9so Год назад +16

      I can assure you as a English man living in England it’s really not 😂😂

  • @ajarnwordsmith628
    @ajarnwordsmith628 Год назад +161

    I spent more than 20 years living and working in the Orient. During my time there, I was engaged in conversation with an elderly gentleman from the USA. The pronunciation of just one word informed me, in the blink of an eye, that this American gentleman had an association with Wales, the Land of my Fathers. How so, I hear you ask? He was recounting a recent visit to a local dentist and pronounced the singular of the plural noun teeth as "tuth", not the more familiar sounding "two-th" (tooth). I paused the conversation and asked him if he had a connection with South Wales. He was struck dumb for a few seconds and then blurted out, "Yes, I was born in Bridgend (near Cardiff), but my parents emigrated to the US when I was a baby and have never been back. How do you know?" The answer, of course, is that he was brought up in the US by Welsh parents from Glamorgan, who never lost their accent and its quirky pronunciation of certain words.

    • @MechanicalMooCow
      @MechanicalMooCow Год назад

      Nobody asked that

    • @Carma123
      @Carma123 Год назад +43

      @@MechanicalMooCowI enjoyed the story because it sounds like my own grandfather. Please don’t be so rude.

    • @eussii9195
      @eussii9195 Год назад +12

      @@Carma123 me too, such a sweet comment

    • @shirleyjenkins11
      @shirleyjenkins11 Год назад +12

      My maternal family always spoke about being Welsh..cousin and I doing family history could never find a welsh birth any where. Then my cousins dna came back 23% welsh which added to our confusion. Both maternal and paternal grandparents were born in UK..one Suffolk the other Hereford. Me being an avid reader of medieval historic fiction found one series of books regularly including Hereford as in Wales on the Marches.. I decided to look up Hereford history and found it had been welsh and welsh was spoken there well into the 1800s. I looked up the origins of the surname Baynham and found it was Welsh but the maiden name of the ggranny was Evans..a clear give way. So you never can tell where one's ancestry can trip you up.

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад +6

      Nice! Brummies also do that ‘tuth’ thing.

  • @jrjhughes1233
    @jrjhughes1233 Год назад +59

    Whilst I’m English my grandfather was from Abersoch so I spent much of my childhood growing up in Wales, and it is so underrated. Proud of my Welsh heritage and absolutely love the country.

    • @lightfootpathfinder8218
      @lightfootpathfinder8218 Год назад +4

      As a Yorkshireman I love god's own county but I must admit Wales is just as beautiful. Iv been to Pembrokeshire and many places in north wales including Anglesey. I was in Llandudno not long back and really enjoyed it. The northern Welsh folk were nice aswell

  • @madit6434
    @madit6434 11 месяцев назад +9

    As a welsh woman, living in Wales, studying to teach in Wales, the more i am learning about our history the more i want to add History on top of my Physics education choice

  • @brawndothethirstmutilator9848
    @brawndothethirstmutilator9848 Год назад +842

    I’m convinced that the main reason more English speaking RUclipsrs don’t cover Welsh history is that they’re terrified of the pronunciation 😂.

    • @harrywalsh2104
      @harrywalsh2104 Год назад +15

      Yep

    • @ianmackenzie6245
      @ianmackenzie6245 Год назад +13

      All those extra vowels

    • @raymondravinsky9583
      @raymondravinsky9583 Год назад +4

      😂❗

    • @John-qy9nw
      @John-qy9nw Год назад +13

      They also number a tiny 3m people and very few emigrated to the new world or Australasia.

    • @Requiemslove
      @Requiemslove Год назад +15

      Well, that and the unfortunate truth of their ancestors being essentially just mercenaries who took advantage of a power vacuum and the fragility of a still very new British state of Wales. [AKA they are the bad guys]
      But, mostly the pronunciation thing. [I'm terrified of it too... and I'm Welsh]

  • @WelshAmericanChannel
    @WelshAmericanChannel 8 месяцев назад +29

    Hello from the Welsh American Channel. Just want to let you know that we Welsh Americans are also interested in what is going on in Wales and its rich history. Cymru am byth!

  • @susanbell8270
    @susanbell8270 Год назад +18

    I am Welsh born and bred, Welsh to my core, and proud to be. For those of you reading this who are not Welsh it's easy to understand us once you accept that we are a proud nation, loyal to our heritage; many have tried to oppress us and beat us down. It will NEVER happen. As the great Bill Beaumont said when playing rugby against the Welsh 'Wales have never lost a match, we just score points against them'. However I am not a rabid Plaid Cymru supporter. Wales and the Welsh nation is well able to survive without creating aggression and division. It will go on regardless of fanatics who do not serve Wales well.

    • @mk_gamíng0609
      @mk_gamíng0609 Год назад +1

      as Englishman from Cumbria well said , you can be proud of your heritage without causing more division

    • @Chris-ve8xw
      @Chris-ve8xw Год назад +4

      Well said. I'm Welsh and I love our English, Scottish and Irish brothers and sisters, the last thing we need right now is more aggression and division.

    • @joannerichards5481
      @joannerichards5481 Год назад

      Of corse being welsh born and bred I totally agree

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад +3

      @@Chris-ve8xw Very true. I have some misgivings about where Britain is going.

    • @druidceltic777
      @druidceltic777 Месяц назад

      Susan , agree with your comment , i left wales (gwent) at 7 years of age went to africa with parents on copper mines then in 1980 they emigrated to Australia now im 57 , i too am welsh to the core , never have i forgot the land of my fathers , i fly the welsh flag here in Australia in my shed proudly and never will i consider my self any thing else other than welsh (Celtic) you can take the boy out of the valleys , but you can never take the valleys out of the boy , its in or DNA you can feel it , 45 years in Australia and i always felt like i dont belong here , plan on visiting home soon ❤👍

  • @devinlawton2390
    @devinlawton2390 Год назад +37

    Just have to say, as a Cymro living in Wales, I congratulate the heck out of your pronunciation. It was very accurate with very few exceptions and you handled the extra vowels and unfamiliar consonants well. An unfortunate majority of modern Britons lack the exposure or interest to try, and at worst, make fun of the language.

