I’m not sure how but whenever I fall asleep watching CZcams I keep waking up to see the end of this video. I think I’ve rewatched it like 5 times already
@@wesleypepple7525 25 years ago lol but yeah, I got to watch moss in person at the Pats games and that dude is easily the most talented athlete to ever play football, hands down.
1:58 am. My third time watching this series since it came out and every time, I have to watch all 4 together because you’ve put it together seamlessly. Even down to the steady escalation in strength of your drinks. You son, are an excellent teacher and I’ve sent this to some of my friends. Funny thing though. I don’t think that most of them finished the first episode. I never got any feedback. Whereas, typically, there’s loads of it along with some interesting opinions. That’s how you know that you’ve laid down solid foundations for real educational information. When you get radio silence from science deniers the quiet is as loud as a hurricane. Once again. GREAT JOB SON! Keep that train a’rollin’!!! 👍
As a Norwegian from Hafrsfjord ( important place in Norwegian Norse history) it’s insane to hear “dubbed” Norwegians and its so wonderful to see that our cultural heritage and history is interesting for others in other countries 😍
I was born and raised in California, but my family is from Gothenburg, Sweden. I am so interested in my heritage; a heritage that has been pushed out of popular culture here since many Scandinavians immigrated here in the early 1900's. The more I know about the early vikings the more I can push out my chest in pride of the blood that runs in my veins!
@@Supreme-SEF Anyone who takes that shit serious is degrading their own intelligence. So ridiculous. That's like having a show about Zulu warriors and having a Ginger in there.
Yeah. Well what happened to your people? Everyone from that part of the world has become cowards. You allow your government and big businesses to rule you and destroy you. You need to go back to your viking ways.
Love listening to these at work and since I'm concentrating on work half the time I get to listen to these over and over and keep getting something new 😅👍
I am a professional historian, and an old man. I CRINGE when I see the young people of this generation say such BS about there not being enough original material from history to study. In fact, it is LITERALLY like the last scene in Indiana Jones where the Ark of the Covenant was locked away in an avalanche of boxes. 95 percent of all the historical documents have NEVER BEEN READ. If you want to check this out, go to a major archive and ask them. No one knows what is in ANY of the National Archives anymore, let alone the Vatican. It is this way all over the world. The GREATEST problem by far for future generations is that no one is being taught to read script (handwriting). I can read a handwritten letter upside down at speed. Not teaching THAT is going to make future research very difficult.
When I taught my kids cursive the teacher forbade them to write it. As the other kids wouldn’t be able to read it. 😢 Stupid argument. So any extra skill is unwanted. And they can’t decipher the handwriting of the grownup generation. 😢
Cursive taught after print letters was what i wàs taught in 1950's, could be too much. Perhaps , dumming down is what is future generations. How did i write we exams? 😅
Grateful for the excellent presentation! This series on Vikings is a treasure trove of knowledge, and I appreciate it being freely available on CZcams. Looking forward to watching more!
Thank you so much for sharing this huge series for free! I've learned more about the Vikings on this channel more than any other source I've seen on CZcams so far!
This series is quite interesting, I refreshed my knowledge and added to It . I understand the importance of Estonia’s big island, but kept waiting for mention of Latvian Vikings, specifically those that resided in the part of Latvia called Courland (Kurzeme), but it never came. Also the bay of Riga has the Daugava providing a way quite far into Russia, and it also was not mentioned. In various museums in Europe, a certain quantity of Viking artifacts come from Latvia. I hope that in a future version of your very informative series some of these omissions will betaken care of.
My maternal great grand parents were rom Sweden & they told me what the "Viking Seeing Stone" is. We have them all over the place although they were much more widely used in the 1800s. Yes! One can see the whole hemisphere with it; when used properly!!!
When I was in Oslo, I visited the Ships Museum and stood beside the Gokstad and the Oseberg. Both of them were magical. The carvings were mesmerizing. To think they were from the 9th century. Makes me wonder about the men who sailed them and all of the places they went.
@@gomnes246They raped women and murdered defenseless farmers and plundered churches. They often went after soft targets to avoid direct combat with defensive forces that could actually fight back. It wasn't all valiant and courageous.
@@sugewhitejacoby8654 "Half" of our basic words in Scandinavia ( three very similar languages ) are still (very) similar to their English counterparts, and there are many grammatical similarities as well, so learning English is fairly easy for us Scandinavians - as if we by magic already "know" a lot of the basics of English in advance and "just" need to fill in the gaps and climb a few hurdles - for instance the use of "do" and "-ing" with verbs. Check out the brilliant video from Langfocus called "Viking Influence on the English Language" to see how much the complicated and highly inflected West Germanic Old English was changed through this long lasting contact with the closely related North Germanic Old Norse in the Danelaw region in the North and the East of England. Hav en god dag [day(gh)], min [meen] frænd{e} 😉
what they were were master shipbulders and bold sailors...that lapstrake design is still used in lifeboats today...their ships were so flexible they almost seemed alive in the open sea...yet easily capable of traversing shallow rivers...a technological leap the world had never seen before...no wonder they were caught by surprise....
Absolutely captivating! A top-notch documentary series on the Norsemen/Vikings. Thank you for the insightful journey through history. Looking forward to future installments that might cover the fascinating stories of Latvian Vikings and their contributions.
Christianity seems to have taken the edge of off everybody...Romans, Vikings...and many others...they fought when they had to though, to preserve it....
Vikings are all over the world today because of their voyages and spread their dna throughout their journey. My ancestors come from france during the fight with the vikings
Didn't France give up and offer Normandy if they would stop raiding? Then the vikings took over the UK and it was time to reproduce so their kids could crusade in the middle east as knights
In your video regarding runes, it seems that Karl Staffan Dahlberg, is my 23rd cousin twice removed, thru Geni. What a delightful discovery! 🙂We are both descendants of Valemar l, King of Sweden.
Yep, many people don’t realize that Vikings weren’t a race, location or anything like that. It came from the term “to go Viking”. Or the act of seaborne raiding or adventuring. Basically a seaborne raider would go out and raid by sea. So many people from Scandinavia didn’t do that. So they weren’t “Vikings” in the way people think of. I’m obsessed with Scandinavian and Old Norse history. I’ve been studying for years now.
