Was Excalibur a Bronze Age Sword?

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  • čas přidán 10. 07. 2024
  • Well? Was it?
    It's a theory that's been proposed by eminent archaeologists and spread all over the internet. But is there really any truth in the idea that the Arthurian Sword in the Stone legend is based on Bronze Age "magical" metallurgy techniques and secrets lost the mists of time?
    Let's find out as we debunk, dig (or excavate!), and research our way through medieval King Arthur's underwear drawer full of French manuscripts, Welsh poems and an epic tale of magic, monsters and myth!
    (And yes, the sword in the stone is Excalibur. It's explicitly stated in "Merlin". Read the whole cycle, nerds! Or don't. Actually mostly don't - it's long and in Medieval French)
    The BS Historian: bshistorian.wordpress.com/
    A fun article on bronze age swords: www.researchgate.net/publicat...
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Komentáře • 729

  • @crystaldottir
    @crystaldottir Před rokem +58

    Time Team fans can recall many times Dr. Pryor got wound up about a grand romantic fantasy narrative of the place they were digging. We also recall just as many times the rest of the team said some version of "We love you, mate, but you're racing away from the actual evidence so far at high speed".

    • @AW-uv3cb
      @AW-uv3cb Před rokem +3

      I think it's also easy for the scholars on Time Team to say something off the cuff, a major thought shortcut - they're just having chats and working and all, so most of the time they don't plan what they're going to say and how - and then it comes out as less nuanced than intended. 🙂 (not saying this was the specific case here as I haven't seen the episode, but I can easily imagine it going this way :-) )

    • @kathilisi3019
      @kathilisi3019 Před rokem +5

      Part of the magic of Time Team is that they're not afraid to bounce wild ideas off each other and then they go to great lengths to find evidence to support or disprove their claims. I didn't see this particular episode either, but I did have a look at the documentation of another dig where the episode included a lot of speculation, and the paper only alluded to some of the theories and pointed out their speculative nature. They do know their stuff and don't pretend that their theories are the truth. And I recently watched an old episode where they were convinced of something on day 2 and had to completely throw their theory out of the window on day 3 due to contradictory evidence.

  • @Neophoia
    @Neophoia Před rokem +230

    gotta say, the idea that the origin of the sword being stuck in an object coming from an actual sword stuck in stone that existed at the time the author wrote it down is far cooler than most theories I've heard. Love to learn that the sword was presumably originally stuck in an anvil rather than stone too, even though that has been twisted over time like so many stories gets.

    • @roxiepoe9586
      @roxiepoe9586 Před rokem +39

      I blame Disney. Of course, when I don't have a real answer, I usually blame Disney.

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Před rokem +32

      @@roxiepoe9586 I think a common blame-ee is the Victorians, too.
      Though in this case, I have no idea. There are so many versions of the story. And the only sort-of original one I read was Mallory. And not all of it. And I don't remember that much of it except that it's a pretty trippy experience.

    • @lucie4185
      @lucie4185 Před rokem +26

      @@beth12svist well if we can suggest bronze age technology inspired a 13th century Myth, then surely Disney is basically the same thing as the Victorians.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Před rokem +39

      I really want to go and see it now!

    • @lordofuzkulak8308
      @lordofuzkulak8308 Před rokem +18

      @@roxiepoe9586could’ve sworn the Disney version still had the anvil in it. 🤔

  • @bengrunzel5393
    @bengrunzel5393 Před rokem +82

    I love that so much of the popular elements of King Arthur are fan fiction that accumulated over the years

    • @razor1uk610
      @razor1uk610 Před rokem

      Indeed so! ..like the Monmouthian mythological idea that there is and was only one 'Arthur'.
      (There was two, 5 or 6 generations apart, one who who fought Gratian/Graticus in the early 400s, the other who fought the Saxons around the mid 500s,
      ...after a comet [which led to the later renewed great comet fears in 1065/1066,] was flaming across the Earth in a very shallow trajectoried decaying orbit from Northern Norway over Carlisle, burnt much of Western mainland Britain & Eastern Ireland, that created the denuded wastelands of lore & yore,
      ...which went on to eventually finally airburst apart & impact in Bolivia at the same general time, leaving semi melted scotched abandoned ruins and left questions of where the people of that city went.)

    • @scottdoesntmatter4409
      @scottdoesntmatter4409 Před rokem

      I certainly don't. I prefer the real thing.

    • @JaylukKhan
      @JaylukKhan Před rokem

      ​@@scottdoesntmatter4409 we will never know the real Arthur. It is the nature of myths to evolve.

    • @scottdoesntmatter4409
      @scottdoesntmatter4409 Před rokem

      @@JaylukKhan Nope. I have a book on him, the actual history according to archaeology and historians. He had an interesting sense of humor.

    • @JaylukKhan
      @JaylukKhan Před rokem

      @@scottdoesntmatter4409 oh really. what is the title of this book?

  • @bast713
    @bast713 Před rokem +75

    I'm not an archeologist, historian, or re-enactor. What I am is someone who deeply appreciates your breakdowns of these subjects. Your sass and sarcasm is always appreciated 🙂

  • @anieth
    @anieth Před rokem +214

    It's so easy to lump everything from 2000BCE to 500CE into one giant category. I appreciate you trying to keep the centuries from touching each other: Bronze Age there! Iron Age here! Stone Age way over there! Not to mention all the ages in between. There are huge differences even between 1700 and 1200 BCE in technology. It's like a giant puzzle with a lot of missing pieces. I also loved your comments on the movies over at Chez BB. It's SO glad to see you doing videos again. I hope you're feeling better!

    • @Inkinhart
      @Inkinhart Před rokem +18

      As someone going to school for prehistory - yes, absolutely!! The lumping gets even worse when you get pre-agricultural revolution - people tend to just go 'oh, banging stones together' when there absolutely is huge differences in technology across the time period. There's a reason we need to differentiate the upper, middle, and lower palaeolithic, after all!

