Where the Hell is Viking London?

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 186

  • @eazy8579
    @eazy8579 Год назад +230

    Ok, but when is History hit gonna give Jimmy his own show? He absolutely deserves one!

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +68

      Take note, illustrious sponsor!!

    • @laraetoday
      @laraetoday Год назад +17

      Definitely! Interesting, poignant, funny and infectious - in a good way. Jimmy everyday would not be a bad thing! Love you! :)

    • @Bildgesmythe
      @Bildgesmythe Год назад +5

      Yes!

    • @melatonin6811
      @melatonin6811 Год назад +9

      I would definitely watch. Here's my vote

    • @AmAppleton
      @AmAppleton Год назад +3

      They definitely should!

  • @thebratqueen
    @thebratqueen Год назад +15

    "You look grander because you have this wall around you" - tell that to my therapist why don't you?

  • @mnk9073
    @mnk9073 Год назад +23

    "Damn, there are long ships full of bearded northmen in a looting mood on the river! What are we going to do?"
    "Oh I don't know Aethelwulf, a completely walled square mile would come really handy right now, if only we had such a place..."
    _*looks at the abandonned and crumbling ruins of Londinium accusingly_

  • @emmamarentette
    @emmamarentette Год назад +11

    closed captioning interpreting "Londonberry?burry?" as "London buddy" is really charming

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +2

      Haha! London, buddy! How you doing?

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Год назад

      ​@@TheWelshViking There's a Czech song calling Paris a Mademoiselle (erroneously, I understand; the name is feminine in Czech) and wishing it good evening, so this could make a companion song. :D

    • @elizabethjones9781
      @elizabethjones9781 Год назад +1

      I was amused by the "pottery shirts". I think the captions gnome gave up when it got Llangorse, so it was nothing like!

    • @emmamarentette
      @emmamarentette Год назад

      @@TheWelshViking In the deepest depths of job hunting, which is a source of multiple existential crises per day. Could be better.

  • @Th3GreenMachine
    @Th3GreenMachine Год назад +49

    I don’t care what I’m doing, when I see Jimmy has posted, I will stop and watch the video

    • @kellybraille
      @kellybraille Год назад +13

      Me too! Haha I was smack dab in the middle of another video, and heartlessly clicked right off and ran over here. 😂

    • @eazy8579
      @eazy8579 Год назад +9

      Same; was listening to another video, at work, got the notification on discord, and came over here so fast I broke the sound barrier

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +16

      LOOK AT THE ROAD

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +12

      Also this is incredibly sweet of ye. You rock and I am humbled

  • @sonkeschluter3654
    @sonkeschluter3654 Год назад +33

    As a german its interesting how the old pronunciation of borough sounds a lot like the german Burg which means castle, Also an walled enclosure

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +19

      Same root!

    • @kajsan760
      @kajsan760 Год назад +11

      I also reflected that it must be the same word as the Swedish borg, meaning fortified place/castle.

  • @chrisball3778
    @chrisball3778 Год назад +60

    The Museum of London used to have some large axe heads on display that (I think) had been retrieved from the Thames. They claimed they were possibly Viking in origin and conjectured that they might have been lost during Olaf II of Norway's attack on London in the early 11th century. This was a disputed historical event that has been proposed as a (very unlikely) explanation for the 'London Bridge is Falling Down' nursery rhyme and featured in the episode of the Vinland Saga anime where Thorkell first appears. The museum's currently closed as its being demolished and the collection moved to a new site, so don't know whether they'll be back with the same description. Possibly it's now considered outdated, as the Anglo-Saxons also used big axes during the same period.
    I once missed my last train home when I was visiting some friends in London and had to walk back to their flat in Bethnal Green because the tube had finished for the night and I couldn't afford a cab. Part of the walk was through the City of London, after midnight, and it was totally eerie how empty the Square Mile was compared to every other part of the city. It was an absolute ghost town. I was just wandering by all these big skyscrapers and famous buildings with literally nobody else in sight most of the time. I've never seen anything else quite like it. The closest thing I can think of is the zombie movie 28 Days Later. It's a very, very strange place, built for money, not people.

    •  Год назад +8

      Oh! I'm not the only one who thinks of a zombie movie when walking by London's financial centre... I feel slightly better for that.

