The Worst Jobs In History 1of6 Roman Anglo Saxon

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  • čas přidán 9. 11. 2013

Komentáře • 186

  • @shonamcwilliam4171
    @shonamcwilliam4171 Před 2 lety +19

    Such a soothing friendly voice. I go back in time with Tony whenever the madness of today's world gets overpowering. I wish there could be more programs made.

  • @bilindalaw-morley161
    @bilindalaw-morley161 Před 6 lety +34

    Hope it doesn't sound cruel, but it was refreshing to see a presenter being real. His terror with the egg hunt really brought home the hardships of life then.
    This is a great vid, genius idea, and very well written n presented.
    Thank you for uploading it, I'm now going to binge on tge rest of the series.

  • @Greenpoloboy3
    @Greenpoloboy3 Před rokem +6

    This show takes me back :)
    Natural presenter, and this just beats anything made today.

  • @tygrahof9268
    @tygrahof9268 Před 8 lety +23

    It is amazing how much hunger can be a motivator. You'll do ANYTHING to get fed.

  • @KenyanBunnie
    @KenyanBunnie Před 6 lety +23

    I did the whole oxen till thing on my grandparents land in Kenya. It was so hard. But that's what my relatives use on their land. Utterly amazed at the work they do to live.

    • @Aleks-Milenkovic
      @Aleks-Milenkovic Před rokem +1

      Probaly the best way. Very low to no cost to produce crops. Just grass and water for the ox and the seed. They are probaly more successfull than english farmers right now with their £500,000 tractors and fuel prices

  • @schradeya
    @schradeya Před 6 lety +4

    I do really feel for Tony over that cliff. He was NOT happy. I can't believe his shoe came off! Watching that fall all that distance made my insides turn to water, and I'm not even afraid of heights!

  • @mariahammarstrom7934
    @mariahammarstrom7934 Před 9 lety +24

    Tony Robinson, I love you. You're one of the greatest presenters in the world.

    • @mariahammarstrom7934
      @mariahammarstrom7934 Před 9 lety +1

      Baldrick was a fun character, but I liked his sharp version in the first, medieval season of Black Adder better than the dimwitted one in the later seasons.
      I'm envious of you for meeting Tony. If I ever get so lucky, I'll hug him and thank him for infotaining me for so long, and in such a great way. :)

  • @elenatoftul3665
    @elenatoftul3665 Před 8 lety +11

    Who would know better about dirty thankless job if not Baldric who labored for Blackadder FOR CENTURIES!
    Thank you very much, guys, what a genius idea that was to make a series of presentation on this topic. I always wondered what everyday's life would be like for an average person of Dark Age.

    • @annoyed707
      @annoyed707 Před 6 lety +1

      And when they were done, Baldric made them a cappucino...

  • @OOZiTen
    @OOZiTen Před 6 lety +7

    18:22 "SLAAAP IT ON, SLIDEE IT... AWW YE SPLASH'D ME WIT YER DOLLOP"
    As an American this sounds hilarious and awesome to me haha

  • @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin

    3:00 - Roman slave gold mining.
    9:50 - Anglo saxon ceorl ploughing.
    13:30 - Ceorl wattle and daubing.
    19:15 - Grinding grain into flour for bread, etc.
    21:00 - Hunting for bog ore, to be smelted into iron.
    23:16 - Ceorl charcoal making.
    26:13 - Anglo saxon coin stamping, the first penny produced in 765 AD.
    28:40 - Anglo saxon monk life.
    34:30 - Viking boat rowing.
    37:28 - Moving a longship across land.
    41:18 - Collecting of guillemot eggs.
    -------
    Now thank me, you assholes. :P

    • @keicbell
      @keicbell Před 8 lety +1

      thank you, sire

    • @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin
      @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin Před 8 lety +7

      Kei Channing
      You're welcome, peasant.

    • @Withnail1969
      @Withnail1969 Před 8 lety

      Thank you lord.