    • @lm3244
      @lm3244 Před rokem

      BC - AD pedantic heathen

    • @michaelpettersson4919
      @michaelpettersson4919 Před rokem +2

      Some bleading into each other are expected however. It is like people suddenly forgot about how to shape flintstones as soon as someone showed them a copper axe. The change are gradual and the need for the old way less but they rarely dissapear completely. Even today, the skill how to form flintstones could still be useful, on occation. Mostely art and survival but there it is.

    • @KageMinowara
      @KageMinowara Před rokem +1

      I'm not sure how you can lump 2000 BCE and 500 CE together since BCE and CE are not real.

    • @stevenredpath9332
      @stevenredpath9332 Před rokem

      Personally I reject the BC dating system because it’s silly. A better method of dating historical events is around the establishment of the ancient civilisations around 3,500 years ago in which we have written history.

  • @GallowglassVT
    @GallowglassVT Před rokem +61

    Also, a personal pet peeve of mine is people conflating Caledfwlch/Excalibur with the Sword in the Stone. if I remember correctly, they're two separate weapons, at least when the Vulgate Cycle begins. Before that, I'll admit my knowledge is a bit slim,other than the fact that Excalibur seems very similar to (though not as cool as) the sword Dyrnwyn.

    • @AlecFlackie
      @AlecFlackie Před rokem +5

      My understanding is Excalibur was given to Arthur by the Lady of the Lake and returned on his death.

    • @GallowglassVT
      @GallowglassVT Před rokem +3

      @@AlecFlackie that's how it is in the later legends, I think. Prior to that, there's nothing magical about the sword. It's just a very good sword.

    • @mikefule330
      @mikefule330 Před rokem +5

      In the various stories, there are at least 2 swords: the one drawn from the anvil, and the one given by the Lady of the Lake. Different writers are inconsistent about which one is Excalibur. As always with any hero who is public property, stories get conflated, mangled, and embellished, with some details borrowed or adapted from other stories. Arthur is a legendary figure, and there is no contemporary evidence that he existed at all. Therefore, any explanation or story about him is, in a sense, equally valid.

  • @permiebird937
    @permiebird937 Před rokem +31

    I got the idea about the bronze age cast sword from Frances Pryor. Thank you for clearing this up.

  • @joelmattsson9353
    @joelmattsson9353 Před rokem +158

    I think the more nuanced bronze casting argument would be that there may have been some half remembered oral traditions about heroes pulling swords out of stones that traced back to the bronze age that were then later attached to the myth of arthur, given the propensity of oral tradition to recycle and reshuffle story elements. But yeah, given the time scale involved, it's a pretty extraordinary claim, so we should expect extraordinary evidence from the person presenting it. And yet there isn't even any mildly compelling evidence, just wild and baseless speculation.

    • @washipuppy
      @washipuppy Před rokem +25

      You could also imagine people finding rocks with sword-shaped indents in them and deciding, since they know perfectly well that swords are forged, this had to be because the sword was stabbed into the stone rather than because someone poured bronze into it. How many things do people find from even a century or two ago today that they have no idea of the function of? And how many of them do people just kind of end up guessing at their purpose due to having no frame of reference for them? But that is a MASSIVE logic leap, and you'd need to have some iron clad reasoning for it before you'd even think about floating it. And it would need to beat "sword stab into hard thing good because sword is just that incredibly sharp and durable" as an idea.

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Před rokem +11

      That's basically the explanation I thought this theory was _supposed_ to be.
      But I know very little about the Arthur stories so I supposed that was the theory because I supposed it was part of the story right from the start. As a late addition... seems far less likely.

    • @tiffanyballard6565
      @tiffanyballard6565 Před rokem +4

      @@washipuppy except that metal casting in stone molds is something that would have been still practiced at the time for other uses, so the molds wouldn't likely have been a mystery just antiquated.

    • @velazquezarmouries
      @velazquezarmouries Před rokem +2

      That could also justify the later version of Arthur pulling the sword from an anvil that was in a church

    • @washipuppy
      @washipuppy Před rokem +5

      @@tiffanyballard6565 Exactly this - it relies too much on the person finding the sword molds being a solid story teller, but not knowing even the most minor thing about mass sword production. Or just bullshitting to children I guess - young Yorik asking his father what that weird rock with the sword shape in it is and getting told it's where an ancient sword was embedded in the stone years ago.

  • @berthulf
    @berthulf Před rokem +46

    that half-second shot of Renee had me spewing coffee everywhere on the first use! I love the dedication to keep having it pop up whenever you say 'French' though.
    Edit: Fairly sure I've seen another 'historian' discuss the possibility that it might be a reference to the bronze casting, though I do remember that film covered several other options too before dismissing them all... and pointing out that in the original stories, that pulling it from a stone is not at all how Arthur acquires Excalibur.
    As for the tea, dear sir, you cannot blame your personal failures on a country! That beverage had a very palid pallour, a truly hideous hue, more a mug of translucent dissappointment than a cup of brown joy.

    • @DrachenGothik666
      @DrachenGothik666 Před rokem +3

      "...a mug of translucent disappointment than a cup of brown joy." That had me rolling in laughter about the tea!🤣😂

  • @kurtbogle2973
    @kurtbogle2973 Před rokem +4

    Excaliber was made of a very special material . Imagination. It's unbreakable .

  • @cheerful_something_something

    The origins of these concepts is fascinating. They sound credible if you don't know much about something... until you look into it more.

  • @gmkar7766
    @gmkar7766 Před rokem +28

    I love how you manage to maintain your composure throughout this. My head would have imploded.

  • @johannageisel5390
    @johannageisel5390 Před rokem +6

    Last time I was this early they were still relying on the woodhenge of Pömmelte to tell the time.

  • @Skooby59
    @Skooby59 Před rokem +10

    I dont have time to watch the vid now, just wanted to hop on and say how stoked i am whenever you pop up in my feed. Much love on an “English” day in Southern California (cool and rainy)

  • @eireanncarter
    @eireanncarter Před rokem +3

    Sincere thanks for labelling the sarcasm. Very useful for people like me who sometimes struggle with accurately identifying the tones meant to communicate that sort of thing. Also thanks for introducing an interesting bit of history (saint's tomb sword).