    • @jwolfe1209
      @jwolfe1209 Год назад +3

      Hmm, demolished you say? That would be an excellent opportunity to do some of that hands on digging to see just what they can find under their foundations!

  • @anthonyhayes1267
    @anthonyhayes1267 Год назад +29

    Unrelated, but buy Jimmy's notebooks from his merch store. They're excellent and I loved mine enough to make it my Polish notebook. (I hope that's a good use of nerd powers)

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Год назад +4

      Language is always a good use of nerd powers.

  • @claire2088
    @claire2088 Год назад +6

    Jimmy looking v dashing here

  • @pumpskin
    @pumpskin Год назад +6

    having grown up in a city with ancient roman background, it's true that you will always find something once you start digging. Like every second building project has to be stopped because they found the foundation of some old wall or villa again. That, or an old bomb. I find it very fascinating that there is so much buried under london buildings as well.

  • @Graham_Rule
    @Graham_Rule Год назад +48

    I know you only threw it in as a passing example but I'd love an entire episode on the history of that little Welsh church in the remains of a Roman fort. Maybe not as good at attracting sponsors but the people who have been there are just as real (some might say more real) than many of the denizens of the "square mile".

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +17

      I’d love to! I’ll get footage next time I’m home :D

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Год назад +9

      I would love that, too!
      Especially because I'm sure the history of such quirky "little" places is in fact often chock full of interesting connections to the "big" history.

  • @cypriennezed5640
    @cypriennezed5640 Год назад +4

    Jimmy's Thinking Face: 😳

  • @fionaellem4379
    @fionaellem4379 Год назад +39

    Love Edwardian Gentleman Jimmy! And this was really interesting, thank you. And that drinking horn was wonderful! Serious envy happening at one point.

  • @keephurn1159
    @keephurn1159 Год назад +8

    What I'm hearing is that the noble purpose of unearthing archaeological sites requires us to strip the eyesores down to their foundations. I mean, obviously we'll recycle the building materials for public works.

  • @mettejakobsen7017
    @mettejakobsen7017 Год назад +13

    Thank you for another interesting video. Borg is the Danish Word for castle. We have the similar names in Viborg, Aalborg, Nyborg (with is the danish variant of Newcastle) 👍🇩🇰

  • @lindsaydrewe8219
    @lindsaydrewe8219 Год назад +4

    So the long Beach would be why its called The Strand?

  • @sarahwatts7152
    @sarahwatts7152 Год назад +9

    It didn't occur to me to think about the lull period in London's archaeology. It's fascinating to think about why there would be so little evidence

  • @pyenygren2299
    @pyenygren2299 Год назад +4

    1: can we please, please, please get a tour of the book shelf behind you? Including books and items.
    2: History hit can give you a show with several seasons.

  • @mayanscaper
    @mayanscaper Год назад +15

    The mithracerium dig and it's location under the Bloomberg building is a wild story of it's discovery in the early 1950s. It was in the way so it was picked up and moved to a nearby roof. Bloomberg people put it back where it was found 20 ft under the foundation while building. They've made a fantastic museum in their lobby and a sound and hologram show recreating the shrine.
    There's a river running through Londinium that is now piped under the road. When contract archaeologists can, they uncover mosaics and daily living artifacts down at the piped river level. So, I think we have to thank intrepid contract archaeology for teaching us about what's buried deep underground, including Romano British hill shrines.

  • @emmaegtberts8419
    @emmaegtberts8419 Год назад +4

    Speaking of Burghs, hi from Doesburg. A lovely little medieval town in the Netherlands 😁

  • @SaszaDerRoyt
    @SaszaDerRoyt Год назад +11

    I'd certainly prioritise uncovering any Viking age knickknacks and Alfred's building projects over any big silly bank building, hopefully someday soon we shall see more archaeology in the City!

  • @starsun6363
    @starsun6363 Год назад +22

    J. Draper is another youtuber that did a video on this!! She points out the various places in the city that are viking or of viking descent though there aren't many. I would highly reccomend her channel, she's amazing.

    • @SarahGreen523
      @SarahGreen523 Год назад +5

      I'm subbed to her channel too! She's another really great presenter!

    • @starsun6363
      @starsun6363 Год назад +2

      @@SarahGreen523 yeees!!!!