    • @themilitantatheist9243
      @themilitantatheist9243 Před 7 lety +2

      I already watched the whole episode before reading your comment. However, I still will thank you for at least supplying me with a satisfying hard-on brought about by your pic. :)

  • @stannousflouride8372
    @stannousflouride8372 Před 8 lety +23

    I find it fascinating how many of these Anglo Saxon techniques were revived by early colonists in the Americas in the 17th & 18th centuries.
    Wattle and daub, wood plank making, charcoal making, and rough plowing were all used until the 1800s on the frontier.

    • @maryanneslater9675
      @maryanneslater9675 Před 6 lety +4

      Less than a century ago, builders were still using its offspring, lath and plaster.

    • @janethagaman394
      @janethagaman394 Před 6 lety +4

      Since most of the colonist were from England, and left because of their faith, they would have been very familiar with these building techniques

    • @bcaye
      @bcaye Před 6 lety +2

      Maryanne Slater, way less than a century-my house was built in 1956 and has lath and plaster walls.

    • @samuelrs5138
      @samuelrs5138 Před 6 lety +1

      Starting in the very late 1600s, most American colonists were actually German. To this day it's still the largest common ancestry of Americans. It's why we have our super-enunciated version of an english accent and not just a subtle take on it like the Australian accent.

    • @geezerp1982
      @geezerp1982 Před 5 lety

      what about canadians then ? cant of been many germans there ?

  • @lucasdavis1964
    @lucasdavis1964 Před 9 lety +33

    27:38 Back out in the woods, Dave has been awake for 48 hours solid... Slowly nightmarish visions of his tours of duty as a Black-Ops specialist flash before his eyes. "So much blood," he thinks, as a wave of emotion engulfs him with savage intensity. With both dull glaze and a weary heart, to himself he ponders the question that has dogged him ever since those days: "what the fuck am I doing here?"

    • @DarkAngleOfAsh
      @DarkAngleOfAsh Před 9 lety +1

      Me too....

    • @lucasdavis1964
      @lucasdavis1964 Před 8 lety

      He just seems so calm and at the same time so sullen. I guess two days without sleep can do that to somebody.

    • @bjrntveter2847
      @bjrntveter2847 Před 6 lety

      Lucas Davis He should build a pedestal on top of the coal mound to sleep on. If the coal mound catches on fire he would feel the heat, wake up and be able to put out the fire. 👍

  • @thekpowe1
    @thekpowe1 Před 5 lety +1

    You know its gonna be a good one when the first thing you hear Tony say is, "Oh Jesus Christ"! LMAOOOOO
    LOVE YOU Tony

  • @djprosser2010
    @djprosser2010 Před 8 lety +8

    Thanks for uploading this.

  • @erichepperle7085
    @erichepperle7085 Před 6 lety +21

    9:07 - Saxon peasant = "churl" = jack-of-all-trades = farmer/woodsman/builder/baker/etc.
    10:29 - #ETYMOLOGY - "acre" = old saxon word meaning the amount of land one could expect to plow in a day.
    13:47 - #COBHOUSE - Wattle & daub = water, mud, straw, and manure.
    23:33 - How to make charcoal #LOSTSKILLS.
    28:38 - Saxon-era English monk life. Monks had to pray 8 times daily (similar to muslims today); they didn't live in cloisters, but instead built their own wattle and daub hut houses; the did pain by wading in ice cold water for hours.
    35:00 - Viking rowing ships were tighly cramped and smelly, then fish guts were used to lubricate horizontal rolling poles which were used to slide the ships across land in what is termed "portage"
    42:00 - Guniea Mott Egg-collector
    42:37 - People believed chickens were sacred (WHY?), so you couldn't eat their eggs, but you COULD eat eggs of other birds.

    • @bubularbobface8731
      @bubularbobface8731 Před 3 lety

      3:00 - Roman slave gold mining. 9:50 - Anglo saxon ceorl ploughing. 13:30 - Ceorl wattle and daubing.
      19:15 - Grinding grain into flour for bread, etc. 21:00 - Hunting for bog ore, to be smelted into iron. 23:16 -
      Ceorl charcoal making. 26:13 - Anglo saxon coin stamping, the first penny produced in 765 AD. 28:40 -
      Anglo saxon monk life. 34:30 - Viking boat rowing. 37:28 - Moving a longship across land. 41:18 -
      Collecting of guillemot eggs.