I was interested to see this because in two months it will be the year anniversary of my husband's death. I want to use some of his ashes and throw him a proper Viking funeral. (On a miniature scale. Miniature boat and small amount of ashes, floating down the creek, on fire. I can't shoot a flaming arrow. Or any arrow.) He LOVED Vikings and I love Norway so it works well. ❤️
Sorry for your loss but sounds beautiful all you need is a drummer to drum him out while singing Helvegan. He may not have been a king of chief but Im sure he is more than worthy and will be looking down pleased. Do take care of yourself sister .
Thank you everyone. No one will ever love me again like he loved me. I wasn't there for him when he needed me. But I prepared his body, and ever since he died I have done everything I possibly can to make amends for everything I've done wrong. I have so many regrets but he deserves the best. He was my Viking chief. He always will be. And he was an amazing death metal musician/guitarist/composer, so I absolutely have a drum to use. I've done my due diligence. I just wish everyone could know how special he is.
Their culture and religion did. I think that's the point. Even knights weren't a "warrior" culture. They were more or less mercenaries for the catholic church.
I'm not the kind of guy that likes to nitpick, but at 27:28 it says that Thor was Odin's brother... that is a huge mistake, since Thor is actually Odin's son ! Get your mythological facts right will ya! 😅
"These warriors were buried with full military honors..." NOT ANYMORE... now they are buried in some drawer in a lab somewhere without any honors at all
@@The_Internet_Is_Overrated why not just put them back? Research is oftentimes just something to do for the archaeologists who graduated or picked it up along the way for lack of life purpose. Our civilization isn't the last. Save something for the next mob coming along.
Vikings discovered high carbon steel by using bones in the forge. This created superior steel that could destroy enemies weapons and armor. It took another 300-500 years for the world to get high carbon steel. When they caught up technologically, the viking age ended.
Great video. I'm aware that the Viking age was technically from 793 - 1066CE, but personally I consider the Vendel era part of the Viking age. When you consider that we now know Swedish Vikingar were raiding in Eastern Europe and Russia at least as far back as the 740s - 750s. The Danes were raiding Frisia and other places during the Vendel era. Norsemen of every kind were traveling, trading and raiding all over Europe centuries before the "Viking age".
Vikings were descendants of royal blood Dacian warriors who were defeated by Romans under Trajan’s rule in 104 AD and retreated in great number from their original ancestor land Dacia towards North Eastern Europe! Danemark was named Dacia actually during Middle Ages
@@hilti4632 where are you getting this information? The Norse were an amalgamation of Germanic tribes that inhabited northern Europe for thousands of years. There's a bog body from the Cimbrian peninsula (Jutland, Denmark) that dates to 8,000 years ago. Also, Cimbria is the ancient name for Denmark. The Dacians were a separate people from around what is today the Carpathian mountains. If you're referring to the Goths you've got it backwards. Historians think the Goths may have come from Gotland(Largest island of Sweden) or possibly even Götaland(kingdom in southern Sweden). Gotland and Götaland both mean 'Land of the Goths'.
When talking about the German swords found in Viking graves around 1:16:00, isn’t it possible that these swords weren’t given to or bought by the Vikings in Germany as that was illegal but instead the Vikings took them from the dead bodies of opposing warriors with whom they were im battle?
Fascinating how widespread their travels were and that they had positive influences as well as murderous influences in many places. I recently learned that my great-grandfather's middle name was Rollo. After the great Viking. He had a Viking first and second name Harold Rollo. I was kind of excited when I learned that. For whatever it's worth. LOL
@@gqakathemagazine6111 although the surname Deal does come from the part of Great Britain where Vikings originally settled, on the southeast part there is a town of Deal.
This is a fantastic documentary thank you!! I studied a year in Sweden at Stockholm Universitet - political science, and I had the opportunity to travel around and see these places you talk about! Vikings have a fascinating history! I was intrigued that a thousand years ago, social arrangements were so healthy and normalized without the church, so when people got married they just exchanged Combs they had made! A wonderful culture and a very enlightened people, that always drew me to Sweden :-)
Crazy. Thanks!! I always knew bits and pieces of Viking hostory, but this is a great overview. I came here because I was actually trying to find info on the Kyiev Rus 😂
There was another video of similar Viking content. Part of the video was dedicated to the findings of 2 or 3 female, French historians that went further in discussing JUST what it was that actually 'pushed' the vikings out if their original homelands and forced then in a lifetime of warring and pillaging. Something was driving them out of their Scandinavian homelands.
It was the climate. I can't remember which videos state it, many do actually, but it was getting colder and their farmland was unworkable. They had to migrate or starve.
It's NEVER too late. I foughtagainst being a historian for many years.,I have now made my living as a professional historian for over four decades. A true Historian is born and not made. I wish to GOD I never listened to anyone on my final decision. Ironically, nowadays,being a Historian is a VERY lucrative job.
I've never understood how so many high school history teachers make history so boring. I didn't like history in high school, it was all dates, name and places. If you could memorize, you could get all A's, but you didn't learn much. I learned more about history in literature classes where they would teach you about the writers and what was going in the world that affected their writing.
@@lucindahumphries4702 I am a professional historian, and I am SORRY that most people experience history that way. I read original letters and diaries from eye witnesses for my living, and to me, history is a living, breathing thing. Most of real history is composed of average people getting on with their lives. Now understand me:Dates are VERY important, because they allow you to see the BIGGER picture, in that you see what is going on in different places at the same time, or in sequence, showing how one event lead to another. Example: If your lover cheats on you on a Thursday and you catch him, and you hit the crap out of him with a frying pan on Friday, what haqppened when is important. Oddly enough, I taught college, so I am amused in that I cannot recall EVER asking any of my students forthe date of ANY event. In university history, we ask you to comment on the BIGGER picture. For your sake, it is better for you to know the dates BEFORE you take the test, because we ask you to explain a larger event, and the dates help you to put your argument together.
@@sp00kyaction-yq2pi You are right, not difficult at all! However, I do not think I should pollute my browser with tons of extentions and other contents just because some people are desperated for video monetization...