    • @carolwoodhouse8493
      @carolwoodhouse8493 Год назад +1

      I'm visiting North Wales soon for the first time so enjoying this look at its impressive history. I'm no linguist but hope to make a good effort at please and thank you by the time I go.🙂

    • @mikimeadows
      @mikimeadows Год назад +1

      His Welsh sounds like he has a bad lisp

    • @whodidthissmh
      @whodidthissmh Месяц назад

      @@mikimeadows tbh i agree, his attempt is very admirable but his pronunciation of welsh is way too breathy and overdone in the case of things like caernarfon

  • @exploreseafaring
    @exploreseafaring Год назад +241

    Fantastic to hear such a well put together history. I've lived in North Wales my whole life, speak the language and my family tree is rooted deep here. I still struggle to put dates to names and people in places. I pass castles and ancient tumulus just to go to the supermaket and it breaks my heart to be powerless as I watch and feel Wales turn into something it shouldn't be.

    • @somniumisdreaming
      @somniumisdreaming Год назад +3

      @@Rabbelrauser How so?

    • @lucasgarrett2107
      @lucasgarrett2107 Год назад +11

      @@somniumisdreaming I believe everything is just being capitalized on so heavily. Politics plays a big role as well. I’d say the people are changing. Wants and concerns are beginning to rule over necessity and logic.

    • @LumiSisuSusi
      @LumiSisuSusi Год назад +61

      @@Rabbelrauser the difference here in Wales is that we have had to fight to this very moment in time to keep our language and culture alive. The Westminster government in England has done their best to destroy our culture and language. We still face issues, even recently our language, one of the oldest on the island was listed as a foreign language and English as the native language which is wrong. We have had our education controlled to hide our history. When I was growing up our parents were told NOT to educate us in Welsh as it will retard us - I'm not kidding. That was the stigma we grew up with. So despite having my roots in Wales for hundreds of years on both sides, we were bullied out of speaking it. I did my best to learn it I school but one else's every 2 weeks does not allow for any skills. As OP said we barely know our history, in my school we learned about the English, the Romans and the Normans etc. But NOT our own people and land as Westminster government controlled that. Things have recently changed in the last year or so and now all children will be educated on our history. Hopefully, we will regain our language and culture, just like the Finn's did from the russians and Swedish, and everyone will speak Welsh and English fluently. There's a reason why Wales has the most castles per km of any country - we fought hard to defend our ways of life and still are. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

    • @stigkrakpants3052
      @stigkrakpants3052 Год назад +18

      @@LumiSisuSusi youll be speaking pashtun or somali soon haha

    • @stigkrakpants3052
      @stigkrakpants3052 Год назад +8

      @@LumiSisuSusi those castles were built by the conquering english, superior cultur ealways wins, the english vikings crushed the celts, the muslims will crush the europeans

  • @hughdncy
    @hughdncy Год назад +4

    Team Cymru👇❤and the way he pronounced Llanfair PG is AMAZING!

  • @trayccox8223
    @trayccox8223 Год назад +27

    Wow that was an amazing history lesson..as a native born English from Scottish/Irish parents..I'd never heard Welsh history before and always wanted to.. thank you so much what a gorgeous language..and amazing history poetry x

    • @addammadd
      @addammadd Месяц назад

      Could someone please explain the me the utility of ‘native’ in the phrase "native born English from Scottish/Irish parents?"

  • @halmillett5448
    @halmillett5448 Год назад +57

    My Grandmother spoke Welsh, taught to her by her grandfather who told her to remember she was Cymry.

    • @timbayliss4153
      @timbayliss4153 7 месяцев назад +4

      It is actually pronounced Cumry, but you always write it as Cymru.

    • @-._A2._-
      @-._A2._- 7 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@timbayliss4153they are using Cymry which is the people of Wales in Welsh, Cymru is the country.

    • @timbayliss4153
      @timbayliss4153 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@-._A2._- Diolch fawr am dy hoffech. I am used to seeing Cymraeg or the word Nheulu for people, you see.

    • @lunabranwen
      @lunabranwen 7 месяцев назад +2

      Amen ❤🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

    • @codychurch5920
      @codychurch5920 5 месяцев назад

      No...I understand Cymraeg, but I don't u derstand a lick of Hebrew​...The reason being, they are not related at all, and biblical geneologies are bunk.@@MaacMaliceMMA

  • @markevans5912
    @markevans5912 7 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you (Diolch), it's great to see non- british people acknowledging my beautiful country and your pronunciations were bloody marvellous! 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @Rotebuehl1
    @Rotebuehl1 Год назад +63

    In German the word "welsch" means "non-germanic"
    In Switzerland the German speaking call the french, Italian, and rheto-roman speaking parts of the country "die welsche Schweiz"

    • @mjograus8800
      @mjograus8800 9 месяцев назад +11

      Interesting! The name Welsh came from the invading Anglo Saxons' name for foreigners. The Germanic connection seems obvious.

    • @Anglo-Saxon66
      @Anglo-Saxon66 5 месяцев назад +1

      It does. Although modern Welsh are themselves 1/3 Anglo-Saxon. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5784891/

    • @Anglo-Saxon66
      @Anglo-Saxon66 5 месяцев назад +1

      It does. Although the Welsh are themselves 1/3 Anglo-Saxon. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5784891/

    • @Rotebuehl1
      @Rotebuehl1 3 месяца назад

      ​@@mjograus8800😅

  • @cadarn1274
    @cadarn1274 Год назад +186

    Brilliant vid! We Cymry definitely deserve more love in the history space.
    On the subject of Arthur being Abrosius' nephew, this is surprisingly plausible. In Medieval Wales, a king's nephew the was the most common/ideal relation to be the "Penteulu" (commander of the Royal Household troops and chief military advisor). This could explain Ambrosius' victories being attributed to Arthur also. That said, I understand it is complicated and Arthur may just be a god figure rather than a real human.
    Edit: The earliest Arthur source, Nennius, says that though he was not a king, he was Dux Bellorum (war leader) of the Kings of Britain.

    • @ellen4956
      @ellen4956 Год назад +8

      In Michael Wood's "In Search of Arthur" he speaks with a man who found very old burial stones on his land and one of them was for someone named Arthur. There was a story that he and his brother were sons of a local king, and Arthur was killed in battle but he fought bravely. The stones were from the right time period, but there were probably other people with that name. Michael Wood said it could have been part of many pieces woven into the legend.

    • @Fredmayve
      @Fredmayve Год назад +2

      @@ellen4956 it more of less is the legend. Funny thing is that when I grew up Arthur was not a common name, although one of my uncles was one and we were not told or taught that Arthur was Welsh. "Knights" to us were the Norman invaders.

    • @Fredmayve
      @Fredmayve Год назад +6

      @leekenyon8705 True. But we beat the Romans in one great battle in South Wales and we kept our language alive and spread it to Brittany in what is now France. We have a devolved Welsh parliament and increasingly aspire to Independence.