  • @mypurplelover
    @mypurplelover Před 6 lety +2

    The one legged stool was the original Pilates ball.

  • @slook7094
    @slook7094 Před 6 lety +1

    This is a common theme with Tony. He's so afraid of heights it's adorable.

  • @db2xs
    @db2xs Před 9 lety +7

    This was fun. I thoroughly enjoyed watching it!

  • @catandpiddle
    @catandpiddle Před 8 lety +1

    very interesting and thank you for posting this.

  • @Kimmy-pw8tm
    @Kimmy-pw8tm Před 8 měsíci

    Great series, and Tony makes history quite fun.

  • @patrickmcshane7658
    @patrickmcshane7658 Před 6 lety +5

    gives a whole new meaning to shit house

  • @ukrulesall1
    @ukrulesall1 Před 6 lety

    33:05. Watching Tony run into the surf made my day! Bravo!

  • @johntierney7244
    @johntierney7244 Před 7 lety +3

    The Ancient Technology Centre in Dorset is well worth visiting but at present is only open to the public for events

  • @lisavranesevic5754
    @lisavranesevic5754 Před 6 lety +1

    I love the abseiling portion as my daughter began at 8 years of age. She loves it although her longest abseil is only 50 feet while her highest climb is 60 feet.

  • @JustJ.
    @JustJ. Před 6 lety +1

    That cliff looked like fun, until he lost his shoes!!! Poor Tony.. lol

  • @roguishpaladin
    @roguishpaladin Před 6 lety +1

    0:04 I swear, for a second it looked like Tony Robinson was winding up to knock down Hadrian's Wall...

  • @MikeT2005
    @MikeT2005 Před 6 lety +3

    Surely the charcoal makers would've had 4-5 charcoal piles going at a time instead of just 1?

  • @kikufutaba1194
    @kikufutaba1194 Před 3 lety +1

    18:36 Tony Robinson: "If you find this therapeutic, Your psyche must be pretty messed up" haha

  • @ederanged7960
    @ederanged7960 Před 6 lety +1

    ''Oh shit Davos, I see an egg.. Hold my mead'' ..
    And thus the art of Gillemot egg collecting was born.

  • @dwightehowell6062
    @dwightehowell6062 Před 9 lety +18

    Life was hard, short, and brutal. I hope they had a few good times scattered around somewhere.

    • @tygrahof9268
      @tygrahof9268 Před 8 lety +5

      +Dwight E Howell You know; that would be another good show. Recorded history of some of the fun times... If there were any. LOL

    • @terriatca1
      @terriatca1 Před 6 lety +2

      It would have been gods.

    • @t.c.bramblett617
      @t.c.bramblett617 Před 6 lety +1

      A couple of horns of mead and even a North Sea voyage probably looked OK :)

    • @Invictus13666
      @Invictus13666 Před 3 lety

      Do you know anything about Romano-Britain or the Saxons? Yeah, thought not.

  • @inkadinkadoodle
    @inkadinkadoodle Před 7 lety +2

    "I see an egg! I see an egg!"
    "Oh! Me shoe's come off!"
    BAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAA XD!!

  • @shendaraalshedir1933
    @shendaraalshedir1933 Před rokem

    WONDERFUL!!👍🏻😀 l say if you are going to watch a lot of tv, treat yourself to something that's not just entertaining but really educational as well! Fantastic shate, thank❤️ you Reijer!👍🏻🐾🌈☮️🇨🇦

  • @kathrynhettinger1321
    @kathrynhettinger1321 Před 8 lety +4

    "a bed of rosaries"
    ahahahahhaha nice.

  • @lekkki1
    @lekkki1 Před 9 lety +5

    Edwin and Oswin are awesome

  • @crazyviking24
    @crazyviking24 Před 8 lety +3

    Building the Anglo Saxon house actually looked fun. As did plowing with the oxen team. It honestly seemed like a way of life I would actually want to try.