  • @DanielledeVreede
    @DanielledeVreede Před rokem +16

    Sassy Jimmy is the best Jimmy❤️
    I also find it hilarious how you decided to depict "French" by using a picture from a distinctly British TV show😂

  • @roxiepoe9586
    @roxiepoe9586 Před rokem +25

    I talked with students about time by using our (USA) history. They can relate to how long it has been from the present back to our 'first' president, George Washington. Then a groundwork was built so they would see just how much we do not know about that era. Rarely, one of them would know their own family tree back that far. Most could not name their own great grandfather. This helped them to understand the meaning of time. So, one of our working questions was "How many G.W.'s is that?" These were high school students (15-19 year olds), so their grasp of many things was tentative. It just helped them begin the journey of which you speak.

    • @karlwilhelmmeinert7592
      @karlwilhelmmeinert7592 Před rokem

      What is a ,,G.W.''?

    • @a.westenholz4032
      @a.westenholz4032 Před rokem +1

      Do you think that this may NOT perhaps be an universal experience? That other people growing with so much evidence of history dating back over 500-1000 years around them, if not more, might have a completely different sense of time? That NOT growing up in country that was primarily composed of immigrants over the last 250 years, who then moved about that same country as they resettled, might mean that people who live in other countries might know their family history a bit better that the general US students do? I'm not trying to say that Americans are dumber than other people in the world, but that based on the the US's very specific short and immigrant history some not so universal factors may be typical in the US and in other countries with the same profile, but not in others.

    • @jonathansmith6050
      @jonathansmith6050 Před rokem +3

      @@karlwilhelmmeinert7592 Given the context "G.W." = George Washington, and so "How many G.W.'s is that?" is using the time between the present and George Washington (around 250 years) as a yardstick by which to measure the age of other historical events.
      As in, 'there's a lot we don't know about the time of George Washington and the Pyramids were built about 20 times longer ago that than' (or, colloquially 20 G.W.'s ago). Or 'the founding of the first British colony in North America, Jamestown, was nearly 2 G.W.'s ago'

    • @karlwilhelmmeinert7592
      @karlwilhelmmeinert7592 Před rokem

      @@jonathansmith6050 Thanks

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Před rokem

      ​​​​@@a.westenholz4032 I don't know my family history much further back. I do know my country's history much further back, sometimes just by dint of many of the structures still being around and often in use.
      It depends.
      The interesting thing was that recently we realised - due to the particulars involved - that an anecdote passed down in the family (though not necessarily involving a family member) must be from the 18th or early 19th century... It doesn't necessarily _say,_ the way it's passed down, but the situation apparently only would have happened then.

  • @goblincavecrafting
    @goblincavecrafting Před rokem +52

    I love this - your sense of humour in addressing topics like this is great. Also, hilariously, the next video that ticked over after this one was a Time Team one with Francis on it 🤣. Thanks for sharing your research and knowledge with us. I hope this year is infinitely better for you than the previous one. I’d love to hear you explore the topic of Merlin, if you’re ever in the mood… (also, edit, as someone who volunteers at Butser and has a background in (modern) metalworking but has done Bronze Age style casting, the idea of using stone *regularly* as a mould is nuts, when it can explode with very dangerous results because it doesn’t stay as moisture free as clay or sand does, and hot liquid metal and sudden and rapidly expanding water vapour do not mix well)

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před rokem +4

      And moist stone is far more dangerous than moist sand when it expands as a result of extreme heat.

    • @goblincavecrafting
      @goblincavecrafting Před rokem

      @@ragnkja right!

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Před rokem +4

      Having done Fine and Applied Art I found it odd that an age of lower level technology would go to the trouble of carving stone as a mould, given that sand and clay have multiple advantages - widely available, easy/quick to use, workable without tools. Add the physics of heat as you have and there's no sense in it. Not knowing stone can explode is a reason to experiment once for a reusable mould. Stories of exploding stone would surely be carried far and wide though.

    • @MissMeganBeckett
      @MissMeganBeckett Před rokem +1

      @@michellebyrom6551 I had wondered if it might be a mold for the wax part of a lost wax casting process for identical castings? Would that make any sense in your opinion? I don’t have much knowledge of this sort of art technique personally.

  • @azteclady
    @azteclady Před rokem +40

    So very happy to see you again, Jimmy!
    And thank you for tackling this--I remember that Time Team episode and how everyone else around Dr Pryor looked like he had sprouted a second head.

    • @moxiebombshell
      @moxiebombshell Před rokem +8

      I love Francis Pryor dearly, but boy howdy does he love to find the possibility of ritual in any and all things. I think that's what got him re: the sword.

    • @snazzypazzy
      @snazzypazzy Před rokem +5

      @@moxiebombshell I also have the feeling that he loves to imagine stories that *could* have been. Which is good, imagination is important, and these can be a start for a hypothesis to test. But in his enthusiasm it comes across as fact, not as what it actually is. Add to that tv magic that has a tendency to remove nuance from the equation and it doesn't help.

    • @moxiebombshell
      @moxiebombshell Před rokem +7

      @@snazzypazzy Yes! I've seen him readily admit as much, too, in conversations on Time Team with Tony or the team, and even in interviews. The problem is that while it's totally fine in a casual conversation with someone (something most of us, I think, do), it's like you said: when things are being edited for television or even print publication, that nuance and context can be lost - sometimes to serious, long-lasting effect.

  • @unarealtaragionevole
    @unarealtaragionevole Před rokem +5

    Also, more Cymraeg please, absolutely love this language spoken out loud.

  • @lucie4185
    @lucie4185 Před rokem +20

    I recently found out that self playing Harps as found in various myths is actually a thing when the wind makes the strings vibrate. 🙂 Basically myths are always more fascinating when they have a basis of reality. And I am happy to increase my patreon to pay for you to visit the tomb.

