Nuo 2021 kovo 16 d. iki birželio 20 d. kviečiame parodoje apsilankyti gyvai. Bendrais bruožais paroda anglų kalba pristatyta virtualiame atidaryme - ruclips.net/video/gVz0tCabD6A/видео.html
Yes, Lithuanians wore closed aventails. This is shown by iconographic data - the capital of the Marienverder Castle column, a chess piece from Krakow, which is traditionally associated with Lithuanians. However one or two archeologically found helmets cannot reflect the variety of helmets used by all Lithuanian soldiers.
@@valdovurum Could you clarify the dating on Marienwerder relief for me? Its weird that some articles state its 14th century. Some people are skeptic about that chess figure, because its lost. Some Believe its wrongly dated, but its those, who believe that polish and lithuanian people are incapable archaeologists. Lets say that the figure is 13th century. What makes it lithuanian, when polish historians could claim it to be polish?
Liuks, bet vienas bet (kaip kitaip), manęs neįtikino manekenai, būkim realistiški, toks paauglio sudėjimo vaikinukas iki prasigyvenusio kario neprasimuštų, juo labiau kunigaikščio draugijon.
Ačiū už labai įdomią ekskursiją . Peržiūrėjau vienu atsikvėpimu .
Nuostabi paroda ir nuostabi gidė. Ačiū :)
Ačiū! Labai patiko
Labai patiko! Aciu jums
aciu uz paroda
Labai erzina gidės demonstruojamos kabutės (dar ir dažnai įterpiamos), labai liberastiškas pasakojimas gaunasi. Kam apskritai reikia tų kabučių?
Ar planuojate įdėti Angliškus subtitrus?
Nuo 2021 kovo 16 d. iki birželio 20 d. kviečiame parodoje apsilankyti gyvai.
Bendrais bruožais paroda anglų kalba pristatyta virtualiame atidaryme - ruclips.net/video/gVz0tCabD6A/видео.html
Did lithuanians wear closed aventails in 13th century? Isn't the only helmet dated to that timeline has open aventail?
Yes, Lithuanians wore closed aventails. This is shown by iconographic data - the capital of the Marienverder Castle column, a chess piece from Krakow, which is traditionally associated with Lithuanians. However one or two archeologically found helmets cannot reflect the variety of helmets used by all Lithuanian soldiers.
@@valdovurum Could you clarify the dating on Marienwerder relief for me? Its weird that some articles state its 14th century.
Some people are skeptic about that chess figure, because its lost. Some Believe its wrongly dated, but its those, who believe that polish and lithuanian people are incapable archaeologists. Lets say that the figure is 13th century. What makes it lithuanian, when polish historians could claim it to be polish?
Liuks, bet vienas bet (kaip kitaip), manęs neįtikino manekenai, būkim realistiški, toks paauglio sudėjimo vaikinukas iki prasigyvenusio kario neprasimuštų, juo labiau kunigaikščio draugijon.
Tais laikais žmonės buvo gerokai menkesnio sudėjimo, tad nieko čia keisto.