    • @stannousflouride8372
      @stannousflouride8372 Před 8 lety +6

      +Donald Vincent Like many jobs it would be fun for the first day but along about the 100th day it certainly would have lost its allure.
      I had a chance to try plowing behind mules. Even with a steel plow it is very difficult to keep a straight line.

    • @janethagaman394
      @janethagaman394 Před 6 lety

      Get yourself a metal plowing blade, that's the only way to make it fun. I have friends who owned Percheron's and used old plowing techniques on their farm, and it's still really hard!

    • @samuelrs5138
      @samuelrs5138 Před 6 lety +3

      Go ask North Koreans how fun ox-and-plow farming is. They're one of the few nations left on earth outside of Africa and rural China that has people still doing it this way. Those in extreme poverty are the only ones who do it. That should tell you all you need to know about how smart of a lifestyle choice it would be.
      Whats not shown is the lack of meats these people had. The produce was seasonal and very regonalized. Europe didn't even have potatoes back then! Let alone citrus fruits or bananas or most other fruits beyond bush berries and apples. Their vegetables were mostly root-based ones that we don't even eat today. They did have bread, but if you had bread that means you grew the grain and then harvested it and then milled it and then took it to a baker who you had to pay to bake it. The end result was a meagre portion that probably wasn't of great quality and was also seasonal and in short supply even then. They had indoor fires to heat homes and cook with. They thought the smoke was a good thing... if you had a cold back then they thought being in an extremely smoky room while you rested would speed you to health. In winters they'd build huge fires and often built lofts to sleep on because the heat, and smoke along with it, would rise to the top. Can you imagine what this would do to you cardiovascularly after awhile?
      Another great medical cure of the day was to use leeches to suck your blood, and then you would burn the leeches in a fire and bury them at least two feet under. How anyone ever came up with this idea is a mystery to me. I can understand things like blood letting, but that sort of stuff escapes me.
      Just because currency wasn't really used among peasents and there was no electricity or running water didn't mean that there weren't bills to be paid. The Lords and Ladies owned the land and tiny tracts were given to families. And I do mean tiny. You can still still the physical imprint this has left in the UK to this very day. When you see those overhead shots of countryside with the Tetris-like pattern of rectangles, a single one of those were given to families of 3-9 people. They paid keep to whomever owned their land and a peasent could never legally own his own land. You paid your cobbler and baker and blacksmiths. You had to buy your wooden bowls and plates and utensils. You had to pay taxes to both the Crown and local Lord. You couldn't even go out and collect all the wood you needed for fires and buildings and tools. You had to not only pay the local Lord, but cut double what you need and give him half. Most bills were paid in food or meat or wood or labor or cloth or in a trade skill if you had one. If you got behind to local Lords and Ladies, they would often take your children as indentured servants or you or your wife if the situation permitted.
      Moving up in society wasn't an option. People like the bakers and blacksmiths and cobblers were family businesses given centuries back by Lords and Ladies to a family whose ancestors always inherited it's rights. Even if you had extra eggs or grain it was illegal to sell them except for about 3 days a year. Some families would keep sheep, then cut all their wool and do about a dozen more steps to get it to usable wool. Then another 15-20 steps to make it into woven cloth. Then you have to take it to a local lord and pay them to use their water mill to pound the cloth to make it usable for clothes. You could make them for your family or sell the cloth, or wool that was ready for spinning, to the church. The church was the monopoly so you accepted their price or kept it.
      Speaking of the church, they collected not only tithes but also taxes. They were essentially rte organized criminals of the day. It's why their magnificent cathedrals still stand while the 99% lived in wretched hovels. Then if you wanted your daughter to ever get married you had to save for her dowry and if you wanted your son to get a wife you have to save resources to attract a bride. These days we can work hard and slog through the day to give our children markedly better lives but back then you had to do that and THEN SOME if you wanted your child to have no life improvement at all, but just the chance to have it as good as you did.

