What did the Arabs Think about the Vikings?

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2022
  • The Vikings met the Arabs in two main locations during the Viking Age, Al-Andalus, the Muslim kingdom in Iberia, the modern-day countries of Spain and Portugal, as well as in Eastern Europe along the rivers of Russia and Ukraine. But what did these Arabs think about the heathen Norsemen they encountered?
    Project Middle East Playlist:
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    Sources:
    The Viking World: The Vikings and Islam - Egil Mikkelson
    Arabic Sources on the Vikings - J.E. Montgomery
    The Vikings In Arabic Sources - Amin Tibi
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    #Viking #Norse #Documentary

Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @Nabium
    @Nabium Před rokem +3152

    If the Arabs saw the Norse as filthy, I wonder what they would have thought of the British who saw the Norse as vain and too focused on personal hygiene.

    • @JoseRodriguez-lp7rs
      @JoseRodriguez-lp7rs Před rokem +625

      British (derogatory)

    • @aneesahussein1522
      @aneesahussein1522 Před rokem

      Even know most Arabs see European filthy by not using water and soap on the butt after number 2.

    • @dondamage2803
      @dondamage2803 Před rokem +189

      Wait seriously? I had no idea that's how the British viewed the norse

    • @fuscian
      @fuscian Před rokem +30

      Where do you get this from ?

    • @Nabium
      @Nabium Před rokem +336

      @@fuscian Anglo-saxon chronicler John of Wallingford, among other ancient sources.

  • @Faris._.
    @Faris._. Před rokem +1092

    As an Arab and an informative "CZcamsr", the fact that you include the Arabic writings of the names and shedding spotlight on our deep and complex region really amazes me, well done!

    • @rhetoric5173
      @rhetoric5173 Před rokem

      he's Arab himself lol

    • @akapoka8732
      @akapoka8732 Před rokem +11

      I second this, I love to see the real names of people and places but they’re usually translated into English nowadays. Not saying I’d rather decipher it myself but have an English and their real name would be nice as the standard for all education channels.

    • @ahunter107
      @ahunter107 Před rokem +27

      I'd like him to say Muslims more then arabs
      Because we achieved all that success when we were real Muslims and true believers when we was united as Allah want us to be when was no difference between all human races except how much strength of your believe in Allah inside your heart
      My friend, in this era that we live in, you see only Arabs and you do not see Muslims, because all the true Muslims died, only a few remain, and all that remains for the Arabs is history about a people they called Muslims, and they feared nothing but God. These people were able to defeat the Roman Kingdom, the Persian Kingdom and the Kingdom of The Mongols and the Spanish and Portuguese kingdoms and defeated the Vikings
      We don't have the right to say that's arab history cuz arab have no history
      Although I'm Arab

    • @jerrypeukert5732
      @jerrypeukert5732 Před rokem

      @@ahunter107 Considering my ancestors were oppressed by the arab muslims, FU

    • @hasanmohamad4159
      @hasanmohamad4159 Před rokem +19

      @@ahunter107 you simply didn't read any history. You just repeating what you've heard

  • @jrileycain6220
    @jrileycain6220 Před rokem +1920

    Would love a video about how the Norse saw the Islamic world. This was such a well presented history lesson full of interesting information and sighting sources. Thanks

    • @snowmoon7385
      @snowmoon7385 Před rokem +8

      Yeah

    • @y11971alex
      @y11971alex Před rokem +208

      Wouldn’t that be a tall order considering we barely know how the Norse saw the Norse world

    • @snowmoon7385
      @snowmoon7385 Před rokem +7

      @@y11971alex
      You mean converts in seville? Or in muslim lands?

    • @maddogbasil
      @maddogbasil Před rokem +6

      @@snowmoon7385 huh?
      Norse converts in Seville

    • @snowmoon7385
      @snowmoon7385 Před rokem +8

      @@maddogbasil
      There were some who wrre captrd in war in coast n settled in caliphate not in sevile hut nearby...

  • @user-ry2qs7xf9k
    @user-ry2qs7xf9k Před rokem +87

    *ibn fadhlan didn't say 'blonde', he said 'moghr', the closest translation is redhead*

    • @IssacAlgizani
      @IssacAlgizani Před rokem +22

      He referred to them as red people because blonde people are modern descriptions of Europeans. Arabs used to call Europeans the red people, the sons of the red, or Romans, which are the most popular, even in holy scripts. Turks and Eastern Asians are called yellow people.

    • @user-ry2qs7xf9k
      @user-ry2qs7xf9k Před rokem +19

      @@IssacAlgizani
      I know that but the word he used is to describe hair color,its a between redhead and blonde

  • @TheRiyad1
    @TheRiyad1 Před rokem +752

    your arabic is surprisingly well, almost unheard of that a western person can pronounce arab words to this accuracy

    • @napolien1310
      @napolien1310 Před rokem +3

      Is her a western person!?

    • @erikjohnson9223
      @erikjohnson9223 Před rokem +99

      @@napolien1310 Hilbert is a male and I believe an ethnic Frisian (a type of Netherlander) living in the U.K., so yes.