  • @anieth
    @anieth Год назад +3

    In Rome, they unearthed a Roman church beneath an old church and under that a temple of Mithras! I was standing in that temple, overly aware of being a woman, but it was really eerie and realistic. They had the altar there complete with the god killing the bull. That was way better than the Coliseum. That's was so cool about Europe--it's like the geostrata of humanity.

  • @roxiepoe9586
    @roxiepoe9586 Год назад +9

    It is so nice to learn from someone who is passionate about accuracy. Thanks.

  • @cathyrogers9276
    @cathyrogers9276 Год назад +46

    Your videos are always a joy to watch. Thank you for all the work that these take. I love learning what really happened and not some sensationalized clickbait!

  • @TalesFromTheHauntedLibrary
    @TalesFromTheHauntedLibrary Год назад +8

    As ever, delightful, charming, and wildly informative. Thank you, Jimmy!

  • @DelDel__
    @DelDel__ Год назад +23

    It pains me to know that there's so much archaeology beneath cities and it's pretty much inaccessable due to the massive buildings :'(

    • @wielderofspoons
      @wielderofspoons Год назад

      We have that where we are. They discovered there was Roman activity, and signs there could have been a fort and other things but it has a housing estate over the top of it 😭

    • @pavelstaravoitau7106
      @pavelstaravoitau7106 Год назад +3

      And whenever it is finally accessible, it's only temporary and they are building things on top of it.

  • @linr8260
    @linr8260 Год назад +8

    Clear the skyline, give access to archeology, and rid us of the banks, three birds with one stone!

  • @euansmith3699
    @euansmith3699 Год назад +5

    Jimmy, "I'm not sure; I can't tell you." Oh, Jimmy you'll never get a series on History Channel with doubts like that. 😍

  • @robintheparttimesewer6798
    @robintheparttimesewer6798 Год назад +7

    That was great. I had never really given any thought to the history of London. The older I get the more lacking I find my education was.

  • @GratiaCountryman
    @GratiaCountryman Год назад +17

    I have been a History Hit subscriber for a year and it’s worth every penny. It’s fantastic, and I love watching and listening to the videos and podcasts.

  • @pacman1386
    @pacman1386 Год назад +2

    I could hear the air quotes round bankers! 😂

  • @Bildgesmythe
    @Bildgesmythe Год назад +8

    Sorry Viking raiders, the rich have left, our ale sucks but we will sell you some barley. Seems like a great strategy to me.

  • @lizzyfrizzy4969
    @lizzyfrizzy4969 Год назад +3

    This really intrigues me

  • @mellfraze8112
    @mellfraze8112 Год назад +3

    Good afternoon from sunny California. Thanks for another lovely & educational video.

  • @herkles5416
    @herkles5416 Год назад +5

    Hey JImmy, I am wondering what are the books on your bookshelf? Perhaps a video of your books and your thoughts/recommendations on them for those wanting to learn more? :)

  • @EFJoKeR
    @EFJoKeR Год назад +6

    I was wondering Welsh... When are you getting to host a show on History Hit ?? xD

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +8

      My name is Jimmy, and I’ll ask them once they’re drunk enough to accept!

    • @EFJoKeR
      @EFJoKeR Год назад +1

      @@TheWelshViking |In that case, Jimmy, Send them a crate of Glenfiddich... >P

  • @latronqui
    @latronqui Год назад +6

    Bitte schön from Germany 😅 (I'm not even German but I've been in Germany and married to a German for long enough that when you talked about the Blitz I felt a little 😬 oops). I found it so funny how you see a big destruction as a digging opportunity 😅

  • @ngliscsaxon6128
    @ngliscsaxon6128 Год назад +4

    Was literally just looking at the Ringerike stone in St Pauls earlier for a Ringerike inspired tattoo. Glad to see your content is back mate. 😊

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +3

      Cheers dude. It’s a great piece! Sean at Sacred Knot tattoos has done a few based on it. Lovely design!

  •  Год назад +2

    Me, who doesn't give a toss about massive office buildings and financial districts: "So... if we start nuking some buildings now, and we're careful, we could find some interesting historical stuff beneath..."

  • @historiansrevolt4333
    @historiansrevolt4333 Год назад +4

    Ohh lovely end to a Friday. It's always interesting to look at what remains of various periods of occupation in cities.