    • @wewenang5167
      @wewenang5167 Před 10 měsíci

      TRY DOING IT FOR A FEW YEARS, WITH BAD WEATHER YOUR CROP WILL FAIL, MUDDY LAND IF YOU HAVE HEAVY RAIN, IF YOU HAVE DROUGHT THE SOIL WILL BE AS HARD AS STONE AND YOU CANT WATER YOUR CROPS. NOT TO MENTION ATTACKING VIKINGS RAIDERS WILL TAKE YOUR CROPS AND YOUR WIFE. MAYBE IT LOOK FUN IF YOU JUST HAVE TO DO IT FOR A FEW DAYS. NO MODERN PEOPLE WILL SURVIVE LIVING LIKE THAT TODAY, WE ALL HAS BEEN SPOILED.

  • @davidmunro1469
    @davidmunro1469 Před 2 lety +1

    Hadrian's wall and Teutaberg forest. When Rome met the Scottish and Germans they got a bloody lesson.

  • @colorado9125
    @colorado9125 Před 2 lety

    Love this show

  • @lilykatmoon4508
    @lilykatmoon4508 Před 3 lety

    I’m right with you in the rappelling, Tony. Yikes!

  • @lrdrskillz1
    @lrdrskillz1 Před 6 lety +1

    i love the song!

  • @theblueknight9746
    @theblueknight9746 Před 6 lety

    I kind of want to try doing a few of these.

  • @jennagriffith9016
    @jennagriffith9016 Před 3 měsíci

    I actually do feel bad for him during the cliff part. He's clearly feeling a lot of terror, however, the way he says his shoe fell off and the clip of the shoe falling makes me laugh so hard I drool on myself.

  • @critterjon4061
    @critterjon4061 Před 2 lety

    29:50 this is what I’d always imagined Bladrick’s house from Blackadder to look like

  • @bioanu
    @bioanu Před rokem

    Excellent sound at 1:52!! Any idea?

  • @wildbill6675
    @wildbill6675 Před 2 lety

    I love his stuff

  • @perniciouspete4986
    @perniciouspete4986 Před 2 lety

    18:10 Sir Tony is wearing his Anglo-Saxon watch. I bet he regrets that.

  • @maggiee639
    @maggiee639 Před 4 lety

    I’m afraid of heights but the hot, smelly, cramped jobs would really get me

  • @liannesadler5771
    @liannesadler5771 Před 6 lety

    22:25 that rock required no digging to dig up, and came out as clean as if it was run through a dishwasher!

  • @kopczas
    @kopczas Před 6 lety

    Being Baldrick to Blackadder was the worst job you can imagine :D

  • @dylanfontaine591
    @dylanfontaine591 Před 8 lety +1

    the plowing made me laugh

  • @andreashofmeyr9583
    @andreashofmeyr9583 Před 2 lety

    I wouldn't be surprised if most of the stones ended up in local village house walls.

  • @Kristoffceyssens
    @Kristoffceyssens Před 6 lety +3

    they should rename this episode. "city boy on the country"

  • @rustyblackdog1619
    @rustyblackdog1619 Před 8 lety

    That pony when he picked up its poop 😁

  • @lubu4u312
    @lubu4u312 Před 6 lety +2

    every job is the worst job when youre 87 apparently.

  • @afrog2666
    @afrog2666 Před 6 lety

    Congratulations on your promotion Baldrick :D

  • @scottg4520
    @scottg4520 Před 6 lety

    Tony is awesome

  • @johntierney7244
    @johntierney7244 Před 6 lety

    Bede's World has been re-opened as Jarrow Hall

  • @Accentrick
    @Accentrick Před rokem

    PLS NO, NOT THE BINDING AGENT!

  • @tncorgi92
    @tncorgi92 Před 6 lety

    That "bog ore" almost looks like meteorites! Wonder if that's where they come from or if it's some other explanation.

  • @kilppa
    @kilppa Před 6 lety +7

    44:40 I'm actually doubtful that the egg collectors wouldn't have figured out to tie a simple climbing knot to lower themselves down. Actually I'm going to say it is ridiculous. Doing this was their life and I'm sure they figured out how to tie it properly, to safely propel themselves down.

    • @DreamBelief
      @DreamBelief Před 2 lety

      You shouldn't be so doubtful. Look all through history. Even look today. There are so many examples of people doing risky work at height without using any rope etc. It may seem silly to us, but that's reality for you.