    • @Fredmayve
      @Fredmayve Год назад

      Preedieval do you think? Iron Age ?

    • @Fredmayve
      @Fredmayve Год назад +2

      @leekenyon8705 I'm not expert. I'll look into it later. But perhaps a real person who resisted the incomers from the continent,. Oral history usually has a kernel of truth.

  • @JackRabbit002
    @JackRabbit002 Год назад +37

    It's nice to see the Nation of Wales get some attention of late! It's weird I was born in Brum (Birmingham, England) but my family on both sides go Welsh going back like! I think the story of my heritage is just following the river Severn Lol

  • @bobmiller7502
    @bobmiller7502 Год назад +4

    i live on the boarder with wales love the mountains and the fact that most still speak the language,(daily) i go to wales all the time,you can just feel the ancient vibe in the land, i love meditating right up in the mountains by a beautiful stream river, its such a special/spiritual place to me, im a luck guy,xxTao,xx

  • @davidjones535
    @davidjones535 Год назад +133

    In the early 1880s a Welsh miner took his wife and three children and move to the United States they had four more children one of whom was named Samuel born in 1889 who became a pipe fitter in the Steelmill married a young woman born In Germany the same year and who had moved to Ohio in 1898 , they had seven children the youngest son name Charles who in turn married a young woman who is half Irish and half northwestern Scottish, they had four sons whom I am the third born .

    • @fuchsiafuture
      @fuchsiafuture Год назад +23

      Well done for keeping track of your ancestors.

    • @uttaradit2
      @uttaradit2 Год назад +7

      visit wales

    • @robertgrey6101
      @robertgrey6101 Год назад +1

      @David Jones
      Heretige / Ancestory.
      How beautiful !!

    • @Dandelion0962
      @Dandelion0962 Год назад

      You got book and verse inscribed on that ?

    • @creekyknee
      @creekyknee Год назад +5

      I have a red car.

  • @welshman8954
    @welshman8954 Год назад +9

    God I miss my homeland I moved to New Zealand three years ago but there are no oeople on earth like the Welsh I miss you Wales
    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿Cumry am byth🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @random2829
    @random2829 Год назад +17

    Well done! 😀❤
    Welsh on the paternal side and - mostly - French Celt on the maternal side.
    I did enjoy my trip to Wales a few years ago - well worth the visit!

  • @bored1930
    @bored1930 Год назад +12

    Cymru am byth ❤.. As a native Welsh speaker and resident of this amazing country, this literally brought tears to my eyes.
    Slowly the Welsh language is being removed from our schools. Only Welsh schools now truly teach our native tongue, and those schools are few and far between.
    With massive rises in housing costs in England, due to over saturated immigration, people are moving over the boarder to Wales. This is a huge strain on such a tiny country, further diluting and eradicating our language and culture.
    I am afraid that my generation and possibly the next will see our language die with us. This utterly breaks my heart, anyone who is Welsh will absolutely understand what I mean.
    Thank you for this wonderful video. ❤

    • @ezioauditore3128
      @ezioauditore3128 Месяц назад

      I'm Welsh and live in Swansea. Your post is barking mad. The Welsh language has been relentlessly pushed for decades and the Welsh speaker rates have climbed steadily as a result. When I was in school hardly anyone spoke Welsh ,now it's very common, even down here in the South. Welsh schools are VERY common and have even become trendy. Your post bears absolutely no resemblance to reality and is frankly drivel.

  • @ericcloud1023
    @ericcloud1023 Год назад +70

    I'd been checking your channel every other day just hoping for a new video, you have really piqued my interest in my Irish ancestry. As a Californian as distant as currently possible from the emerald isle, something about the clawing back bit by bit of Pre-roman/pre-christian Gaelic/Welsh/etc really speaks to me. I've always been absolutely enthralled by history. As a kid instead of Saturday morning cartoons I'd watch history channel documentaries (when they still had credibility) and I've never dropped it as a passion, but I never studied my own people's heritage. Funny isnt it? Much love from California

  • @Readrose8
    @Readrose8 Год назад +8

    Wow that last couple of sentences have me unexpectedly tearing up. Thank you for all this history!

  • @Chris-ve8xw
    @Chris-ve8xw Год назад +4

    Thank you for this documentary, a good watch. Love from Wales.

  • @nickstephenson7340
    @nickstephenson7340 Год назад +8

    I recently found I am 100% Welsh on my mothers side. Her mother and fathers side both came to Canada from Wales and then went down into Idaho where my grandparents met in college at Ricks College. I love this video, thank you. I am trying to learn more of my ancestry to pass onto my children.

    • @Knights.of.Ni.
      @Knights.of.Ni. Год назад +1

      I can't remember what channel I seen it on but Pennsylvania was almost named new Wales and same parts still has Welsh street names.

  • @hunterluxton5976
    @hunterluxton5976 Год назад +6

    Outstanding, non partisan, erudite and objective analysis of us Welsh. The English are prone to subtle forms of mockery, biasness and faint undermining and discrediting of anything Welsh, so it's good to hear an outsider be so thorough and use facts to describe my wonderful country. Superbly put together thank you so much. ❤

  • @goodsoup301
    @goodsoup301 Год назад +49

    It’s so nice to hear proper Welsh pronunciation from outside of wales. I never knew people found ‘ll’ hard to pronounce, it just seems so easy and natural for me. I suppose it’s like rolling your ‘r’s, some people can do it naturally and some people can’t.

    • @amberkat8147
      @amberkat8147 Год назад

      How is it supposed to be pronounced? I don't even know. I assume it's not the y sound of romance languages or it would be easy.

    • @codexamalgam5939
      @codexamalgam5939 Год назад +2

      It's not "doing it naturally" it's whether you grew up needing to use that sound. And Amber, a combination of L, G and H is the best way to describe it. It's pronounced in the video a lot at the start of Lleu and Llewellyn in particular.

    • @goodsoup301
      @goodsoup301 Год назад +4

      @@amberkat8147 uh… the easiest way to describe it is to grit your teeth, and open your mouth so you kind of look like this emoji 😬 and push the tip of your tongue against your teeth. Then, open your teeth slightly as if you were about to just say the letter ‘L’ but don’t let your tongue slip through. Then lastly, push air through the side of your teeth, and you’ve got it! The easiest way to practice would be to do those steps and at the end add an ‘oo’ sound, just doing it as you would as if you said ‘you’ but replacing the ‘y’ with that ‘LL’ sound.
      Oh, and keep the back of your tongue off the roof of your mouth, the sound won’t work if it’s there.