    • @ixthebest8325
      @ixthebest8325 Před rokem +35

      Bruh, everyone Who learnt arab can pronnounce It perfectly if they train, look for example to Western muslims the have to ready and pronnounce the Quran.

    • @paulashe61
      @paulashe61 Před rokem +5

      Or Arabs pronunciation of islandic

    • @lordgemini2376
      @lordgemini2376 Před rokem +2

      @@erikjohnson9223 Half frisian no?

  • @TheNotoriousDUDE
    @TheNotoriousDUDE Před rokem +898

    Bro, can I just say, the sheer effort and commitment you put into trying to pronounce all the foreign words in your videos as correctly as possible is amazing! As a linguistics nerd, I truly appreciate that.

    • @xxCrimsonSpiritxx
      @xxCrimsonSpiritxx Před rokem +30

      Yeah that really caught my attention, great pronunciation

    • @williambolton4698
      @williambolton4698 Před rokem +11

      I find it interesting that no-one appears to have considered that the narrator may be an Englishman of Arabic/Muslim extraction.

    • @TheNotoriousDUDE
      @TheNotoriousDUDE Před rokem +10

      @@williambolton4698 Sounds unlikely when the dude's name is Hilbert, but I guess nothing's impossible ^^

    • @wariyoshidirector
      @wariyoshidirector Před rokem +6

      I was literally about to write a comment about 2:17 saying this. I honestly don't think it's fair to expect people who don't know a language to pronounce things as natives would, but I appreciate that he went the extra mile for it.

    • @TheNotoriousDUDE
      @TheNotoriousDUDE Před rokem +5

      @@wariyoshidirector Exactly! Of course I wouldn't expect non-natives to be able to pronounce Arabic, or any foreign language for that matter, perfectly, but it really ticks me off when I see creators not even at least trying, so Hilbert is definitely a nice change of pace ^^

  • @elmehdilamrhari1404
    @elmehdilamrhari1404 Před 8 měsíci +14

    Ibn Fadlan is one of the best story writters in the whole history. He could describe very detail information about other practices in different cultures. I still read his stories and memories, they are amazing I cant stop it.

  • @Jobe-13
    @Jobe-13 Před rokem +414

    It’s as fascinating as the interactions between the Chinese and the Romans and Greeks.

    • @VicmundLim
      @VicmundLim Před rokem +3

      You should a video on that topic lol

    • @nomanor7987
      @nomanor7987 Před rokem +4

      The Chinese never interacted with the Romans.

    • @VicmundLim
      @VicmundLim Před rokem +37

      @@nomanor7987 bruh they did in Roman Syria

    • @VicmundLim
      @VicmundLim Před rokem

      @Abdulaziz Mohammed noice

    • @esti-od1mz
      @esti-od1mz Před rokem +18

      @@nomanor7987 no , they were well aware of each other...

  • @TimRobertsen
    @TimRobertsen Před rokem +754

    Really fascinating stuff! Being a Norwegian, it's very interesting to hear how the vikings were perceived by others than the typical sources

    • @snowmoon7385
      @snowmoon7385 Před rokem +21

      I d like to see what vikings think of arabs

    • @MrBlue-dm5li
      @MrBlue-dm5li Před rokem +55

      @@snowmoon7385 We thought they were a good income source!

    • @snowmoon7385
      @snowmoon7385 Před rokem +15

      @@MrBlue-dm5li
      The whole encounter of vikings with muslims be in rus or in coasts of spain were hilarious...

    • @Aurmm
      @Aurmm Před rokem +15

      I am arab and live in norway

    • @MrBlue-dm5li
      @MrBlue-dm5li Před rokem +21

      @@Aurmm How do you perceive Norwegians?

  • @jytte-hilden
    @jytte-hilden Před rokem +134

    "It is possible Ibn Fadlan exaggerated the filthy bathing practices"
    Probably not. Mixing spit was a sign of fidelity and brotherhood, the same as mixing blood. Even to this day, you are supposed to spit in your hand before shaking on a deal at a Scandinavian cattle or horse fair. It is a truly ancient custom, most famously described when the Aesir and Vanir sealed the peace treaty after the first war by all spitting in a great cauldron, from which beer and poetry were later derived.

    • @BADALEX1
      @BADALEX1 Před rokem +17

      Interesting point and well spotted. May have been a religious ritual.

    • @brazucahciczarmy1120
      @brazucahciczarmy1120 Před rokem +39

      You don't understand how much Arabs focus on hygiene and cleanness.

    • @juzores1
      @juzores1 Před rokem +36

      The guy was really defensive in this video.

    • @iceseic
      @iceseic Před rokem +40

      @@juzores1 He like to downplay arabs account if it has bit of negativity about vikings. Like, even france with its beautiful architecture have shite everywhere even on the building, on the street, everywhere. Victorian era were not so much different in terms of hygiene.

    • @Dawn.tless.
      @Dawn.tless. Před 10 měsíci +2

      To be fair the Arabs at their height described any place they disliked or disrespected as “filthy”, so there might be some exaggeration here

  • @Happyfor96
    @Happyfor96 Před rokem +34

    For a guy named Hilbert, your Arabic is amazing :o

    • @kuchikopi4631
      @kuchikopi4631 Před rokem +2

      Umm it's ali hilbert muhammed son of Hassan ali

  • @adir.2055
    @adir.2055 Před rokem +35

    I love these sort of videos that talk about how different peoples interacted. Very keen to see you do more!