  • @vincewhite5087
    @vincewhite5087 Před 6 lety +1

    A large resource that Romans had was slaves. Might be good for us to use convicts. Better then have them pumping weights in prison gyms & thinking of ways to improve at criminal activities.

  • @dickscratcher3040
    @dickscratcher3040 Před 9 lety

    The Toaly nargler was really bad. They used to 'suck' the shit from constipated rich folks back ends.

    • @azbrowne
      @azbrowne Před 9 lety

      Really? Are there documents

  • @martentrudeau6948
    @martentrudeau6948 Před 6 lety

    Good show, I wouldn't liked being on that cliff either.

  • @deejay3971
    @deejay3971 Před 9 lety

    this was entertaining.

  • @lonewolfweed9500
    @lonewolfweed9500 Před 6 lety

    Is this captured from finnish tv-channel?

  • @SuperExodian
    @SuperExodian Před 6 lety +2

    the worst job to me sounds like adream job. climbing for a living

  • @marinar17
    @marinar17 Před 5 lety

    They should do another episode with horse grooms in it!

  • @Willesden_Rab1_TV
    @Willesden_Rab1_TV Před rokem

    music at 40:30 anyone please help ... much appreciated

  • @wtrdawnlord
    @wtrdawnlord Před 5 lety

    It never fails. Tony gets to deal with piss, shit, something really stinky and rotten, and some perilous height. Apparently he'll do almost anything for a paycheck. ;-)

  • @huberthubert860
    @huberthubert860 Před 6 lety +1

    27.30 what s so hard to mention the Clipping, to make good Money. Check out Stephen Zarlenga. Coins making was a great Option, throughout history

  • @pcaso100
    @pcaso100 Před 9 lety

    Edwin and Osmond, WALK ON! LOL

  • @MissTamTamXD
    @MissTamTamXD Před 10 lety +12

    Am I weird for thinking I'd like to try out building a house wall like that once? ^^

    • @milesclark2230
      @milesclark2230 Před 10 lety +2

      Yeah kinda

    • @MissTamTamXD
      @MissTamTamXD Před 10 lety

      LOL xd good to know ^^

    • @Dumbo8234
      @Dumbo8234 Před 10 lety +5

      When I was living in the Sudan I helped build a school in a very similar manner. Its definitely not as disgusting as it sounds

    • @CalloftheWarrior1
      @CalloftheWarrior1 Před 9 lety +5

      Nah, I'd love to have a go aswell.
      As stated above me, cow-dung doesn't smell that bad at all.

    • @depthcon
      @depthcon Před 6 lety

      why are they using shit?

  • @getin3949
    @getin3949 Před 4 lety +1

    How can Tony only be worth one million in 2019 when he's been so successful?

    • @getin3949
      @getin3949 Před 2 lety +1

      Now I just read it's only $600,000.00 as of 2022, how can that be?

  • @Augustus17
    @Augustus17 Před dnem

    Hahaha the geezer on the boat having a chuckle at Tony disliking rowing the boat.
    Going back to Cuthbert, isn't it time Archbishop of Canterbury went down to the coast to atone for all our sins, so we don't go to hell? We'd all be free to go out & sin all we want if the owd Archbishop was atoning for us 🤷‍♂️😆 who's going to write to him to tell him he's got some atoning to do 🤔😉

  • @stevethepirate123
    @stevethepirate123 Před rokem

    Why did we forget all the Roman knowledge and go backwards to chucking crap out windows? And living in mud huts? How was this knowledge all forgotten?

    • @Augustus17
      @Augustus17 Před dnem

      Because most the skillful Romans up & left when the Roman Army left Britain, the average Brit back then wouldn't of had the know how about him/her to carry on like before, the Romans imported everything hence why we lost the knowledge cus they took it with them sadly

  • @ReeceRockholdTV
    @ReeceRockholdTV Před 8 lety +4

    but how are we to tell people about shitty dark age jobs. dont worry my lord i have a cunning plan

  • @senmoru
    @senmoru Před 6 lety

    The prequel series to Dirty Jobs.