    • @tohaason
      @tohaason Před rokem +6

      Oh absolutely - my wife plays the harp and learned about this, so she tried it when visiting relatives in the countryside, when a fair wind was blowing. She set the harp in the field, and lo and behold the harp started playing itself. As the wind waxed and waned and changed direction the sounds changed. Tune the harp to an open tuning and you get a melody.. neighbours and children were fascinated. And we, of course.

  • @Kabast
    @Kabast Před rokem +2

    Welsh-descended United Statesman serendipitously guided to your channel, cheers 🍻 fascinating stuff, thank you so much

  • @kattkatt744
    @kattkatt744 Před rokem +59

    I'm so here for the takedown of Francis Pryor. I loved Time Team as a child, but even then I wondered why the other people bothered with him and his endless "it was for rituals". It was clear that he was physically unable to simply say "we don't know".

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před rokem +16

      Just saying "rituals" is such a non-answer. Even when something was done for a ritualistic purpose, it was still done in a consistent manner throughout a community and served a specific purpose to them.

    • @roxiepoe9586
      @roxiepoe9586 Před rokem +31

      @@ragnkja I shall now indulge in my ritual of mid-afternoon coffee. Why do I do it? Who knows? It is a ritual!

    • @margotmolander5083
      @margotmolander5083 Před rokem +5

      At least in later seasons he was willing to make fun of himself and the whole “ritual” thing. Broken swords in bodies of water? Ritual. Most everything else? “Dunno” or “dunno yet”.

    • @lordofuzkulak8308
      @lordofuzkulak8308 Před rokem +7

      ‘Rituals’ is pretty much an in joke amongst historians/archaeologists/palaeontologists these days I believe; if you don’t know what something was for, it was for ‘ritualistic purposes’, and only quacks will say that without tongue firmly planted in cheek.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před rokem

      @@lordofuzkulak8308
      If it’s not meant to be tongue-in-cheek they’ll presumably be more specific.

  • @TheBopRock
    @TheBopRock Před rokem +6

    Mick Aston the 🐐
    Francis was always a bit out there on Time Team

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Před rokem +3

      Mick is my hero. Absolute dude.

    • @themightymash1
      @themightymash1 Před rokem +1

      I always enjoyed how both Mick and Stuart would be sceptical of the early narratives of the crew and would insist on looking at the landscape and any historical record.

  • @katesclabassi3857
    @katesclabassi3857 Před rokem +13

    Yay! You're back!!
    Also, it's hilarious that people forget about the anvil when talking about the sword in the stone. Maybe it's just because I had an English teacher that was a stickler for accuracy but it's one of the few things I remember.

  • @beethovenjunkie
    @beethovenjunkie Před rokem +3

    I am ALWAYS here for sassy!Jimmy.

  • @eazy8579
    @eazy8579 Před rokem +7

    YEAH! ANOTHER ARTHUR VIDEO! FUCK YEAH! Glad you’re doing alright Jimmy, and glad your back; take care of yourself, and remember we’re here for you

  • @baie_nuuskierig
    @baie_nuuskierig Před rokem +10

    On Time Team's episodes, I always saw people having a go at Francis, and once I saw his ideas about the Bronze-Age sword thing, I was a bit 🤔🤔. Went back, re-read all the stuff I have acquired in my obsession with the Arthur myth, and came to the same conclusion as you. And I am but a lowly school teacher. Though I love TT, I usually immediately skip a 'Francis episode'. It honestly weirds me out that he rarely refers to craftsmen/local history/documentation before he delivers an hypothesis.

  • @TheManWithTheFlan
    @TheManWithTheFlan Před rokem +10

    i heard somebody say that the story of arthur receiving a sword from the lady in the lake is an oblique reference to bog iron but that also seems spurious

    • @Aswaguespack
      @Aswaguespack Před rokem +13

      “You can't expect to wield supreme power just 'cause some watery tart threw a sword at you!”
      Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Dennis the peasant.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Před rokem +6

      Oh yeah. No. Garbage.

    • @expatpiskie
      @expatpiskie Před rokem +2

      One of the supposed homes of the Lady of the Lake is Dozmary Pool, on Bodmin Moor.
      No bog iron, it's not bottomless & despite the efforts of my dad & his mates (who swam there as boys) there's no sword either.

  • @elizabethmcglothlin5406
    @elizabethmcglothlin5406 Před rokem +13

    Excellent! May I now hope for the long-promised episode about Merlin?

    • @lordofuzkulak8308
      @lordofuzkulak8308 Před rokem +3

      Don’t rush, a wizard is never late nor early, he, and a video on him, will arrive precisely when he means to. 🧙‍♂️
      😜

    • @elizabethmcglothlin5406
      @elizabethmcglothlin5406 Před rokem +1

      @@lordofuzkulak8308 So sorry, sir. but I have been waiting patiently.

  • @beth12svist
    @beth12svist Před rokem +9

    Well, the possible connection to a saint is something new I learned today. Now I'm really curious about that!

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Před rokem +5

      Right? What a cool trip that’d be

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Před rokem

      @@TheWelshViking Honestly, I will have to go visit Tuscany one of these days. I actually might have someplace to stay...
      One day.

  • @chadatchison145
    @chadatchison145 Před rokem +5

    "I blame the English" I literally loled much to loud at that, it was totally unexpected, thanks for the laugh and the video. :)

  • @wyncaletha5195
    @wyncaletha5195 Před rokem +2

    Yikes, that tea looked like what happens when I forget that I need to use 2 teabags to make lapsang souchong brew properly! Awesome to see you in full on sarcastic debunking mode again Jimmy!

  • @j3tztbassman123
    @j3tztbassman123 Před rokem +25

    I've always held to the point that Arthur's blade was made of forged iron. In that, Arthur had to smelt, and forge his own blade, thereby pulling a sword from stone.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Před rokem +20

      Sword on anvil on stone imagery innit. Or it was just St Galgano.