  • @siwarhamza5174
    @siwarhamza5174 Před rokem +24

    you are so good in pronouncing arabic
    as an arab i had no idea about the authors or the books and sources that you mentioned
    its so informative this videos of yours
    thank you so much

  • @barbaralucas1220
    @barbaralucas1220 Před rokem +77

    Fascinating thanks for another great history lesson Hilbert ☺️

  • @maxcasteel2141
    @maxcasteel2141 Před rokem +11

    This video is amazing! Such an interesting topic, I always think it's really cool to think about how different people groups throughout history looked at the rest of the world, brings a lot of humanity into history I think. Really well put together!

  • @ameen6834
    @ameen6834 Před rokem +198

    Wow nice as an arab I am impressed od how well you pronounced the Arab names and letters very well .

  • @christoguichard4311
    @christoguichard4311 Před rokem +48

    Excellent video!
    Very thorough and well-researched.
    Thank you Hilbert.

  • @samwill7259
    @samwill7259 Před rokem +30

    "These people keep burning our shit but they also give us REALLY good deals."
    Yknow, what everyone thought of the vikings, really.

  • @manuelschurig2266
    @manuelschurig2266 Před rokem +9

    I'm once again amazed at your ability to pronounce so many different languages so well.

  • @PlayusTheGreat
    @PlayusTheGreat Před 10 měsíci

    I love the way you pronounced things! This video was wonderfully made. It was super entertaining and informative, I loved it!

  • @marcusantonius117
    @marcusantonius117 Před rokem +11

    Great video. very interesting! Would like to see more about middle eastern history!

  • @TexasDevin
    @TexasDevin Před rokem +6

    This was super cool. I support the idea of doing another one in the other direction.

  • @philesq9595
    @philesq9595 Před 11 měsíci

    Intriguing topic, substantive research, and well-produced presentation. Thank you for sharing your efforts, friend. 🙂

  • @mrkbwyr6079
    @mrkbwyr6079 Před rokem +2

    THAT GREAT ! I would like to hear the otherside and also even more on this topic as well !

  • @Seaoflife.
    @Seaoflife. Před rokem +17

    Your Arabic pronunciation was superb

  • @abdulsd2268
    @abdulsd2268 Před rokem +431

    While I appreciate the creator of this content, I’m a bit disappointed that he failed to mention that the Vikings were defeated in all of their raids on Iberia, this is very important fact to be mentioned since the bulk of the Arabic Andalusian writings about the Vikings were about the details of the Arab success in repelling these raids, it's important to know the context from which these quotes come

    • @SamSam-mv6gf
      @SamSam-mv6gf Před rokem

      He is trying hard to whitewash his ancestors like all orientalists before him. What do you expect from European except lies and deceive

    • @DubK-ww6xj
      @DubK-ww6xj Před rokem +22

      yes, however they took Sicily from the Arabs

    • @joellaz9836
      @joellaz9836 Před rokem +129

      @@DubK-ww6xj
      That was the Normans, not actual genuine Vikings.

    • @DubK-ww6xj
      @DubK-ww6xj Před rokem +38

      @@joellaz9836 Vikings / Normans are the same thing the only difference is a few centuries and by the time they were called Normans they had already become Christians, in addition the terms Norman and Viking meant the same thing Norman derived from the Latin languages ​​and the Viking term derived from the Nordic languages but in themselves they are the same thing

    • @maverick1654
      @maverick1654 Před rokem +89

      @@DubK-ww6xj no they're not. culturally, and religiously different for 100 years, at that point, they wont see themself the same pagan as their ancestor are. we're talking about the viking with the nordic culture and fascinating pagan religion here, not the christian norman who basically have the same culture with other christian civilization in europe.

  • @tzvi7989
    @tzvi7989 Před rokem +1

    Mental that you've collabed with people like sam aronow now. Keep up the great work Hilbert!

  • @danielu1763
    @danielu1763 Před 9 měsíci

    Placing the commentary in context shows insight, and is appreciated.

  • @ally_crawford
    @ally_crawford Před rokem +3

    Great video/pronunciations as ever. Would love to see the reversal you mentioned at the end as another video.
    I have but one complaint, surely you could have done more to shoehorn THAT national anthem in there somewhere 😉

  • @DuelScreen
    @DuelScreen Před rokem +3

    I'd love a video exploring Gog and Magog. Keep these videos coming.

  • @harry7227
    @harry7227 Před rokem +1

    Brilliant video - how have I only now discovered this channel!!!

  • @bdr420i
    @bdr420i Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you for such rich deepdown in this amazing topic ❤️

  • @jesupcolt
    @jesupcolt Před rokem +12

    A reverse video would definitely be interesting. Great video! 👍

  • @animatedislamichistory
    @animatedislamichistory Před rokem +19

    Interesting collection of testimonies. Usually the account from Ibn Fadlan is the one that is most popular, so I appreciated the others from Al turtushi for example

  • @0harris0
    @0harris0 Před rokem

    that was amazing bro!!! absolutely compelling subject

  • @holysab7
    @holysab7 Před rokem +2

    OMG! Another video I'm interested in would be very interesting! It's Lit!