Also the STRESS that is caused on them with the high intensity of fighting day in day out CHANGES a humans views concepts action and reactions to the rest of the world. There is no way really to know what they felt but they must have been a force to be reckoned with
I enjoy watching these documentaries about the Norse people. They always mention Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. What about Finland? Finland is never mentioned at all!
Pretty surprising as, here in the US, ever since the Finns held off the Russians single-handedly in the Winter War, they are seen as half, “super-Viking,” half, perfect warrior….
Finns are NOT Scandinavians. They are related to Magyars, Estonians and Sami’s language family and are called Finno- Urics. The Finnish language is very different from the North Germanic Language of the Norse peoples.
I wish I had majored in history rather than criminal Justice in college. I am not sure if I could have done archeology given my claustrophobia. This is such an amazing documentary.
Interesting! I did geology/french, archeology minor. Graduated 23 years ago wish I'd chosen almost anything more practical, I ended up with a career in IT
@@kathrynjordan8782 Independent Studies, given the power of the internet will allow everyone interested in learning any subject they wish, if studying is primarily for personal intellectual development, rather than vocational advancement, although, internet allows one to achieve both.
2:55:20 Did those Vikings really have paragliders? Silk ones, like their expensive ships' sail? If they knew how to make them, they could have FLOWN! It's just a very smart sail, after all.
As a white male, I see so much resentment for me and my ancestory in modern culture. It's wonderful to see such a noble history of men and women who preserved through incredible challenges. All lives matter.
This has nothing to do with being white, these are nordic people, or scandinavians. Don't you dare try to put your self next to us on our pedestal. Know your place.
Conquered normandy, created Russia , the uk, belrus, etc and went to the Mediterranean Took over sicily, most of italy and then began crusading in the middle east. After 1291 they became bankers and freemasons
There was no Russia during Viking period. It was Kievan Rus'. And Rus' was called because of Rurik (viking's ruler in slavic country). Rurik was rus' and then hall slavic country was named Kievan Rus'.
My understanding is that the commonly agreed explanation for the etymology of Rus is a reference to Swedes from Roslagen (Rosar in swedish). Roslagen has its origin from the words for rowing (rod today but roðr then, kind of pronounced rothr) and a word for a kind of administrative division of people who could man ships during war called a skeppslag (directly translated as shipping team). The old name for roslagen was roþin, again roughly rothin but a softer th-sound (voiceless) which could easy turn in to a soft s sound. The finnic word for swedes is Ruotsi, or rowers. The swedish "o" sounds more like a slavic "u" so translating their spoken sound to words, natives of that region would have written it Rus!
The church conquered All of Europe. We were all Pagan at a time. Northern Europe was just the last to be converted. Baltics were the very last. In the 13th century.
And common guys, for nearly entire series you keep placing Wolin (Jomsborg) in the same place as Truso. The former was located at the banks of Odra River, and the latter at the banks of Nogat, delta branch of the Wisła (Vistula) River. These two places are almost four hundred kilometers apart..
Cool finds! To me, it looks like the front view of a tug boat on the water. Maybe tug boats gave rides and those rings were a type of souvenir? That's my guess, anyhow! Man Shwoo is very handsome, indeed! Thanks for sharing your lark, ladies! 😊
I’m a bit pissed. Not once does this show point out directly that Vikings were called Danes back in their day regardless of if they were Danes Norwegian or Swedish and that Vikings is never used in historical text and is a very very modern term and that viking is to ‘Go Raiding’. So a Dane would go viking. So Ulthbert a farmer comes home one day and says “The Jarl has said we are going viking this summer so you’ll have to look after the farm.” Also the guy who showed old sword billets said that it was a production line in the houses making swords with the different stages done by different people. He then says “ they melted the iron”. Well that’s just a lie as the Europeans couldn’t melt iron for another 800 or way more years depending on what time the swords making was referred to. Danes like all Europeans collected natural iron like bog iron and iron ore and put that in a blumery furnace for a day to turn the ore back to iron but it never even near melts. Then these little chunks and pieces are heated and gently hammered together. Forge welding the pieces and slag and other crap into a billet. The more it is hammered the more impurities are beaten out unfortunately carbon is also beaten out at the same time but slag inclusions make a sword very weak so it’s a balance. Danes did import real steel ingots as in carbon steel that’s been fully melted. These ingots came from India and whatever the place Saladin lived was called. This was true steel, real carbon steel capable of being hardened and sharpened to a razor and holding that edge way longer. It’s what a general person today thinks of iron or steel today. No one makes iron these days and smiths have to find old scrap iron especially in England who hasn’t made iron in decades, it’s all steel. The reason the Danes were so hard up on making twisted forged welded blades is that it raises the average quality of the blade. If you have iron or low low carbon steel of quality 1 2 and 3 then forging them together straight gives you a billet with an overall quality of 1. All the good metal is wasted and brought down to the lowest common denominator. But if that bar is then heated and twisted and hammer forged welded flat into a new bar then that bar is now grade 2 an average of the 3 original billets. Also the only known true steel Dane made swords are the UTHBERT swords which were made and named on the blade with steel carved out and then steel letters dropped in and hammer forge welded in place. I think 125 UTHBERT swords have been found as identified by the named blade but only about 80 are true UTHBERTs made from fully melted crucible steel that MUST have been imported from India or Salidins home land. This was microscope tested to check the steel types. Truely named Damascus steel blades are a crucible steel but not all crucible steel is Damascus steel. Damascus steel is not steel patterned by forge welding different steel together and then twisting or bending that into patterns and making something out of that. That is called Pattern Welded Steel or iron back before steel. Truely named Damascus Steel Such as What Saladin and his army had is crucible steel that the ore had a certain chemical composition and then the ingot was processed in a certain way to have layer upon layer of carbide spheroids in sheets in the steel carbides are about the hardest things known. So not even similar.
Something that stands out to me and your chronicles brings it to my attention is the Dragon and it's importance. My brother Rip and my best friend both had Dragon tattoos. If I had a tattoo, it would be a Dragon. The Dragon is one of the most common figures in history. The meaning is obviously very deep and carries a rich tradition in culture. Thank you for sharing this educational material and elaborating on the details.