    • @lordofuzkulak8308
      @lordofuzkulak8308 Před rokem +7

      @@TheWelshVikingdon’t recall where I read it, but fairly sure I’ve read somewhere that there are some people who think the anvil and the stone have origins in older, separate myths so the reason why in later versions of the Arthur myth we have the sword going through the anvil into the stone is basically to double down so that the Arthur myth conforms with the two older myths (as is often the case in stuff involving prophecies). Doubt it holds water though and wouldn’t be surprised if that’s just a conspiracy theory or pseudo-archaeology/literary history.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Před rokem +8

      Thinking bout smelting iron rich rock to produce enough metal to form a sword, from an uneducated viewer's perspective that is magical. Everything is easy when you know how.

    • @andyc750
      @andyc750 Před rokem +3

      Doubt the leader of a war band would forge his own sword, very specialised skills and a blacksmith wouldn't have made the iron from the ore either or at least very unlikely

  • @ZeroAnalogy
    @ZeroAnalogy Před rokem +4

    It was a surprise to me when you appeared on Bernadette Banner. I follow you both, so it was great to see the collab.

  • @Rune_Scholar
    @Rune_Scholar Před rokem +17

    The Arthurian idea of Excaliber is a Frankenstein sword composed of various sword allegories and myths. As you said, some of it's qualities, such as the sword in anvil/stone come from early medieval France. Others, come from far older legendary swords such as the Irish Caladcholg from Táin Bó Cúailnge, written in the 7th and 8th centuries but occurring in the first century. Ideas of such a sword may go back even further in oral tradition. It has many similarities with the legendary sword of Nuada, Fragarach. This sword, called the "Answerer" was also connected to a stone, the Lia Fail.
    Lia Fail was the stone of destiny and coronation sight for the High Kings of Ireland. The sword and the stone together themselves responsible for signifying the true ruler of Ireland. The potential king would stand above the stone with the sword and both were said to "call out". I'm sure you'll see many parallels to Arthurian legend here.
    These tales come from Lebor Gabála Érenn, which while written in the 11th century. is a compilation and many of it's stories almost certainly date back to pre iron-age Ireland.
    I don't say this as a way to refute anything you've said, but just to underline that, much like fiction in the modern era, the legend is a remix of many thing that came before.
    Ideas are reused and there is nothing new under the sun.

  • @beckyginger3432
    @beckyginger3432 Před rokem +1

    I'm welsh and I've not been home in ten years listening to your voice is so lovely. And I blame the English too

  • @saxonhermit
    @saxonhermit Před rokem +10

    I think a lot of this insistence on Excalibur being bronze might have something to do with just how fascinating so many of us find the so-called "Bronze Age" to be. (Honestly, I think referring to an entire time period by a single somewhat-notable way that tools and weapons were made is kinda missing the point, but we don't really have a better way to describe it, so I'll use what language we have.) This is a period of time wherein the public at large is mostly in the dark about how normal people lived life. A lot of popular knowledge about it comes from myth and legend, and until people buckle down to do their research, it's gonna stick with a sort of "Age of Heroes" kind of vibe, and people are always going to try to connect their favorite myths. They always have; look at Brutus coming from Troy to become the father of the Britons.

  • @federicoronchi725
    @federicoronchi725 Před rokem +2

    these videos on the welsh origins of king arthur are so interesting.
    I don't know if it's something you are familiar with or are interested in but i would love to take a look to the more flokloristic and mithical aspect of the legend, and i would especially appreciate hearing it from you, an actual welsh.

  • @judithlashbrook4684
    @judithlashbrook4684 Před rokem +1

    Happy new year! great to have a new video, I get insanely excited when I see them come up... so you can imagine my pleasure seeing your recent colab with bernadette! some unexpected jimmy content. Wishing you all the best for 2023!

  • @perefalc
    @perefalc Před rokem

    I just wanted to say that I am really enjoying your videos, especially the exhasperated sighs & near face palm moments... glad to have you back. Best of luck in the new year.

  • @lorelay2882
    @lorelay2882 Před rokem

    Yay Jimmy, so nice to see you again, love your videos!

  • @clairemullin249
    @clairemullin249 Před rokem +2

    I remember Pryor's series. Much of it seemed to be about a lot of things being older than we think. Thanks for setting us all right.

  • @pentegarn1
    @pentegarn1 Před rokem +3

    I'm glad you made this. I read comments like that and just spit my milk all over the screen. Between the internet and these TV series it's breeding a new type of historian....ones that don't know the basics of history.

  • @mayanscaper
    @mayanscaper Před rokem +86

    12:34 Francis Pryor is a prehistoric archaeologist who distrusts medievalists historians. The quote from his book Britain AD on Kindle section 510 is as you say, Jimmy, really off base because of dates, literary sources and the Welsh stories that reference Arthur. Pryor wrote the book as part of a series on the archaeological history of England. He admits in his book on Medieval archaeology he is out of his league after the Bronze Age (corrected based on feedback from another commenter with thanks). I guess public archaeologists can get carried away on television, hence Pryor’s out there mistaken theory. Thank you for your brilliant interdisciplinary analysis. Maybe Pryor will correct his error.

    • @73North265
      @73North265 Před rokem

      ‘He admits he is out of his league after the Neolithic’ - sorry you are talking utter BS now. Francis and Maisie are primarily famous for excavating and managing Flag Fen, one of the most important bronze age sites in NW europe. Last time I checked the Bronze age came after the Neolithic. I very much doubt he would (or would need to) make such an outlandish admission. Maisie helped me with my under-graduate dissertation and I worked a season at FF, I’ve never heard him say anything like that. Yes, this theory is odd (but which archaeologist doesn’t have a few like that?) but doesn’t justify your clearly made up confession.

    • @mayanscaper
      @mayanscaper Před rokem +4

      @@73North265 I’ve read his books on Seahenge, Flag Fen, Home, and the series on history of England as well as his his terrific book about Stonehenge. I admire Pryor’s work and have chatted with him because my daughter got her MA and worked in Dorset and at Exeter on Romano-British archaeology. I am not an archaeologist but rather have an MA in ethnohistory of the Maya but am fascinated by British history and archaeology. I totally agree that Maisie’s work with wood is brilliant and unique. Someday I really wish to get to Flag Fen Park and see her conservation efforts.
      Yes, Bronze Age is after the Neolithic. I apologize for my misquote. I believe Pryor was being humble in his book about Medieval British archaeology in his statement about Bronze Age knowledge. It was a sentence in his introduction. I did not mean to denigrate his work. I was responding to those comments that seemed to dismiss Pryor and current theories about ritual landscapes. I respectfully request that you don’t get personal if you disagree with something.