    • @custink22
      @custink22 11 месяцев назад

      Am currently learning the Welsh language. Grew up reading Welsh mythology, history, etc, despite my family being German/Irish because i was a huge fan of Arthurian legends and expanded from there... also learning those languages... but spent a day in Wales during a TDY to Endland, and found it enchanting. Theres something... magical... about Wales, which inspired me to want to learn the language and want to name my first son after Myrddin Wyllt. That being said, Welsh is a rather difficult language for someone unfamiliar with it, especially someone who has grown up speaking American English. But its a beautiful language that i enjoy learning and hope to one day speak well enough to be understood by a native speaker.

    • @shamanschlong
      @shamanschlong 6 месяцев назад

      @@goodsoup301that's an awful description

  • @kennyglesga
    @kennyglesga Год назад +7

    Great to see the Welsh resurgence in music, football, and the arts generally. Ever since hearing Dylan Thomas poems, I've been interested in the Welsh culture, with it's amazing castles and wooded valleys and ancient language.

  • @RenataCantore
    @RenataCantore 10 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you for your Exquisitely detailed documentary. I Love every moment of your beautifully worded presentation.
    It was wonderful hearing these ancient words pronounced perfectly ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉

  • @theviper1999uk
    @theviper1999uk Год назад +12

    Great video! As an English man, I love the Welsh landscape and language.

    • @Sielffo1
      @Sielffo1 Год назад +1

      Your not allowed too boooo 😂

    • @GreoGreo
      @GreoGreo Год назад

      No

  • @juditrotter5176
    @juditrotter5176 Год назад +58

    My Grandmother was a pioneer in the US State of Montana. She was the oldest of five. Her father was killed by her brother in a hunting accident and the following year 1917 her mother died in the great flu pandemic.
    When I was growing up (from 1948 on) she would say “Now, don’t put on airs we are just Welsh miners.” When I’ve visited Wales I can’t say that I found a pronunciation gene.
    One interesting happening for me was my first trip to Wales was with my son Colburn(Colby). We were so interested and happy to see how much his beam appeared as place names. His Dad and I had no idea.

    • @jillybe1873
      @jillybe1873 Год назад +1

      My mum said exactly this too ❤

    • @angelalewis3645
      @angelalewis3645 Год назад +1

      What a sweet, wonderful lady!

    • @kellyhawkes3191
      @kellyhawkes3191 Год назад

      My daughter's boyfriend is from Cwmbran, his surname is Colburn.

    • @DrJamesFeelgood
      @DrJamesFeelgood Год назад

      @@kellyhawkes3191I don't think Colburn or Coburn are Welsh.

  • @craigdavies1747
    @craigdavies1747 Год назад +4

    Interesting. I'm a Welsh man from Swansea in South Wales. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @contentcitycosmos5554
    @contentcitycosmos5554 Год назад +10

    As me and my father and my grandfather ancestry were born in Wales and as a WelshMan,
    I thank you very much for this education video!
    Cymru Am Byth 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @Dav1Gv
    @Dav1Gv Год назад +25

    What a great video. I was born in Yorkshire but my great grandfather came from Merthyr Tydfil, I spent most of WW2 as a child in Aberdare and I've lived in the Vale of Glamorgan for fiflty years but your Welsh pronounciaton knocks spots off mine. You might be interested to know that there is a legend that the Normans, like the Saxons in England, were invited in to fight for one of the Welsh princes and then did a 'hostile' takeover. When he died the soul of the man who made the deal, Einion ap Colwyn, was sent into the body of a fox for his great sin which meant that the fox could speak (Welsh I assume). Hundreds of years later someone who had come into the Vale to buy cattle was 'benighted' in Porthkerry Woods (near where I live). Sitting in the rain by a smoky fire he heard a fox talking in a nearby bush. He spoke to the fox which told him the story saying he was the lineal descendent of the original fox so he too could talk. (Source is Marie Trevelyan's book of Welsh legends)

    • @501sqn3
      @501sqn3 Год назад +1

      .....you've been in Wales far,far too long, time to pack up and go home lad.

    • @Sielffo1
      @Sielffo1 Год назад

      Aberdare too

    • @Dav1Gv
      @Dav1Gv Год назад

      I remember my mum going off to the Rheigos plant to make sten gun bullets and seeing the Yanks training on Ogmore Beach when we went on holiday there - presumably 1944@@Sielffo1

  • @masterchefbaker723
    @masterchefbaker723 Год назад +34

    As a Welsh Draig can I also just point out we by far have the best flag too date.

    • @FortressofLugh
      @FortressofLugh  Год назад +4

      Absolutely agree

    • @M1ggins
      @M1ggins Год назад +1

      Mozambique have an AK47 on there's, pretty badass.

    • @masterchefbaker723
      @masterchefbaker723 Год назад +7

      AK cannot fly, dragon wins

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад +3

      As a rule, I like symmetry for flags, but dragons are terrific.

    • @PBRJOHN684
      @PBRJOHN684 6 месяцев назад

      Yes we bloody well done 👍

  • @ccsmooth55
    @ccsmooth55 Год назад +33

    My last name (Craddock) is derived from the Welsh name Caradog. Im proud to have Welsh heritage!

    • @joemeyers4131
      @joemeyers4131 Год назад

      Interesting possibility is Caradog is in a likeness to a very ancient wording , Middle Eastern Karduch- to words of today even Kurd- .. just a little idea .

    • @noneofurbusiness5223
      @noneofurbusiness5223 Год назад

      @ CC Smooth
      Interesting. Craddock is a burrough in city of Chesapeake VA

    • @MalakhimTarot
      @MalakhimTarot Год назад +1

      I am Maddock from Madoc / Madog 🙌🏼
      A couple of years back I randomly become obsessed with Arthurian myth and completed a diploma in it. Then I came across Madoc and was like 😮

    • @joemeyers4131
      @joemeyers4131 Год назад

      @@The_Welsh_Jordanian reading your response thanking you .

  • @kathyevans3251
    @kathyevans3251 Год назад +17

    Absolutely great video.I love to learn more about history. This one was fascinating .Thank you for sharing it.

  • @stompthedragon4010
    @stompthedragon4010 Год назад +8

    I spent 6 months in the UK and a large part of it in Wales. It was beautiful. A little over 40 years ago. Great memories. Interesting to know about ' Cambria, the county I live in is named Cambria.