They represent the vagabond. Vagus bonding. Control over us by these parasites dragons. The things protruding from the pharaohs forehead fore instance represent who is Realy in control
@@Coincidence_Theorist Why would you ramble those responses? Had nothing to do with what he said. Are you one of those crystal healing, reiki, law of attraction blokes?
Actually they were by no means the last. Baltic Prussians, Yotvingians, Lithuanians and Livonians, as well as Finno Ugric Estonians and Finns, were pagan for centuries after the Viking age. Lithuania was baptized in 1385. Also, multiple Slavic tribes were still pagan and raiding during and after the Viking age. Christian Scandinavian kings actually conquered and fought these tribes, at times baptizing them.
I’m not sure how but whenever I fall asleep watching CZcams I keep waking up to see the end of this video. I think I’ve rewatched it like 5 times already
CZcams wants you to become a viking thats why! 😎 SKOL! ALL TOGETHER NOW! MY MOTHER TOLD ME, SOMEDAY I WILL BUY!
I’ve started to dream about what I’m listening to and when I wake up I’m like “hey, that sounds just like the guy from my dream”
8y
Yup I feel the same
All this dominance and not one Superbowl
the league would love to see the Bills play the Vikings in this years SB....I mean, somebody's got to win...right?
Thank you for making me genuinely laugh out loud today
As a diehard Minnesota fan I find that comment deeply offensive, sadly true and contextually hilarious. 😉
@@nataliechild9163 you guys had one hell of a team with moss and Cunningham
@@wesleypepple7525 25 years ago lol but yeah, I got to watch moss in person at the Pats games and that dude is easily the most talented athlete to ever play football, hands down.
I fell asleep listening to jazz but somehow woke up knowing more about Vikings! Thanks CZcams Algorithm!
Loser
Oh my Lord,,, me too!!!
Just happened today.
same here
Same just not jazz
1:58 am. My third time watching this series since it came out and every time, I have to watch all 4 together because you’ve put it together seamlessly. Even down to the steady escalation in strength of your drinks.
You son, are an excellent teacher and I’ve sent this to some of my friends.
Funny thing though. I don’t think that most of them finished the first episode. I never got any feedback. Whereas, typically, there’s loads of it along with some interesting opinions.
That’s how you know that you’ve laid down solid foundations for real educational information. When you get radio silence from science deniers the quiet is as loud as a hurricane.
Once again.
GREAT JOB SON!
Keep that train a’rollin’!!! 👍
As a Norwegian from Hafrsfjord ( important place in Norwegian Norse history) it’s insane to hear “dubbed” Norwegians and its so wonderful to see that our cultural heritage and history is interesting for others in other countries 😍
You have just scratched the surface
I was born and raised in California, but my family is from Gothenburg, Sweden. I am so interested in my heritage; a heritage that has been pushed out of popular culture here since many Scandinavians immigrated here in the early 1900's. The more I know about the early vikings the more I can push out my chest in pride of the blood that runs in my veins!
@@Supreme-SEF its a joke
@@Supreme-SEF Anyone who takes that shit serious is degrading their own intelligence. So ridiculous. That's like having a show about Zulu warriors and having a Ginger in there.
@@Supreme-SEF still enjoyed the show a lot, but yeah that’s ridiculous.
Man this made for the PERFECT educating nap. THANK YOU!!! I feel smarter and rested 🥰 so interesting and relaxing.
I two sleep well with history jolted awake by CZcams commercials that are much louder than the very interesting presentation.
@@flouisbailey 0⁷úúlyù if úpppppp uui uppppppúpúpúūupup2 iyh upuuup
@@munakies2651 Maybe?
How bout it I'm bout to shut my eyes between shifts and this is perfect right
@@flouisbailey adblock
My people! I am Norwegian, Swedish, Icelandic and Danish Viking. Rawr!! 🐾
You are nothing until you have arab or african babies. Then you are something.
Yeah. Well what happened to your people? Everyone from that part of the world has become cowards. You allow your government and big businesses to rule you and destroy you. You need to go back to your viking ways.
Hail Sister... Our race is the greatest and other races are Jealous of that fact
@@mwol5473 viking wasn't a race...lol...by that reasoning, I am a lawyer because my great, great grandfather was...
Same. Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, and Finnish DNA in my blood!
Love listening to these at work and since I'm concentrating on work half the time I get to listen to these over and over and keep getting something new 😅👍
I am a professional historian, and an old man. I CRINGE when I see the young people of this generation say such BS about there not being enough original material from history to study. In fact, it is LITERALLY like the last scene in Indiana Jones where the Ark of the Covenant was locked away in an avalanche of boxes. 95 percent of all the historical documents have NEVER BEEN READ. If you want to check this out, go to a major archive and ask them. No one knows what is in ANY of the National Archives anymore, let alone the Vatican. It is this way all over the world.
The GREATEST problem by far for future generations is that no one is being taught to read script (handwriting). I can read a handwritten letter upside down at speed. Not teaching THAT is going to make future research very difficult.
No one asked old man
Simplified!
Truth!
When I taught my kids cursive the teacher forbade them to write it. As the other kids wouldn’t be able to read it. 😢
Stupid argument.
So any extra skill is unwanted.
And they can’t decipher the handwriting of the grownup generation. 😢
Cursive taught after print letters was what i wàs taught in 1950's, could be too much. Perhaps , dumming down is what is future generations. How did i write we exams? 😅
Fascinating. One of the best documentary series on the Norsemen/Vikings around. Thank you.
😊
Grateful for the excellent presentation! This series on Vikings is a treasure trove of knowledge, and I appreciate it being freely available on CZcams. Looking forward to watching more!
Thank you so much for sharing this huge series for free! I've learned more about the Vikings on this channel more than any other source I've seen on CZcams so far!
Not very impressive video. Nothing much revealed about daily lifestyle, culture or traditions. Barbaric, pagan warriors wandering back and forth! 😢😮
Excellent presentation!! Thank you for posting this on CZcams!!!
As we
This series is quite interesting, I refreshed my knowledge and added to It . I understand the importance of Estonia’s big island, but kept waiting for mention of Latvian Vikings, specifically those that resided in the part of Latvia called Courland (Kurzeme), but it never came. Also the bay of Riga has the Daugava providing a way quite far into Russia, and it also was not mentioned. In various museums in Europe, a certain quantity of Viking artifacts come from Latvia. I hope that in a future version of your very informative series some of these omissions will betaken care of.