  • @berkleypearl2363
    @berkleypearl2363 Год назад +5

    Man. It’s not fair that you are such a well spoken stranger on the internet. I wish to be your friend and send you memes and chat about stuff. Alas you do not know me and I do not know you. You are just so friendly and funny and handsome and you know all these cool things! Curse my earnest nature and the folly of parasocial relationships

  • @MrSinclairn
    @MrSinclairn Год назад +4

    Good,informative vid,Jimmy: never knew that Westminister starts is existence as an Anglo-Saxon island!👌👍

  • @lilykatmoon4508
    @lilykatmoon4508 Год назад +1

    So cool. Thanks for sharing!

  • @ulrike9978
    @ulrike9978 Год назад +5

    Okay, now you have got me curious (she says, as if I´m ever not interested in archaeology and history): when did Westminster stop being an island and how?

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +2

      The level of the land gradually roae over a few centuries and it just sort of quietly silted up and was built over. Apparently it was quite a nice green placw 1000 years ago!

    • @ulrike9978
      @ulrike9978 Год назад +1

      @@TheWelshViking Thank you, much appreciated!

  • @melatonin6811
    @melatonin6811 Год назад +2

    Glowing even harder today my man's loving the content. ❤❤❤ thank you

  • @martinseelig585
    @martinseelig585 Год назад +1

    This video screams for a Jay Foreman "Unfinished London" collab!

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Год назад +1

      Ooooh!
      Not sure the styles would mesh, but it really does scream Unfinished London.

  • @elizabethmcglothlin5406
    @elizabethmcglothlin5406 7 месяцев назад

    Rewatching again. When the present gets me down I soothe myself with history and science and your pleasant voice, so thanks again.

  • @ceilidhdancer28
    @ceilidhdancer28 Год назад +8

    I'm loving having you back on the regular, definitely worth the wait and I'm inspired to do some of my own research again ❤️❤️

  • @ladyliberty417
    @ladyliberty417 Год назад +3

    Thanks Jimmy - this is a complicated history ( for me!!) and I love your teaching it so well!! Looking handsome too❗️✌🏼

  • @sarahjameson3064
    @sarahjameson3064 Год назад +1

    These videos are great. I've enjoyed watching them any time I take a break from my own dissertation (which I have no idea how you do both!). Have to admit, I had to rewind this one a couple times though because I kept to getting distracted by the beautiful book set behind you.
    Thank you for making history entertaining!

  • @beth_winegarner
    @beth_winegarner Год назад +4

    I love all of this. I live in California but London is one of my favorite places, especially archaeologically. I enjoy visiting the Museum of London (and seeing the bits of Roman wall there), and following the mudlarkers who find artifacts along the Thames, particularly Lara Maiklem. Like you I sort of hope for demolition in London so y'all can study what's underneath. I've been down into the depths of St. Bride's Church, which dates back to the 6th or 7th century and existing structures date back to the 11th century.

  • @januzzell8631
    @januzzell8631 Год назад +6

    That was fascinating - thank you SO much

  • @futuristicspider
    @futuristicspider Год назад +3

    I'm always so excited to see your uploads ❤ great video!

  • @ladyshield
    @ladyshield Год назад +1

    Hey jimmy, if you ever see this, hi . Just wanted to say I really enjoy your videos. And the way you have sculped your facial hair looks really good on you in this video >///

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +1

      Thank you, Lady Shield! All credit to my barber!

  • @jamesblenn5146
    @jamesblenn5146 Год назад

    Thank you for saying this Jimmy! I am an American who studies and practices a mixture of pagan cultural and religious rites. I consider myself neo-pagan because I obviously cannot verify the accuracy of these historical practices. I try to explain the nuance of these issues as much as I can, but I am not quite as eloquent and educated as yourself. Keep up the good work! You really do make a difference.

  • @phoenixkingtheo
    @phoenixkingtheo Год назад +6

    Not sure why they changed the name, but I still maintain Londinium is such a cooler name than London

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Год назад

      In Czech, it's still called Londýn, with the I sound. :-)

  • @judgeflems
    @judgeflems Год назад +1

    Thank you good Sir! I just subscribed to The history Hit. 👍Thank you Awesome Jimmmy! 💯

  • @TwoMikesProductions
    @TwoMikesProductions Год назад +4

    Annoyingly Billngsgate fish market, after the thick end of a thousand years of being there for its importance of trading eels... has now moved to west london.
    You cant stop progress apparently. Its making way for posh flats.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +4

      NO? I had no idea it was being flattened. At least people will be *living* there I guess? Who am I kidding, they’ll be more pieds à terre for bloody oligarchs. Hope the fish guts rot the foundations and we at least day the building work with a long excavation

    • @TwoMikesProductions
      @TwoMikesProductions Год назад +4

      @@TheWelshViking Honestly mate, its absolutely disgusting. Being moved to warehouse areas in west london. Without soul. 1000+ years of history literally gone. Arguably one of the reasons london is even where it is and not left to ruin.