  • @trailingarm63
    @trailingarm63 Год назад +19

    I'm from North Wales and I compare aspects of our history and geography to that of Afghanistan. A colourful tribal culture prone to internal squabbling, only ever united by a common enemy. Resistance to powerful invaders made possible by reckless bravery, a capacity for exceptional endurance and suffering, and a harsh, mountainous terrain affording opportunities for refuge and ambush. However, our love for the arts and the (relative) freedom enjoyed by women are probably points of departure.
    Good film, and a very fair assessment imo.

  • @andrewjones4568
    @andrewjones4568 Год назад +4

    Fantastic video. Thanks for making. Cymru Am Byth!

  • @bonnieandclyde222
    @bonnieandclyde222 Год назад +14

    My Grandma came with her brother by horse and cart ,from Carnarvon in the 30s to Leicester, to look for work as their family's wealth diminished due to the Great depression.
    Her life became hard as she married my Grandad and was left looking after 4 son's as he fought in WW2. She knew no people much here. I always felt I was like her , and she had 6th sense , sadly she passed when I was 13. I feel very Welsh and not like an English, though my other Grandad was Scottish.

    • @jillybe1873
      @jillybe1873 Год назад +1

      I suspect you are actually me! My grandma came from Abernant to Manchester in the 30s. She died when I was 13. I loved her. I always felt welsh, married a half-welshman and my children feel welsh and support the rugby. I did an ancestry thing and found that somehow I'm over 60% welsh.

    • @meilir.ap.emrys420
      @meilir.ap.emrys420 Год назад +1

      It’s Caernarfon not Carnarvon. Not much difference in pronunciation but if you want to embrace being Welsh more then use the proper Cymraeg spelling. Phob dymuniad da.

  • @The_welsh_cobrachicken
    @The_welsh_cobrachicken Год назад +8

    My grandmother was Welsh. She moved to Canada in 45/46 after marrying my grandfather in ww2

  • @sidgriffith1592
    @sidgriffith1592 Год назад +69

    I visited North Wales January 2020 before all the lockdowns. The Welsh are very nice people. I've done a deep dive into my Y-DNA. My ancestors originated from this beautiful land. Anglesey is very nice. I spend a few days exploring the island. I wish more Welsh men would do their Y-DNA. I have several other Griffith men that we have a common ancestor in Wales in the early 1600s. Maybe one day we will figure out who he was.

    • @Vesnicie
      @Vesnicie Год назад +15

      Someone named Griffith in Wales? No way!

    • @iriscollins7583
      @iriscollins7583 Год назад +9

      My maiden name is Griffiths, my great great grandfather, grandfather was born in Anglesey, possibly a great, grandfather on my mother's side. ( Still searching ). Had my DNA tested, am 96% Welsh, ( North, West. South). 2% Cornish, Devon, 2%, Scots.West.) Cymru am Byth.🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

    • @ellen4956
      @ellen4956 Год назад +6

      @@iriscollins7583 My Hughes branch is probably from there but I haven't figured out exactly where. They came to America (early 1700s) and in Pennsylvania founded a town called Gwynedd. It's still there.

    • @joshbates9015
      @joshbates9015 Год назад +9

      No way! I was traveling North Wales in January of 2020 as well! Came to Liverpool from Canada for my father's wedding and decided to spend a week doing a circuit from Llandudno to Betws-y-Coed to Porthmadog to Caernarfon.
      First time I heard about covid spreading in Wuhan was actually when I was sitting at the bar at the Black Boy Inn in Caernarfon.
      I still remember thinking at the time that it was a whole lot of fuss about nothing and would blow over within a month lol.

    • @Randrew
      @Randrew Год назад +8

      @@ellen4956 My father's side immigrated from Wales just after the US Civil War and settled in Pennsylvania for a while. Apparently my ancestor did some mining there, as he'd done back in Wales. Later they joined with a Welsh immigration society which bought railroad land in Kansas to form a town they named Bala - it's long a ghost town now. The two sons of my American patriarch participated in the big land run into Oklahoma - the one covered in the Tom Cruise movie "Far and Away" in 1992 - and homesteaded there.
      I don't know from where in Wales my great-great-grandparents came, but they left at a time when the mining business was suffering.

  • @rhiannonwest2465
    @rhiannonwest2465 Год назад +1

    I am a quarter welsh and dead proud of my heritage. I love Wales, to me it always feels like home. Thank you for uploading this. iechyd da

  • @georginagibson9356
    @georginagibson9356 Год назад +8

    I am a Welsh descendent from Canada, my last maiden name Roberts. I've always been interested in my family roots. My mother was adopted in Scotland, and I don't know much about either my fathers side or mothers. My two eldest took the plunge and did the ancestry dna test. My mother asked me before she passed to find her biological family. To let them know Thank you, it was a hard decision and I have done alright. etc. you get the point. Well covid hit and my mother and my sister 47 passed away in 2021 just 12 hrs apart. So my husband and I took the plunge and took the test. married name McCrae-Gibson. My goal now is to write a book of our family history for our children.This video helps a lot, thank you for sharing .

    • @TugWanka
      @TugWanka Год назад

      The Roberts name has its highest concentration in the Conwy Valley in North Wales , which is where my fathers side of the family are from.

    • @Johnathan66667
      @Johnathan66667 Год назад

      I'm a Roberts too, from this area. With so many people with the surname Roberts in the area, it can make it very difficult when tarcing your family tree back more than 200 years. It's sad that we were forced to take up the English way of naming our children. Previously, we had an easy way to figure out our heritage. We would use our father's first name, " as our second name," then his father's name as our third name, and then so forth up to 10 names. Makes family tree finding way easier

  • @grahamfleming8139
    @grahamfleming8139 Год назад +16

    We in the Scottish Borders are well aware of our Welsh bloodlines and proud of it,names like peebles, Lee pen ,white coomb,Ettrick pen, Ancrum, lauder still survive today .
    Both lands are proud of 🏉 rugby and if Scotland is no playing we back the boyos.

    • @garrywynne1218
      @garrywynne1218 Год назад +3

      Yes. It was the Hen Ogledd (Old North) were names still reflect this (pen - top or head) Glas (Green /Blue) Aber (estuary) Lanark ( Llanerch - glade) . The area spoke Cumbric which was a derivative of Old Welsh or Cymraeg. All very interesting as a history and shows we have more in common than we are led to believe.

    • @grahamfleming8139
      @grahamfleming8139 Год назад +1

      @@garrywynne1218 in England it extends to Carlisle from the Welsh and gaelic too for seat,the pen ines and penrith, to everyday penquins

    • @garrywynne1218
      @garrywynne1218 Год назад

      @@grahamfleming8139 I never thought of Penguins to be honest ? Thanks

    • @philhawley1219
      @philhawley1219 Год назад

      Brecon and Brechin?