I only just saw this, after hearing the bit at the end I wanted to say it's awesome seeing how far you've come in only 5 years. Congratulations mate
What do you mean by this? Is this channel just some dude? It looks like a fancy documentary from PBS or something
It's amazing how much territory the Vikings covered in a relatively short time!
Those guys got around!!
they were really bored and the wives kept naggin
their ships displayed a technology that was ahead of its time....
Yes Wow I Was Amazed at How They Travel To Different Country Rich in Culture
Boat
@@brofist200 ..and not the "long" ones, right? Quite the feat of marine engineering 👌 IMhumbleO
I'm from Tønsberg, I walked by almost every day during the building and was there for the first sailing, very cool stuff to have happening in my town!
G ft Th&
that's awesome.
What was built?
I’ve been to the Oslo museum. It’s truly breathtaking
This place was absolutely beautiful i hope that the artifacts end up in a museum somewhere eventually
My maternal great grand parents were rom Sweden & they told me what the "Viking Seeing Stone" is. We have them all over the place although they were much more widely used in the 1800s. Yes! One can see the whole hemisphere with it; when used properly!!!
Kkooo
😊o
😊😊oo😊
O
All right so please go and get one and then you can tell me what I'm doing now and if you say sitting in front of my phone l will seriously be amazed.
When I was in Oslo, I visited the Ships Museum and stood beside the Gokstad and the Oseberg. Both of them were magical. The carvings were mesmerizing. To think they were from the 9th century. Makes me wonder about the men who sailed them and all of the places they went.
such men and country are to be saluted because of their valiantry, and big heart which shows no fear
@@gomnes246They raped women and murdered defenseless farmers and plundered churches. They often went after soft targets to avoid direct combat with defensive forces that could actually fight back. It wasn't all valiant and courageous.
This trip to Oslo is on my bucketlist for sure. I am fascinated by Viking History!
@@sugewhitejacoby8654 "Half" of our basic words in Scandinavia ( three very similar languages ) are still (very) similar to their English counterparts, and there are many grammatical similarities as well, so learning English is fairly easy for us Scandinavians - as if we by magic already "know" a lot of the basics of English in advance and "just" need to fill in the gaps and climb a few hurdles - for instance the use of "do" and "-ing" with verbs.
Check out the brilliant video from Langfocus called "Viking Influence on the English Language" to see how much the complicated and highly inflected West Germanic Old English was changed through this long lasting contact with the closely related North Germanic Old Norse in the Danelaw region in the North and the East of England.
Hav en god dag [day(gh)], min [meen] frænd{e} 😉
at 24:40 "the whole day was runed!" 😆
"Odin and his brother Thor" pretty sure Thor was Odin's son... Overall though, I'm always impressed by viking history. They really were pioneers.
Tonger is the son of Wodan and Fjorgyn
I use the old Frisian names Because I don't know the modern English names
what they were were master shipbulders and bold sailors...that lapstrake design is still used in lifeboats today...their ships were so flexible they almost seemed alive in the open sea...yet easily capable of traversing shallow rivers...a technological leap the world had never seen before...no wonder they were caught by surprise....
@@sjefkerolleman2094 Tor er sønn av Odin og Frøya. Odin var æsir, Frøya var vane, datter av Njord.
There were several discrepancies I picked up on. I think it was more archaeological than anything though
Pioneers? You mean murderers? 🤣
Absolutely captivating! A top-notch documentary series on the Norsemen/Vikings. Thank you for the insightful journey through history. Looking forward to future installments that might cover the fascinating stories of Latvian Vikings and their contributions.
Your title is a bit off... The vikings did not fall...
We integrated 🥳
Well they did lol but honestly some failed some integrated. I suppose it really means stopped raiding and when harold died
Just settled really.
Christianity seems to have taken the edge of off everybody...Romans, Vikings...and many others...they fought when they had to though, to preserve it....
And misceginated...
And make no mistake. The warrior is still alive inside us
Vikings are all over the world today because of their voyages and spread their dna throughout their journey. My ancestors come from france during the fight with the vikings
Didn't France give up and offer Normandy if they would stop raiding?
Then the vikings took over the UK and it was time to reproduce so their kids could crusade in the middle east as knights
I learned France gave Normandy to the Vikings so they would sail their boats out of Paris. 🤣 🤣 🤣
In your video regarding runes, it seems that Karl Staffan Dahlberg, is my 23rd cousin twice removed, thru Geni. What a delightful discovery! 🙂We are both descendants of Valemar l, King of Sweden.
I learned a lot from this series. Very well done.
Thank you I really enjoyed watching &I'll be watching 👀 more!!!
There is the best documentary of history of the rise and fall of the Vikings in timeline in recognition.
Looks like their dna is integrated all over and they blended into many countries.
Such a well done documentary. Very informative, interesting, & no weird camera tricks or wonky audio. Brilliant.
kk
ok 😊jjjkjjjkkookkkkkkkkkjjjiiiiii😅i😅im lmk k
I’m proud to be Swedish/Scandinavian/Viking descendent king of “merchants/traders “ 👍🏼👍🏼
Yes 🇸🇪
Lol
It recently occurred to me that the word "viking" isn't a race or a location. It's an occupation. :)
It's a way of life!
Yep, many people don’t realize that Vikings weren’t a race, location or anything like that. It came from the term “to go Viking”. Or the act of seaborne raiding or adventuring. Basically a seaborne raider would go out and raid by sea. So many people from Scandinavia didn’t do that. So they weren’t “Vikings” in the way people think of. I’m obsessed with Scandinavian and Old Norse history. I’ve been studying for years now.
Most documentaries mention that fact
I thought it was common knowledge that it was an occupation. You really do learn something new everyday and Viking is also a title FYI 😊
I fucking wish the rest of the world would do so.
The Last Kingdom is my favorite show and their names are accurate
Love that show too
how about Vikings Valhalla
@@najayhudson9745 its ok.