  • @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014

    You should do about the Normans in Spain. Roger de Tosny being a famous one.
    There was also a Norman Principality in Iberia: Principality of Tarragona

  • @chronicfatiguehermithiker3022

    I read about the Vikings from the British perspective, I’m glad to get the Arab perspective because they are a writing people from a long time ago. I believe what the Arabs wrote and accept it as written because it’s a consistent impression of the Vikings with what I’ve seen elsewhere. Its annoying when people try to change history to fit their preferred ideas to flatter those that they like and tear down those that they don’t like; that’s why I wish more peoples wrote and find it sad that they destroyed so much written history (burning of the library of Alexandria), the more perspectives the greater the possibility for accuracy. Based on what I’ve seen elsewhere I was actually surprised that they washed at all, though washing in filth might be the same as not washing at all to some people. I find the history interesting because of how scornful, shaming and superior Europeans tend to act towards other people.

    • @pjq420
      @pjq420 Před rokem +4

      You're a person of truth my friend.there's a Swedish telling a short historical summary between both.look up for the video when the Muslims meet the Vikings

    • @muhannadalwani7833
      @muhannadalwani7833 Před rokem +11

      sadly, until today, the winner writes the history.

    • @try2justbe
      @try2justbe Před 11 měsíci

      ...and burning of dar el hikma librery of Baghdad by the Mongols and the burning and looting of the Baghdad museum that held many old/ancient manuscripts during the American invasion of Iraq and later isis that burned the libraries of Mosul with thousands of manuscripts

    • @luckyabdurrahman1085
      @luckyabdurrahman1085 Před 11 měsíci +25

      I believe one of the most horrendous atrocity committed by the mongolians was the burning of the House of Wisdom in Baghdad, so much text and knowledge lost to the fires.

    • @BonVoyage861
      @BonVoyage861 Před 11 měsíci

      History is but a work of fiction. Europeans have always been on top. They just write these fairy tales to make other races feel better about themselves and have hope.

  • @pauljermyn5909
    @pauljermyn5909 Před rokem +1

    This was really interesting, good job

  • @noobmaster_69_420
    @noobmaster_69_420 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for the right pronunciation and putting in the effort, well done ❤🎉

  • @jasonyoung2160
    @jasonyoung2160 Před rokem +6

    Love the videos on relations between different peoples, more!!!!

  • @_.atd21
    @_.atd21 Před rokem +6

    you have the best Arabic pronunciation I've seen on a non-Arab. Good on ya hilbert

  • @milanmilan2
    @milanmilan2 Před rokem

    Well done... would love to see more videos on your suggested topics.

  • @dylanfriese8077
    @dylanfriese8077 Před rokem

    Truly one of the best channels

  • @solssun
    @solssun Před rokem +4

    Very interesting part of history, haven’t seen this covered before

  • @promptjungle
    @promptjungle Před 11 měsíci +4

    You can see alot of these info included in the great movie "The 13th Warrior" starring Antonio Banderas. As an arab who sails with Beowulf and the vikings back to Scandinavia. There is even a scene about the bowl of spit and dirty water that goes around the men to wash with. As an Arab who was raised up in Sweden I find this video utterly intersting and well done. And you arabic pronunciation is on point. You should read some of the Quran, you will find it very intersting. There is so much history written there. Great channel. Subbed and liked. 👍

  • @yahiaasiri2748
    @yahiaasiri2748 Před rokem +2

    Great work ..Interested to know about other sources from the Vikings

  • @tohidsha9489
    @tohidsha9489 Před rokem +1

    your pronunciations are perfect. Good job.

  • @TheEbrithil2
    @TheEbrithil2 Před rokem +61

    I'd love to see more videos about contacts between cultures you don't usually hear about, and especially perspectives you rarely hear

  • @monakeulen5622
    @monakeulen5622 Před rokem +16

    Wow your Arabic pronunciation is really good!! And the knowledge you share is very accurate. I love your videos, but this one especially because it connects both my backgrounds ☺️ although they're not that positive about my people 🤣

  • @ashtregar
    @ashtregar Před rokem

    Great job, and your voice is easy to listen to, like a great story teller.

  • @shaungillingham4689
    @shaungillingham4689 Před 11 měsíci

    Well done, a good even handed account without bias, thats real history!

  • @Melia_67
    @Melia_67 Před rokem +55

    As an Arab; I found this video incredibly interesting. And btw your pronunciation of Arabic words and names is really good!

    • @swijii
      @swijii Před rokem +4

      قناة السبيل عملوا حلقة كرتونية عن رحلة بن فضلان

    • @Melia_67
      @Melia_67 Před 10 měsíci

      @Qe Qa كيف فضحتك ما فهمت؟ تحسبني مب عربي ولا وش هههههه؟

    • @Mster1
      @Mster1 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Melia_67أنا احب اهل الامارات

  • @user-wm9mk8mc4w
    @user-wm9mk8mc4w Před 9 měsíci +8

    Good job Hilbert, as an Arab this was informative
    I would just say that we should give more credit to the ability of these writers to differentiate between cultural norms and understanding reality, such as what ibn fadlan mentioned about the Russ spitting in the same bowl that they used to clean themselves, this is pretty straightforward imo

  • @jamescollinscares3897

    This is awesome thank you for this

  • @welshpete12
    @welshpete12 Před rokem +2

    Fascinating and a remarkable talk on the subject . Can we have more please ?