    • @garygcrook
      @garygcrook Před rokem

      I saw the TV series related to the book, Britain AD: King Arthur's Britain, I thought it brilliant and well researched.

  • @olivermorritt3268
    @olivermorritt3268 Před rokem

    Hey mate I loved this video. I hope that continuing on with this channel keeps you happy. I bet it your late father would be so proud knowing that you were making other people happy (like myself) with something you create and keeps you happy with yourself. Have a great new and great appreciation from New Zealand.

  • @rhondastolle1550
    @rhondastolle1550 Před rokem

    Nice to see you back, Jimmy! As always, I learned some stuff. :)

  • @garygcrook
    @garygcrook Před rokem +1

    Robert Buboron worked for the Court of Anjou which was the French home of the Plantagenet Kings of England.
    That court also added the story of the Holy Grail (which apparently resides in Spain), Lancelot Du Lac, plus the courtly romance of Lancelot and Guinevere which was inspired by the relationship between William the Marshal and the Queen.

  • @999Giustina
    @999Giustina Před rokem +4

    Happy new year to our myth busting Welshman!

  • @rcschmidt668
    @rcschmidt668 Před rokem +1

    “It’s frankly nonsense.” I see what you did there. Well played!

  • @miku103100
    @miku103100 Před rokem +3

    Dia dhuit Jimmy!
    I'm a new subscriber from Dublin. I've been absolutely binging all of your videos that past few days. You've really sparked an interest in mediaeval and iron Age history with me. So I just wanted to say thanks and that your videos are great!
    Agus Athbhliain faoi mhaise!

  • @SandraOrtmann1976
    @SandraOrtmann1976 Před rokem +3

    Fantastic video, Jimmy. And what an interesting turn with that Sword in the Stone from Tuscany. Hope you are doing well.

  • @cosmicfatboy1419
    @cosmicfatboy1419 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for more Arthur content! Fascinating stuff.

  • @mnk9073
    @mnk9073 Před rokem +3

    It's always funny to me how people forget that fiction is a genre as old as bread. „La Mort Le Roi Artu“ is not history, it's basically the Netflix adaption of a Welsh legend "improved" with the tropes of the day. It's like people in the year 3020 looking at the comic 300 and debating if 300 spartans ever faced an army of 2 million persian orcs and why they fought in leather thongs.

  • @wendynordstrom3487
    @wendynordstrom3487 Před rokem

    Oh Jimmy! You and your logic are fantastic and the way you present your thought process is *chef's kiss*. I love you and your videos! I'm watching during my lunch and chuckling... Keep up the good educational work!

  • @lesliel9791
    @lesliel9791 Před rokem

    good to see you back....Happy New Year!

  • @cindykurneck
    @cindykurneck Před rokem +4

    I always enjoy your videos. Thank you!

  • @euansmith3699
    @euansmith3699 Před rokem +5

    As an English, I fully accept your blame.

  • @skloak
    @skloak Před rokem +4

    I did frequently worry about Dr Pryor. Very eager for things to be ritualistic, magical, mystical. I wonder sometimes how close he and Phil Harding might have come to blows. I’m sure he must be an expert in his own field, but when even the actor (Tony) looks at you with surprised bafflement...
    “Pulling” is (to my understanding) a term used in smithing, so pulling a sword from a stone would make sense that way. And depicting that as a sword-anvil-stone makes sense. Though I don’t know how the ‘pulling’ concept translates, and if it would have been used the same way back when the Further Adventures of Arthur were being written; I could just be making modern connections with old things. However, I’ve still always thought that “sword from stone” could certainly just be referring to the lumps of rock they got their iron from, regardless of specific word choices.
    I can see cultural memories, oral traditions, old tattered stories about bronze casting being extant. And given the degradation of time, even clay casting could be misunderstood as stone casting, since the clay gets hard after firing. But using it in a more modern story would be unlikely, I think, considering even if you heard those stories and knew the details well enough to use them, you’d know they were *way* older than the era you were writing about. Like, I’m not going to claim the mincemeat pies my mother made in the 80s contained any actual meat, even though I know they *used* to, a very long time ago. Cuz I know nobody’s done that lately (aside from for historical purposes), and it would be absurd, nobody would take me seriously. Actors would look at me with surprise and bafflement, even.

  • @DneilB007
    @DneilB007 Před rokem

    I was just thinking, as you introduced the topic, “isn’t it from that sword stuck in a stone somewhere in Italy?” and then there it is. Nice!

  • @DipityS
    @DipityS Před rokem

    Fascinating as always, thank you. I think the concept of the depth of learning which needs to go on really hit me and how important it is to be able to trust the people you listen to - the pre-history of Arthur coming from the Welsh for centuries - I didn't know that - the French writer who added on the sword in the stone idea - I didn't know that - these layers that really can lead you down the wrong hole if you don't pull them back and try to discover the 'pre' of everything.

  • @emilia.s
    @emilia.s Před rokem +1

    I literally just watched Opus Eleane's new video, and she uses the same background music. 😆 This is such interesting information regarding the lore of King Arthur. Thank you for your hard work!

  • @riverAmazonNZ
    @riverAmazonNZ Před rokem +2

    Oh Francis Pryor ~~ wonderful enthusiasm and boundless imagination

  • @p0etrygh0st
    @p0etrygh0st Před rokem +1

    yay more Jimmy content. And back with the great contentttt

  • @juliettbloom5376
    @juliettbloom5376 Před rokem

    Love these videos! Thank you!