    • @grahamfleming8139
      @grahamfleming8139 Год назад

      @@philhawley1219 in gaelic breac is a trout or spotted, connected?brock is a badger

  • @Al-AI
    @Al-AI Год назад +20

    Loved this. Have you read Alan Wilson and Baram Blacket - Arthur King of Glamorgan. It's very interesting.

  • @gar6446
    @gar6446 Год назад +4

    This is remarkably good.
    Excellent visuals. Not just maps and video game clips.
    The narrator is clear, precise, and sympathetic to pronunciation and language.
    The history is very grounded and a fair and logical interpretation of what might have happened.

  • @rasputin3263
    @rasputin3263 Год назад +19

    I'm proud of my Welsh ancestry. I have the dragon tattooed on my arm and I got to visit Wales when I was a kid. It's beautiful and green.

    • @rhianyddsian9518
      @rhianyddsian9518 8 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah most welsh people have the dragon tattooed on them all my brothers do also

  • @rogerdavid3297
    @rogerdavid3297 Год назад +1

    as a welsh born person, aged 73. i found the video very good, a lot of it i already know, through the celtic tradition of the oral way of passing on our history. this video will help a lot of people ,who are not from the british isles, become better educated about my ancestors. it still makes me gringe, when many years that an american , refered to us as wales england.

  • @markthompson5481
    @markthompson5481 Год назад +26

    There was an arthur, but it was a nickname that warlords often had. His was the bear art in early welsh yr for artyr the bear. Gildas mentions him as die ursa. He was based in Wroxeter if this is true. His father's war name was the terrible head dragon- urthur pen dragon

    • @markthompson5481
      @markthompson5481 Год назад +2

      @Lee Kenyon The celtic culture of course or at least the la tenne, not sure of the exact pronunciation originated in switzerland. There are Arthurian cycles- Siegfried in German, Roland in France, it's entirely possible that the whole thing may be part of some romantic original story that has been modified over time by different populaces. Fascinating speculation though. Die ursa met his end fighting his nephew according to the welsh annals and was buried in Baschurch, who knows the truth?

  • @lindaclark3241
    @lindaclark3241 9 месяцев назад +1

    Really excellent piece and the research was breathtaking. I am English with Scottish background but think that our intrinsic celtic origins, not least from Wales, are an important asset to a sense of national unity. This cultural and artistic inheritance from Wales, Ireland, Scotland and Cornwall is of major importance and is the source of Britains cultural wealth.

  • @jessicamattingly6879
    @jessicamattingly6879 Год назад +7

    I’m so happy to see another of your videos ❤

  • @celtofcanaanesurix2245
    @celtofcanaanesurix2245 Год назад +55

    Despite my welsh ancestry being distant, and the recent discovery that I may be more Breton than Welsh or even Scottish, Welsh language, culture and history will forever hold a special place in my heart.
    The most beautiful stories and songs that make me feel hiraeth very strong, and to this day I hang a welsh flag in my home, under the constitution; the culmination of the ideas written by Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence.
    As he too was of Welsh ancestry, and he was the one who declared that humans rights were life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

    • @rhiAction.
      @rhiAction. Год назад +7

      We love our Breton cousins though

    • @somniumisdreaming
      @somniumisdreaming Год назад +3

      Oh that wonderful slave owner Thomas Jefferson, what a load of bs he wrote.

    • @michmunuti968
      @michmunuti968 Год назад

      @@somniumisdreaming the true tragedy is that he could have helped steer the country onto the right path instead of slavery leading ultimately to empire and the American Civil War with the failure of the Constitution, which Mr Trump seems to be a reminder of that fact even now...what if Jefferson had actually acted on his words rather than making them only a partial truth and the country based on that fraudulent beginning...admitting the truth now can finally set us free...?

    • @celtofcanaanesurix2245
      @celtofcanaanesurix2245 Год назад +7

      @@somniumisdreaming I know it is futile arguing against that point, but context is needed before judging people of the past. He inherited his slaves, and certainly saw it as a terrible and hypocritical thing that he had them, and yet he would not have had the money to be able to do the political work he did without that which he gained through his plantation.
      A hypocrite? Maybe, someone engaged in what today would be considered a grave human rights abuse? Certainly. A self conscious person who was ahead of his time for understanding that the position he inherited was terrible? Also certainly.

    • @WalesTheTrueBritons
      @WalesTheTrueBritons Год назад +4

      But Bretons are just the people who were isolated from the Briton (Welsh) their roots are the same.

  • @jojo1011able
    @jojo1011able Год назад +4

    Really appreciate the effort put in to pronounce the welsh words.

  • @3vo338
    @3vo338 Год назад +25

    11:39 I went to Caerleon (pronounced Ki-er-leon) for comp, as we call high school in Cymru. And the one block we had was called the Isca block or block I. This was due to the Roman fortress, baths and the amphitheater that remain to this day within the village. Isca was the name of the camp which held the fortress' guards, and the village was renamed to it's resident fort, Isca...
    Btw, I used to have my lunch on both the amphitheater AND the baths, it was tranquil and serene almost always.

    • @LumiSisuSusi
      @LumiSisuSusi Год назад +5

      I love Caerleon! As a south Walian I have many fond memories of the place from my childhood. What a great place to go to school! unfortunately, I have not been since 2016 when I went there for my birthday as I adore the place. I now live in Finland so I miss Cymru so badly. The hiraeth is strong 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

    • @3vo338
      @3vo338 Год назад +1

      @@LumiSisuSusi May the Hireath be strong with you, Cyru Am Byth a Yma O Hyd!!

    • @DJ-Brownie-UK
      @DJ-Brownie-UK Год назад +1

      Im 5 minutes up the road went to St.Julians (pronounced SayntJew-leons) for comp. Btw, I used to mooch off school to snog and finger the girls over the Dingle, smoking all.sorts ,sniffing tippex , gas, fishing stickelbacks over beechwood or making rope swings and bon fires over pernells farm .