  • @richardreinertson1335
    @richardreinertson1335 Před rokem +10

    Interesting and outstanding scholarship, presentation, and pronunciation, from my POV as a Norwegian-American with linguistics knowledge. I'll be looking for more of your work.

  • @willek1335
    @willek1335 Před rokem +19

    Please do make a part 2 of the reverse perspective. I appreciate all these sources. Thank you.

  • @Diamondraw4Real
    @Diamondraw4Real Před rokem +1

    first time on ur channel, real interesting topic :)

  • @mattsreptileroom
    @mattsreptileroom Před rokem +1

    That is a burning question I didn't know I had. Thank you

  • @spuggym8986
    @spuggym8986 Před rokem +141

    This is sick, would love to see more! Under York Minster there's a big elephant tusk that was gifted to the vikings by and carved by islamic people, would love to hear more about it

  • @seanpatrick3955
    @seanpatrick3955 Před rokem +8

    Fantastic video thoroughly enjoyed

  • @peterbeater012
    @peterbeater012 Před rokem

    Requesting part 2 please!

  • @davesimple3283
    @davesimple3283 Před rokem +18

    3:50 this guy spoke in that book about discovering the place of Gog and Magog, an interesting subject for a video if you will.

  • @alfredsanzj2637
    @alfredsanzj2637 Před rokem +9

    I really like this video, great information. And yes I would like to see more videos on related topics like for example with the Arabs\Muslims in al Andalusia Spain side of the Germanic tribes, the Norse and the other way around. What did the Spanish Norse Germanic groups thought of the Muslims and just more general information about their interactions in Spain. Thank you very much in advance.

    • @batminton7467
      @batminton7467 Před rokem +1

      There were no arabs or germanic spanish people. There are only spanish people from roman descent aka mediterranean. the arabic language was a second language used for the export in the international book trade that made spanish writers very rich back then. it was also a liturgical language for the spanish who converted to islam back then. there were no people of arabic descent is spain at all, because the arabs stayed in their homelands in the desert. and back then some germanic people were paid as mercenaries to fight in spanish civil wars back then. no one foreign group contributed to the spanish genetic makeup.

    • @abdullaevo2745
      @abdullaevo2745 Před rokem +4

      @@batminton7467
      Hahahahahahah are you kidding? Almost people from most of the Arab Tribes immigrated to Spain and have dependents there , yes there were other converts from other nations but it was arab culture

  • @user-ir1rs1wz7w
    @user-ir1rs1wz7w Před 10 měsíci +1

    Great content 👌

  • @jameswyre6480
    @jameswyre6480 Před rokem +1

    Excellent and learned presentation!

  • @coyote4237
    @coyote4237 Před rokem +51

    Interesting, thanks. Keep it up, with how the Vikings thought of the Arabs.

    • @yassine073t
      @yassine073t Před rokem +23

      Sadly Vikings didn’t write books.

    • @paulallen8109
      @paulallen8109 Před rokem +6

      @@yassine073t Quite right. Much like is the case with tribal people around the world they mostly told and preserved stories by telling their children while a few wealthy vikings could afford to have rune stones erected as a lasting legacy of somebody's adventurous life. For obvious reasons nothing particularly long and elaborate could be told on these rune stones just the main factors.
      The main factor here is that the monks were preservers of knowledge, history and science in Europe at that time and there were none of those in Scandinavia until those countries became wholly Christian. Pagan practices, stories and rulers were abandoned and only kept alive through stories in rural communities, mostly in the far north, where they became sagas and legends. Keeping the two apart was difficult which is why some of the stories either are completely made up or "improved upon" over the centuries.
      It's possible that there were viking "scholars" who were eager to learn about the science, discoveries and knowledge of other cultures but these were sadly forgotten in history because those rural people who maintained the legends by word of mouth through the generations obviously didn't understand science or knowledge and only kept the "legendary adventurer" stories. So any viking "Plato" would have been reduced to a malevolent schemer much like Loki the norse god of mischief and tricks.

    • @maskedreality7543
      @maskedreality7543 Před 8 dny

      Many arabs academic wrote about Arabs and others races such as Ibn Khaldon he was the founder of social science and other... He was very professional

  • @Ali-bu6lo
    @Ali-bu6lo Před rokem +39

    14:54 Though the city of Barda is currently in the Republic of Azerbaijan the region wasn't known by this name back then, the name Azerbaijan was for the region south of the river Aras , what is now Republic of Azerbaijan was known as Caucasian Albania, Arran, and Aran and Shirvan.

    • @blerimlila5893
      @blerimlila5893 Před rokem

      Ali, i dont think albania was a caucasian though the race of albanians identified as White caucasian and though the majority are muslims. Albania is a south european country or west balkan known as recently.