  • @DipityS
    @DipityS Год назад +2

    Very informative and interesting as always, thank you!

  • @AmAppleton
    @AmAppleton Год назад +1

    Two of my favourite things, history wise, in one vid. I could seriously listen to a lot more.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +1

      Oh! I’m so pleased! I’d love to do more in this style with more location shooting if that appeals?

    • @AmAppleton
      @AmAppleton Год назад

      @@TheWelshViking That appeals very much! What can /we do to help make it happen? Beyond supporting you on Patreon

  • @jessicasinclair323
    @jessicasinclair323 Год назад

    Kyning Ton now Kennington was the seat of crowning for Harthacnut and Harold Godwinson now Kennington Park (South of the River Thames)
    West of London and North of the Thames is Gunnersbury Park which was named after Gunhilda, Cnut's niece. And in neighbouring Brentford is supposed to be the beach where Cnut sat in the tidal flow of the Thames.
    There is a wee section in the British Museum of Viking relics found in London
    I remember many moons ago visiting an excavated building site in York that revealed a wee city from Eric Bloodaxe's era and how truly fascinating it was!
    In 1012 the Viking's stronghold base camp was in Greenwich. In that same year they kidnapped the then archbishop of Canterbury (Alfege) and held him captive ransomed at a mahoosive 3000 gold sovereigns. Alfege fearing his followers would starve to death as he'd been held for 7 or 8 months by then, refused to be ransomed and was instead "oxboned to death".(The mind boggles. Perhaps you could enlighten me on what "oxboned to death" actually entails).Alfege was martyred later in the same year becoming St Alfege. His remains are interred beneath the medieval floor of St Alfege Church in Greenwich before the alter.

  • @katienewell7350
    @katienewell7350 Год назад +1

    Awesome video! You mentioned minster complexes being built on Roman sites - this sounds similar to Winchester, where the current cathedral (which is on the site of the prior Old and New Minsters) is likely situated beside where the Anglo-Saxon palace complex was, which itself was built over the Roman forum it seems. Loved the map you included on Winchester too, happy to see Nunnaminster was on there!

  • @SSRT_JubyDuby8742
    @SSRT_JubyDuby8742 Год назад +2

    I thoroughly enjoyed this Jimmy, glorious work, thankyou 😁
    Like deployed 👍

  • @elizabethmcglothlin5406
    @elizabethmcglothlin5406 Год назад +3

    So many layers and so much loss!

  • @breannadyck3415
    @breannadyck3415 Год назад

    Ok I think you’ve scored the best sponsor ever!

  • @MacMoonie
    @MacMoonie Год назад +2

    OMG it is mindblowing to think that there are places where humans built buildings and monuments for thousands of years... i know that people lived here for thousands of years, but i don't think they left buildings here (Saskatchewan) so how do they learn from nomadic peoples?

  • @cherub2918
    @cherub2918 Год назад

    Cool! Thank you for the video!

  • @Leifr952
    @Leifr952 Год назад

    Fascinating stuff! I regularly used to explore The City and the route of the Roman walls when I lived in London. Enjoyed the shot of the Old Cheshire Cheese too, one of my favourite boozers!

  • @elewysoffinchingefeld3066
    @elewysoffinchingefeld3066 Год назад

    I've never been to London (or most of the cities you've named) I spent a day in Edinburgh many, many years ago but it's clear that I really need to make a British Bucket List! Thanks for sharing this Anglo-Archaeology lesson to your channel!

  • @lizzaturnbull
    @lizzaturnbull Год назад

    Thanks for another great video Jimmy! Jay Draper of The London History Show here on RUclips has done an episode on this that goes along really well with this video xx

  • @westsaxoninwales
    @westsaxoninwales Год назад +2

    Excellent pronunciation of "saaaaaath" 😂

  • @melissamybubbles6139
    @melissamybubbles6139 Год назад

    Glad to see you as always Jimmy. I hope someday more archeology emerges.