    • @3vo338
      @3vo338 Год назад

      @@DJ-Brownie-UK My cousin went there, said it was mental himself, mind u Caerleon was no less mental. I remember my mam giving me n all my m8's sherbet... And we when n snorted the fuckin' stuff!! One lad had to go to the hospital bc he burst a blood vessel in his eye 😭😭

    • @DJ-Brownie-UK
      @DJ-Brownie-UK Год назад

      @@3vo338 😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣haahhaahhahha , made my day that hahahaha those where the best times I can recall me and my mate smoking "mixed herbs" in that thin paper from those cheap bibles you get in the 1st year of comp 😁hehheh

  • @josephkolodziejski6882
    @josephkolodziejski6882 Год назад +16

    There is a linguistic nitpick I'd like to point out - if one looks up the origin of Welsh words online, there are an awful lot of Latin origin words alongside the decidedly Celtic ones with the asterisks. as well as most of the earliest figures of Welsh history.
    For example: "Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru" comes from *Gario iator Prim- Schol- Com- *mrog(i)(a) with "gario" and "mrogi/brogi" being the Celtic words
    -One name example:
    Padarn Beisrudd ap Tegid > Patern Peis-Rut map Tacit > Patern(us) Pexa- *roud(os) *makw(os/i) Tacit(us)
    -Juvencus Three manuscript example:
    niguorcosam nemheunaur henoid >> *ni (=non, no) *wor- (=super, uber) cons(eo) nem(os) medio(n) (h)ora sen(ior)-noct(em)
    mitelu nit gurmaur >> Mi(hi) *tego- *-slougos nit *wiros *magros
    mi am [franc] dam ancalaur >> Mi(hi) am(bi) "(a) Frank" *do-ambi ante-caldar(ia)
    ...cet iben med nouel *Cit(u) *? med(ia) (=mead) novel(la)
    mi amfranc dam anpatel (My Frank) *do-ambi ante-patel(la)
    seems like "Romano-British" and "Welsh" may functionally be the same thing.

  • @TheJamesRedwood
    @TheJamesRedwood Год назад +5

    Good work sir. Your narrative skill, both written and oral, is excellent.

  • @christopher9196
    @christopher9196 Год назад +3

    My great, great ,great Grandfather came to America From Martleswy in 1820 and was a mining foreman in Plymouth Pennsylvania. My Great, Great Grandfather died in a mine collapse trying to rescue 12 men. All 13 perished on Friday The 13th. Through an awesome Gentleman in England , Brian Picton Swann, I am able to trace my family history in Wales to the year 1275. I know it sounds unbelievable, but this man did a 50 year long Genome project on The Picton Family. His work is nothing short of a masterpiece.

  • @nre1553
    @nre1553 Год назад +17

    The French call Wales, Land of the Gaul's, Gales and Wales may have the same root, a Germanic name to describe the Welsh as Gaul's.

    • @martyngittins1274
      @martyngittins1274 7 месяцев назад +1

      Wales is a very significant part of Our UK which arguably it pioneered c/ o Henry Twdwr’summarily ending the ‘Wars of the Roses’- much welcomed by the English let alone the Welsh!

  • @vicsaul5459
    @vicsaul5459 Год назад +18

    Very well presented video production, If not for Welsh folklore, the Mabinogion, the Druids, and the extensive writings of Tacitus, we would hardly know anything of their origin. For years now ihave been fascinated by the extreme north west of Wales. Dinas Dinlle ,
    Tres Ceri , many hill forts and burial mounds all across Wales. There is the remnants of an old roman/ celtic road called Sarn Helen in Snowdonia, which leads to the coast,, where there is rumored to be a sunken castle, Caer Arianhrod , roughly off the coast west of Caernarfon. Very plausible story indeed, since the area is a almost shallow sea across the Menai Straits to Anglesey and Holy Island, the last hold out of the Druids. I look forward to seeing more of your channel, Diolch, c;👌

    • @ferguspitcher7911
      @ferguspitcher7911 11 месяцев назад +2

      I live on the west coast of Ceredigion and at certain beaches during low tide, you can see an ancient petrified forest. The land would have stretched further out to sea, makes it easy to imagine the myths of places like Cantre’r Gwaelod and Caer Arianhorhod coming to life

  • @davemcintoshyt277
    @davemcintoshyt277 Год назад +1

    TY for this video. Very informative.
    I am Welsh. Living on Anglesey. Loved seeing all the video clips of the different locations.

  • @Diogenes_43
    @Diogenes_43 Год назад +6

    Great deep dive on the Welsh. Well done.

  • @micheleheggedahl5114
    @micheleheggedahl5114 10 месяцев назад +2

    As an American of Welsh heritage, my Grandmother told me of our Welsh heritage with great pride. The surname, I was told and have documentation of, is Winn. Personally, I have always been fascinated by the tale os Queen Boudicca.

    • @saturdayplayer2492
      @saturdayplayer2492 9 месяцев назад

      Boudicca was queen of the Iceni a tribe from Eastern England and had little if anything to do with Wales. Caractacus ( Caradog) was a great chief of the Silure in South Wales who fought against the Romans.

    • @CherieCombie-ot2fp
      @CherieCombie-ot2fp 3 месяца назад

      Hi
      Interesting
      I'm Welsh born and bred in ( Gwent )
      Welsh on my mother's side Davies
      English blood from my father's side ( Anglo Saxon ) yet my great great grandmother was born in Frostburg Maryland in 1845 I'm yet to trace her history
      So I guess I'm a mix
      Nice to meet you"

  • @madsleonardholvik3040
    @madsleonardholvik3040 Год назад +4

    Great video! Thanks! I'll be going to Wales in April from Norway to see the Norwegian sailors church in Cardiff where my great grandfather went from Norway to work as a diacon at the beginning of the 19-hundreds. I'll be looking out for King Arthur as well!

  • @lgeef1631
    @lgeef1631 Год назад +1

    I learned our family immigrated from Wales in the mid 18th century .. so cool to learn more, hope to visit one day

  • @chriscarey1478
    @chriscarey1478 Год назад +33

    Many believe Arthur is fictional because of accounts of him fighting both Romans and Saxons- some 400 years apart. Wilson and Blackett have shown with good evidence, that there were two Arthur's, one directly descended from the other, and that they were both very real.

    • @deanmorgan7011
      @deanmorgan7011 Год назад +5

      Spot on they were 250 years apart and that often causes confusion, but yes your 100% right my friend.

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад +2

      I learned about the two Arthurs watching Britain's Hidden History. I have read books by Lomas and Knight inn then 90's that talked about one Arthur, the one from north britain.

    • @Anglo-Saxon66
      @Anglo-Saxon66 5 месяцев назад +2

      King Arthur wasn't real. Good myth though.

    • @chriscarey1478
      @chriscarey1478 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Anglo-Saxon66 Strong evidence shows otherwise if one looks for it. It's still extant in writing, and geography.