@@najayhudson9745 I like that one too and want more
agreed..excellent show
I was interested to see this because in two months it will be the year anniversary of my husband's death. I want to use some of his ashes and throw him a proper Viking funeral. (On a miniature scale. Miniature boat and small amount of ashes, floating down the creek, on fire. I can't shoot a flaming arrow. Or any arrow.) He LOVED Vikings and I love Norway so it works well. ❤️
Sry for ur loss
Sorry for your loss but sounds beautiful all you need is a drummer to drum him out while singing Helvegan. He may not have been a king of chief but Im sure he is more than worthy and will be looking down pleased. Do take care of yourself sister .
cool. just don't sacrifice a maiden to go with him. maybe a tiny snippet of your hair?
Thank you everyone. No one will ever love me again like he loved me. I wasn't there for him when he needed me. But I prepared his body, and ever since he died I have done everything I possibly can to make amends for everything I've done wrong. I have so many regrets but he deserves the best. He was my Viking chief. He always will be. And he was an amazing death metal musician/guitarist/composer, so I absolutely have a drum to use. I've done my due diligence. I just wish everyone could know how special he is.
❤️
Gotta love all this history!
Big..
@@aadriangroenewald1828 the Vikings...the motorcycle gang of their times.....
Vikings are basically a race of glorified thugs, slavers and pirates.
Love the subject, but not these scum.
What a great series I found it when I was down with covid and have watched it twice more!!
Greetings from Sweden
400K views in just 25 days after being uploaded. Go figure. What awesome content is this
1.6 mil now
2.3 million now
7.4 mil now!
The Vikings didn't fall. They became knights and crusaders, etc.
Right, they just blended in over the years, like the Normans
Spot on! Scandinavia has never been conquered by any empire through history.
@@AlexQC9 because they were the Normans. Nordic+ French.
@@MrBlue-dm5li who want to live there? To cold, look map or world battles, all in warm belts ;)
Their culture and religion did. I think that's the point. Even knights weren't a "warrior" culture. They were more or less mercenaries for the catholic church.
Interesting. Vikings are my favorite.
they're's something hauntingly beautiful about their mythology....
Seeing authentic-looking Viking (Norse) helmets in the intro... this might well be worth watching. Let's see.
actually scarier-looking then those fake horned ones.....
I'm not the kind of guy that likes to nitpick, but at 27:28 it says that Thor was Odin's brother... that is a huge mistake, since Thor is actually Odin's son ! Get your mythological facts right will ya! 😅
Then pick no nits!
"These warriors were buried with full military honors..." NOT ANYMORE... now they are buried in some drawer in a lab somewhere without any honors at all
Maybe because the vikings believed that the weapons and armer would be usefull in the afterlife.
It's an abomination.
@@The_Internet_Is_Overrated He has a point.
@@The_Internet_Is_Overrated why not just put them back? Research is oftentimes just something to do for the archaeologists who graduated or picked it up along the way for lack of life purpose. Our civilization isn't the last. Save something for the next mob coming along.
You should complain on the internet about it...
27:28 the narrator says "Odin and his brother Tor." ??? It is his son!
Wonderfully informative and entertaining! I'm proud to continue to re-enact, research and represent this amazing Era. Thank you, instascribe!
You do re-enactments?
Vikings discovered high carbon steel by using bones in the forge. This created superior steel that could destroy enemies weapons and armor. It took another 300-500 years for the world to get high carbon steel. When they caught up technologically, the viking age ended.
Great video. I'm aware that the Viking age was technically from 793 - 1066CE, but personally I consider the Vendel era part of the Viking age. When you consider that we now know Swedish Vikingar were raiding in Eastern Europe and Russia at least as far back as the 740s - 750s. The Danes were raiding Frisia and other places during the Vendel era. Norsemen of every kind were traveling, trading and raiding all over Europe centuries before the "Viking age".
Any up
@Moon Cricket Doesn't matter what you think.
Vikings were descendants of royal blood Dacian warriors who were defeated by Romans under Trajan’s rule in 104 AD and retreated in great number from their original ancestor land Dacia towards North Eastern Europe! Danemark was named Dacia actually during Middle Ages
@@hilti4632 where are you getting this information? The Norse were an amalgamation of Germanic tribes that inhabited northern Europe for thousands of years. There's a bog body from the Cimbrian peninsula (Jutland, Denmark) that dates to 8,000 years ago. Also, Cimbria is the ancient name for Denmark. The Dacians were a separate people from around what is today the Carpathian mountains. If you're referring to the Goths you've got it backwards. Historians think the Goths may have come from Gotland(Largest island of Sweden) or possibly even Götaland(kingdom in southern Sweden). Gotland and Götaland both mean 'Land of the Goths'.
it only counts when it happens to us...(Brits)
Thank you for your hard work. I always enjoy your videos.
When talking about the German swords found in Viking graves around 1:16:00, isn’t it possible that these swords weren’t given to or bought by the Vikings in Germany as that was illegal but instead the Vikings took them from the dead bodies of opposing warriors with whom they were im battle?
I get the littoral advantages, wish they spent more time explaining how the vikings managed the boat performance in the rough seas
Anyone know when this documentary first came out? How old is it? Thanks all.
Fantastic history
thanx Thanx THANX for overdubbing non-English dialogs 👌 extremely helpful 👍
Fascinating how widespread their travels were and that they had positive influences as well as murderous influences in many places. I recently learned that my great-grandfather's middle name was Rollo. After the great Viking. He had a Viking first and second name Harold Rollo. I was kind of excited when I learned that. For whatever it's worth. LOL
So Harold Rollo Deal
@@gqakathemagazine6111 although the surname Deal does come from the part of Great Britain where Vikings originally settled, on the southeast part there is a town of Deal.
😂
So interesting and it just keeps going and going.
Love your thoughts give me hard. love
enjoyed the video
This is a fantastic documentary thank you!! I studied a year in Sweden at Stockholm Universitet - political science, and I had the opportunity to travel around and see these places you talk about! Vikings have a fascinating history! I was intrigued that a thousand years ago, social arrangements were so healthy and normalized without the church, so when people got married they just exchanged Combs they had made! A wonderful culture and a very enlightened people, that always drew me to Sweden :-)
Why did they exchange combs?
@@Caress1972same reason they exchange rings!
As a Viking longship...
I really needed this motivation today...