  • @hidillon
    @hidillon Год назад +1

    this was amazing!

  • @bridgetconnolly5178
    @bridgetconnolly5178 Год назад

    I would love to go on a bookshelf tour someday, always just out of focus in the background.

  • @quercus2949
    @quercus2949 Год назад +1

    Have you seen the archeological site on Micklegate in York? Very exciting.

  • @henninghesse9910
    @henninghesse9910 Год назад +2

    Burg (high german)=Castle

  • @ellen4956
    @ellen4956 Год назад

    There was a street in York (Jorvik to Vikings, Eoforwick to Saxons) that was a trading site, and *fairly* recently there was a special (TimeTeam?) where they showed a dig in progress where some great artifacts were found, including a preserved leather shoe and a beautiful helmet. There was a 9 month dig in Londinium led by the Museum of London, and TimeTeam did an episode on what they found there (episode 91).

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад

      The dig in York was the Coppergate excavation which took place in 1976-1981(!) and the helmet is now in the Yorkshire Museum!

    • @ellen4956
      @ellen4956 Год назад

      @@TheWelshViking Yes! I didn't realize it was that long ago! I got a piece of jewelry made to look like part of the design on the helmet; like two dogs ( or creatures of some sort) but a knot design - it's beautiful!

  • @robertfaucher3750
    @robertfaucher3750 Год назад +5

    Wasn't a whole king just buried under a parking lot

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +15

      Leicester. He was buried in a monastery precinct we had already located, so there was no real mystery to where Dicky III was buried, despite the hype.

    • @robertfaucher3750
      @robertfaucher3750 Год назад +3

      @@TheWelshViking still surprising how much can be underfoot. I live in the US so most of our cities histories pale in comparison.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +7

      Get yourself on a dig at some point! It’s really good fun :)

    • @robertfaucher3750
      @robertfaucher3750 Год назад +4

      @@TheWelshViking Even though I love history, my interests are primarily paleontological. Unfortunately the glaciers that scrubbed off the topsoil of New England removed the Neolithic and mesozoic deposits. I was thinking about heading to VT in the summer to look at some Cambrian age outcrops though

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Год назад +1

      ​​@@TheWelshViking The hype was largely because a whole load of people still refused to accept he could be buried there despite the evidence, until it was definitively proved by genetics, wasn't it? At least that was my retrospective impression when I did a presentation on that for school here in Czechia (ETA: Well, him the historical king vs him the literary figure, that was the actual topic). Lots of internet comments even after the fact going "it can't be him, he wasn't actually a hunchback, that was Tudor slander", too, so it seems it really was only the genetics that shut people up. :-)

  • @AppalachiaRRlover
    @AppalachiaRRlover Год назад

    I love that you properly pronounced vicus w a W not V

  • @danielaf1487
    @danielaf1487 Год назад

    It has to be said though, Erik (from The Last Kingdom)'s Norse warlord chat-up line to Aethelflaed was pretty original: "I gave up Lunden for you". 😁

  • @millymollymrst3537
    @millymollymrst3537 Год назад

    Thank you for an extremely interesting video.😊

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад

      Well thank you for an extremely nice comment :)

  • @BrotherJing1
    @BrotherJing1 Год назад

    Worth noting with Exeter that the former Roman walls were rebuilt by the Romans fairly late on, and then strengthened by Alfred since the Vikings had seized the town at one time. They were strong enough to resist multiple sieges in the chaos of 1068-70 when first William besieged Gytha, Harold's mother, and her supporters (the town weren't keen so they gave up), then his supporters were besieged by rebelling men of Devon and Cornwall when the Danish fleet was off the coast of Northumbria.

  • @persiswynter6357
    @persiswynter6357 Год назад +2

    I read somewhere (or saw a documentary) that the Vikings weren't in the habit of leaving architectural signs of their presence. They simply used the buildings that were already there. There were pictures of fortresses in Andalucia, Spain, showing how the Moors left their mark; but the images of old buildings from Normandy, France, where Vikings settled don't show any characteristic details. My conclusion was that stonemasons apparently didn't go a-viking.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +3

      Not true. We have lots of interesting rectilinear Norse style buildings from places like Dublin, Lllanbedrgoch, and Scandinavia ofc! Normandy was already built up to a degree, so there were plenty of locals about to throw buildings up!