  • @ladyliberty417
    @ladyliberty417 Před rokem

    Good to see you Jimmy!!
    I love this idea, it just makes sense, ha!! Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us, so interesting 🥰

  • @entropybentwhistle
    @entropybentwhistle Před rokem

    In Glu-Tube’s algorithmic awesomeness, this video is the first time your channel has been recommended to me, despite my lurking in historical channels for years. I thought this was a great presentation and subscribed right away. Looking forward to meandering through your earlier vids and learning what else the TV presenters bolloxed up.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Před rokem

      Well thank you for dropping by! It’s so cool to know this happens :)

  • @avalonseer
    @avalonseer Před rokem +2

    I love any time you want to talk about Arthurian myths, they are some of my favorite things on earth 🥰

  • @lindsaydrewe8219
    @lindsaydrewe8219 Před rokem

    Love the quick pix of Renè Artois😄. Nice to see you,Jimmy

  • @rinajoy9284
    @rinajoy9284 Před rokem

    I have to admit that I was worried by the title, but you did not disappoint 💪🏻 it's always annoyed me that people just leave out the anvil 😒

  • @gadgetgirl02
    @gadgetgirl02 Před rokem +1

    Now I want to see a video where Jimmy and Francis meet in person and hash this out. Maybe Tony Robinson could moderate.

  • @cheerful_something_something

    A thousand years was a bit much. Amd yeah, what we called a time doesn't mean others used it.

  • @kmsimi
    @kmsimi Před rokem

    Jimmy I started watching your videos (from Hungary) recently and I am obsessed with them now. Determined to watch all of them :)
    Please never stop!
    I really respect what you do regarding all the topics you touch on, especially your openness on mental health, racism and so on while providing all this fascinating content in a fun and approachable way. Amazing.
    A topic suggestion that is both fitting the Welsh and the Viking in you: what about the dragons? Several cultures seem to have them, but why? Ok, they are facsinating and there are tales and myths and fantasy but where did the idea come from originally?

  • @douglasboyle6544
    @douglasboyle6544 Před rokem +1

    Well, Francis Pryor is a Bronze Age guy so I can see him wanting the connection to be there excellent to see the myth busted though, thanks for another great video. Stay Well.

  • @mbuhtz
    @mbuhtz Před rokem +1

    Thank you for clearing this up. That Time Team episode was indeed where I heard the idea, and iirc he was waxing eloquent about how magical bronze casting must have seemed, so I'm not surprised that the sword in the stone concept came up. But thank you for doing the research to find that it was a late addition to the King Arthur myths, so couldn't have been a "cultural memory" or whatever.

  • @LadyDarkSunMoon
    @LadyDarkSunMoon Před rokem

    I had never heard of St Galgano: thank you for intrducing me to his story!

  • @thejammiebricker2327
    @thejammiebricker2327 Před rokem +1

    Really great to hear you knock this bronze ‘theory’ where it belongs😊

  • @thebratqueen
    @thebratqueen Před rokem +1

    Caption and image game on point this go round. *Chef's kiss*

  • @moxiebombshell
    @moxiebombshell Před rokem +2

    Hahaha, as soon as I heard you say "bronze cast sword" I was like "noooooo, Francis Pryor's gonna get taken to task for his Arthur sword musings!"
    (His book on The Fens is great, tho, unlike his sword in the stone, "casting bronze looked like magic to laypeople" take)

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Před rokem +2

      Oh so much of his work is great and important and useful! But yeah…
      Yeah…

  • @Angel_1394
    @Angel_1394 Před rokem

    Hey Jimmy! Never thought about that being a possibility. Definitely interesting and good to know at least.

  • @erikkraan1936
    @erikkraan1936 Před rokem

    Again an entertaining and informative clip, thank you! I agree with your theories except for one aspect. "Our idea of the Bronze Age is relatively recent." The popularity of this idea is recent, since the three-age system by Thomsen (1820ies), but the idea itself is written down in De Rerum Natura by Lucretius (c. 99 BC - 55 BC).
    Another wondrous facet is the anvil. I found this on Reddit: "I remember a sword stuck in a stone, not just from the movie, but from my trip to Disneyland, where they had a real, physical sword stuck in a stone (not an anvil) for people to tug on." When you google for pictures of the sword in Disneyland, one can clearly see the anvil, just as it was in the animated picture from 1963. Funny how memory and history seem to be worlds apart.
    But that Disney movie bore the title "The Sword in the Stone", like White's novel from 1938 it is based upon! Why don't these titles mention the anvil, when it's present in the story? Because 'The Sword in the Anvil' doesn't alliterate. Or maybe because images of yet another sword in a stone (in a river) already existed: the one that Galahad takes.

  • @thirdcoastfirebird
    @thirdcoastfirebird Před rokem

    Thanks for the info, and this was good to learn.

  • @tessiagriffith9555
    @tessiagriffith9555 Před rokem

    hello Jimmy! Was really excited when I saw this video posted! I know you are the only person running this channel, but would it be possible to have the closed captions include the Welsh when you switch to speaking welsh? I understand if it isn't feasible it would just make things a bit more accessible for me! Awesome content!

  • @hollyingraham3980
    @hollyingraham3980 Před rokem +2

    Done just lovely. It's so humbug trying to explain to the innocents that so much of the "canonical" Arthur is French, not British.

  • @ulrikschackmeyer848
    @ulrikschackmeyer848 Před rokem

    Lovely little bit of Sherlockian deduction. So nice that people still care for seeking the truth. Well done, lad!

  • @erintaylor5162
    @erintaylor5162 Před rokem +3

    oh i'm so glad you mentioned San Galgano- i visited Italy several years ago and my companion and i happened to stumble upon the town of Chiusdino where the abbey of San Galgano is located. i knew nothing of the sword in the stone there or how it fit into the Arthur myth(s), but it was fascinating nonetheless! i have pictures somewhere, i'll see if i can find them.

    • @TheWelshViking
      @TheWelshViking  Před rokem +2

      Oh that’s so cool! I’d love to go and see it

  • @elisabethmontegna5412
    @elisabethmontegna5412 Před rokem +1

    “Pilgrimage (Quest?) to see the sword in the stone at saint whasiname’s place” added to my bucket list.