Crazy. Thanks!! I always knew bits and pieces of Viking hostory, but this is a great overview. I came here because I was actually trying to find info on the Kyiev Rus 😂
There was another video of similar Viking content. Part of the video was dedicated to the findings of 2 or 3 female, French historians that went further in discussing JUST what it was that actually 'pushed' the vikings out if their original homelands and forced then in a lifetime of warring and pillaging. Something was driving them out of their Scandinavian homelands.
It was the climate. I can't remember which videos state it, many do actually, but it was getting colder and their farmland was unworkable. They had to migrate or starve.
This is so amazing! I wish I would have pursued a degree in History/Archeology.
It’s never too late
It's NEVER too late. I foughtagainst being a historian for many years.,I have now made my living as a professional historian for over four decades. A true Historian is born and not made. I wish to GOD I never listened to anyone on my final decision. Ironically, nowadays,being a Historian is a VERY lucrative job.
I've never understood how so many high school history teachers make history so boring. I didn't like history in high school, it was all dates, name and places. If you could memorize, you could get all A's, but you didn't learn much. I learned more about history in literature classes where they would teach you about the writers and what was going in the world that affected their writing.
@@lucindahumphries4702 I am a professional historian, and I am SORRY that most people experience history that way. I read original letters and diaries from eye witnesses for my living, and to me, history is a living, breathing thing. Most of real history is composed of average people getting on with their lives.
Now understand me:Dates are VERY important, because they allow you to see the BIGGER picture, in that you see what is going on in different places at the same time, or in sequence, showing how one event lead to another.
Example: If your lover cheats on you on a Thursday and you catch him, and you hit the crap out of him with a frying pan on Friday, what haqppened when is important.
Oddly enough, I taught college, so I am amused in that I cannot recall EVER asking any of my students forthe date of ANY event. In university history, we ask you to comment on the BIGGER picture.
For your sake, it is better for you to know the dates BEFORE you take the test, because we ask you to explain a larger event, and the dates help you to put your argument together.
@@georgehollingsworth2428 HIStory....HERstory...OURstory....it's all about the stories.....
The Vikings actually discovered the new world, 500 years BEFORE Columbus!
And 500 years after they still living of the new world
Too many ads! Quite annoying to watch.
Get adblock. Not difficult.
@@sp00kyaction-yq2pi You are right, not difficult at all! However, I do not think I should pollute my browser with tons of extentions and other contents just because some people are desperated for video monetization...
U sound poor
Re enacting is far from the reality back then.... Ruthless and deadly to anyone unfortunate to cross paths with a viking raid....☠️☠️
Also the STRESS that is caused on them with the high intensity of fighting day in day out CHANGES a humans views concepts action and reactions to the rest of the world. There is no way really to know what they felt but they must have been a force to be reckoned with
@@AS-pi3zg bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
@@AS-pi3zg hhhhh
@@AS-pi3zg and yet Christianity ultimately tamed them.....
@@frankpienkosky5688because God will always win the battle.
Peat bogs make peat bog mummies. Essentially leather humans. I wonder how often these sacrifices became mummies.
“It can pull back the shield, let me show you” /pulls shield. Bonk.
I enjoy watching these documentaries about the Norse people. They always mention Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. What about Finland? Finland is never mentioned at all!
Probably some of they were, but Finns is from East Asia, thats why why our language differs i guess
Pretty surprising as, here in the US, ever since the Finns held off the Russians single-handedly in the Winter War, they are seen as half, “super-Viking,” half, perfect warrior….
Finns are NOT Scandinavians. They are related to Magyars, Estonians and Sami’s language family and are called Finno- Urics. The Finnish language is very different from the North Germanic Language of the Norse peoples.
I wish I had majored in history rather than criminal Justice in college. I am not sure if I could have done archeology given my claustrophobia. This is such an amazing documentary.
Interesting! I did geology/french, archeology minor. Graduated 23 years ago wish I'd chosen almost anything more practical, I ended up with a career in IT
never too late to learn...it's a fascinating subject....
@@frankpienkosky5688 you are absolutely correct. I will go back to school and get my degree in history!
@@kathrynjordan8782 ...or just read a lot...it's cheaper....
@@kathrynjordan8782 Independent Studies, given the power of the internet will allow everyone interested in learning any subject they wish, if studying is primarily for personal intellectual development, rather than vocational advancement, although, internet allows one to achieve both.
Wonderful. A non-false, non-clickbait, non-dramatic, non-moralizing history of the Vikings. ;)
Love this!!!
2:55:20 Did those Vikings really have paragliders? Silk ones, like their expensive ships' sail? If they knew how to make them, they could have FLOWN! It's just a very smart sail, after all.
their sails were made out of wool...
As a white male, I see so much resentment for me and my ancestory in modern culture. It's wonderful to see such a noble history of men and women who preserved through incredible challenges. All lives matter.
They are just jealous
Hail my Brother! Yes, other races are Jealous of our race
This has nothing to do with being white, these are nordic people, or scandinavians. Don't you dare try to put your self next to us on our pedestal. Know your place.
@@meisrerboot 😂😂😂
@@michaeldunwoody3629 We laugh at people like you. Sit down
Fabulous amazing film...don't miss this...the details are even very excited.
this documentary was really cool interested to watch other viking comentary
Did the Vikings fall? Or did the Vikings assimilate?
The Vikings became respectable, and turned into Scandinavians. They're alive, well, and in NATO (or are about to be).
Conquered normandy, created Russia , the uk, belrus, etc and went to the Mediterranean
Took over sicily, most of italy and then began crusading in the middle east. After 1291 they became bankers and freemasons
Assimilated... adopting christianity marked the end of "VIKING ERA"
Technically we're still here, just stopped all the raiding stuff and settled down.
Alive and kicking.
It was one huge skullcrush festival back then..
Subscription added. Nice find this channel. Well done.
There was no Russia during Viking period. It was Kievan Rus'. And Rus' was called because of Rurik (viking's ruler in slavic country). Rurik was rus' and then hall slavic country was named Kievan Rus'.