    • @persiswynter6357
      @persiswynter6357 Год назад

      @@TheWelshViking then my memory is probably faulty. I should revisit the source. Apologies!

  • @kellyburds2991
    @kellyburds2991 Год назад +3

    Where link for History Hit?

  • @BrotherJing1
    @BrotherJing1 Год назад

    They also sometimes have handsome historians on their podcasts chatting about early medieval Cornwall ;)

  • @theoneandonly3283
    @theoneandonly3283 Год назад

    Good old Lundene (in Old English accordng to Oxford)

  • @VinlandAlchemist
    @VinlandAlchemist Год назад +4

    Another brilliant video! It just kills me that much of our developed world with its buildings and such has completely ruined any chance of finding anything of archeological value in many cases. What were they thinking? Obviously nothing about our history... still, some chance still exists for some, I hope. Thanks for this video, Iago mab Iago! 😊

  • @KelciaMarie1
    @KelciaMarie1 Год назад +1

    IS THAT THE BARTIMAEUS TRILOGY BACK THERE?!
    It was my absolute favorite for years. I always wanted a sassy murder hobo friend like Bartimaeus. Such a fun series.

  • @beepboop204
    @beepboop204 Год назад +5

    🙂

  • @MichaelBerthelsen
    @MichaelBerthelsen Год назад

    Did you play AC:Valhalla and make it to London? It was pretty cool that it was mostly Roman ruins, and people making houses there among and using the ruins. And it even has some new farming settlement to the West of the docks.

  • @Loweene_Ancalimon
    @Loweene_Ancalimon Год назад

    There's a Mithraeum in London?! I've only ever spent four nights in London, and I definitely want to go back to visit more things (and see more stuff at the Globe :p) but this new piece of information is definitely going to the top of the list of stuff I want to see there! Love visiting places of worship, no matter the state of ruin, and I've yet to see a Mithraeum. There's a bunch in France, but none nearby, alas.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад

      It’s super cool! Hard to visit I think, but there!

  • @enariva669
    @enariva669 Год назад

    Yes! Level the banks… for the archaeology

  • @katyalysander1490
    @katyalysander1490 Год назад +1

    The gravestone from St Paul’s is so interestingly square! And lacking in Christian imagery on the side shown, which makes me wonder about how it compares to its Saxon contemporaries (if any survive in that area). Is the squareness an 11th-c thing, or more of a “living in a city with plenty of good stonemasons” thing? As an aside, I’d love to see a video on VA drinking horns/vessels.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад +2

      Short answer: we dunno. Long answer: it’s probably intended as a “runestone” like they’d erect in Denmark, but as a guess maybe the local mason suggested squaring it off as there were no natural menhirs nearby available? Or maybe it’s a recycled dressed stone?

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Год назад

      But yes, a *fascinating* artefact!

  • @larrywave
    @larrywave Год назад +1

    Is that a separate collar 😄

  • @rocketman9448
    @rocketman9448 Год назад

    So your telling me Wick means town… so that means John wick is actually John Town 😱

  • @atevensnderson5827
    @atevensnderson5827 Год назад +3

    Is that a removable collar? You look very put together it's charmingly distracting

  • @dannyfriar5653
    @dannyfriar5653 Год назад

    What is the map used at 4:26?

  • @DneilB007
    @DneilB007 Год назад +4

    I really wonder about the accuracy of the traditional accounts of post-Roman Britain in general, and of Londinium in particular.
    The majority of the excavations that have occurred in the footprint of Londinium were done before the excavations began in Wroxeter, and if there were similar reuse of sites in Londinium (basically, buildings flattened to create level platforms for timber-framed buildings comparable in size to later Roman villas in the British provinces, all during the mid-5th to early 6th centuries), the excavation techniques of the day would likely have not only misinterpreted the rubble platforms, they would have literally destroyed the evidence of those sites ever existing.
    Future excavations in the footprint of Londinium need to be aware of the possibility of post-Roman timber houses being used, and be prepared to look for evidence of post-holes & timber rails in the post-Roman rubble layers.

  • @Angel_1394
    @Angel_1394 Год назад

    I'm glad WW2 did some good at least in history research. I never knew this much about London and I'm glad to know it now