    • @ashton1952
      @ashton1952 2 месяца назад

      Amazing. There's no smoke without a fire

  • @johnnythermos8288
    @johnnythermos8288 Год назад +2

    An excellent video. Ardderchog, da iawn.

  • @Paul.Morgan
    @Paul.Morgan Год назад +39

    The Welsh house of Tudor held the English throne from 1485-1603.

    • @DLLW93
      @DLLW93 Год назад +5

      And the early Tudors did much to emulate the symbology of Arthur's court

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад +5

      Tudor was an anglo-welsh house.

    • @irenejohnston6802
      @irenejohnston6802 Год назад

      The wives of Kings were all continental until Edward IV married widow of Earl Grey, Elizabeth Woodville. The King couldn't marry one of his subjects.

    • @intothewild5045
      @intothewild5045 Год назад

      The tutors were Welsh?

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад

      @@intothewild5045 It's what we were taught!

  • @robertbowden1445
    @robertbowden1445 Месяц назад +1

    Amazing video thank you 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @notdylan3125
    @notdylan3125 Год назад +3

    I have mostly scottish heritage but I have a good part of welsh in me too and this was very interesting

  • @stuart5107
    @stuart5107 Год назад +1

    Remarkably put together the history of Wales . Thank you for retelling their story.

  • @petergriffiths369
    @petergriffiths369 Год назад +4

    Absolutley brilliant. An English accent speaking good Welsh. I had a London accent speaking Welsh. The small town of Porthcawl, where I was born, had Viking settlements (Sker house), Medeival settlements (Kenfig) Norman churches and more. I shared this to my page, tagged my familey and the histoirans and fellow Archaeolgists 🙂Subscribed !

  • @franciscoprazzio225prazzio
    @franciscoprazzio225prazzio Год назад +1

    Like the video you earned a sub, my Welsh ancestors came mostly from North Wales some of them came from Mid Wales, and South Wales.

  • @spidey6349
    @spidey6349 Год назад +3

    amazing pronunciation and good video thanks for covering the history

  • @carrired20
    @carrired20 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for your video. I am from Hong Kong and have been to UK before. Now it's help me to understand more about Wales. 😊

  • @vallovesnature8449
    @vallovesnature8449 Год назад +7

    Most excellent video! Thank you for sharing this with us 😊

    • @hankwilliams5622
      @hankwilliams5622 Год назад

      Why? They weak a weak assed race. We bruthas knock y'all on yo' asses in every boxin' ring in the world.

  • @pjakep
    @pjakep Год назад +1

    Pretty impressed with your LlanfairPG pronunciation. Da iawn

  • @jeffroberts1649
    @jeffroberts1649 Год назад +4

    I have been researching my heritage over the past few months, my paternal grandfather came to Canada from Flintshire, this video was vert well done!

    • @cynthiaclark9566
      @cynthiaclark9566 Год назад +1

      Jeff Roberts, My Paternal Grandparents came to Canada from Swansea, Victor and Ida May Begy. There Son, Burton Clark Begy was my Dad. I am Sotts/Irish on my Mom's side😁

    • @GaryOzbourne-mp7yv
      @GaryOzbourne-mp7yv Год назад +1

      Flintshire is not far from were I come from Denbighshire. Flint is a
      Nice place..

    • @jeffroberts1649
      @jeffroberts1649 Год назад

      @@GaryOzbourne-mp7yv Flintshire /Wales/Cymru is first on my bucket list!

  • @juliagarza9942
    @juliagarza9942 Год назад +2

    I have enjoyed this Video so very much I have discovered that I am a Welsh descendent in USA and it just so happens your video popped up and I laughed, must be my PSYIC ABILITIES kicking in. I look forward to many more of your Videos.

  • @ninamoores
    @ninamoores Год назад +4

    After the war we used to get a lot of French ( from Brittany) onion sellers who would spend the summer cycling around the U.K. selling strings of French onions.Many of them only spoke a little English but coped quite well withWelsh speakers when working in Wales.A friend of my parents ,whose first language was Welsh had the same chap turn up with his onions for several years and they conversed quite easily in Breton/Welsh.

    • @Halbared
      @Halbared Год назад

      Have you seen he film, Johnny Frenchman? An easy going British film about a Cornish/Breton rivalry.

  • @Rae-J90
    @Rae-J90 Год назад +2

    Great video and fantastic pronunciation of some tricky Welsh words and names! Lovely to see this recognition of little old Wales from across the pond. All the best from a modern day Cymru 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @morganjohn8580
    @morganjohn8580 Год назад +9

    As a Welshman living near Swansea,.south Wales, diolch, thank you for this video. It's very accurate and was a very interesting watch. I thoroughly enjoyed it 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @paulsmith3487
    @paulsmith3487 Год назад +1

    Listening from Windsor,n.s.w
    Australia.hokey smokes Natasha this almost unbelievable!beautifully done!

  • @TeresaE116
    @TeresaE116 Год назад +7

    Such an informative and excellent video! I also subscribed to your channel! I have some Welsh DNA 🧬 and my husband has perhaps as much as 50% Welsh! I’ve never heard of anyone giving this much time and serious attention to the People of Wales! Thank you ❤

  • @taff6987
    @taff6987 4 месяца назад

    This was absolutely fantastic.
    Very well put together sir, your pronunciations are spot on which is not easy for many, especially an American!
    I loved the work you did.🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @matthewsuchomski2593
    @matthewsuchomski2593 Год назад +6

    great video! thank you for your work FoL.

  • @makeupboss3568
    @makeupboss3568 7 месяцев назад +1

    My mother’s ancestors are from Wales ! It’s an interesting thing to learn about.

  • @magicpyroninja
    @magicpyroninja Год назад +12

    Learning about your ancestors is always fun

  • @gemma327
    @gemma327 Год назад +1

    Really enjoyed this- thank you from Caerphilly

  • @em6577
    @em6577 Год назад +5

    I am a jones. My father was Welsh. Beautiful country.

  • @jamespowell4522
    @jamespowell4522 Год назад +2

    loved this. My son is Owain, now i have the vid to show him why

  • @welshed
    @welshed Год назад +8

    Excellent video and your pronunciation though not perfect, was pretty good. The attempt is always appreciated at any rate.
    Good job, subscribed :)

  • @Lea-rb9nc
    @Lea-rb9nc Год назад

    Alas, I have not yet been to Wales. However, my maternal grandmother was a Cardiff lass. She was marvelous. I do hope to visit in the next few years. I enjoy learning more about her homeland and thank you for sharing.