    • @Ali-bu6lo
      @Ali-bu6lo Před rokem +1

      ​@@blerimlila5893 You're confusing modern day nation of Albania with Caucasian Albania. Albania is an exonym with Latin origin which means "mountains land" or something. Albanians themselves call their country " Shqipëri". Also didn't get the meaning of Caucasian here, here it means from the region of Caucasus and had nothing to do with the racial term Caucasoid or Caucasian white.
      In ancient times the name Albania and Iberia were used for to state in the Caucasus, stuck between the various Iranian empires and the Roman Empire to the west. and south. While Iberia was one of the early Georgian nations, Caucasian Albania was home to a people whose language was related to modern Chechens. The region of Caucasian Albania was first Persianized and then Turkified, mostly becoming the modern day republic of Azerbaijan. Nowadays a small population of Christians called the Udi people still live in the Republic of Azerbaijan whose language is similar to Caucasian Albanian.

  • @johnlang1728
    @johnlang1728 Před rokem +2

    Very enlightening and nuanced

  • @samaralhalal6137
    @samaralhalal6137 Před rokem +2

    Love the video and your Arabic pronunciation! Would love to see more of these😍

  • @hilmarheathkliff9511
    @hilmarheathkliff9511 Před rokem +6

    Perfect upload timing. Im at a viking festival here in iceland.

    • @hilmarheathkliff9511
      @hilmarheathkliff9511 Před rokem +2

      5:20 if they were down south on the volga dressed the way they were i have begun to realize that was NOT their normal attire. They were not wearing tunics or caftans because they were too damn hot to be wearing more than half a layer.

  • @thewol7534
    @thewol7534 Před rokem +112

    There is a book by Michael Crichton, "Eaters of the Dead" (and a film "The !3th Warrior" loosely based on the book) which, while fiction, makes use of the real-life historical document you note, the account by Ahmed Ibn Fahdlan, the Arab poet, of his travels north to the Viking lands in the 10th century. Crichton states the major inspiration for his book were Ibn Fahdlan's work and the Anglo Saxon poem "Beowulf." In the film version, Ibn Fahdlan, played by Antonio Banderas, is the POV character. The book is an interesting read. The film does a good job of juxtaposing the two cultures. While it did poorly at the box office, those fans of the current spate of Viking dramas on offer on the various streaming services might want to give this film a look -- ditto fans of Antonio Banderas. You might recognize Crichton as the author of the books "The Andromeda Strain" and "Jurassic Park" on which the respective films are based.

    • @4CelciusDegree
      @4CelciusDegree Před rokem +9

      That movie is epic and nicely done

    • @sowbat
      @sowbat Před rokem +8

      That movie is so underrated and under-appreciated. Love the reveal that the Grendel are just a bunch of surviving neanderthals and I lost it when i realized an Arab and some Vikings made them go extinct, for good.

    • @EvanLovesWhiskey
      @EvanLovesWhiskey Před rokem +6

      One of my favorite films

    • @letsdothis9063
      @letsdothis9063 Před rokem +5

      I love that movie.

    • @ChipmunkRapidsMadMan1869
      @ChipmunkRapidsMadMan1869 Před rokem +2

      It's a combination of the manuscript of Achmed Ibn Fadlan and the epic Poem of Beowulf.
      He wrote it on a bet with a fellow professor.

  • @mjungwir
    @mjungwir Před rokem +1

    Love all the Creators of Project Middle East!!!

  • @MrHazz111
    @MrHazz111 Před rokem +1

    Love this! Id love to see more on this subject!

  • @kawaiiarchive357
    @kawaiiarchive357 Před rokem +27

    I have always been interested I'm Arab and Muslim history however a lot of people give it such a negative stigma. Thankfully my sister went to school with a majority of Muslims so she's willing to discuss the topic with me. She has also taught me a bit about the culture.

    • @user-cl9ww9it8v
      @user-cl9ww9it8v Před rokem +3

      May Allah guide you

    • @stagthechainsawbeserker3926
      @stagthechainsawbeserker3926 Před rokem +1

      Well for the account of the respect ibn showed I wonder why ?

    • @user-cl9ww9it8v
      @user-cl9ww9it8v Před rokem +4

      @@stagthechainsawbeserker3926 he admittedly said the truth

    • @angelofthedeath2433
      @angelofthedeath2433 Před rokem +10

      @@stagthechainsawbeserker3926 to be completely fair, Middle East's standards of cleanliness were high. With having Running water and sewer system. Plus taking baths once a week and using communal bowls are considered clean to Western Europe's standards.

  • @HikmaHistory
    @HikmaHistory Před rokem +49

    Great video man, makes me wanna re-make my own vids about the Vikings and the Islamic world!

  • @ahmedabuouf223
    @ahmedabuouf223 Před rokem

    Amazing video and Fabulous pronounced Arabic

  • @farrukhkhan5128
    @farrukhkhan5128 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting enjoyed the video

  • @sqmh4
    @sqmh4 Před rokem +3

    Yes, more please!