  • @wewenang5167
    @wewenang5167 Před 10 měsíci

    WE ASIAN ALSO HAVE THE WATTLE AND DAUB TECHNIC SINCE ANCIENT TIMES TO BUILD WALL AND HOUSES....BUT WE AIN'T USING DUNG!! SOUTH EAST ASIAN AND EAST ASIAN USED COOKED STICKY RICE AS A BINDING AGENT...MUCH STRONGER AND MUCH CLEANER. BUT INDIAN DO USED COW DUNG THOUGH...BECAUSE THEY DEEM IT TO BE SACRED :p.

  • @glutinousmaximus
    @glutinousmaximus Před 6 lety +9

    Yes, but - what else did the Romans do for us?

  • @simgingergirl
    @simgingergirl Před 8 lety +3

    Wait a minute... Roman & Anglo Saxon. The Welsh are Celts, not Anglos.

  • @talathuma934
    @talathuma934 Před 6 lety

    Genius 😁😁😁

  • @ketchup143
    @ketchup143 Před 6 lety

    oh me shoe's come off! oh Christ!

  • @neuemage
    @neuemage Před 6 lety

    Dung walls? *LAUGHS IN ADOBE MASTER RACE

  • @fataal0fat874
    @fataal0fat874 Před 3 lety

    I’m doing an assignment about this video Something about pros and cons and have no clue help

  • @DreamBelief
    @DreamBelief Před 2 lety

    Why do they make him say that spell about trying the worst job when he identifies it? He tries all of them, not just one!

  • @renatarogo1933
    @renatarogo1933 Před 6 lety

    I subscribe also If my ancestors were your invaders 😁😇. Thank you. Good job

  • @dezmondfur6271
    @dezmondfur6271 Před 6 lety +1

    Now thinking compare to how old the Earth is this was not to long ago like the way we have evolved is amazing lol XD

    • @LaurusHG
      @LaurusHG Před 6 lety +1

      We haven't evolved, society has evolved.

  • @bilbo_gamers6417
    @bilbo_gamers6417 Před 6 lety

    Being a churl isn't the worst life. I mean, it would be hard, but it's not so dangerous or difficult as being in the army or mining.

  • @jessewilson8676
    @jessewilson8676 Před 5 lety

    21 century Easter egg collecting.

  • @jordanlea1502
    @jordanlea1502 Před 2 lety

    I like Tony, more and more as time goes on, but what's with all this "we" business 😆

  • @davidallen346
    @davidallen346 Před 7 lety

    This is excellent BBC series, egg collecting by the sea cliff has to be the worst job for that era with shit pile wall making without gloves

  • @paul6925
    @paul6925 Před 6 lety +2

    I think Id only last a few days at any of these jobs before I decided to off myself. But then again maybe not since suicide was considered a mortal sin. (if you were Christian that is)

  • @CreatingwithWinglessAngel

    Wow , poor Tony. Picking up poo. If they had just mixed the clay & straw in the round pens they would have known the only reason dung was in it was from the ox 's mixing the clay, water & straw. 🐂🐃🏠

  • @rcx8666c
    @rcx8666c Před 9 lety

    VIOLIN STRING FROM CAT GUT

  • @vincewhite5087
    @vincewhite5087 Před 6 lety

    Actually most deforestation happened during Bronze Age.

  • @perrykuehr5538
    @perrykuehr5538 Před 3 lety

    Wow, tony is lefthanded

    • @perniciouspete4986
      @perniciouspete4986 Před 2 lety

      Not all left-handers are good people, but all good people are left-handers.

  • @joeforte6978
    @joeforte6978 Před 7 lety

    using poop good idea, but so close to figuring out how to make concrete.

  • @weepingwell
    @weepingwell Před 5 lety

    11:12 Sir Edmund Blackangus?

  • @jddgostino9104
    @jddgostino9104 Před 8 lety

    Tony Robinson you got guts sod egg collecting and you lost a shoe. wonder who got it back if it were me those eggs be scrambled

  • @maggiee639
    @maggiee639 Před 4 lety

    Seriously though did anyone have a non miserable life back then???

  • @fred6059
    @fred6059 Před 9 lety

    No Black Adder?