  • @SarahGreen523
    @SarahGreen523 Před rokem +3

    Thank you, thank you, thank you for debunking this!! I knew it was Francis Pryor! He should have thought that through a bit more, though it was just a theory.

  • @lilykatmoon4508
    @lilykatmoon4508 Před rokem +3

    A really cool series by Jack Whyte slowly builds the Arthurian legend from a legion of Romans who stay in Britain to set up their “Camelot”. Excalibur in this series is forged from a Skystone (meteorite). There are many, lovely thick books to this series. The first is called the Skystone. Great read and only tangentially related to the topic, lol

    • @persiswynter6357
      @persiswynter6357 Před rokem

      I was thinking about this book! I read the first one about a decade ago; think it's time for a re-visit!

  • @Bildgesmythe
    @Bildgesmythe Před rokem +1

    You've made my day!

  • @mver191
    @mver191 Před rokem

    Francis Pryor was also the one that classified everything he couldn't explain as ritual. So much that even Tony starts meme-ing it to him at some point.

  • @cakeeeetime
    @cakeeeetime Před rokem +1

    As always: Awesome :)

  • @atrior7290
    @atrior7290 Před rokem +7

    I heard that the legend of king Arthur, the round table and excalibur was basically a Welshified version of Charlemagne, his 12 paladins and Joyeuse (his mystified sword).
    Basically in the 12th century Robert de Bauron mashed together :
    - The story of Charlemagne,
    - The story of the norse mythological hero Sigurd (Sigfried and the Dragon) and his sword Gram with which Sigurd had cut an anvil in half,
    - And the song of Roland (one of Charlemagne's 12 paladins) in which Roland who is mortally wounded throws the indestructible sword Durandal into a cliff's face in which it stays in the stone so the ennemy can't capture it.
    He then used the name of a famous and ancient Welsh king to create his own story around.

    • @oldoneeye7516
      @oldoneeye7516 Před rokem +1

      Which version of the Sigurd saga are you referring to? I read multiple ones and I do not remember a single one in which he cuts an anvil made from metall. There is one in which he cuts an anvil made from stone - the very same on which Regnir the Dwarf forged the sword. I do know one version were he easily cuts a chainmail with the sword (in which Sieglind has been "bound") but that is the only occasion I remember in which he cuts metall with Gram.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Před rokem +1

      I prefer the origin being a lot earlier, Caradoc of the Catuvellauni, who the Irish called Carthach or Carthaigh. He was a British King who presided over a prosperous time, ruling from the city of Camulodunum. He regularly defeated his neighbours in battle to spread his rule. His father had already been so powerful that he was called King of the Britons. The young king fought against the armies of an invader across most of southern Britain for eight years before being defeated in a final great battle. He left the scene of the last battle alive and was then betrayed by a Queen who was having an affair with her husband's greatest warrior. The king did not die but went into exile in a far-distant and almost mythical land (Rome) famous for the size and sweetness of its apples. The bards were famous for memorising tales, surely the legend of Caradoc could easily have been the kernel of the myths of Arthur 1,000 years later?

    • @atrior7290
      @atrior7290 Před rokem

      @@oldoneeye7516 I never said a metal anvil

    • @atrior7290
      @atrior7290 Před rokem

      @@pattheplanter The Arthurian legend is already a mash of several different Myths so one author at some point adding an additionnal one isn't too farfetched.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter Před rokem

      ​@@atrior7290 Everybody dumps on Geoffrey of Monmouth's _The History of the Kings of Britain_ but he had King Arthur defeating the Romans under the fictional Emperor Lucius Tiberius (or Hiberius) and becoming Emperor himself. The real Emperor Claudius' first name was Tiberius. Of course Geoffrey must be making stuff up because we all know that Arthur is, um well, you know.

  • @joshicus_saint_anger
    @joshicus_saint_anger Před rokem +1

    Great video! I think the bronze sword idea is probably just really compelling to a lot of our modern inclinations, and the unfortunate reality is that interesting fabrications travel way better than boring truths.

    • @smokedbeefandcheese4144
      @smokedbeefandcheese4144 Před rokem

      That’s true. It’s very appealing to the modern fantasy genre where having a casted sword is seen as higher quality

  • @LukeBunyip
    @LukeBunyip Před rokem

    This is nothing more than clickbait for history nerds.
    As a history nerd, I found this thoroughly entertaining, and have thusly subscribed and liked the video.

  • @Heegs
    @Heegs Před rokem +1

    Hey, love your vids, just wondering if you've ever thought about doing a video on Kievan Rus? like its history and origins? connections to the norse? Differences from the norse? critiques of their depictions in media? I know some stuff but I've been interested in them recently and would love to learn more that isn't from wikipedia or "questionable" youtube channels.

  • @StuartGrant
    @StuartGrant Před rokem +5

    To be fair in the series Francis Pryor only offers the bronze sword as a "Folk memory".
    However, a probable later instrument of the Arthurian Legend - the Lady of the Lake; (I don't think it appears before Malory), does have a significant archaeological basis .the offering of swords to water (as at the end of Arthur's life when Percival(?) throws Excalibur into the lake.). is definitely a tradition dating from the depths of the bronze age until the 15th century (at least) eg the Witham swords.

  • @oldmanofthemountains3388

    It may be a crap theory, but now I have new ideas for my D&D game!

  • @scottdoesntmatter4409
    @scottdoesntmatter4409 Před rokem +1

    Thank you!!!!!!!!!! The French are legendary for their tall tales! BS artists the lot of them. Frankly, it would be nice to have a summation of what Arthur actually did, free of the French embellishments!

  • @blargblarg7875
    @blargblarg7875 Před rokem

    Idea: the story that swords were once drawn from stone was a thing when people were making up stories about king Arthur was a thing.
    The people who heard this while writing king Arthur stories had no idea about bronze casting, having grown up with iron or steal swords thought this would be a neat element to include in a story about a magic sword.
    So they placed the sword in a stone.