  • @ishqnoor
    @ishqnoor Před rokem +15

    I'd love a video about how the Norse/Vikings saw the Arabs!! This was awesome ☺️

  • @salimgohan9670
    @salimgohan9670 Před rokem

    Nice arabic brother, thanks for the video !

  • @brentandvuk
    @brentandvuk Před rokem

    Enjoyed this video

  • @alirezaghadimi7873
    @alirezaghadimi7873 Před rokem +12

    Fun fact, the word "magic" also comes from the word "majus"

  • @LordIronfist
    @LordIronfist Před rokem +6

    I used to really enjoy the 13th warrior but I had to turn off my history brain to continue to enjoy it as I learned more. I don't even know if you mentioned that film or the book it was based on (which I also read but is not really more than a launchpad for the movie) but until I die or something like dementia steals my past time, I will always first think of that movie when I see Arabs and Norsemen mentioned together.
    More on topic I highly enjoy your material, thanks for the hard work

    • @larsrons7937
      @larsrons7937 Před rokem

      The Ibn Fadlan Hilbert mentions is the book. Years ago I read (and somewhere have) several versions of the book written in modern language in both English and Danish, it's the content in the book he refers to. The film the 13th Warrior is loosely based on a fictional book which in turn is loosely based on both the travelogues of Ibn Fadlan and the Anglo-Saxon poem "Beowulf".

    • @LordIronfist
      @LordIronfist Před rokem +1

      @@larsrons7937 I made that comment earlier in the video before he mentioned ibn fadlan, but I've actually read the book that was used to make the movie, it's by Michael Crichton, a talented novel writer who also adapted his own novels into movie scripts on occasion. But he was well known for writing fiction, so the only reason I was unsure of where the line between reality and fiction in the book "Eaters of the Dead" was because there are excerpts from the actual writings of Ibn fadlan which if I recall correctly, served as the prologue or preface to each chapter or section of the novel. But since those exist and aren't fiction-if a bit exaggerated or unable to be explained after having his mind blown by what he saw but still attempted-but I hadnt really been able to find the line between historic record actuality and modern fiction entertainment polish.

    • @larsrons7937
      @larsrons7937 Před rokem

      @@LordIronfist I think it's hard to even find what right or wrong between historic modern actuality and interpretations or re-writings in modern language of Ibn Fadlan ancient Arab, and what it meant to them back then what he wrote over a thousand years ago (like problems with understanding the meaning of other old texts if we just translate them), so it might be even harder with fiction. It's hard to know.
      I trust that Michael Crichton is a talented writer. In a book of fiction I would expect much to be fiction but that doesn't mean that his "fiction" could contain his and others' own interpretations of what Fadlan wrote and meant with it. And as for Crichton's own imagination: Sometimes mere imagination can lead to the truth - and sometimes not.
      To sum up: It think it's really difficult to tell.

    • @LordIronfist
      @LordIronfist Před rokem +1

      @@larsrons7937 haha, yeah, it's nice to see you understand what I was saying, the truth of lives lived far back in the past will always be shrouded in some fog of time-i believe that's likely to always be the case, even in the modern digital storage and at least 1 video camera for each denizen of the planet...even still there will be news stories in 2922 that go something like: "archaeologists in Africa excitedly reporting the discovery of a long lost cache of hardrives which was buried on the apparent site of an ancient server farm. Construction drones clearing a vacant lot for a new parking structure uncovered the top of a forgotten building. Further exploration by the members of local university historical preservation committee realized that the building had only partially caved in, and even as excavation continues, scientists are working to determine the right way to connect to numerous still intact hardware, and experts in the computer programming languages used by humanity almost a millennia ago are standing by to process the data once the drives are accessed. Estimates currently believe the drives to be 900 years old and daring back to the time of a worldwide pandemic known as the coronavirus or Covid 19."
      Something like that.
      I apologize- got really long but I was dictating and got a little carried away with my imagination. However, even with all the evidence we will leave behind now it just seems likely that future earthlings will be dealing with as many mysteries as we do when looking back great distances in time.

    • @larsrons7937
      @larsrons7937 Před rokem

      @@LordIronfist Hehe, very imaginative, I liked it. And I do believe it's a realistic scenario. People of the future will wonder about us just as much as we do about those before us.
      For example, how much is there that we by now _don't_ know about the age of Napoleon?
      But when we think about it, at the age of Napoleon there were young men fighting in the wars who were still alive in the 1870's or 80's. They first hand told their stories to their young grandchildren whom could still be alive during WWII. And they told the stories second hand to their grandchildren who are still alive today. And these people are only the third link.

  • @FATDUCK2525
    @FATDUCK2525 Před rokem

    The other way would be a great and much needed topic to be undertaken. Covering the wars between the two also

  • @aimanzaidan9904
    @aimanzaidan9904 Před rokem +1

    good job brother ,I am Arabic and I live in Norway .you spoke about many Arthur's of Muslims and so much information about the viking , also reading good Arabic .Allah with you to show you the way..