My understanding is that the commonly agreed explanation for the etymology of Rus is a reference to Swedes from Roslagen (Rosar in swedish). Roslagen has its origin from the words for rowing (rod today but roðr then, kind of pronounced rothr) and a word for a kind of administrative division of people who could man ships during war called a skeppslag (directly translated as shipping team). The old name for roslagen was roþin, again roughly rothin but a softer th-sound (voiceless) which could easy turn in to a soft s sound. The finnic word for swedes is Ruotsi, or rowers. The swedish "o" sounds more like a slavic "u" so translating their spoken sound to words, natives of that region would have written it Rus!
@@sebastianjovancic9814 that is correct Sebastian
The only thing that could conquer the Vikings. The Church.
.....or Alfred...who seems to have done well....and employed that method....
Niiice :)
Yep the ruin everything
😂😂😂 so funny and so gross.
The church conquered All of Europe. We were all Pagan at a time. Northern Europe was just the last to be converted. Baltics were the very last. In the 13th century.
Omg they have Kia from Heilung on here explaining viking tattoos! Heilung f-n rules
The volume isn't loud enough really wanted to watch this.. blessings everyone
Thank you this seems to be very informative
And common guys, for nearly entire series you keep placing Wolin (Jomsborg) in the same place as Truso. The former was located at the banks of Odra River, and the latter at the banks of Nogat, delta branch of the Wisła (Vistula) River. These two places are almost four hundred kilometers apart..
Thanks for posting this. Very interesting!
Wonderful. Thank you .
A bit repetitive and back and forth for my taste, but it definitely helped surviving work 😊
not enough mention of some of the more famous characters....
This was really good.
Thanks allot friends
😊💯🙏
This is a Fantastic documentary.
Cool finds! To me, it looks like the front view of a tug boat on the water. Maybe tug boats gave rides and those rings were a type of souvenir? That's my guess, anyhow! Man Shwoo is very handsome, indeed!
Thanks for sharing your lark, ladies! 😊
I’m a bit pissed. Not once does this show point out directly that Vikings were called Danes back in their day regardless of if they were Danes Norwegian or Swedish and that Vikings is never used in historical text and is a very very modern term and that viking is to ‘Go Raiding’. So a Dane would go viking. So Ulthbert a farmer comes home one day and says “The Jarl has said we are going viking this summer so you’ll have to look after the farm.”
Also the guy who showed old sword billets said that it was a production line in the houses making swords with the different stages done by different people. He then says “ they melted the iron”. Well that’s just a lie as the Europeans couldn’t melt iron for another 800 or way more years depending on what time the swords making was referred to. Danes like all Europeans collected natural iron like bog iron and iron ore and put that in a blumery furnace for a day to turn the ore back to iron but it never even near melts. Then these little chunks and pieces are heated and gently hammered together. Forge welding the pieces and slag and other crap into a billet. The more it is hammered the more impurities are beaten out unfortunately carbon is also beaten out at the same time but slag inclusions make a sword very weak so it’s a balance. Danes did import real steel ingots as in carbon steel that’s been fully melted. These ingots came from India and whatever the place Saladin lived was called. This was true steel, real carbon steel capable of being hardened and sharpened to a razor and holding that edge way longer. It’s what a general person today thinks of iron or steel today. No one makes iron these days and smiths have to find old scrap iron especially in England who hasn’t made iron in decades, it’s all steel.
The reason the Danes were so hard up on making twisted forged welded blades is that it raises the average quality of the blade. If you have iron or low low carbon steel of quality 1 2 and 3 then forging them together straight gives you a billet with an overall quality of 1. All the good metal is wasted and brought down to the lowest common denominator. But if that bar is then heated and twisted and hammer forged welded flat into a new bar then that bar is now grade 2 an average of the 3 original billets. Also the only known true steel Dane made swords are the UTHBERT swords which were made and named on the blade with steel carved out and then steel letters dropped in and hammer forge welded in place. I think 125 UTHBERT swords have been found as identified by the named blade but only about 80 are true UTHBERTs made from fully melted crucible steel that MUST have been imported from India or Salidins home land. This was microscope tested to check the steel types.
Truely named Damascus steel blades are a crucible steel but not all crucible steel is Damascus steel. Damascus steel is not steel patterned by forge welding different steel together and then twisting or bending that into patterns and making something out of that. That is called Pattern Welded Steel or iron back before steel. Truely named Damascus Steel Such as What Saladin and his army had is crucible steel that the ore had a certain chemical composition and then the ingot was processed in a certain way to have layer upon layer of carbide spheroids in sheets in the steel carbides are about the hardest things known. So not even similar.
You forgot .027% vanadium.
A moment of silence for the camera man at those battles. Somewhere is Iceland there is an ancient camera crane buried in those lands.
Love these videos!
I've been told quite emphatically that ño Viking helmet ever had horns. That was mostly for operas.
I love so much scenery and artifacts. Watching someone's face talking, not so much.
Something that stands out to me and your chronicles brings it to my attention is the Dragon and it's importance. My brother Rip and my best friend both had Dragon tattoos. If I had a tattoo, it would be a Dragon. The Dragon is one of the most common figures in history. The meaning is obviously very deep and carries a rich tradition in culture. Thank you for sharing this educational material and elaborating on the details.
The dragon is a drag-on life.
The dragon and its host.
They represent the vagabond. Vagus bonding. Control over us by these parasites dragons.
The things protruding from the pharaohs forehead fore instance represent who is Realy in control
Also known as pine eels because of their relation to the pineal gland as well as the penile glans.
@@Coincidence_Theorist Why would you ramble those responses? Had nothing to do with what he said. Are you one of those crystal healing, reiki, law of attraction blokes?
The Dragon is one of the oldest symbols of the Indo European Myth all the way into India, China, Japan, Greece
1:24:59 is Kai!!!!
Rune carver: *forgets an R in the rune*
Rune carver: Oh no! It's...runed
*buh dum tss*
U had me at the last of the barbarians 💯❤️
Adorable little nazi
Actually they were by no means the last. Baltic Prussians, Yotvingians, Lithuanians and Livonians, as well as Finno Ugric Estonians and Finns, were pagan for centuries after the Viking age. Lithuania was baptized in 1385. Also, multiple Slavic tribes were still pagan and raiding during and after the Viking age. Christian Scandinavian kings actually conquered and fought these tribes, at times baptizing them.
THANK YOU...VIKING STUFF...BOOOOYAHHHH.❤❤