  • @KarimKhldi
    @KarimKhldi Před 10 měsíci +7

    As an Arab myself, your pronunciation is phenomenal

    • @user-D7oom
      @user-D7oom Před 10 měsíci

      ليس كل من تحدث العربيه عربي غالبا انت لست عربي جرب تسوي Dan لان كثير ناس للاسف خصوصا في شمال افريقيا يدعون العروبه والنسب الهاشمي وعندما يعمل DNA يكتشف انه ليس عربي ولى حتى واحد بالميه

    • @KarimKhldi
      @KarimKhldi Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@user-D7oom كول خرا أنا من لبنان يا قلبي

    • @elmoubarikabdelaziz1688
      @elmoubarikabdelaziz1688 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@user-D7oom شمال افريقيا عربية يا كربوز، سير بكي

    • @cow-ve6ci
      @cow-ve6ci Před 10 měsíci

      @@user-D7oomNA tests from companies like MyHeritage and 23 and me that are manipulated by by the the zionist party and the US government ? Yeah no thanks, I would prefer unification 1Million times over division, plus how the hell did spanish have words with Arabic origins if they weren’t there in that area. And let us not forget that the Maghrebi dialect is actually pretty easy to understand if you have basic knowledge in Quranic Arabic wich most of people do not plus understanding the spanish and french slangs .

    • @user-D7oom
      @user-D7oom Před 10 měsíci

      @@KarimKhldi لا اعلم لماذا تغضب اذا قلت هل كونك عربي سيجعلك انسان مميز او انت تشعر ان العرب عرق اعلى من عرقك الفينيقي لهذا تدعي العروبه 🤭

  • @obsc3n3skull
    @obsc3n3skull Před rokem +26

    I would love a series on the ancient and up to modern day Arab world

    • @irishl3403
      @irishl3403 Před rokem +1

      That would be hard to do or perhaps impossible to do because Vikings didn’t really record much of their journeys or their lifestyle. That’s why there’s those people from other cultures describing them and writing about them. We mostly hear about the negative side of Vikings because those who wrote about them hated the Vikings because of their ruthlessness like families of people who were killed by them, or people who were raided by them.

    • @CaptCool88
      @CaptCool88 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@irishl3403 Al-Fadlan was sent on a diplomatic mission to Volga-Bulgaria and just happened to come across the Vikings.
      I don't think he had anything against them..

    • @morceen
      @morceen Před 11 měsíci

      ​@iris HL
      Not really.
      The Anglos thought the Vikings were clean (because they were even worse when it came to hygiene).
      Ibn Fadhlan was on a diplomatic experience to Vulga Bulgaria. He only met the Russ Vikings because his guide made a mistake on their way back to Baghdad.

  • @claudiopiteri8621
    @claudiopiteri8621 Před rokem

    Good job, bro .

  • @Desh282
    @Desh282 Před rokem

    Great video!!!!

  • @dcanedemboyz7431
    @dcanedemboyz7431 Před rokem +7

    Woooow, great arabic reading

  • @sir_muath
    @sir_muath Před 11 měsíci +4

    As a muslim arabian i know that ahmed ibn fadlan talks about them,
    but i didn't know that also Al Ghazal had talks about them, thanks i should know more about my history
    +your video was great

  • @potat2976
    @potat2976 Před rokem +1

    ok rq I am quite impressed on how you said the letter ح which is replaced by H in Muhammad, quite correctly, it's a small tang of how the actual letter is pronounced but it isn't very noticable, anyways good vid my guy :D

  • @bigbuddhabelly
    @bigbuddhabelly Před 10 měsíci

    Really cool video!! Thanks?

  • @ahmedmuayad2013
    @ahmedmuayad2013 Před rokem +6

    I appreciate Aḥmad ibn Faḍlān for his excellent records, he'd be very sad to see how Baghdad is today 🇮🇶
    May your soul rest in peace 🙏🏻

  • @torfinnzempel6123
    @torfinnzempel6123 Před rokem +34

    Yes, please, more of this content! I am looking to roleplay a CK3 game where Norse colonize a part of Iberia and form a hybrid culture with the Andalusian's so more info on how these 2 cultures saw each other and how they interacted would be most helpful.

    • @micahttt
      @micahttt Před 11 měsíci

      I did something like that in ck3 too. But with the Bedouin instead.

    • @Ppoim
      @Ppoim Před 11 měsíci

      Andalusia was concurred by imazighen most

    • @Fahad-be6nx
      @Fahad-be6nx Před 10 měsíci +1

      Amazigh dreams to create a civilization in Andalusia Arabic The language in Andalusia was Arabic The population was Arab The inscriptions in the buildings are Arabic All scholars of Andalusia are Arabs
      ​@@Ppoim

    • @DgjJsk-mv1si
      @DgjJsk-mv1si Před 10 měsíci

      Only 5% of the Muslims in Al-Andalus were Arab lol

  • @AliKhan-kw6ns
    @AliKhan-kw6ns Před rokem

    Great video

  • @atoridolor666
    @atoridolor666 Před rokem

    Excellent video.

  • @user-ph5cs6pg5n
    @user-ph5cs6pg5n Před rokem +7

    I am from Ukrainian Celtic region Galicia. According to my own investigation the Arabic sources know only Swedish Rus Vikings! These Swedish Vikings were the Celtic tribe Sitoni-Svei who originated from the territory of Scythia, previously right bank of Dnipro river